"What do you want?" he demanded.
"Come to the door."
Jack did as requested, but did not open the door.
"Now, what is it?" he asked.
"Is that Nestor?"
"It"s Jack," was the reply.
"Well, ask Nestor if he"ll let both of us go if well give up the whole scheme. Will you?"
"And the papers?"
"I"ll help him get the papers."
"I"ll tell him," said Jack.
"Send for him at once," urged the Captain. "If we remain here much longer, we"ll be blown out of water. You heard those explosions?"
"They harmed no one but the sea creatures," Jack replied. "They were bad for them."
"Where is Nestor?" was then asked.
"Visiting on the Shark," was the reply.
"If they"ve got him, he"ll never come back," gritted the Captain.
"But they haven"t," said the boy. "We"re going to run the Sea Lion over to the Shark now and help them entertain him."
"You"re a fool!" roared Moore. "Don"t you tell them that we are on board--my son and myself."
"Don"t they know it?"
"How should they know it? Don"t you tell them. If you do they will raid your ship and get us."
"So you"ve been playing some dirty trick on them, have you?" asked Jack. "Well, what about your meeting them at Hongkong?"
"That was a lie."
"You are out with them?"
"They are out with me. They claim I am keeping them out of a lot of money. Don"t tell them I am here."
"In all your life"--asked Jack--"in all your life, did you ever do business with any man, woman, or child you didn"t cheat and betray?
You ought to be hanged."
"If Nestor comes back, you send him here and I"ll tell him the whole story if he"ll let us go. And I"ll tell him how to get the papers he is after. Will you see that he comes--if he gets back?"
"I think it would do you more good," laughed Jack, "to have a talk with the people on the Shark."
Ignoring the prisoner"s further demands, Jack turned on the power and directed the Sea Lion toward the Shark. In a moment Jimmie called down through the hatchway:
"Slow up, now, unless you want to bunt the other boat."
Jack, accordingly, shut off the power and went up to the platform. The boat was still drifting ahead a trifle, and the boy went below again and dropped an anchor.
If the advance of the submarine had attracted the attention of those on the Shark"s conning tower they gave no evidence of the fact. The boat Ned had taken lay swinging on the easy sea close to the tower, with Frank and Hans sitting near the stern.
Directly voices came from the other submarine. The first speaker was Ned, then a heavier voice exclaimed, angrily:
"You have no right to suppose anything of the kind. We are here on legitimate business, and must not be interfered with."
"What did you take from the wreck?" asked Ned.
"What is it to you?" came the stronger voice. "You can"t make any bluff work with me."
"Then I may as well go back to my ship," Ned said.
"Go back to your ship!" snapped the other. "Not if I know myself. You have come aboard without leave or license, and you"ll stay until we get good and ready to let you go."
The boys saw Hans and Frank spring for the platform, and then a shout of triumph came from half a dozen throats. Ned surely was in trouble.
CHAPTER XVIII
"MAKING A GOOD JOB OF IT."
"I guess they"ve got Ned!" Jimmie cried, as the heavy hatch of the Shark closed with a slam. "If they have, we"ll ram "em to the bottom."
"You just wait!" Jack advised. "There"s a good deal of a racket going on over there. I guess Hans is putting his educated left into motion.
Look at him!"
There was indeed a great commotion on the platform. Presently the hatch was lifted and one of the contestants disappeared.
"Do you mind that, now!" shouted Jimmie. "Ned has captured the boat for keeps! There! Now he"s tellin" them where to head in at!"
Through the still night air they heard Ned"s voice:
"You people down there know what I am here for. If the thing I want is destroyed you"ll all be hanged for piracy. Understand?"
Then the hatch was jammed down again, and Ned and Frank stepped into the rowboat, leaving Hans on the platform. Jimmie threw up his cap when the two boys stepped on the Sea Lion"s platform.