Part 18 (1/2)
Wadsworth had agreed to re-set the jewels according to designs already accepted by the millionaire and his wife, and had guaranteed the safe return of the jewels, re-set as specified, not later than the first of the following May. As the millionaire was a strict business man he had demanded a bond for the safe return of his property, and this bond had been given by Mr. Wadsworth, indorsed by David Breslow Porter and Dunston Porter.
Thus it will readily be seen that the millionaire and his wife were amply secured. If they did not get the jewels back they would demand the payment of the bond, worth seventy-five thousand dollars, and Mr.
Wadsworth and the Porters would have to make good.
On the second day after the robbery, Dave, Roger, and Phil went down to the jewelry works and began a close investigation on their own account.
Dave had mentioned something to his chums that had caused them to open their eyes in astonishment.
An hour was spent around the offices, and then Phil picked up an empty cigarette case. He took it to Dave and Roger and both looked at it with keen interest.
”I guess that is another clew,” said our hero. ”Let us look around some more.”
”I'm going for the train now,” said the senator's son, a little later.
”And as soon as I find Hooker Montgomery I'll let you know.”
”Yes, and make him come here, whether he wants to or not,” cried Dave.
”You leave that to me,” answered Roger, grimly.
Oliver Wadsworth had been interviewing a private detective, and soon the man left, stating he thought he could lay his hands on the guilty parties.
”I'll look for Tom Basnett,” said the detective. ”This looks like one of his jobs.”
”I don't care whose job it is-I want the jewels back,” said Mr.
Wadsworth, wearily. He had not slept since the crime had been committed.
”Mr. Wadsworth, Phil and I would like to talk to you in private,” said Dave, when he could get the chance.
”You have some clew, Dave?”
”Well, I want to tell you something, and then you can judge for yourself.”
”Very well, come with me,” answered the manufacturer, and led the way to a little side-room, used by the salesmen for exhibiting wares to possible customers.
”I want to tell you all about something that happened early in the winter, while I was at Oak Hall,” said Dave. And then he told of how he had called on the fake doctor, Hooker Montgomery, and how he had been attacked from behind and made a prisoner, and carried off to a house in the woods, the particulars of which have already been set down in ”Dave Porter and His Rivals.”
”The fellows who carried me off were the doctor and the driver, who was only a tool, and two fellows who have caused me a lot of trouble in the past, Nick Jasniff and Link Merwell,” went on our hero. ”When I got away I tried to follow up Jasniff and Merwell, but they got away from me, and so did the driver get away. But one day I found Hooker Montgomery, and by threatening to have him arrested I made him confess to the truth, which was that Jasniff and Merwell had hired him to help get me in their power. At first they told Montgomery it was only a schoolboy trick, and he said he believed them, but, later on, it leaked out that Jasniff and Merwell had another motive in making me a prisoner.”
”And that motive--?” began Oliver Wadsworth, with deep interest.
”Doctor Montgomery said that Jasniff and Merwell had in mind to drug me and take me to some place a good distance from Oak Hall. He said he also heard them speak of robbing a jewelry works, and I was to be drugged and left in the factory,-to make it appear as if I had done the deed and as if the blowing up of a safe had stunned me.”
”Dave, is this possible!” exclaimed the manufacturer.
”It is true, Mr. Wadsworth,” said Phil. ”I was along and so was Roger at the time. Montgomery couldn't give many details, but he said he thought Jasniff and Merwell were cold-blooded villains and he wanted nothing more to do with them.”
”This looks as if those rascals, Jasniff and Merwell, had come here.”