Part 7 (1/2)

”What!” e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed the storekeeper. ”Do you mean to deny that you bought those goods from me, young man?”

”I certainly do deny it. As I said before, I haven't been in this store for several months.”

At this plain declaration made by Dave, Mr. Asa d.i.c.kley grew fairly purple. He leaned over his counter and shook his clenched fist in Dave's face.

”So that is the way you are going to try to swindle me out of my money, is it, Dave Porter?” he cried. ”Well, let me tell you, it won't work. You came here and got those goods from me, and either you'll pay for them or I'll sue your father for the amount. Why, it's preposterous!” The storekeeper turned to his clerk, who was gazing on the scene in open-mouthed wonder. ”Here a customer comes in and buys a lot of goods and I am good-hearted enough to trust him to the amount, twenty-six dollars, and then he comes here and declares to my face that he never had the things and he won't pay for them. Now what do you think of that, Hibbins?”

”I think it's pretty raw,” responded the clerk.

”Weren't you in the shop when I let Porter have some of those goods?”

”I certainly was,” answered Hibbins. ”Of course, I was in the rear, sorting out those new goods that had come in, so I didn't see just what you let him have; but I certainly know he got some things.”

”Mr. d.i.c.kley, now listen to me for a minute,” said Dave in a tone of voice that arrested the man's attention in spite of his irascibility.

”Look at me closely. Didn't the fellow who got those things from you look somewhat different from me?”

Dave faced the storekeeper with unflinching eyes, and Asa d.i.c.kley was compelled to look the youth over carefully. As he did this the positive expression on his face gradually changed to one of doubt.

”Why, I--er--Of course, he looked like you,” he stammered. ”Of course you can change your looks a little; but that don't count with me.

Besides, didn't you give me your name as Dave Porter, and ask me if I didn't remember you?”

”The fellow who got those goods may have done all that, Mr. d.i.c.kley.

But that fellow was not I. I may be mistaken, but I think it was a young man who resembles me, and who some time ago made a great deal of trouble for me.”

”Humph! That's a fishy kind of story, Porter. If there is such a person he must look very much like you.”

”He does. In fact, some people declare they can hardly tell us apart.”

”What's the name of that fellow?”

”Ward Porton.”

”Does he live around here?”

”I don't know where he is living just at present. But I saw him day before yesterday in Clayton. I tried to stop him, but he ran away from me.”

The storekeeper gazed at Dave for a moment in silence, and then pursed up his lips and shook his head decidedly.

”That is too much of a fish story for me to swallow,” he said harshly.

”You'll either have to bring that young man here and prove that he got the goods, or else you'll have to pay for them yourself.”

CHAPTER VI

MORE TROUBLE

Dave and Roger spent the best part of half an hour in Asa d.i.c.kley's store, and during that time our hero and his chum gave the particulars of how they had become acquainted with Ward Porton, and how the young moving-picture actor had tried to pa.s.s himself off as the real Dave Porter, and how he had been exposed and had disappeared.

”Well, if what you say is true I've been swindled,” declared the storekeeper finally. ”I'd like to get my hands on that young man.”