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The moment the purser was gone Jones came up to our hero.
"Brute, ain't he?" he said, in a low voice.
"He called me a blockhead." Randy's eyes were flas.h.i.+ng.
"Don't you mind him, lad. He is sour all the way through--he don't seem to be able to help it."
"I didn't see him coming."
"He should have looked where he was walking."
"I don't wonder the hands don't like him," went on Randy. "I don't think Captain Hadley would have spoken so."
"Not a bit of it--the captain's a gentleman, every inch of him."
"How do he and the purser get along together?"
"None too good, so I've been told. I wish we had a man in place of Polk."
"So do I."
"More than likely, when he comes to pay you your wages, he'll take out the price of a shoe s.h.i.+ne."
"Would he really be mean enough to do that?"
"Polk is about mean enough to do anything."
There the talk ended and Randy finished up his work. The day pa.s.sed, and when the steamboat tied up that night Randy was more than usually sleepy. It was very warm, and he went on the upper deck to get a breath of fresh air.
"See here," said the purser, coming up to him rather suddenly. "Are you talking about me?"
"Talking about you?" repeated our hero, somewhat puzzled.
"That is what I said."
"Not particularly, Mr. Polk."
"Somebody on this boat is telling tales about me, and I don't like it."
To this Randy made no answer.
"Have you heard any stories?" went on Peter Polk.
"What kind of stories?"
"That I was going to leave the steamboat?"
"No, sir."
"No stories at all?"
"No, sir."
"Humph!" And with this the purser walked away.
"What did he want now?" asked Jones, coming up a little later.
"Wanted to know if I had been circulating stories about him."
"Did you tell him no?"
"I did."
"I've heard a story--in a roundabout way--that Mr. Shalley is getting tired of the way Polk runs the money matters on this boat."
"Does he run all the money matters?"
"Sure--that is a purser's business. He does the buying--or most of it--too."
"I see."
"I don't believe he buys to advantage," went on Jones, closing one eye suggestively.
"I don't understand."
"Maybe he buys at two prices--some of 'em do, you know."
Randy did not know, but he did not say so.
"I knew a purser once--on the _Sea Sh.e.l.l_--who used to pay one price for a thing and then charge the owners of the vessel another price. At last they caught him at it and sent him to prison."
This opened Randy's eyes to what his fellow-deckhand was driving at.
"Do you imagine Polk is that sort?"
"He is certainly close."
"So you said before. Well, he ought to be watched."
"Oh, it's not my affair," said Jones. "Say, I am going to bed," he added.
"So am I," said Randy, and retired, thinking of what Jones had said and also of what the Clares had told him regarding Peter Polk.
CHAPTER XVIII
A MEETING ON THE RIVER