Motor Matt's Mariner; or, Filling the Bill for Bunce

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Motor Matt's Mariner; or, Filling the Bill for Bunce Page 13

by Stanley R. Matthews


  CHAPTER XIII.

  FROM THE OPEN PORT!

  Motor Matt made no move to give the ruby into the possession ofGrattan. Thief though he was, yet Philo Grattan had a remarkablepersonality. Matt had listened to him with deepest interest, but onehand had been busy in his pocket. McGlory was so deeply absorbed inwhat the master rogue was saying that his jaws gaped, and he hungbreathlessly upon his words.

  Near Matt's left hand, with only the width of the side seat between,was an open port.

  "What!" exclaimed Grattan, as though intensely surprised, "youhesitate? I dislike to treat you with any more roughness, Motor Matt.It seems to me you might understand how hopeless it is for you to tryto keep the ruby. What is this Tsan Ti to you that you will risk somuch for him? Is it the money he pays you? I can't believe that. Youhave made a good deal of money in your work, I have been told, and youare not in need.

  "Is it because you desire to help an unfortunate Chinaman who mustuse the yellow cord in case he cannot return to China with the Eye ofBuddha? Foolish sentiment! What would this fat mandarin of the redbutton do for you if your positions were reversed? Take the presentcase. What has Tsan Ti done? He is a coward. Instead of facing hisrisks like a man, he turns the ruby over to you, thereby unloadingthe danger and responsibility. After you have me safely jailed"--andGrattan's voice throbbed with contempt and scorn--"then this mandarinwill hunt you up, take the ruby, which is worth a fortune, and pay youa thousand dollars! Why are you the friend of such a coward? Tell me,will you? Here is where I should like a frank expression of your views."

  "I don't think Tsan Ti is a coward," Matt answered.

  "You have the proof."

  "I have your side of the question, not his."

  "My side of the question! Is there any other side?"

  "There may be."

  "I am disappointed in you, Motor Matt. Such talk is foolish--almostworthy of Bunce, here."

  "There is something else, too, Grattan," went on Matt, "something, Isuppose, you will appreciate even less than what I have just said."

  "I don't think there can be anything I would appreciate less. However,let's hear what it is."

  "Being true to a trust," answered Matt sturdily. "Even if a Chinamantrusts you, standing fast and not betraying his confidence."

  Bunce snickered, and Pardo laughed outright. Only Grattan kept aserious face and peered steadily at Matt.

  "Yes," murmured Grattan, "there is something in that. It is not forme--I have turned my back on such principles--but you are young andquite likely you have started right. That, however, does not affectour present situation. It is impossible for you to remain true to thetrust the cowardly Tsan Ti reposes in you. I have you in my power. Itis night, and the _Iris_ is in the middle of the Hudson River. The rubyis tied up in a handkerchief in your coat pocket. I tell you I want it."

  The voice was imperious, compelling. Motor Matt still passively facedGrattan.

  "Oh, shiver me!" grunted Bunce. "Let's lay hold of him an' take it."

  Pardo pushed a hand toward the revolver on the table.

  With one movement, Grattan, although still with his eyes on Matt,dropped his own hand to the revolver and another hand on Bunce'sshoulder.

  "You'll speak when you're spoken to, Bunce," said he savagely, "andPardo, you'll leave the revolver alone. I've managed this matter withfair success, up to now, and I believe I can wind it up. The ruby,Motor Matt!"

  "There it is!" said Matt.

  His hand darted toward the open port. A knotted handkerchief, weightedwith some small object, flashed through the port and vanished downward.

  A yell escaped Bunce, and he flung himself across the table in afrantic attempt to lay hold of Matt. Pardo leaped for him, and the doorleading into the stateroom opened and the man who was waiting steppedinto the room.

  McGlory had jumped to help Matt against Pardo. The man who had justentered grabbed the cowboy and flung him roughly on the seat at theside of the room; then he and Pardo hurled Matt to the floor.

  "Search him!" ordered Grattan calmly.

  "By the seven holy spritsails!" bellowed Bunce, "what's the use o'searchin' him? Didn't he just throw the Eye o' Buddha into the river?"

  "He ought to be strangled for that!" cried Pardo, in a temper.

  "Search him, I tell you!" roared Grattan. "Are you all a pack of fools?He didn't throw the ruby into the river."

  "But we saw him," insisted Pardo.

  "You saw his handkerchief go into the river, but it was only a trick.Do you think he would sacrifice the ruby, even to prevent me fromgetting it? Search him, I tell you."

  The search was made, and thoroughly. Motor Matt's pockets were turnedinside out, but without result. Garment by garment his clothes werestripped away and crushed in eager hands, but still without result.

  The ruby was as large as a small hen's egg, and not easily to be hidden.

  McGlory had gone into a trance again. As he lay on the seat and stared,he wondered if Matt had really tossed the priceless gem into the Hudson.

  "He hasn't got it, Grattan," announced Pardo.

  "Then his friend has it," answered Grattan confidently. "Search him."

  Thereupon the cowboy came in for his share of the rough handling. Mattonce more got into his clothes. Just as the search of McGlory wasfinished, Motor Matt was reaching for his cap, which had tumbled offin the scuffle in the other room, and had been thrown into the saloonafter the boys had entered it.

  "Nothing here," announced Pardo, as he turned from McGlory.

  "Nary, there ain't," fumed McGlory. "Motor Matt's not the lad to shifthis responsibilities like Tsan Ti. Sufferin' hornets! You're a fineoutfit of tinhorns, I must say."

  Stepping quickly out from behind the table, Grattan passed to Matt andsnatched off his cap. He weighed the cap for a moment in his hand,felt of the crown with his fingers, and then, still holding the cap,returned quietly to his seat.

  "Sit down, Bunce, you and Pardo," ordered Grattan. "Pierson, go out andclose the door."

  When the two men were seated, and after Pierson had left the saloon,Grattan leaned his elbows on the table, Matt's cap between them.

  "This Motor Matt," said he, "is a lad whom I greatly admire. He takesprecautions. His first precaution was removing the ruby from the boxand depositing the box with the hotel clerk before he went out into thehills with Bunce. In running away from the ravine with Bunce to carryout my plan for securing the box, I ran directly away from Motor Mattand the ruby. Motor Matt had the ruby tied up in his handkerchief,then. He was seen, on the hotel veranda, to untie his handkerchiefand show the ruby to his friend. When he came aboard the _Iris_ hehad taken another precaution. Something else was tied up in thehandkerchief, and the ruby was in the lining of his cap."

  Swiftly Grattan's hands descended, tore at the cap lining, and broughtout the imperial stone. He laid it on the table, turning and turning itso the light might catch its fiery flash.

  "Blow me tight!" mumbled Bunce. "Say, mates," he added, drawing asleeve across his forehead, "that was a scare I don't want ever to gothrough ag'in. We've risked so much for that bloomin' Eye o' Buddhathat I near went wrong in the head with the thought that it was in thebottom o' the river!"

  "It's comparatively easy for you to go wrong in the head, Bunce,"taunted Grattan.

  "So that's the thing!" murmured Pardo, his fascinated eyes on thegleaming stone.

  "Did you ever see anything more beautiful?" asked Grattan. "It's a truepigeon-blood ruby, and worth ten times the value of a diamond the samesize."

  Then, drawing out his own handkerchief, he wrapped the ruby carefully,and as carefully stowed it away in his pocket.

  "So," said he, "after a number of startling adventures in theCatskills, the ruby is finally where it ought to be."

  "It ought to be in the head of that idol, in Canton," said Matt.

  The king of the motor boys was calm, and, while he may have hadregrets, he had nothing to reproach himself for. He had done his bestto keep the ruby--a
nd he had failed.

  "Motor Matt," returned Grattan, "a heathen temple is no place for sucha jewel as this. In the Honan joss house it benefits no one. When Isell it, it will benefit me a great deal, and Bunce a little."

  "And me," put in Pardo. "Don't forget that I stand in on the divvy."

  "And Pardo," added Grattan.

  "And Tsan Ti must strangle himself with the yellow cord," said Matt.

  "If that is his will, yes. I have no patience with these pagansuperstitions. A heathen, who lives by them, cannot let them shufflehim out of the world too quickly. As for you, Motor Matt, you havenothing to be sorry for. You did your best to keep the ruby out of myhands--no one else could have done so much."

  "It's not the ruby I care for so much as saving Tsan Ti," answered Matt.

  "Find out if there's a landing near this point, Pardo," said Grattan.

  Pardo stepped out of the room and could be heard talking with the manat the steering wheel.

  "No," he reported, coming back, "there's no safe landing for the _Iris_anywhere near here."

  "Then put over the tender," ordered Grattan; "Motor Matt and his friendare going ashore."

 

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