<h2 id="c17">CHAPTER XVII <br/><span class="small">A FIGHT FOR A FORTUNE</span></h2>
<p>Into the waiting assemblage in the Everdail
library plunged Sandy with a white, frightened
face and his breath coming in gasps after his
run.</p>
<p>“It’s—gone! Mr. Everdail—the life—preserver——”</p>
<p>“Gone? That can’t be!”</p>
<p>“It is, sir!”</p>
<p>“I don’t see how—” Mr. Everdail was thinking,
as was Sandy, that with everyone whom
they suspected, except the maid Miss Serena
had accused, present in that room, the loss of
the carefully hidden object must be impossible.</p>
<p>“When did you last see it, wherever you had
it?” asked the man from London, cool and practical.</p>
<p>“Just before—the meeting here, sir!”</p>
<p>“It was—where?”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</div>
<p>“We left it where Dick had discovered it—in
the fuselage of Jeff’s airplane. One of us
watched, taking turns, all afternoon. Just before
we came in here we made sure it was all
right, and Larry, who has the longest reach,
pushed it in as far as he could get it and still
be able to take it out again.”</p>
<p>“Could that girl, Mimi, have come back?” Jeff
wondered.</p>
<p>“Whether she did or not,” the pilot, Tommy
Larsen, jumped up, “if the life preserver was
safe an hour ago, and gone now, it was taken
during that hour. Maybe within the last few——”</p>
<p>“Yes—I think it was in the last few minutes!”
Sandy declared. “We didn’t talk about the
emeralds being hidden in it until almost the last
thing before we went to fetch it here.”</p>
<p>“Let’s search the estate!” urged the pilot.</p>
<p>“Come on, everybody—spread out—” cried
Jeff. “We’ll get that-there girl——”</p>
<p>“Wait!” begged Sandy. “Everybody will get
mixed up and hunt in the same places. We ought
to organize——”</p>
<p>“Sound common sense,” commented Miss
Serena. “But if you ask——”</p>
<p>Sandy guessed that she would have given her
opinion, if asked, that the search was useless.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</div>
<p>She was given no time for the comment.
Leaving her with the white-faced stewardess
and the pilot, whose injuries prevented him
from being of much use due to his evident weakness,
the others, under Mr. Everdail, were
grouped into parties. Given a definite territory,
each set out, one group to search the grove
under Jeff’s leadership, another to cover the
shore section, boathouse and boats, with Captain
Parks and his men in the party. Others,
under the mate and engineer, divided the rest
of the searchers to beat the further and less cultivated
woods on the estate and to walk the
roads, while Miss Serena gladly agreed to telephone
to outlying estates, and to the nearby
town to have a watch kept for any unknown person,
woman or man.</p>
<p>“Where’s Larry—and Dick?” asked Jeff, as
Sandy ran beside him.</p>
<p>“Searching the hangar——”</p>
<p>“But it was locked and all doors down,” Jeff
grunted. “Why waste time there?”</p>
<p>“I guess we thought, just at first, somebody
might have hidden the preserver somewhere—we
thought we saw somebody in the hangar the
day the mystery started, but we found no one,
so Dick thought——”</p>
<p>“Well, go tell them to come and help me in
the grove. Don’t waste time there!”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_149">149</div>
<p>Sandy separated from the superstitious one,
as the latter rushed among the trees, muttering
that some omen had warned him of trouble.</p>
<p>As the beaters separated, and widened the
circle of their search, the sounds of calls, shouts,
voices identifying one another grew fainter.</p>
<p>Sandy, reaching his comrades, compared
notes.</p>
<p>“They’ve organized and started,” Sandy reported.
“What have you two found?”</p>
<p>“Nothing,” Dick said dejectedly. “We ought
not to have left that thing unguarded.”</p>
<p>“Not with a fortune in it,” agreed Larry.
“But we were so sure——”</p>
<p>“Whoever got it can’t be far off,” interrupted
Dick. “No one but Miss Serena and Captain
Parks—and we three—knew about the hiding
place until the last part of the meeting.”</p>
<p>“Let’s lock up, here, and join Jeff,” suggested
Sandy.</p>
<p>“Where is he?”</p>
<p>“In the grove, Dick.”</p>
<p>“All right,” Larry moved to the small door.
“The spring lock’s set. The place is surrounded.
Nobody’s in here—” They were outside as he
made the last statement. “Slam the door and
try it, Dick. All right. Come on, let’s find Jeff.”</p>
<p>The search took longer than they expected.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_150">150</div>
<p>To all calls the thick grove gave back only
echoes.</p>
<p>Dick, rounding a tree, stumbled.</p>
<p>“Larry—Sandy—come—quick!” He called
his chums in a strained voice.</p>
<p>When they reached him, in the dying glow of
the flashlight Dick trained on a body lying in a
heap, they identified the man who had been
warned by his gypsy fortune teller to “look out
for a hidden enemy.” He was lying at full
length in the mould and leaves.</p>
<p>“Jeff!” Dick knelt and lifted the man’s head.</p>
<p>“Huh!—uh—oh!”</p>
<p>Slowly, while they held their breath, understanding
came into the dazed eyes, the breath
was drawn in, and Jeff struggled to a half-reclining
posture.</p>
<p>“What happened to you?” begged Sandy.</p>
<p>“The rest—oh, I’m sick!—I got a bang in the
solar plexus—I sent the rest of the men out to
the edge of—the woods—oh!—my stomach—to
beat in towards me—when I come around this-here
tree, somebody was waiting and poked me—oh!”—</p>
<p>“Then somebody is still close. How long
ago?——”</p>
<p>“I don’t—know—I passed out——”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_151">151</div>
<p>“Hey—everybody—yoo-hoo!” Larry cupped
his hands and began to shout in various directions.</p>
<p>The crash and call of the beaters coming in
began to grow louder.</p>
<p>Unexpectedly, from the water of the inlet,
and yet in a muffled, unnatural tone, there came
the sputtering roar of a motor.</p>
<p>“What’s that?” cried Dick.</p>
<p>“One of the airplanes—somebody’s in the
hangar——”</p>
<p>“No, Sandy, it’s from the water.”</p>
<p>“But there’s no boat out—the only boat with
an engine is the hydroplane——”</p>
<p>“The yacht tender’s tied to the wharf,” Dick
reminded Larry.</p>
<p>They raced down the sloping woods path.</p>
<p>“Where’s the guard—where’s everybody?”
Sandy shouted.</p>
<p>The men came running. They had scanned
the place by the wharf, and, satisfied that no
one lurked there and that the tender was secure,
they had gone further along the inlet coast.</p>
<p>“No one’s in the tender!” Larry exclaimed.</p>
<p>“It’s the hydroplane, then!” Dick decided.
“It’s coming from the water-dock inside the
boathouse, now—there it is. Hey! You! Stop!”</p>
<p>Seamen, the mate, Pilot Tommy Larsen, servants,
dashed up.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_152">152</div>
<p>“What’s happened? What’s the excitement?
The hydroplane—there it goes!”</p>
<p>Their shouts came in a chorus of helpless
questions and suggestions.</p>
<p>“Man the yacht tender!” ordered Captain
Parks. His men tumbled into it.</p>
<p>“That isn’t fast enough!” objected Pilot Larsen.
“I’d fly that amphibian crate only—I’m
too weak and dizzy——”</p>
<p>“Jeff’s hurt, too,” said Dick, desperately. “I
guess they’ll get away with the emeralds!”</p>
<p>“Why can’t Larry fly the ‘phib’?” demanded
Sandy.</p>
<p>“At night? I haven’t had any experience.”</p>
<p>“But Jeff could go along.” Dick took up the
idea eagerly. “Couldn’t you, Jeff? And tell
him what to do in an emergency!”</p>
<p>“Yes—sure I could! Not in the ‘phib’ because
we don’t know how much gas—the gauge
is out of whack—but we got the airplane ready
this morning—if it wasn’t the night of the thirteenth
I’d have said something about it long
ago!”</p>
<p>“Forget about the thirteenth—remember the
thirty emeralds!” cried Sandy. “Come on, all—help
us get that crate out and started. It’s a
flight for a fortune!” They took up the cry.
Dick and Larry ran off.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_153">153</div>
<p>Those of the servants and seamen who were
not too excited by the escape of the hydroplane
to hear, followed the Sky Patrol as they raced
through the grove. Jeff, supported by Sandy
and friends among the men, came more slowly,
still unwell from the blow in a tender spot.</p>
<p>“Mr. Everdail could fly the crate if he was
here—he’s an old war pilot,” said Larsen, but
they did not wait to locate him. As soon as the
engine was warmed, the instruments checked, in
spite of the delay at cost of precious moments,
Larry donned the Gossport helmet, Jeff got in
behind him, Sandy and Dick, without waiting
for invitations, snapped their belts—the engine
roared—and they were off!</p>
<p>Larry was keyed up to a high tension; but
he had no lack of confidence in himself. Night
flying, of course, differed from daytime piloting.
But Jeff was in the second seat, with the
Gossport tube to his lips.</p>
<p>Sandy and Dick were in their places, ready to
observe and to transmit signals by using the
flashlamp—one flash, directed onto the dash before
Jeff so it would not distract Larry, meant
turn to the right, two meant a left turn, three
quick flicks would tell of the discovery of the
hydroplane.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_154">154</div>
<p>Jeff was too upset to pilot; and since the
morning adventure he had no second control
stick; but he could give instructions.</p>
<p>“I see a light,” Sandy said as the airplane
swung far out over the dark water. “A green
light, but the hydroplane wouldn’t carry lights.”</p>
<p>As they swung in a banked turn to circle over
the Sound, the green disappeared and its
place was taken, as it seemed, by red.</p>
<p>“Dick!” Sandy turned and gestured, pointing.</p>
<p>“I see it!” Dick located the tiny light well
below them.</p>
<p>“The hydroplane must have its electric running
light switched on,” Sandy mused, unable
to convey his idea, because Larry had the engine
going full on.</p>
<p>“That must be the hydroplane,” Dick decided.
“He—whoever is in it—is afraid to run without
his lights.”</p>
<p>Three swift flicks of his own flash showed to
Jeff.</p>
<p>“Larry, they’ve spotted that-there boat,” Jeff
spoke through the tube to the young pilot. “Yep.
More to the left. That’s it—both at the same
time! Stick to the left, rudder, too. Good boy.
Now the stick comes back to neutral. Hold her
as she is—better cut down the throttle a little
as we bank and turn to the left.”</p>
<p>Thus began their flight for a fortune!</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_155">155</div>
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