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"That's her. She's a fine steamer, and Captain Turton is a fine man. I shall like to work for him, and I believe you will too."
"Maybe he doesn't want me," suggested Nat, for he had been thinking of that contingency.
"Oh, I've arranged all that. But I wonder if George Clayton will be here?"
"Where did you expect to meet him?"
"At the hotel. There's the place, just ahead," and the pilot pointed down the street. "Yes, and there's George, like a lookout in the bow on a foggy night. There, he's signaling us!"
Nat saw a stout, jolly looking man, standing on the hotel steps, waving his hand to Mr. Weatherby.
"Ahoy there!" called Mr. Clayton, when they were within hailing distance, "how goes it?"
"Very fair. How about you?"
"Oh, I've had pretty good weather, and I managed to keep off the rocks and shoals. But is this Nat Morton, whom you were telling me about?"
"That's Nat," replied the pilot.
"Hum. Looks like his father," commented Mr. Clayton. "Shake hands, young man," and he extended a big one, roughened by many years of toil aboard lake steamers.
"Did you know my father?" asked Nat, with deep interest.
"Indeed, I did. He and I were messmates on many a trip. I was on the same barge when a big wave washed him overboard. My! but that was a rough night!"
"I thought maybe, George," said Mr. Weatherby, "that you could tell Nat something about his father's affairs. There seems to be something wrong somewhere, but I can't get a clear pa.s.sage to what it is. The signals don't seem to be right, and we're navigating around in a fog.
Maybe you can put us on the right course, and we'll get into some sort of a harbor."
"I'll do my best, though I don't know much about his affairs," said the stout sailor. "But come on in. I'd like to talk to you."
Nat felt a little strange at meeting one who had known his father so intimately.
But George Clayton was not one to let one feel sad for very long. When they were in his room at the hotel, drinking lemonade, for the day was hot, he told Nat all he knew about his father's last voyage.
"And so you're learning to be a pilot," he said to Nat at the close.
"I thought your father was going to set you up in some business. He was afraid you would meet with some accident if you followed the same calling he did."
"Set him up in business? What do you mean?" asked Mr. Weatherby.
"Well, I don't know exactly what business, but I know Jim--I always called your father Jim," he explained to Nat--"I know Jim was talking what he was going to do with the profits of the load of lumber--I mean his share."
"Did Mr. Morton have a share in the load of lumber on the barge from which he was drowned?" asked the pilot.
"Of course. Didn't you know that? Didn't you get his share when he died?" he asked of the boy.
"I got nothing. Father left nothing, as far as I know."
"Why, he certainly left something," insisted Mr. Clayton. "We all got our share out of it, and I always supposed his went to his heirs.
You're the only one, I understand."
"This is getting to be quite a puzzle," declared Mr. Weatherby.
"Suppose you explain."
"Well, you certainly surprise me," went on Mr. Clayton. "And Nat didn't get anything after his father died?"
"Not a cent. How could he? Mr. Morton left no papers of any kind."
"Well, he certainly did, for I saw 'em. There was a whole walletful, and among them was a certificate of his share in the lumber deal."
"What lumber deal? What wallet?" asked Nat excitedly.
"I'd better begin at the beginning," said Mr. Clayton, "and tell it all regularly--that is, as much as I know. But first I must have some more lemonade."
He filled his gla.s.s from the pitcher, drank a goodly draught of the beverage, and began:
"Jim and I and several others formed a syndicate on that lumber. That is, we all put our money together and purchased the load. It was good timber, and the price was high, and we stood to make considerable. Jim had five shares, and each share was worth in the neighborhood of three hundred dollars. I had two shares."
"Then my father had fifteen hundred dollars in that lumber deal," said Nat.
"That's what he had, my boy, and where it went to is a mystery."
"Did you get your money out of it?" asked the pilot.
"I certainly did, and so did the others. After that storm, when your father was lost overboard, we had a hard job getting the lumber to port, but we managed to do it, and sold it for a good price."
"What was done with the money?" asked Mr. Weatherby.
"It was divided among the members of the syndicate."
"What about Mr. Morton's share?"
"His was laid aside, and the second mate of the barge said he would take it to his address in Chicago. He got it off Mr. Morton's dead body."
"I never received the money," said Nat.
"That's queer," spoke Mr. Clayton.
"Who was the second mate, who agreed to take Mr. Morton's share to his heirs?" inquired the pilot.
"He was Joseph b.u.mstead," was the startling answer, "but I don't know where he is now. He cleared out after we sold the lumber, taking his share, and Mr. Morton's, and I haven't seen him since."
CHAPTER XVI
JUST TOO LATE