<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</SPAN></span>
<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII<br/> <small>HAPHAZARD QUESTING</small></h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap">MASTERS, who was not minded to let the
value of a small weekly stipend stand
between him and the possession of riches, had
now abandoned even the pretense of work. He
let it be known, casually, at the cottage that he
was temporarily idle, while awaiting orders.
As a matter of fact, he was awaiting the dismissal
that now could not be long delayed.
To May, however, he confessed the truth, that
he had chosen to sacrifice a paltry certainty
for the sake of possible wealth. She had protested
against the recklessness of his conduct,
but her pleas had fallen on deaf ears. Masters
went his way of crafty greed without a moment’s
faltering. He had exulted on learning
from the conversation overheard among the
three friends that the systematized search was
to be abandoned in favor of a foolish fancy—as
he deemed it. While Saxe Temple and his
companions loitered in expectation of some
psychic guidance, Masters would give himself
to the quest with an energy that must win him<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</SPAN></span>
the victory. It was in a very cheerful frame
of mind that he betook himself to the cottage
on the following morning. Upon his arrival,
however, he was at once confronted with a new
phase of the situation, which filled him with
rage.</p>
<p>The engineer found Mrs. West and Billy
Walker chatting cozily on the porch, as usual.
Mrs. West beamed kindly in her greeting, for
she enjoyed the breezy manner of this handsome
young man. Billy merely grunted. To
judge from the expression of his face, the
utterance were better inarticulate.</p>
<p>Masters leaned his long length against a pillar
at the head of the flight of steps, and joined
genially in the conversation for a few minutes,
despite the manifest grumpiness of Billy
Walker, who, never a courtier, was at no pains
to conceal his distaste for the engineer’s
society. Mrs. West, however, was amiability
itself, and Masters was minded to ignore the
superciliousness of the other man’s manner,
though fully conscious of it. He felt that,
under the circumstances, he could ill afford to
be too finical over such a trifle, notwithstanding
the irritation to his vanity. So he rolled a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</SPAN></span>
cigarette from the chip tobacco and wheat-straw
paper which he affected, and chatted
jauntily with Mrs. West. When he deemed
that a sufficient interval had elapsed, the
engineer prepared the way to continue his
delayed search of the cottage:</p>
<p>“I’ll just take a look inside. Miss Thurston
promised me a book.”</p>
<p>Forthwith, he reprobated himself for having
employed this particular ruse, for Mrs. West
said:</p>
<p>“Miss Thurston isn’t in the cottage, Mr.
Masters. You will find her down at the boat-house.”</p>
<p>Masters thanked her with his most winning
smile, and strolled away toward the lake. Mrs.
West looked after him with a femininely
appreciative smile.</p>
<p>“What a delightful gentleman Mr. Masters
is!” she remarked innocently to Billy; by way
of answer, there came a rumbling, luckily
again quite inarticulate.</p>
<p>Forced thus by his own error to postpone
the anticipated investigation, Masters was in
no pleasant mood as he made his way to the
boat-house, with the intention of venting his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</SPAN></span>
spite on the girl who loved him. But even this
relief was not to be vouchsafed him yet. On
the contrary, his displeasure was swiftly to
become wrath, venomed by alarm; for, as he
drew near the boat-house, he heard a chorus
of merry voices. Instantly, he realized that
the other men were here where he had expected
to find only May, and possibly Miss West. Fury
mounted high at the thought. A fierce, unreasoning
jealousy bit at him. So great was his
emotion under these confederate causes that,
for once, he forgot discretion, and passed with
hasty steps around the boat-house, totally heedless
of the distraught expression on his usually
debonair countenance.</p>
<p>As the engineer rounded the corner, a scowl
bent his brows at sight of the scene before him.
The summer morning was of bland sun and
gentle airs to set the care-free in a mood for
lazy delights. The group of four, it was plain,
had yielded to the soft seduction of the hour,
for their faces were radiant. Roy Morton was
sitting, in a boyish attitude, on the top of a
snubbing post, about which his long legs were
twined for security’s sake, while May Thurston
cuddled at his feet, her face uplifted, her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</SPAN></span>
eyes rapt, as she listened to some tale told from
the book of his adventures. The spectacle
infuriated Masters, and new fuel fed the flame
as his eyes fell on the other two. These had
their backs to the newcomer, who approached
immediately behind them. Margaret sat at
the edge of the dock, leaning against a post,
in a posture of perfect comfort peculiarly
exasperating to the observer. A little to the
right, and so placed as to face the girl, Saxe
sat, with his feet folded under him like a Turk.
Masters noted, even in this gusty moment, that
his rival was an especially good-looking young
man, of the shaven, clean-cut type most
esteemed by the contemporary illustrator. The
engineer appreciated the type of which he himself
was the exemplar, and appreciated it indeed
at its full worth, but, having a fair degree
of intelligence, he knew that women admired
also the vigorous, wholesome and cultured man,
of the kind there before him. Though he had
not the least fear for his own prowess where
the hearts of women were concerned, he could
not disguise from himself the fact that here
was one who might easily prove a dangerous
rival were the opportunity given.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</SPAN></span>Saxe had just done with explaining to Miss
West the reason for the new era of idleness,
which the day had inaugurated for himself and
his two companions. With Billy Walker, the
era was merely continued.</p>
<p>It must be confessed that Saxe had cast a
reconnoitering glance toward Roy before
beginning his recital, and that he held his voice
lowered throughout the telling. He knew that
this confidence to the girl, whom, to a certain
extent, at least, the others distrusted, might be
deemed by them the height of folly. But he
was past respecting their opinions in aught
that concerned her and him. So, he told her
freely of the decision to abandon systematic
search, in favor of a recondite dependence
upon occult inspiration. Margaret’s interest
in the narrative was of the sincerest, and it
delighted him. Her manner of receiving the
information was proof enough to his mind that
she harbored no least desire for his failure in
this undertaking. His heart was in a glow of
happiness, as she bent a little toward him, her
face all eagerness, her limpid eyes dazzlingly
blue in the brilliant light. She met his gaze
squarely, as she voiced her protest against the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</SPAN></span>
course adopted:</p>
<p>“Oh, but, Mr. Temple, the time’s so short—less
than three weeks now—it isn’t safe!”</p>
<p>The two were in this attitude of absorbed
intimacy when Masters’ glance fell upon them.
The evident intensity of their interest in each
other capped the climax of his rage. He strode
forward, with a sneer arching the heavy mustache.
At the sound of his steps, the group
looked up, and, in varying fashion, each of the
four showed unmistakable signs of dissatisfaction
at this interruption of the conversation.
Masters so far forgot his manners as to make
no response to the rather curt nods with which
the two men greeted him. Instead, he halted
abruptly, and stared, glowering, at Margaret
and Saxe. After the first moment of astonishment
at the engineer’s discourteous manner,
Saxe’s expression of animation died out suddenly,
to be replaced by a set severity that augured
ill for him who should challenge it. Roy’s
jaw shot out a little, and the veil dropped over
his eyes, which, a moment before, had been
mild and deep. Margaret could only regard
the malevolent face of Masters with sheer
amazement, as his wrathful eyes met hers.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</SPAN></span>It was May who saved the situation. She
sprang to her feet with a little cry, which
might have been of pleasure or of pain. With
the intuition of a loving woman, she seized
instantly on the fact that something had
thrown her lover from his customary poise.
Without a particle of hesitation, she employed
the first ruse suggested by her woman’s wit:</p>
<p>“Oh, you did come, after all—in spite of
that horrid tooth!”</p>
<p>She had no least idea as to the cause that
had put the man in this tempestuous temper,
but she realized the necessity of restoring him
to some measure of self-control ere he should
commit himself hopelessly by a violent outbreak.
The fiction concerning the tooth rose
to her lips without conscious volition on her
part, the grimace with which Masters faced
her, though merely a physical symbol of fury,
might well have had its origin in a spasm of
pain.</p>
<p>As he met May’s dismayed and imploring
eyes, sanity rushed back on the engineer. By a
stern effort, he fought back the flooding wrath.
His face worked a little, then settled into a
grim repose. While the others waited in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</SPAN></span>
silence for the outcome, he suddenly smiled,
crookedly.</p>
<p>“I had a frightful twinge while I was coming
through the woods, but that didn’t matter
so much, because I was alone, and could make
faces, and say just what I wanted to. But I
do think it was unkind of fate to visit the worst
twinge of a jumping toothache on me at the
very instant when I stepped into the presence
of company; forgive me the face I made,
please.” His big eyes were shining gently now,
where before they had been blazing. His
demeanor was convincing to the unsuspicious
Margaret, who, having once experienced a
jumping toothache, was prepared to accept it
as full justification for any desperate deed. Of
the others, May felt a profound relief in finding
that he had so swiftly made use of her
offered help, and, for the moment, this satisfaction
contented her; Roy adjusted his jaw
in a less-belligerent fashion, as contempt took
the place of anger; Saxe found himself smiling,
genuinely amused over the fancy of so
piratical-seeming a person in the throes of
toothache. Neither of the men, however, had
the slightest doubt that May had offered an<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</SPAN></span>
ingenious excuse to account for the engineer’s
savage manner; and forthwith, Saxe and Roy
began to wonder mightily as to what, in fact,
had occurred to destroy so completely the ordinary
suavity of this young gentleman whom
they cordially detested.</p>
<p>Mrs. West sent her servant, Chris, in quest
of Margaret, and, soon afterward, May and
Masters also went to the cottage, without troubling
much for an excuse, so that the two
friends were left alone together on the dock.
But, before they had time to voice their common
astonishment over the scene that had just
passed, they were confronted by Jake, who, as
they looked up at his approach, bobbed his head
at them, and winked with a fine air of mystery.
When he spoke, he addressed himself directly
to Roy, for the love each of them bore to niceties
of mechanism sealed their sympathy.</p>
<p>“Well, what’s new, Jake?” Roy demanded,
amiably.</p>
<p>Another series of bobbings and winks
emphasized the importance of the forthcoming
communication. Then, finally, he spoke in a
husky whisper, for secrecy’s sake:</p>
<p>“Thought I’d look in on ye, and tell ye I got<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</SPAN></span>
an idee.”</p>
<p>“Capital, Jake!” Roy’s tone was distinctly
encouraging. “What’s it all about?”</p>
<p>“It’s this way,” Jake began, with manifest
pride in the importance of the coming revelation.
“You see, I know somethin’ ’bout the
house up thar—” he nodded over his shoulder
in the direction of the cottage—“that you
chaps don’t. That’s what!”</p>
<p>At this preamble, Saxe, who had been giving
only desultory attention to the old man,
quickly ceased looking out over the lake, and
gave ear to what the boatman was saying,
while Roy, too, displayed a new interest. Jake
was plainly gratified by the effect he had
wrought on his hearers, and he proceeded with
a note of pride in his voice.</p>
<p>“That’s one thing ’bout that-thar cottage
that you ain’t onto, and, thinkin’ as how you
wa’n’t likely to be, I says to myself, says I, I’ll
jest put ’em wise, seein’ as how ye come, to a
kind o’ standstill, as it were.”</p>
<p>“Thanks, Jake,” Roy said. “We surely need
any help we can get at this stage of the game.
Go ahead.”</p>
<p>The cottage was an uncouth structure. It<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</SPAN></span>
had originally been a story-and-a-half building,
and to this Abernethey had added a sort of
wing to make the music-room, and eventually
this portion had become the principal bulk of
the edifice, for domestic offices had been joined
to it, and a second story set above, in which
were a number of bedrooms. It was in reference
to this second story on the wing that Jake
now came with tidings for the treasure-seekers.</p>
<p>“Si Hatch did that-thar job,” he said, with
a wheezy chuckle of amused reminiscence. “Si
means well, but, ’tween you and me and the
lamp-post, he ain’t wuth shucks as a carpenter
and j’iner—no, siree! Well, bein’ a cussed
fool, Si misca’c’lated somehow, and left ’bout
two-fut space at the forrerd end ’tween the
outside wall and the lath to that side o’ the bedroom.
I s’posed, o’ course, the old man’d be
madder’n a hornet, but he only jest grinned
some, and says to me, says he, it’ll save that
much floorin’ for the bedroom, yes, I snummy,
he did! Mighty clus, the old man was.” Jake
paused, and regarded the listeners with merrily
twinkling eyes. “Might so be as the gold’s in
thar,” he concluded. “O’ course, ’tain’t likely,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</SPAN></span>
but it might so be.” He stood silent, awaiting
comment.</p>
<p>“We’re tremendously obliged, Jake,” Roy
declared promptly; and Saxe added a phrase
of appreciation.</p>
<p>“Do we have to tear the house down to get
into the space?” Roy continued.</p>
<p>Jake shook his head vehemently.</p>
<p>“Not a bit on it,” he declared; and he forthwith
gave vent to another chuckling series of
explosions.</p>
<p>“You see, the old man was clus, as I said.
That’s right, he was gorrammed clus—meanin’
no disrespect. You know that-thar closet in
the front hall upstairs, by the bedroom door.
Well, the old man said they wa’n’t no earthly
use o’ wastin’ good timber puttin’ a back to
that closet, with plasterin’ and all. So, he
jest had paper put up. You break away the
paper, and then you can sidle right in’tween
the outside wall and the lath o’ the bedroom;
thought it might be wuth while jest to look in,
as it were.”</p>
<p>“Indeed, we shall look in,” Saxe declared,
“and we’re tremendously grateful to you, Jake,
for the tip, because we need a lot of help, I’m<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</SPAN></span>
thinking.”</p>
<p>Roy nodded assent.</p>
<p>“We appreciate the kindness, old chap,” he
exclaimed. “And let me tell you that I’m going
to show my friendship by getting you a decent
berth, after this wild adventure is over and
done with, where you’ll have the chance of
your life. Your skill with engines is wasted
here; it’s ’way off in Cuba, but it’ll be worth
your while. Would you like that?”</p>
<p>“You bet ye!” was the sententious answer of
the boatman, as he turned to lead the way
toward the house. Presently, he chuckled yet
once again, contentedly, and added: “My old
woman allus has been a-pinin’ to travel in
furrin parts.”</p>
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