The Golden Magnet Part 49
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"Most faithfully, Tom."
"Thanky, sir, thanky," cried Tom.
"Yes, yes, Tom, we know all about that," I said. "No one doubts your fidelity, but it is not the question. We want to know what to do about getting the treasure home safely."
"Oh! Ah! Yes, I see," said Tom, as if he had not understood before, and it made me so vexed, what with being hot and nervous and bothered, that I felt as if I should have liked to kick Master Tom.
"I have it," I exclaimed suddenly, and I gave the table a thump.
"He's got it," cried Tom, rubbing his hands. "Mas'r Harry's got it, Mas'r Landell, sir. He's a wunner at hitting out things, he is."
"What is your idea, Harry?"
"It is rather a risky one, sir," I replied; "but it seems to me the only likely one. We must put up with some inconvenience to get our treasure safe. Once we are at a good British port, of course we need not mind, and can do as we please."
"Well," he said, "what do you propose doing?"
"Find out some small vessel going to Jamaica, and arrange with the captain to take us. If we pay him pretty well he will ask no questions about what our luggage is."
"And you might make him think it was forsles and them what-you-may-call-'em tights. He wouldn't be much cleverer than the Injins," said Tom.
"We'll see about that, Tom," I said, and my uncle having approved of my plan, we began at once to see if we could not set it in force.
It sounded very easy, but when I had to put it in practice I found it extremely difficult, and to be hedged in with p.r.i.c.kles of the sharpest kind.
We wanted to go to Jamaica, as being a suitable port for our purpose, and an easy one to obtain pa.s.sage home in a mail steamer; but though I could find small vessels, schooners, and brigs going everywhere else, there did not seem to be one likely to sail for Kingston; and try how I would, it appeared as if the very fact of our wanting to go otherwise than by the regular mail route made our conduct suspicious.
In fact more than one of the skippers seemed to think so, and as a rule they declined to take us, saying that it would get them into trouble, while in one case, where the captain of a schooner eagerly agreed to take us, merely stipulating to be well paid, the vessel was such a cranky, ill-found affair that I shrank from trusting my aunt and Lilla in such a crazy hull.
"There's a chap out in the river yonder going to sail for New York at the end of the week, Mas'r Harry," said Tom one morning. "I got into conversation with him last night when I was smoking my pipe, and in about half a minute he'd asked me what my name was, where I was born, how many teeth I'd got, why I came here, what I was going to do next; and when I told him I wanted to go back to England, he hit me over the back and says: 'Case o' dollars, stranger. I'll take you.' He's coming to see you this morning."
About an hour after I saw a tall, thin, yellow-looking man coming up to the house. He had a narrow smooth face, and two very dark eyes that seemed to have been squeezed close up to his nose--a sharp nose--and a very projecting much-pointed chin. His face was as devoid of hair as a baby's, and taking him altogether, if Tom had not told me he was curious, I should have said at once that he was a man who loved to ask questions.
"Mornin', stranger," he said to both Tom and me, and then, with his queer-looking sharp little eyes searching me all over, he went on: "I guess you're the Englishman who wants to get home with all your tots."
"I am," I said. "May I ask your name?"
"Perks," he said sharply. "'Badiah P. Perks, o' New York. What's your'n?"
I told him.
"Hah, yes. I could see you warn't an A-murray-can. I'll take you if you'll pay."
"Oh, I'll pay a reasonable fare for our party," I replied.
"Party, eh? How many?"
"My uncle, his wife and daughter, and us two," I said.
"And that makes five, stranger. Baggage?"
"Yes," I said, "Let's look."
I hesitated for a moment, and then took him into the room where our neat little chests were packed, one on the top of the other, with a couple of blankets thrown over them.
"Hah!" said the skipper, trying one of the iron-bound cases. "Precious heavy, mister. What's in 'em?"
"Curiosities," I replied.
"Just so," he said, winking one eye. "I said they was to myself soon as I see the iron bands round 'em. Wal, they'll weigh up pretty smart.
You'll have to pay for them."
"Of course," I said; "anything reasonable."
"That's square, mister," he said, scanning the whole place eagerly.
"Now, what might bring you out here, eh?"
"I came to see my uncle," I replied, annoyed at the fellow's impertinence, but thinking it better to be civil.
"Did you, though, mister? Find him?"
"Yes, I found him right enough."
"Did you, though? Old man all right?"
"Quite right."
"Didn't stop with him, though?"
"No, we are all going home together."
"Wonder at it when you might stay in A-murray-kay. I say, mister, you know, what's in them chesties?"
He accompanied the question with a wink and a grin, and pointed over his shoulder towards the cases.
"I told you," I replied, "curiosities."
"Are they, though? Wonder what the custom chaps would call 'em when they overhauled them, eh?"
I was silent, for it was evident that the fellow suspected me of a desire to evade the regular authorities of the port.
"Come, mister," he said with a grin, evidently divining my thoughts, "out with it, come; you want them chesties smuggled off on the quiet, don't you now? Best take 'Badiah P. Perks into confidence, I guess; makes it smooth for all parties."
"If you like to take our party and luggage to New York, Mr Perks," I said quietly, "I am ready, as my uncle will be ready, to pay you well for the pa.s.sage. Is it agreed?"
"Luggage, of course, mister; but them there arn't luggage. Curiosities, didn't you say? What's in 'em?"
"That is my affair, Mr Perks."
The Golden Magnet Part 49
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The Golden Magnet Part 49 summary
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