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"I'd hate to follow stocks for fifteen years."
"Do you mean to say you have been handling stocks for the past fifteen years?" questioned Mr. Fordham, slowly.
"Exactly, sir--ever since I gave up my position as cas.h.i.+er of a Boston bank," returned Job Haskers, smoothly. "And now, to get down to business, as my time is somewhat limited. I suppose you are ready to subscribe for that stock?" And the former teacher brought forth a paper and his fountain pen.
"We'll see," mused Mr. Fordham. "Dealing in stocks for the past fifteen years, eh? How long since you gave up your office in Wall Street?"
"About--er--two years," stammered Job Haskers. He looked keenly at Mr.
Fordham and then at Mr. Pa.s.smore. "What--er--why do you ask me that question?"
"Mr. Fordham probably thought it strange that you could be dealing in stocks and teaching school at the same time," answered Bert's father, dryly.
At this announcement Job Haskers' jaw dropped.
"I--I don't understand you," he stammered.
"Well, you will understand in a minute," returned the rug dealer, blandly. He raised his voice. "Boys, I guess you had better come in now!"
CHAPTER VI
ANOTHER SURPRISE
The boys had listened to all that was said, and now they lost no time in filing into Mr. Fordham's bedroom.
Job Haskers stared at them in amazement, and his face dropped in consternation.
"Porter!" he gasped. "And Morr and Lawrence! Wha--what does this--er--mean?"
"Perhaps you know as well as we do," answered Dave, sharply.
"You have been spying on me!"
"We are here by permission of Mr. Fordham," returned Roger.
"How did you know I was to call?"
"Never mind about that," put in Phil. "We are here, and that is enough."
"And we know all about what you are trying to do," added Dave.
"This is a plot--a plot against me--to ruin me!" spluttered the former teacher of Oak Hall. "Oh, you needn't try to disguise it! I know all of you!"
"We have no plot against you, Mr. Haskers," replied Dave, calmly. "If your business is perfectly legitimate----"
"Never mind about that!" interposed Job Haskers, hastily. He jammed the paper and his fountain pen in his pocket. "You can't make a fool of me!
You have been following me up, and you mean to--to--do what you can to--er--get me into trouble." He backed towards the doorway.
"What is your hurry, sir?" asked Mr. Pa.s.smore, and he quietly placed himself in front of the door.
"Let me pa.s.s! Let me pa.s.s!" shrilled Job Haskers, and now he looked thoroughly scared.
"Don't you wish to talk this matter over?" questioned Mr. Fordham, wonderingly.
"No, sir. I am not going to stay here to be made a fool of!" cried the former instructor. "Let me pa.s.s, I demand it!" he added, to Bert's father.
"Oh, all right, if you insist," answered Mr. Pa.s.smore, and stepped aside. At once Job Haskers threw the door open and retreated to the hallway.
"Just wait, you young scamps! I'll get even with you for this!" he exclaimed, shaking a long finger at Dave, Roger, and Phil. "I'll show you yet! You just wait!" And with that threat he literally ran down the hallway and down the stairs and out of the hotel.
"Say, he's some mad, believe me!" was Roger's grim comment.
"I think he is more scared than anything else," returned Dave. "He acted as if he thought we had trapped him in some way."
"Just how it struck me," put in Phil. "He certainly didn't lose any time in getting away, did he?" and the s.h.i.+powner's son grinned broadly.
"He had a guilty conscience," was Mr. Pa.s.smore's comment. "Mr. Fordham, I think you can congratulate yourself that he has left."
"I think so myself, sir," replied the old gentleman. He looked kindly at Dave and his chums. "It looks to me as if you had saved me from being swindled," he continued. "If he had a fair sort of a proposition I think he would have stayed."
"I think so myself," added Mr. Pa.s.smore. "Just the same, supposing I look into this Sunset Company for you?"
"As you please, Mr. Pa.s.smore. But I doubt if I care to invest--after what I have heard and seen of this fellow, Haskers," answered the old gentleman.
The matter was talked over a little more and then the boys and Bert's father departed, first, however, receiving the warm thanks of Mr.
Fordham for what they had done. In the foyer of the hotel the chums fell in with Bert.
"Say, I saw that Haskers fellow shoot out of the hotel in a mighty hurry," he said. "You must have made it hot for him."
"We did," answered Dave. "Where did he go?"
"Up the lake road, as fast as he could walk."
"I wonder where he is stopping?" mused Phil.
"We might take the auto and follow him?" suggested the senator's son.
"There is no hurry about our getting home."
"Let's do it!" cried Dave, for he was as curious as the others concerning the former teacher of Oak Hall.
"If you don't mind I'll go along," said Bert.
So it was arranged, and letting Mr. Pa.s.smore know of their plans they soon got ready for the trip.
"Now, don't get into any trouble," warned the rug dealer, as they were about to depart. "That fellow Haskers may be like a rat--very ugly when cornered."