Had he possessed plenty of leisure, Robert would have been glad to remain in Boston long enough to see the principal objects of interest in the city and its vicinity, but he never for a moment forgot that his time was not his own. He had entered the service of the hermit, and every day's delay was so much additional expense to his employer. True, Gilbert Huet was a rich man, as he had himself acknowledged, but Robert was conscientious, and felt that this would not justify him in gratifying himself at the expense of the man who had so trusted him. Robert felt proud of this trust—this very unusual proof of confidence in a boy so young and inexperienced as he was—and he was ambitious to justify it. I am sure, therefore, that he would have had little satisfaction in postponing it out of regard to his own pleasure. There were two ways of going to the West, which, it will be remembered, was his destination—by the way of Albany or New York City. Finding that it would not matter much how he went, Robert decided upon the latter. It would enable him to see the great city of which he had heard so much, and who knows but, in this great metropolis, which swallows up so many, he might hear something of the lost boy? He decided, therefore, to go at once to New York, and, after some inquiry, he fixed upon the Fall River route. This includes railroad travel to Fall River, a distance of about fifty miles, where the traveler embarks on a great steamer and arrives in New York after a night on Long Island Sound. Guided by an advertisement in the daily papers, Robert made his way to the Old State House, at the head of State Street, and, entering the office of the steamboat line, asked for a ticket. "Will you take a stateroom also?" asked the clerk. "Is that necessary?" asked Robert, who was unused to traveling. "No, it's not necessary. Your ticket will entitle you to a comfortable berth, but in a stateroom you have greater privacy." "What is a stateroom?" asked our hero. The clerk was rather surprised by this question, but decided that Robert was not accustomed to traveling and answered politely enough: "It is very much like a room in a hotel, only much smaller. There is a berth and a washstand, and you can lock yourself in. There is greater security against robbery, for you hold the key and no one can enter it without your knowledge." As Robert carried considerable money belonging to Mr. Huet, he felt that he ought to take this precaution, if it were not too expensive. "How much must I pay for a stateroom?" he asked. "You can get a good one for a dollar." "Then I will take one." "Number fifty-six," said the clerk, handing him a card with the number penciled on it. "What's your name?" "Robert Coverdale." So Robert walked out of the office with his passage engaged. This was on the morning after his arrival, and as the steamboat train did not start till afternoon, this afforded him a chance to spend several hours in seeing the city. First he went to the Common and walked across it, surveying with interest the large and noble trees which add so much beauty to a park which, in size, is insignificant compared with the great parks of New York and Philadelphia, but appears older and more finished than either. He rode in various directions in the cars and enjoyed the varied sights that passed under his notice. At half-past four he paid his bill at the hotel and took a car which passed the depot from which the steamboat train for New York starts. The train was an express, and in little more than an hour he boarded the beautiful Sound steamer. He was astonished at its magnificence as he went upstairs to the main saloon. As he was looking about him in rather a bewildered way a colored man employed on the boat inquired: "What are you looking for, young man?" "Where shall I get a key to my stateroom?" He was told, and, opening the door, he found himself in a comfortable little room with two berths. "I can pass the night here very pleasantly," he thought. "There is some difference between sleeping here and on a sailboat." Once, in company with his uncle, he had been compelled to pass the night on the ocean in a small sailboat used for fishing purposes. Robert left his valise in the stateroom and went into the saloon. A gong was heard, which he found was the announcement of supper. It was now past seven o'clock and he felt hungry. He accordingly followed the crowd downstairs and ate a hearty meal. When he went upstairs again the band soon began to play and helped to while away the time. Some of the passengers read papers, others read books and magazines, while others from the outer decks watched the progress of the large boat as it swiftly coursed over the waves. In this last company was Robert. Without being aware of it, our hero attracted the notice of one of his fellow passengers, a man possibly of thirty-five, tall and thin and dressed in black. Finally he accosted Robert. "A fine evening!" he remarked. "Yes, sir, very fine." "You are going to New York, I suppose?" "Yes, sir." "Do you tarry there?" "Not long. I am going to Ohio." "You seem young to travel alone. Perhaps, however, you have company?" "No, sir," Robert answered. "I am traveling alone." There was a look of satisfaction on the man's face, which Robert did not see. Even if he had he would not have known how to interpret it. "It is pleasant to go to New York by boat," said the stranger. "I prefer it to the cars; that is, when I can get a stateroom. Did you secure one?" "Yes, sir." "You are more fortunate than I. I found they had all been taken. I would not care so much if I were not suffering from fever and ague." "I suppose you have a berth?" said Robert. "Yes, but the berths are exposed to draughts and are not as desirable as staterooms." Robert did not know that, so far from this being the case, the great fault of the ordinary berths was a lack of air. "I suppose your stateroom contains two berths?" said the stranger. "Yes, I believe so." "I may be taking a liberty, but I have a proposal to make. If you will allow me to occupy one of them I will pay half the cost of your room. It would oblige me very much, but I would not ask if I were not sick." Robert did not entirely like this proposal. He preferred to be alone. Still he was naturally obliging, and he hardly knew how to refuse this favor to a sick man. "I see you hesitate," said the stranger. "Pray think no more of my request. I would not mind paying the entire cost of the room, if you will take me in. It cost you a dollar, did it not?" "Yes, sir." "Then," said the man, drawing a dollar bill from his pocketbook, "allow me to pay for it and share it with you." "I ought not to be selfish," thought Robert. "I would rather be alone, but if this man is sick I think I will let him come in with me." He so expressed himself, and the other thanked him warmly and pressed the dollar upon him. "No," said Robert, "I can't take so much. You may pay for your share—fifty cents." "You are very kind," murmured the other. And, replacing the bill in his pocketbook, he took out a half dollar and tendered it to our hero. Half an hour later both repaired to stateroom No. 56. As they entered the room the stranger glanced at the two berths and said: "It is only fair that you should occupy the best berth." "Which is the best berth?" asked Robert. "The lower one is generally so considered," said the other. "It is a little wider and it is less trouble to get into it. I will take the upper one." "No," said Robert generously. "You are sick and ought to have the best. "But it seems so selfish in me," protested the stranger, "to step into your stateroom and take the best accommodations." "Not if I am willing," responded Robert cheerfully. "So it is all settled." "How kind you are!" murmured the invalid. "Though we have met so recently, I cannot help feeling toward you as if you were my younger brother." Robert thanked him, but could hardly reciprocate the feeling. In truth, he had taken no fancy to the man whom he had accepted as roommate and was only influenced by compassion for his reported sickness. They undressed and retired to their berths. As the stranger was about to step into his he said: "It is only fair to tell you my name. I am called Mortimer Fairfax and I am a partner in a business firm in Baltimore. Are you in business?" "Not exactly," answered Robert, "though I am traveling on business just now." "I believe you didn't mention your name," said Fairfax. "My name is Robert Coverdale." "An excellent name. I know a family in Philadelphia by that name. Are you sleepy?" "A little." "Then suppose we go to sleep?" "All right. Goodnight!" Then there was silence in the stateroom. It was not long before Robert's eyes closed. He had gone about considerable during the day and was naturally fatigued. Generally he had no difficulty in sleeping soundly, but to-night proved an exception. He tossed about in his narrow berth and he was troubled with disagreeable dreams. Sometimes it happens that such dreams visit us to warn us of impending danger. Robert finally dreamed that a pickpocket had drawn his pocketbook from his pocket and was running away with it, and he awoke with a sudden start, his face bathed in perspiration. It was midnight. The band had ceased playing for two hours and all who had staterooms had retired to them. Only here and there in the main saloon a passenger lay asleep in an armchair. There was a scanty light, which entered the stateroom through a small window, and by this light Robert, half rising in bed, saw a sight that startled him. Mr. Mortimer Fairfax, his roommate, was out of his berth. He had taken down Robert's trousers from the nail on which he had hung them and was in the act of pulling out his wallet, which he had imprudently left in it. |