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The River Motor Boat Boys on the St. Lawrence.
by Harry Gordon.
CHAPTER I
A MYSTERIOUS VISITOR
It was dark on the St. Lawrence River at nine o'clock that August night. There would be a moon later, but the clouds drifting in from the bay might or might not hold the landscape in darkness until morning. The tide was running in, and with it came a faint fog from the distant coast of Newfoundland.
Only one light showed on the dark surface of the river in the vicinity of St. Luce, and this came from the deck of a motor boat, anch.o.r.ed well out from the landing on the south side of the stream, fifty miles or more from Point des Montes, which is where the St. Lawrence widens out to the north to form the upper part of the bay of the same name.
The light on the motor boat came from an electric lamp set at the prow, six feet above the deck. It showed as trim and powerful a craft as ever pushed her nose into those waters.
Those who have followed the adventures of the Six River Motor Boat Boys will not need to be told here of the strength, speed and perfect equipment of the _Rambler_. The motors were suitable for a sea-going tug, and the boat had all the conveniences known to modern shipbuilders. She had carried her present crew in safety up the Amazon to its source, down the Columbia from its headwaters, through the Colorado to the Grand Canyon, and down the Mississippi from its source to the Gulf of Mexico.
All these trips had been crowded with adventure, but both the boys and the boat had proved equal to every emergency. At the conclusion of the Mississippi journey, the boys of the Six River Motor Boat Club had decided to explore the St. Lawrence river from the Gulf to Lake Ontario.
The _Rambler_ had been shipped by rail to a point on the coast of New Brunswick, and the remainder of the journey to St. Luce had been made by water along the treacherous coasts of New Brunswick and Quebec. A fresh supply of gasoline had been taken on just before night fell, and on the approach of daylight the boys would be on their way up the stream.
Although it was early August, the night was decidedly cold, and Clayton Emmett, Alex Smithwick, Julian Shafer, and Cornelius Witters, the four boys who had embarked on the trip, were sitting snugly around a coal fire in the cabin. They were st.u.r.dy, healthy, merry-hearted lads of about sixteen, all from Chicago, and all without family ties of any kind so far as they knew. They had been reared in the streets of the big city, and had become possessed of the _Rambler_ by a series of adventures which the readers of the previous volumes of this series will readily recall.
The night grew darker as it grew older, and a strong wind came up from the bay, bobbing the _Rambler_ about drunkenly. Clayton Emmett--always just "Clay" to his chums--arose from his chair after a particularly fierce blast from the wind and approached the cabin door.
"Don't open that door!" shouted Alex Smithwick. "We'll be sent smashing through the back wall if you do. This night makes me think of a smiling summer day in Chicago harbor,--it's so different!"
"Company!" Clay answered, excitedly, "We're going to have company.
Listen!"
"Yes," laughed Jule Shafer, "I've got a flashlight of any one rowing out to us to-night. The river is too rough for a rowboat."
"Now you look here, Captain Joe," Clay went on, "don't you go start anything!"
This last remark was made to a white bulldog of sinister aspect which had arisen from a rug in a corner of the cabin and now stood at Clay's side, growling threateningly. Joe wagged a stumpy tail in acknowledgment of the advice, but dashed out, snarling, as Clay opened the door and gained the deck.
"All right; go to it!" Alex laughed, as the door closed behind the two. "Stick out on deck a spell and the wind will do the rest."
Case Witters--he was never anything but "Case" to his friends--went to the door and looked out through the blurred gla.s.s, wiping the inside of the panel with his sleeve in order to get a clearer view.
"What's coming off?" demanded Jule.
"I hope we'll be able to get away on one trip without some one b.u.t.ting in," suggested Case.
"Say, now, look at Teddy," cried Jule, springing to his feet.
"Teddy" was a quarter-grown grizzly bear. He had been captured on the Columbia river, and had been a great pet of the boys ever since. He now rose from the rug which he had occupied in company with Captain Joe, the white bulldog, and shambled over to the door, against which he lifted a pair of capable paws in an effort to get a view of the deck.
"Rubberneck!" called Alex, digging the cub in the ribs.
"You know what you'll come to if you talk slang!" Jule grinned.
"You'll have to wash dishes for a week. We all agreed to that, you know," he added as Alex wrinkled a freckled nose and pointed to the bear cub still trying to look out.
"Why don't you let him out?" he asked. "If the wind blows his hide off, we'll make a rug of it. What is Clay doing?"
Case did not reply to the question. Instead, he opened the door, swinging it back with a bang, and both boy and bear ran out on deck.
The first thing Teddy did was to sit up on his hind legs and box at the wind, which rumpled his fur and brought moisture to his little round eyes. Boxing was one of the accomplishments taught him by the boys, and he took great pride in it.
Alex closed the door and, with Jule at his side, stood looking out on deck. Clay, Case and the two pets stood at the prow, gazing down on the river.
Directly the top of a worn fur cap made its appearance above the gunwale of the boat, followed almost immediately by the head and shoulders of a man. Then Alex and Jule both rushed out of the cabin.
"He must be a peach, whoever he is, to come off to us in a canoe over that rough water to-night!" Alex cried. "I want to see that boat of his."
The boat in which the stranger had put off was rocking viciously in the stream, and it was some seconds before he could secure a footing which promised a successful leap for the deck. When at last he came over the rail, the boys saw a heavily-built man with thin whiskers growing out of a dark face. His eyes were keen and black, and the hair hanging low down on his wide shoulders, was black, too, and straight.
Holding his boat line in one hand, in order that the craft might not drift away, he searched with the other hand in the interior pockets of a rough Jersey jacket for a second, and then brought forth a sealed package which he handed to Clay. As the boy took the package, the man who had delivered it sprang, without speaking a word, to the railing, hung for a moment with his feet in the air above the bobbing canoe, dropped, and was almost instantly lost in the darkness.
Leaning over the railing of the boat, wide-eyed and amazed, the four boys stood for a moment trying to pierce the line of darkness beyond the round circle of the prow light. Nothing was to be seen. The boat had come and gone in the darkness. The packet in Clay's hands was the only evidence that it had ever existed. Alex was the first to speak.
"What do you know about that?" he shouted.
"They must have fine mail facilities on the St. Lawrence!" commented Case.
"That was only a ghost!" Jule a.s.serted, with a wink at Alex. "That letter will go sailing up in the air in a minute."
Clay opened the packet so strangely delivered and unfolded a crude map of a country enclosed between two rivers. These rivers, after running close together for a long distance, spread apart, like the two arms of a pair of tongs, at their mouths, making an egg-shaped peninsula which extended far into the main river. Back from the river sh.o.r.e, on this rude drawing, a narrow creek cut through the territory between the two rivers, making the peninsula an island.
Below this rude drawing of the rivers and the peninsula was another of an old-fashioned safe resting high up in a niche in a rocky wall. The face of the wall was cross-hatched, to show that it was in the shadows.
Below the drawing of the safe, were these words:
"At last! Follow instructions. Success is certain. Map enclosed. Point straight to the north."
The boys gathered closely around Clay, standing under the brilliant prow light, and examined the paper, pa.s.sing it from one to another with questioning glances.
"I guess," Alex said, "that we are drawing somebody else's cards."
"Well," Case suggested, "that's a queer kind of a hand to come out of the night."
"Perhaps," Jule observed, "they present travelers on the St. Lawrence with these little souvenirs just to excite interest."
"Point straight to the north," repeated Clay. "I wonder what that means."
"I'd like to know what any of it means," Alex a.s.serted. "It looks to me like some one was b.u.t.ting in."
"Well," Case remarked, "we have started out on every trip with a mystery to unravel, and here we go again, loaded up with another."