The River Motor Boat Boys on the St. Lawrence - Part 21
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Part 21

"Do you think the story about the lost channel had anything to do with his sudden departure?" asked Clay.

"Yes, sir. Yes, sir," was the reply. "He didn't tell me what he suspected or feared, but he hurried away to find out what was going on just the same. And he hurried away right soon."

"Is he in any way interested in the Fontenelle charter?" asked Clay.

"Interested?" repeated the other. "I should say he was! Why, he's the lawyer for all of us fellows who will be turned off our farms if the charter should be found and sustained."

"I see," said Clay, "I see!"

"Now," whispered Jule, giving Clay a nudge in the side, "we'll find out who the disguised man was. It might have been this Lawyer Martin."

"What kind of a looking man is Mr. Martin?" asked Clay.

"Mighty nice looking fellow," was the reply. "Shows breeding and culture all the way through, just like a thoroughbred horse shows what he's got in him. His face is as white as a woman's and his eyes are as clear as a girl's!

"He neither drinks nor smokes, and he is about the best play actor you ever saw on the stage. Put a river man's rig on him and he looks like a river man.

"Dress him up like a preacher, and you'd think he had the bible by heart. He's been in our schoolhouse many a time on his trips here, showing the boys and girls how to conduct a commencement exhibition.

Oh, he's mighty popular all along the river!"

Another nudge and whisper from Jule.

"Blonde or black?" the boy suggested.

"I think I know the man," Clay went on, following the lead again. "He has very black eyes, hasn't he? And a nose with a little hump on it, and a wide, straight mouth and thin lips."

"No, sir. No, sir," was the reply. "He's got light hair and blue eyes, and a straight nose, and a mouth that isn't wide nor straight. Mighty handsome man, is Lawyer Martin. We all like him up here!"

"And you will lose your farm if this charter is found and sustained?"

asked Clay. "You and many of your neighbors?"

"That's what they say," replied the other, "though, of course, it will depend upon what young Fontenelle says about it."

"The courts might not sustain the charter," suggested Clay.

"Oh well, we're not worrying about it," was the reply. "We're leaving the whole case to Lawyer Martin."

As the night advanced the residents left the campfire and returned to their homes, while the boys sought their bunks on board the _Rambler_.

"What was it some one said about a small world?" asked Clay. "Who was it that said that a face once seen was sure to cross our paths in future years? Was it the same man who said that a note of music once struck revolves around the earth for countless millions of years, never ceasing, never reaching mortal ears, but making its way through s.p.a.ce forever?"

"Hold on!" Alex cried. "Come down from the stars if you want to talk to us."

"Well," Clay went on, "every person we have met at our stopping-places has been seen or heard of at the next stopping-place. We meet a disguised man on the street at Montreal. We come to a campfire by the riverside, miles above the city, to learn why he was disguised, and why he was following us. As we have said several times lately, this is a pretty small world. The man you meet to-day may walk in your path forever!"

The boys were astir early in the morning. They cooked breakfast on the sh.o.r.e, watched by inquisitive boys and girls, and then proceeded upstream. They pa.s.sed beautiful Lake St. Frances long before noon, and just as night fell tied up at a lower pier at Ogdensburg. As soon as supper had been eaten, Alex and Captain Joe started away together.

"Here, where are you boys going?" asked Clay. "I say boys because Captain Joe has more sense than Alex," he added, turning to the others. "At least Captain Joe doesn't get lost very often."

"Right over here on the river front," Alex replied, "is where the Rutland Transit Company boats dock. Those boats are fresh from Chicago, and I'm going over to see if I can get a drink of Lake Michigan water!"

"If you go over there with that dog," Case declared, "the sailors will steal him. That dog is about as well known in Chicago as Carter H.

Harrison. He's had his picture in every one of the Chicago newspapers."

"All right," replied Alex. "If they catch him and take him back to Chicago, they'll have to take me with him."

The boy took his departure, accompanied by the dog, and the others sat down to a quiet evening in the cabin. They had had several pleasant days and many thrilling adventures on the St. Lawrence river.

There remained now only about a hundred miles of travel, Lake Ontario being only that distance away. But included in that hundred miles were all the beautiful islands, great and small, which have made the St.

Lawrence river famous.

The pleasantest part of their trip was yet to come.

While the boys lay in the cabin, with the lights all out as usual, a heavy step sounded on the deck, and there came a sharp rap at the cabin door. The boys sprang out of their bunks instantly.

"What's coming off now?" whispered Jule. "Anyway, this fellow has more manners than our other night visitors."

Clay stepped to the door, searchlight in hand, and turned a circle of flame on the face of the newcomer. Then he dropped the electric and sprang forward. The boys were getting ready with their automatics when they heard his voice speaking in great excitement.

"Captain Joe!" he cried. "Captain Joe! Where the d.i.c.kens did you come from? What are you doing at Ogdensburg?"

"I might ask the same question of you," replied the hearty old ex-captain. "To tell you the truth, lad," he went on, "I've been so lonesome ever since you boys left the South Branch that I've done quite a lot of traveling, for an old man. Several times I've been almost up with you but you always got away."

"You never came all the way up here to visit us?" asked Case.

"To be honest about it, boys," the ex-captain replied, "I just did that very thing. I've got a friend who is captain of the Rutland boat which arrived this evening, and I came on with him. Mighty fine trip we had, too. And how are you all, and where is Alex and my namesake?"

"You wouldn't know Captain Joe," laughed Clay. "He's got to be the biggest, fiercest, wisest, pluckiest bulldog in the world."

"And Teddy bear! You remember him of course," Jule put in. "He ate up two pirates down the river, body and bones, and is so fat that we have to help him out of bed. Great bear, that!"

"Boys, boys," warned Captain Joe. "Don't exaggerate. I've always told you not to exaggerate. Do you think Captain Joe will know me?"

"Of course he will," said Case. "Captain Joe never forgets a friend."

"And now that you are here," Clay put in, "you are going to remain with us while we go back down the St. Lawrence to St. Luce and return here. Then we'll either ship the boat to Chicago or take her slowly up the lakes. Won't that be a fine old trip?"

"It listens pretty good to me," Captain Joe answered. "To be honest with you, boys," he continued, "I've been wanting a trip on the _Rambler_, but I never felt like getting away until now."

"You sailed on the St. Lawrence once a good many years ago, didn't you, Captain Joe?" asked Jule.

"Did I?" asked Captain Joe extending his stubby forefinger by way of emphasis. "Did I sail on the St. Lawrence river? Boys, I know every inch of it, up one side and down the other and through the middle."

"Then you'll be a great help to us," Clay suggested.

"Oh, you boys don't need any help navigating a boat on any river,"

Captain Joe a.s.serted. "You boys are all right! But I was going to tell you about the St. Lawrence river."

"A few years ago, there wasn't an eddy, nor a swirl, nor an island, nor a channel, on the whole stream from Wolfe island to the waters of the Atlantic that I didn't know all about. I've sailed her night and day and I could take a ship down the rapids now. Only the government won't give me a license because I can read and write," he added in a sarcastic tone.