“They’ve got wind of something,” said Mr. Tinkham to Mr. Gray, “or else they are waiting for you to resume payment,—or else the widow’s got money from somewhere for her present necessities.” “I don’t know what hope they can have of getting money out of me,” said Gray, with a laugh. “I’ve tangled everything up, so that Beal can’t find a thing to levy on. I have but one piece of property exposed, and that’s not in this State.” “Where is it?” asked Tinkham. “It’s in Kentucky, five miles back of Port William. I took it last week in a trade, and I haven’t yet made up my mind what to do with it.” “That’s the very thing,” said Tinkham, with his little face drawn to a point,—“the very thing. Mrs. Dudley’s son came home from Port William yesterday, where he has been at school. They’ve heard of that land, I’m afraid; for Mrs. Dudley is very positive that she will not sell the claim at any price.” “I’ll make a mortgage to my brother on that land, and send it off from the mail-boat as I go down to-morrow,” said Gray. “That’ll be too late,” said Tinkham. “Beal will have his judgment recorded as soon as the packet gets there. You’d better go by the packet, get off, and see the mortgage recorded yourself, and then take the mail-boat.” To this Gray agreed, and the next day, when Jack went on board the packet “Swiftsure,” he found Mr. Francis Gray going aboard also. Mr. Beal had warned But in the hour’s run down the river, including two landings at Minuit’s and Craig’s, Jack had time to remember that Meantime, Francis Gray had looked at Jack’s lithe legs with apprehension. “I can never beat that boy,” he had reflected. “My running days are over.” Finding among the deck passengers a young fellow who looked as though he needed money, Gray approached him with this question: “Do you belong in Port William, young man?” “I don’t belong nowhere else, I reckon,” answered the seedy fellow, with shuffling impudence. “Do you know where the county clerk’s office is?” asked Mr. Gray. “Yes, and the market-house. I can show you the way to the jail, too, if you Gray was irritated at this rudeness, but he swallowed his anger. “Would you like to make five dollars?” “Now you’re talkin’ interestin’. Why didn’t you begin at that eend of the subjick? I’d like to make five dollars as well as the next feller, provided it isn’t to be made by too much awful hard work.” “Can you run well?” “If they’s money at t’other eend of the race I can run like sixty fer a spell. ’Tain’t my common gait, howsumever.” “If you’ll take this paper,” said Gray, “and get it to the county clerk’s office before anybody else gets there from this boat, I’ll give you five dollars.” “Honor bright?” asked the chap, taking the paper, drawing a long breath, and looking “Honor bright,” answered Gray. “You must jump off first of all, for there’s a boy aboard that will beat you if he can. No pay if you don’t win.” “Which is the one that’ll run ag’in’ me?” asked the long-legged fellow. Gray described Jack, and told the young man to go out forward and he would see him. Gray was not willing to be seen with the “wharf-rat,” lest suspicions should be awakened in Jack Dudley’s mind. But after the shabby young man had gone forward and looked at Jack, he came back with a doubtful air. “That’s Hoosier Jack, as we used to call him,” said the shabby young man. “He an’ two more used to row a boat acrost the river every day to go to ole Niles’s school. He’s a hard one to beat,—they say he used “You think you can’t do it, then?” asked Gray. “Gimme a little start and I reckon I’ll fetch it. It’s up-hill part of the way and he may lose his wind, for it’s a good half-mile. You must make a row with him at the gang-plank, er do somethin’ to kinder hold him back. The wind’s down stream to-day and the boat’s shore to swing in a little aft. I’ll jump for it and you keep him back.” To this Gray assented. As the shabby young fellow had predicted, the boat did swing around in the wind, and have some trouble in bringing her bow to the wharf-boat. The captain stood on the hurricane-deck calling to the pilot to “back her,” “stop her,” “go ahead “What are you treading on my toes for, you impudent young rascal?” he broke out. Jack colored and was about to reply sharply, when he caught sight of the shabby young fellow, who just then leaped from the gunwale of the boat amidships and barely reached the wharf. Jack guessed why Gray had tried to irritate him,—he saw that the well-known “wharf-rat” was to be his competitor. But what could he do? The wind held the bow of the boat out, the gang-plank which had been pushed out ready to reach the wharf-boat was still firmly grasped by the deck-hands, and the farther end of it was six feet from the He ran out upon the plank amidst the harsh cries of the deck-hands, who tried to stop him, and the oaths of the mate, who thundered at him, with the stern order of the captain from the upper deck, who called out to him to go back. But, luckily, the steady pulling ahead of the larboard engine, and the backing of the starboard, began just then to bring the boat around, the plank sank down a little under Jack’s weight, and Jack made the leap to the wharf, hearing the confused cries, orders, oaths, and shouts from behind him, as he pushed through the crowd. “Stop that thief!” cried Francis Gray to the people on the wharf-boat, but in “For record,” he gasped. The next instant the shabby young fellow pushed forward the mortgage. “Mine first!” cried Long Ben. “I’ll take yours when I get this entered,” said the clerk quietly, as became a public officer. “I got here first,” said Long Ben. But the clerk looked at the clock and entered the date on the back of Jack’s “I meant to do the fair thing by you,” he said to Jack, severely, “but now you’ll never get a cent out of me.” “I’d rather have the law on men like you, than have a thousand of your sort of fair promises,” said Jack. “I’ve a mind to strike you,” said Gray. “The Kentucky law is hard on a man Mr. Niles came in to learn what was the matter, and Judge Kane, after listening quietly to the talk of the people, until the excitement subsided, took Jack over to his house, whence the boy trudged home in the late afternoon full of hopefulness. Gray’s land realized as much as Mr. Beal expected, and Jack studied hard all summer, so as to get as far ahead as possible by the time school should begin in the autumn. |