Guilt of the Brass Thieves by Mildred Augustine Wirt (unputdownable books txt) đź“•
"Let's not go into all the gory details here," Jack broke in. "We're getting wet."
"You mean you are all wet," corrected Sally, grinning.
"Sally, take our guests to the cabin," Captain Barker instructed with high good humor. "I'll handle the wheel. We're late on our run now."
"How about dropping us off at the island?" Jack inquired. "If we had some gasoline--"
"We'll take care of you on the return trip," the captain promised. "No time now. We have a hundred passengers to unload at Osage."
Penny followed Sally along the wet deck to a companionway and down the stairs to the private quarters of the captain and his daughter.
"Osage is a town across the river," Sally explained briefly. "Pop and I make the run every hour. This is our last trip today, thank Jupiter!"
The cabin was warm and cozy, t
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“The badge may have been dropped by a passenger yesterday,” Jack added. “Let me find out this fellow’s name first, and a few facts about him.”
“I don’t believe your friends, the Harpers, will tell you much,” Sally said stiffly. “They’re the scum of the waterfront. How you can go there—”
Penny, who saw that another storm was brewing, quickly intervened, saying it was time she and Jack started for the island. Sally, taking the hint, allowed the subject to drop.
But as she went on deck to see the pair off in Jack’s motorboat, she whispered to Penny:
“See me this afternoon, if you can. I have an idea I don’t want Jack to know about. If we work together, we may be able to trace the trophy.”
CHAPTER14
TRAPPED
Jack had little to say about the theft as he and Penny returned to the Gandiss home. However, after lunch he offered to go to his father’s factory to learn the identity of the employee who had lost the badge aboard the River Queen.
“Want to come along?” he invited.
Ordinarily, Penny would have welcomed the opportunity, but remembering that Sally had wished to see her, she regretfully turned down the invitation.
“I’ll ride across the river if you don’t mind,” she said. “I have an errand in town.”
By this time Penny was familiar with the daily route of the River Queen and knew where it would dock to pick up and unload passengers. Sally, she felt certain, would be aboard, expecting her.
They crossed the river in the motorboat, making an appointment to meet again at four o’clock. After Jack had gone, Penny set off for the River Queen’s dock where a sizable group of passengers awaited the ferry.
Soon the Queen steamed in, her bell signaling a landing. Passengers crowded the railing, eager to be the first off. A crewman stood at the wheel, and Sally was nowhere to be seen.
As the boat brushed the dock, sailors leaped off to make fast to the dock posts. Captain Barker, annoyed because the passengers were pushing, bellowed impatient orders to his men: “All right, start that gangplank forward! Lively! Are you going to sleep over it all day?”
Then, seeing Penny, he raised his hand in friendly greeting.
“Is Sally aboard?” she called to him.
“No, she went up the shore a ways—didn’t say where,” the captain replied, waving his hand upriver. “Ought to be back here any minute.”
Sally, however, did not appear, and the Queen pulled away without her. Penny loitered on the dock for twenty minutes. The sun was hot and with nothing to do, time lay heavy upon her. It lacked a half hour before the River Queen would return, and fully two hours before she was due to meet Jack. For lack of occupation, she walked upriver along the docks.
Buildings were few and far between. There were several fish houses, a boat rental place and the half-deserted amusement park. The beach beyond made easy walking, so Penny kept on. With quickening interest she saw that she was approaching a two-story building which appeared to stand on stilts over the water. Close by was a large, smoothly cemented area with overhead lights.
“That’s the Harper place!” Penny recognized it. “With the dance area adjoining.”
She moved on along the beach. Drawing closer to the building, she passed a clump of bushes fringing the sand. The leaves stirred slightly though there was no breeze. Penny failed to notice the movement.
But as she passed the bushes, a hand reached out and grasped her ankle.
Startled, Penny uttered a nervous cry.
“Be quiet, you goon!” a familiar voice bade.
It was Sally Barker crouched amid the foliage. Quickly she pulled Penny with her behind the bushes.
“Sally, what are you doing here?” Penny demanded.
“Watching that house. I saw you a long way down the beach.”
“Anything doing?”
“A boat is coming in now. That’s why I didn’t want you to be seen.”
A rowboat with an outboard, rapidly approached the Harper pier. Already it was making a wide sweep preparatory to a landing.
“Why, it’s that fellow, Joe the Sweeper!” Penny exclaimed, peering out from the hiding place. “Who is steering the boat?”
“Claude Harper,” Sally revealed. “Ma Harper’s husband.”
“Wonder what Joe would be doing here?”
“That’s what I’d like to know myself,” Sally returned grimly. “Joe isn’t as stupid as he’s given credit for being. He’s crafty and mean, and being mixed up with the Harpers is no recommendation.”
While the girls watched, the boat landed. The two men tied up the craft, and removing a burlap sack which apparently was filled with something heavy, carried it into the two-story house.
“I wish we knew what they brought here,” Penny said. “Why not try to find out?”
“How?”
“Couldn’t we sneak up to the house and peek in one of the windows?”
“We might be caught.”
“True, but we’ll learn nothing more here.”
Debating a moment, the girls emerged from their hiding place. To reach the house they were compelled to cross an open stretch of beach. However, no one was to be seen outside the dwelling and their arrival appeared to attract no notice of anyone inside.
“How about that window at the east side?” Penny suggested.
The one she pointed out was half screened by bushes and at a level which would permit them to peer inside.
“Okay,” agreed Sally, “but I’d hate to be caught at this business. The Harpers hate me and they would be mighty unpleasant if they came upon us snooping.”
“What a harsh word!” chuckled Penny. “All this comes under the heading of investigation! The only difference is that Mr. Gandiss’ detectives are paid and we aren’t.”
“If I could get the brass lantern back that would be pay enough for me,” Sally returned.
Creeping to the window, the girls cautiously peeped into the house. The panes were so dirty it was hard to see inside. But they were able to distinguish three persons sitting at a living room table. Papers were spread out before them, and they were adding figures. There was no sign of the sack which had been carried into the house.
“Who are they?” Penny asked her companion.
“Joe the Sweeper, Ma Harper and her husband. Another woman is coming into the room now. But she’s only a stupid houseworker Ma hires by the week.”
Sally moved backwards, intending to give Penny her place at the window. Inadvertently, she stepped on a stick which broke in two with a snap. Though the sound was not loud, it apparently was heard by those inside the house.
For immediately Claude Harper shoved back his chair and started toward the window.
“What was that?” the girls heard him mutter. “I thought I heard someone outside.”
“Quick! Crouch down or he’ll see us!” Penny warned, pulling Sally to the ground.
Claude Harper, a sallow-faced man in dirty leather jacket, appeared at the window. To the alarm of the girls, he thrust up the sash. In plain view, should he peer down over the ledge, they held their breath.
The man, however, gazed toward the boat docks. “I don’t see anyone,” he reported to his companions. “I was sure I heard something—” he broke off, ending sharply: “And I did too!”
“What is it, Claude?” his wife called.
“Anyone been here this afternoon?” he demanded.
“Nary a soul until you came.”
“Take a look at those shoetracks in the sand!”
Hearing the words, Penny and Sally gazed behind them. From the bush on the beach to the wall where they crouched, led a telltale trail.
“I’ll go outside and look around!” Harper said to his wife. He slammed down the window.
“We’re sunk!” Sally moaned. “We can’t run across the beach without being seen, and we’re certain to be caught here.”
Keeping close to the wall, treading in firm earth which left no visible shoemarks, the girls crept around the building corner. The slamming of a door warned them that Claude Harper already was on their trail.
“Someone’s been here by the window!” they heard him shout.
Frantically, the girls looked about for a place to hide. There was no shrubbery nearby, only the waterfront. Penny’s desperate gaze fastened upon the rowboat tied up at the pier nearby. In the bottom lay an old canvas sail.
“Quick! The boat!” she whispered to Sally.
“We’ll be caught there sure!”
“It’s even more certain if we stay here. Come on, it’s our only chance.”
Choosing the lesser of two evils, they tiptoed across the pier. Though many of the boards were rotten and loose, their shoes fortunately made no sound.
Scrambling down into the boat, the girls jerked the canvas sail over them. Barely had they hidden themselves, than their hearts sank, for they heard heavy footsteps approaching on the pier.
CHAPTER15
UNDER THE SAIL
That Claude Harper was searching for them, the girls did not doubt. But though he knew someone had been peering in the window, they were hopeful he had not actually seen them. Huddling beneath the sail in the bottom of the boat, they nervously waited.
The man came farther out on the pier, the boards creaking beneath his weight. At any instant the girls expected to have the sailcloth jerked from their heads. However, Harper’s attention was diverted as Sweeper Joe came out of the house.
“Find anyone?” the factory worker asked.
“No, but tracks lead to the window. Someone’s been spying.”
“Kids probably.”
“I don’t know about that,” Claude Harper returned gruffly. “I’d feel a lot safer if we didn’t have all that stuff in the basement. What’s our chances of getting rid of it tonight?”
“We can’t do it. Tomorrow or next night maybe. Arrangements have got to be made, and if we try to push things, we’ll end up in a jam.”
The voices faded away, though not entirely. Presently daring to peep from beneath the canvas, Penny saw that the two men had seated themselves on the rear steps of the house at the edge of the river and within plain view of the tied-up boat.
“We’re in a nice position now!” she whispered to Sally. “Suppose they sit there until they decide to leave in this boat?”
“We’ll be caught. We’re the same as trapped now unless they go back into the house.”
The two men showed no inclination to leave. They talked earnestly together, evidently making plans of some sort. Though the girls tried hard to overhear, they could catch only an occasional word. After awhile, Ma Harper, a wiry, ugly woman with stringy black hair, came outdoors to join the men on the steps.
“It’s getting late,” she warned. “If you’re goin’ to tend to that job today, you’ll have to be gettin’ across the river. Ain’t you due to show up for work at four o’clock, Joe?”
“That’s right,” the man yawned, getting up. “I’ll be glad when I can chuck the whole business and live without workin’.”
Though Penny and Sally did not hear much of the conversation, it was evident to them that the men were about ready to make use of the boat.
“We’re sunk,” Sally whispered fearfully. “Maybe we ought to climb out of here and make a dash for it.”
Penny offered a better idea. “Why not untie the rope, and let the boat drift off?” she proposed. “The current is swift and should carry us downstream fairly fast.”
“Any other boat around that they can use to follow us in?”
“I don’t see any.” Penny raised the sail a little higher as she gazed along the pier and nearby beach.
“All right, then do your stuff,” Sally urged.
While she held the sail slightly above Penny’s head so that no movement would be discernible to those on the house steps, the latter reached her hands from beneath the cloth and swiftly untied the rope. The boat began to drift away. Covered by the sail, the girls lay motionless and flat on the craft’s bottom.
At first nothing happened. But as they began to hope that the men would not notice the drifting boat, they heard an explosive shout.
“Look!” Claude Harper exclaimed. “Our boat!”
“Jumpin’ fish hooks!” Sweeper Joe muttered. “How did
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