Part 24 (1/2)

The place where Abe Blower resided was down at the end of a side street, which, at this hour of the night, was dark and deserted. They had some little difficulty in finding the right number. The house stood back from the street, and not a single light shone within it.

”Everybody gone to bed,” announced Dave. ”It seems like a shame to wake them up.”

”I'll wait till morning,” announced the senator's son. ”Now we know just where the place is, we can come here directly after breakfast.” And so it was settled.

At the hotel Phil found himself so tired that he pitched into bed with scant ceremony. After the long trip on the train, Dave felt that he needed a bath and took it, followed by Roger. Then all went sound asleep, not to awaken until daylight. Then Phil took a good ”soak,” as he called a bath, and all dressed for an early breakfast. In the dining-room they met Mr. Dillon.

”Find Abe last night?” asked the old miner, with a smile.

”We located the house and are going over there right after we eat,”

answered the senator's son. ”And by the way, Mr. Dillon,” he continued.

”Do you know any men named Blugg, Jaley, and Staver?”

”Do I!” cried Tom Dillon. ”Sure I do, an' so do lots of other folks in these diggin's. What do you know about 'em?”

”We met them on the train.”

”Don't ye have nothin' to do with that crowd, lads. They ain't the sort you want to train with, nohow.”

”We are not going to train with them,” said Dave.

”We thought they were pretty hard customers,” added Phil.

”They mentioned Abe Blower and one of them said he thought Blower had queered some sort of a land deal they were trying to put through,”

continued Roger.

”Is that so! Well, if Abe did that I give him credit for it, I sure do.

Those fellers are swindlers, pure an' simple. But they generally work in sech a way that the law can't tech 'em. I ain't got no use for 'em--and I reckon Abe ain't neither,” went on the old miner, vigorously. And then he sat down to breakfast with the boys, telling them much about b.u.t.te, and the mining country around it, and about what dealings he had had with Roger's uncle.

”A square man he was,” he said. ”And a great pity the way he dropped off and had his mine lost by a landslide.”

The meal over, the three boys lost no time in walking over to the other side of the city, where Abe Blower lived. They found the front windows of the house open and an elderly woman was sweeping off the front stoop with a broom.

”Good-morning,” said Roger, politely. ”Is this Mrs. Carmody?”

”Yes, I'm Mrs. Carmody,” was the reply, and the old lady looked questioningly into Roger's face. ”I don't seem to remember you,” she went on.

”We never met before, Mrs. Carmody,” answered Roger, and introduced himself and his chums. ”I came to see Mr. Abe Blower.”

The woman looked quite bewildered, so much so that the boys were astonished. She dropped her broom.

”Did you say you was Roger Morr?” she gasped, looking at the senator's son.

”Yes.”

”Then what brought you here--lookin' fer Abe?”