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"I'd like to know some of the people who have invested in this stock,"
said Tom, after the matter had been talked over for nearly an hour.
"I will give you some names," was the broker's reply, and he wrote them down. "They are the princ.i.p.al stockholders outside of ourselves."
Tom took the list and glanced at it. His father's name did not appear, nor did the names of two other men he knew were interested in the concern.
"Thank you," said the youth, rising. "I will look into this. It might be a good investment for me."
"Finest in the world," returned Jesse Pelter. "Better let me put you down for five thousand dollars' worth of shares to-day."
"No, I want to think it over first."
"Supposing I hold the shares for you until to-morrow?" went on the broker, persuasively.
"You can do that, if you wish," answered Tom.
"Do you want to leave a deposit on them?"
"I didn't bring any money with me--that is, not enough."
"You might write out a check, Mr. Putnam."
"No, I'll think it over first."
"Then I'll hold the shares and look for you to-morrow," returned Jesse Pelter, somewhat disappointedly. He loved to get his hands on another's money at the first interview. "Please come in after lunch,"
he added. "I have an important engagement for the morning."
With the map and prospectus and list of names in his pocket, Tom left the offices. He saw that the man with the pointed chin and heavy eyebrows was not present. The force consisted of Mr. Pelter, the office boy, a girl at a typewriter, and a very old man who was at the books.
"j.a.pson must be keeping out of the way," mused Tom, as he descended to the street. "I wonder if it was he or old Crabtree who talked to Pelter over the 'phone?"
Tom soon rejoined his brothers and all three walked away from the vicinity of Wall street. The youth told of his interview with the broker, and of the talk he had overheard while Jesse Pelter was at the telephone.
"They must have been talking about father!" cried d.i.c.k, eagerly.
"Maybe they have him a prisoner on a boat!" added Sam.
"It looks that way to me," said Tom. "And I know what I think we ought to do," he continued.
"So do I," answered d.i.c.k, quickly. "Watch this Pelter to-morrow, when he leaves his home, and see where he goes to."
"Right you are."
"Where does he live?" questioned Sam.
"I don't know, but we can easily find out."
The boys presently pa.s.sed an office building in which there was a large telephone station, and there they hunted up Jesse Pelter's home address.
"He lives up in the Bronx," said d.i.c.k, taking down the street and number. "We can find out up at the hotel how to reach the place. Let us go back to the Outlook and see if there is any letter from home.
Maybe we'll get more news about that financial loss mentioned in that telegram."
CHAPTER XVIII
ON THE HUDSON RIVER
When the boys returned to the Outlook Hotel they found several letters awaiting them. There was one each from the girls and also a communication from Songbird, written partly in verse, and telling of matters at Brill.
But the letter that interested them most just then was one from their Uncle Randolph, in which he explained something of the financial matters mentioned in the telegram. Their uncle was not a good business man, and often got his statements mixed, but from the communication the boys learned the truth.
There were two matters of importance--the irrigation scheme and the purchase of a large tract of land which would be benefited by the flow of water, when the irrigation plant was put into operation. In both of the schemes the Rovers held large interests--that is, they held what were called options, for which Anderson Rover had put up large sums of money, and he had likewise induced some friends to let him put up money for them. In order to clinch their hold on the two business propositions Anderson Rover must sign certain papers and have them delivered to the right parties inside of the next three days. Should he fail to do this, then his options on the property would terminate, and Pelter, j.a.pson & Company would be able to step in and gain control. The brokers had at first tried to gain control by getting Anderson Rover to a.s.sign his interest in the options, but this the boys' father had refused to do.
"And now that father wouldn't turn the control over to them, they have had him kidnapped, so that he can't sign those papers and serve them,"
said d.i.c.k. "The case is as plain as day."
"And they got old Crabtree to manage the kidnapping," put in Tom.
"But how did they know about Crabtree?" asked Sam.
"Most likely he has been mixed up in some of their shady transactions of the past," replied d.i.c.k. "When he got in jail, he sent for j.a.pson and made him fix it up so he could escape. That fire helped the rascals. Then both came down to New York, and all hands hatched the plot to put dad out of the way."
"Poor dad! If only we knew he was safe!" murmured Tom.
"That's just it--he may be suffering terribly!" added Sam.
"I think we'll find out something definite to-morrow--when we follow Pelter," said d.i.c.k. He, too, was greatly worried.
The evening proved a long one to the boys, even though they spent some time in penning letters to the girls and to the folks at home. d.i.c.k had received a most sympathetic letter from Dora, in which the girl stated that she wished she was with him to help him.
"Dear Dora!" he murmured, as he placed the letter in his pocket. "I wish all this trouble was over, and we could be married and go off on our honeymoon!"
The boys had found out from the hotel clerk how to reach the address in the Bronx, as the upper portion of New York city is locally called.
They could take a subway train to within two blocks of Pelter's home.
They were up bright and early, and after a hasty breakfast went out to a nearby store, where all purchased variously-colored caps of the automobile variety, and also some automobile goggles.
"We'll pa.s.s for chauffeurs in a crowd," said d.i.c.k. "The goggles will change our appearance, even if we only wear 'em on our foreheads."
They were soon on a subway train and being whirled northward. The train was an express, making but few stops, and almost before they knew it, the guard called out their station.
d.i.c.k had consulted a street map at the hotel, so he knew exactly how to turn. They easily located the apartment house in which Jesse Pelter resided, and then stopped at a nearby corner to await his appearance.
"We have got to be very careful how we follow him," said d.i.c.k. "If he spots us, it will be all up with us. I think Sam had better go first.
I will follow, and Tom, you can bring up the rear. And let us all act as if we were perfect strangers to each other."