CHAPTER XVIIITHE RICH MAN
“What’s the matter?” cried Teddy. “There aren’t any snakes here, I tell you!”
“’Tisn’t a snake,” answered Janet. “But did you see the bushes move? And there’s something black in ’em! Look!” She pointed. Teddy could see a black animal moving along behind the screen of bushes. “Oh, maybe it’s a bear!” murmured Janet.
“There aren’t any bears here!” declared the Curlytop boy. He was not altogether sure of this, but he felt it best to tell Janet so, anyhow.
And, truly enough, this did not prove to be any fierce animal at all. As Janet and Ted stood there waiting, with fast-beating hearts it must be said, there came out from the bushes a dog with black, curling hair.
The black dog barked once or twice on seeing the Curlytops and then, wagging his tail in a friendly fashion, he frisked about them. They knew at once he was a friendly dog, and the dog seemed to know, in an instant, that here were children who loved animals.
“Oh, you darling dog!” exclaimed Janet, patting his head.
“He is a good one,” agreed Ted, pulling his ears, which the dog seemed to like.
“If there’s a dog here there must be people,” Janet said. “I mean somebody must live here.”
“Yes,” Ted admitted. “Unless, maybe, they’re having a picnic. But we’ll soon find out. Go on, Fido, or whatever your name is,” he said to the dog. “Show us where the house is. Home, Fido!”
Fido, or whatever his name was, seemed to understand. He looked first into the face of Ted and then into the face of Janet. He wagged his tail to show that everything was all right, and then started off along a path that led up out of the dark dell.
“Come on, we’ll follow him,” Teddy decided.
This seemed to be just what the dog wanted, for, after going on a little way, he stopped and looked back as if saying to the children:
“It’s all right! Come on! I’ll lead you where you want to go.”
“I hope he leads us where we can get something to eat,” murmured Janet, as if understanding what the dog was saying. “I’m terribly hungry; aren’t you, Ted?” she asked.
“Yes,” he replied, “I am. All right, Fido, we’re coming!” he told the dog.
This seemed to satisfy the animal, for, without further looking back or barking, he trotted on along the path which, every minute, became more and more open and plain.
“Now we’re coming to something,” declared Ted, in a few minutes. “These are regular grounds like around a big cottage.” For they could see lawns and beds of shrubbery and flowers.
“I see the house!” suddenly cried Janet. “There it is—in among the trees!”
She pointed to a large mansion—a white house with green shutters. Plainly it was the home of some one with money, so large was the place and so well kept up and with such large grounds around it.
The dog, too, Fido or whatever his name was, seemed to know that he was near home, for he began to bark as if giving a signal that he was coming.
Ted and Janet hurried along after the animal, who barked louder and more often the nearer he came to the house. Suddenly a voice called:
“Quiet, Nero! What are you making all that fuss about? Quiet!”
Instantly the dog stopped.
“His name’s Nero—not Fido,” whispered Janet.
“Yes, I guess it is,” assented her brother.
The dog had run on farther ahead now, and the children could see, through the trees and bushes, that Nero was leaping about a tall man in a black suit, who was walking with a cane. The man appeared a trifle lame. But he seemed as glad to see the dog as the dog was to meet his master.
“Where have you been, Nero? Running away again?” the Curlytops heard the man ask the dog.
As if in answer, Nero looked back to where he had left Ted and Janet. He barked once or twice and then ran on to the bush behind which stood the boy and his sister. It was as if the dog said:
“Come on out, children, and show yourselves. Show yourselves to my master. Then he’ll know I didn’t run away. He’ll know that I went into the woods to get you to bring you safely out. Come, children, show yourselves!”
This Ted and Janet did, stepping from the shadow of the shrubbery into the sunshine on the curving gravel walk that led up to the big, white house.
“Oh, hello there! Where did you come from?” exclaimed the man, in surprise, as he saw the children. “Nero, where did these two come from?”
Nero barked in answer, as much as to say:
“I brought them. That’s why I have been away so long.”
The man with the shining, black, gold-headed cane, leaning slightly on it as he walked, approached Ted and Janet. He looked at them with more of a frown on his face than a smile, and asked, rather sternly:
“What are you two doing here on my island? Don’t you know there are signs up forbidding trespassers?”
“No, sir, we didn’t know it,” answered Teddy.
“And we couldn’t help coming!” added Janet. “We are shipwrecked!”
“Shipwrecked! Bless my soul! Shipwrecked!” exclaimed the man. “You don’t mean it! I didn’t hear of any ship being wrecked around here. Besides, the bay is too shallow for any ship. Come now, no nonsense!” and he spoke sternly. “What are you doing on my island?”
“We—we didn’t know it was yours,” faltered Ted.
“And we wouldn’t have come here, but we got adrift while we were crabbing,” explained Janet. “We lost our oars and the anchor stone slipped out and—and—we’ll give you a basket of crabs if you give us something to eat!” she finished, with a sigh.
“Crabs? You’ll give me crabs for something to eat? Bless my—” began the old gentleman.
“Yes, sir!” broke in Janet, anxious to tell everything at once. “We’ve got a whole basket of crabs in the boat at the other end of the island—your island,” she added.
“They’re big crabs, too,” put in Ted.
“And I caught the biggest one!” continued his sister. “It’s got blue claws!”
“Crabs! Crabs! What do I want of crabs?” asked the man in rather a testy, cross voice.
“You can boil them and make a salad,” volunteered Ted. “That’s what my father does with them. We caught the crabs for him, but we’ll sell ’em to you, cheap. My sister’s hungry, and thirsty too, I guess, and I am, too, and——”
“Yes, I’m awful thirsty,” sighed Janet.
“Do you mean to say that you go around catching crabs and getting adrift and then you trade the crabs for something to eat?” asked the gentleman.
“Oh, no, sir!” Ted hastened to explain. “This was an accident. This is the first time we have been crabbing in the bay. I borrowed Jimmie’s boat, and I lost his oars. I guess I’ll have to pay for them. Generally we crab off the dock near our cottage, but this time——”
“Oh, you’re summer visitors, like myself!” exclaimed the man, and, for the first time a smile appeared on his wrinkled face. “I thought you didn’t look like natives. Hum—well—so you’re hungry and thirsty, are you?”
“Yes, sir,” said Janet.
“I’ll go get you the crabs,” offered Ted, for he seemed to think the man was going to bargain with him.
“No, don’t do that!” called the man after him. “I don’t want your crabs! I never eat them! They give me indigestion. They’re bad for me. Save them for your father.”
“My father will pay you if you give us something to eat,” said Janet.
“Um! We’ll talk about that later,” chuckled the old gentleman.
“Here, Peter,” he added, as a colored man-servant appeared along another path, “take these children up to the house and see that the cook gives them something to eat—and drink, too,” he added. “They’re thirsty. Give them lemonade or milk—whatever they want.”
“Yes, sah, Mr. Narr,” answered the colored man, and at that name Ted and Janet started in surprise. “Did yo’ say I was to hab de cook gib ’em lemonade an’ milk, sah?”
“Lemonade and milk? The idea! Of course not! Don’t be stupid, Peter. I said lemonadeormilk—not both! Whatever they want, though. They’ve been ship-wrecked, Peter, and cast away upon this island. It isn’t exactly a desert island, though,” he added, with a chuckle, as he looked at the beautiful large house where he lived. “But they were shipwrecked, Peter, and we must feed the shipwrecked ones.”
“Shipwrecked, sah?” and the colored man looked at his master in a strange way.
“Well, their boat drifted away. It’s much the same thing. Now take them up and feed them, and let me know when they’ve had enough. You’ll find me here with Nero,” and he patted the dog’s black head.
“Yes, sah, Mr. Narr! Yes, sah!” murmured Peter. “Come along ob me, chilluns,” he added, with a kind smile.
Ted and Janet liked Peter at once. He had a kind way about him. Perhaps this had something to do with the magic words of food and drink.
The colored man led Ted and Janet up toward the rear of the large house. He took them in at a side entrance, where a big sun parlor was filled with lovely wicker furniture—books on the tables, and near the easy chairs were more tables with vases of flowers. Through the sun parlor Peter led the two into a small dining room.
“Sit right down yeah, chilluns,” he directed, “an yo’ all kin be fed right soon.”
Somewhat in a daze at the rapidity with which it had all happened, the Curlytops sat down. Peter went from the room and presently came back with a kind-looking colored woman, who smiled at the boy and girl.
“Dere dey am, Sarah!” announced Peter, also smiling. “Dey is de shipwrecked chilluns whut is to be fed and drinked, Mr. Narr done say.”
“Shipwrecked! Whut yo’ mean?” demanded the colored woman.
“Our boat just drifted away; that’s all,” explained Ted. “We sort of pretended it was a shipwreck.”
“Well, yo’ all is hungry, isn’t yo’?” demanded Peter.
“Yes,” admitted Janet.
“An’ yo’ all is thirsty, isn’t yo’?”
“I should say so!” exclaimed Teddy.
“Well, den, dey is to be eated and drinked,” explained Peter. “And den Mr. Narr wants to see ’em!”
Still in somewhat of a daze, Ted and Janet ate the food that was soon set before them—bread and butter and jam, lovely little cakes, and some glasses of milk. Peter had spoken about the choice they were to have, of lemonade or milk, and the Curlytops had selected milk.
Peter had gone out while the children were eating, but he came back before they had quite finished. In the meanwhile Ted and Janet had been talking together in low tones.
“Did you hear the name of this man that owns the island?” asked Ted of his sister.
“Yes—Mr. Narr.”
“Do you know who he is?” whispered Ted.
“I guess he’s the man that Mr. Keller works for,” said Janet. “The one he lost the keys of and——”
“Hush-s-s-s!” exclaimed Ted, quickly clapping a hand over his sister’s mouth, for they were alone in the small dining room just then. “Don’t speak of the—well, you know what.” He didn’t want to mention keys.
“Why not?” asked Janet.
“’Cause Mr. Keller doesn’t want Mr. Narr to know they’re lost. Mr. Keller thinks he can get another set made, maybe, without Mr. Narr knowing it ’cause if Mr. Narr knows Mr. Keller lost the keys he may discharge him and Mr. Keller wouldn’t have any job.”
“Oh, now I ’member!” murmured Janet. “I ’most forgot.”
“Mr. Keller said Mr. Narr lived somewhere on an island in the bay,” went on Ted. “But I didn’t think we’d visit him.”
“I didn’t, either,” said Janet.
The meal over, Peter appeared again and led them out into the grounds.
“Hello, children!” exclaimed the gentleman with the gold-headed cane, as he caught sight of the boy and girl. “Let’s see—did you tell me your names?” he asked.
“We’re the Curlytops!” exclaimed Janet, almost before she thought.
“The what? Curlytops!”
“That isn’t exactly ourrealname,” put in Teddy. “It’s just what they call us on account of our hair.”
“Oh, I see,” laughed the gentleman. “Well, I’m glad to meet you, Curlytops. My name is Narr.”
“Yes, we heard Peter call you that,” said Janet, as she stole a look at her brother.
“Now tell me where you live, and I’ll see about getting you two shipwrecked ones home,” went on Mr. Narr. And when the Curlytops told him they were spending the summer at Sunset Beach Mr. Narr exclaimed:
“Sunset Beach! Why, that’s where my secretary is staying! Mr. Keller! Perhaps you know him?”
“Yes—yes—we know him,” admitted Ted, his heart beating rather fast. Somehow, as he said afterward, he felt as though something was going to happen.
“You do, eh?” exclaimed Mr. Narr, in surprise. “So you know my Mr. Keller, do you? Well, that’s good. I wonder if you could take him a message for me?”
“We’ll be glad to,” said Teddy, politely.
“Very good. Tell him, please, that I’m stopping here—I guess he knows that, though. And tell him I’m coming over to see him in a day or so. Just tell him Mr. Narr is coming to see him.”
“Yes, sir,” murmured Teddy. “Is that all?”
“Well, if you think you can remember it, I’ll give you a bit more of a message,” went on Mr. Narr. “Do you think you can?”
“I’ll remember it all right,” Teddy said, his heart beating faster than ever.
“I’ll help him,” offered Janet. And she, too, felt that something was going to happen.
“Well, just tell Mr. Keller the reason I am coming to see him,” went on Mr. Narr, “is that I want to get his bunch of keys. I’ve left mine at my town house, and I want to get in my safe deposit box in New York City, without going all the way back to where I live to get my keys. I don’t want to have them mailed, for they might be lost. It’s a bad thing to lose keys—especially safe deposit box keys. Just tell Mr. Keller that I’ll be over to the mainland in a day or so, to get his bunch of keys. They’re really my keys, but he keeps them for me. Do you think you can remember that message, Curlytops?”
“Yes—yes, sir,” almost whispered Teddy.
The worst had happened!
Mr. Keller’s sad loss was going to be found out, and by the very man he didn’t want to know.
What could be done?