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He peered down into the water. There was no sign of the mate. By this time several members of the crew were aroused and were on the deck.
"What's the matter?" cried a voice that Nat recognized as Sam Shaw's.
"Prisoner escaped!" exclaimed the policeman. "Can you see him?" he asked of Nat, who stood beside him, in the early dawn.
The boy shook his head in disappointment.
"He's got away, I guess," he said.
"Get me a boat!" cried the officer. "I'll find him if it takes all day. Come on!"
CHAPTER XXIV
IN A COLLISION
With the increase of daylight, objects on and about the freighter became clearer. But looking over the side Nat and the policeman could see nothing of the mate. Members of the crew who had hastily leaped from their bunks began asking what the matter was. Soon the captain came from his cabin.
"They've killed my uncle!" exclaimed Sam Shaw. "That's what they did!
I heard them throw him overboard. That mean Nat Morton did it! I'll have him arrested for murder!"
"Oh, dry up!" exclaimed Nat, quite put out with the unexpected turn of events.
"I'll lick you; that's what I'll do!" cried Sam, advancing on Nat with outstretched fists.
"Keep away from me!" retorted Nat. "I whipped you once, and I can do it again!"
"He didn't push your uncle overboard," said one of the crew. "He jumped."
"That's what he did," added the policeman. "He got away from me, too.
Somebody get me a boat."
"What for?" asked the captain.
"Because I'm an officer of the law, and a prisoner has escaped. I had him a prisoner, all right, for I had my hand on him, but he went so sudden he got away."
"There's a boat moored alongside," said the captain, when matters had been briefly explained. "But you want to hurry. I can't lay here all day, though how I'm going to sail without a mate is more than I know."
"I'll get him for you, but I'll have to take him right away again,"
said the officer. "He's a criminal and a fugitive from justice."
The mate might have been almost anything, as far as any denial on his part was concerned, for not a trace of him had been seen since he jumped overboard. Sam Shaw, mean as he was, had a genuine affection for his uncle, and he was much distressed about his relative.
"He's drowned! I know he's drowned!" he exclaimed, as he walked about the deck, half crying.
"Oh, dry up!" advised Nat savagely, for he knew the mate was a good swimmer, and he had no doubt but that b.u.mstead had managed to reach sh.o.r.e, under cover of the semi-darkness, and was far enough away by this time.
Meanwhile, the policeman got into a boat and rowed about, but all to no purpose. The mate had disappeared as completely as if he was at the bottom of the lake.
"Well," said Nat, much disappointed, "that's done with. It's a failure. I guess I'd have done better if I'd gone alone, and not taken the policeman with me, though he meant well enough. Now I'd better get some breakfast and then arrange to have some one row me out to meet the _Mermaid_."
He told the officer that he would have to leave.
"Very well," replied the policeman. "You may go, but I'll never give up hunting for my prisoner. It's the first time one ever got away from me, and I'm not going to stand it. I'll keep hunting until I find him, if it takes all day or a whole year. You had better leave me your address, and as soon as I arrest him, I'll let you know."
"I don't believe that would do any good. I travel about so, on the boat, that I can't tell just what my address will be. You had better give me the warrant; I may run across him at some other port."
Rather reluctantly the policeman gave up the legal doc.u.ment.
"I wish I had handcuffed him at first," he said. "Then he couldn't have gotten away, and if he jumped in the water he would have been drowned."
"I wouldn't care about having that happen," said Nat.
"Me either, though I hate to let a prisoner get away. But I'll catch him yet, you see."
And when Nat had gone ash.o.r.e, eaten his breakfast in a little restaurant, and was being rowed out to be picked up by the _Mermaid_, the policeman was still searching about the dock and adjacent sh.o.r.e for the missing mate.
Captain Turton and the pilot sympathized with Nat over the failure of his mission, but they said b.u.mstead was sure to be arrested sooner or later.
"He'll probably transfer to some other boat, now," said Nat.
"Very likely," answered Mr. Weatherby. "He knows you are after him, and it's going to be harder to arrest him."
The _Mermaid_ proceeded on her way, and for some time Nat was so occupied with his work, for there was a great increase in pa.s.senger traffic, that he almost forgot about the rascally mate and the stolen money.
Meanwhile, as my young readers have probably surmised, b.u.mstead had safely reached sh.o.r.e and had arranged to keep out of the way of officers of the law. The sudden appearance of the policeman in his cabin had been the first intimation that there was a warrant for his arrest, and that Nat knew of his appropriation of the fifteen hundred dollars belonging to Mr. Morton.
It is true the mate had fancied Nat was suspicious, after the lad had seen the wallet, and questioned him about it, but, when some time pa.s.sed, and nothing resulted, the scoundrel thought that Nat either had his suspicions lulled, or did not know how to go about recovering the money. That a previous plan to arrest him had failed, by his shift of vessels, the mate never dreamed.
Now he knew he must make another change. It would not be safe to remain aboard the _Spray_. Accordingly, when he had reached sh.o.r.e, after his sensational leap for liberty, he sought refuge with a man he knew at Cove Point. He remained there until he heard that Nat had left, and that the policeman, very reluctantly, had given up the search.
Then the mate sent for his nephew, and the pair took what money was coming to them and left town. About two weeks after this the mate secured a place on the freighter _Liberty Bell_, which plied up and down Lake Huron.
"Uncle Joe, what did that officer want?" asked Sam Shaw of his relative, one day, when he happened to mention their former place aboard the _Spray_. "Was it in connection with that charge you made against Nat before the pilot board?"
"Well--er--yes--that was it. They wanted my testimony."
"Why don't you give it to them? I'd like to see that Morton chap locked up. How did he escape being sent to jail on your charge?"
"I don't exactly know," replied the mate. "I guess he is only out on bail."
"I hope they send him to prison for a long time. I can't bear him, he's so stuck up, thinking he's a regular pilot."
"Well, I'll fix him," murmured the mate. He did not want his nephew to know about the accusation Nat had made, for he was afraid Sam might, unconsciously, betray him. Nor was the mate altogether easy regarding the charge he had made before the pilot board. He had read in the papers about that case, and how he was wanted for contempt of court.
He thus had to face two charges, and he knew he must be very careful when he went ash.o.r.e, lest he be arrested.