Levi explained when he had breath enough to do so. Mr. Watson also explained, and each was in possession of all the information the other had; but their wisdom was foolishness, since it fell far short of the requirements of the moment.
"The Caribbee sailed last night, Levi," said Mr. Watson, who, however, did not regard the fact as of much importance, or as having any especial connection with the absence of Bessie.
"Sailed!" exclaimed Levi. "Then Bessie has sailed in her."
"I can hardly believe it," added Mr. Watson.
"It is another plan to extort money from you."
Levi persisted in his belief. Putting this and that together, he could almost demonstrate that Mat Mogmore was in the employ of Dock Vincent; indeed, Dock had told him that Mat intended to sail for Australia with him. Mr. Watson decided to return immediately to Rockport, and the yacht lay to off the railroad wharf long enough to land him. He took the morning train for Boston, and reached home at two o"clock.
The Starry Flag did not sail in the race that day. As soon as her owner had been landed, she was headed for Cape Ann again, and arrived before night. Levi was bewildered and confounded by the shock of the blow which had fallen upon him and the Watson family. He could do nothing, and in his inactivity he chafed like a caged lion. Mr. Watson had gone to Boston soon after his arrival, taking Mr. Gayles with him. He did not return till the next day. He had chartered a swift steamer, and the constable, with other officers, had gone in pursuit of the Caribbee.
In the morning mail, on the second day after the disappearance of Bessie, came a letter to her father. Levi was present when it was opened, and it contained a full confirmation of his theory that Bessie had been carried off in the Caribbee, and was now going half round the world to Australia. The letter was written by Dock Vincent, and dated ten days before its receipt. The villain a.s.sured the distracted parents that Bessie should be kindly cared for by Mrs. Vincent, and should be restored to her friends as soon as possible after her father had paid over to Mr. Fairfield the sum of seventy thousand dollars.
Mr. Watson dropped the letter on the floor, and breathed a deep sigh.
He would have given double the sum for the return of Bessie; but his conscience would not permit him to reward villany like that of Dock Vincent.
"Levi, your uncle is concerned in this affair," said Mr. Watson, turning to the young skipper with a sad look.
"I suppose he is. I will go and see him at once."
"I will go with you."
They went.
"Mr. Fairfield, where is Dock Vincent?" asked the suffering father, when he and Levi had been admitted to the kitchen.
"I don"t know no more"n nothin" in the world," whined the miser. "I hain"t seen nothin" on him."
"You don"t know!" repeated Mr. Watson, sternly.
"No more"n nothin" in the world," answered the old man, who realized that the first instalment of trouble on account of Dock"s little plan was about to come upon him.
"Yes, you do know where he is. Read that letter;" and the merchant handed him the epistle he had received from Dock.
Mr. Fairfield took the letter, put on his gla.s.ses, and studied out its contents.
"I don"t know nothin" about it," pleaded the old man, as he looked over his spectacles at the stern parent.
"Don"t tell me that! I"m not to be trifled with. I want my daughter, and you are a party to this conspiracy. If you don"t speak I"ll wring an answer out of you by force," said Mr. Watson, his patience exhausted, and his indignation so aroused that he could not control it.
[Ill.u.s.tration: MR. WATSON IS EXCITED.--Page 227.]
"I tell you I don"t know nothin" at all about it. I hain"t seen your darter, nor Cap"n Vincent nuther," whimpered the miser.
"No evasion! Answer me at once," thundered the enraged merchant, goaded to desperation by the anguish his injury called forth. "Your name is mentioned in this letter. You are to receive the money, and share it with the scoundrel who intends to filch it from me. Vincent did not go in the vessel. Where is he?"
"I don"t know nothin" at all about it," answered Mr. Fairfield, wriggling like a worm in his chair.
"Yes, you do. You are to send the money to him. Where is he?" demanded Mr. Watson, as he seized the old man by the throat, and dragged him out of his chair.
"Lem me be!" sputtered the miser, trying to free himself from the grasp of the wrathful father.
"Speak, old man! Where is he? Speak, or I will tear the answer from you."
"Be calm, Mr. Watson," interposed Levi, gently.
"For ma.s.sy"s sake! You don"t mean to kill him--do you?" exclaimed Mrs.
Fairfield, alarmed for the safety of her husband. "Don"t hurt him! He"s a poor old man, and don"t know no better."
Mr. Watson, conscious that he had gone too far in his violent indignation, released his grasp upon the miser, and he sank back into his chair more frightened than hurt.
"If I knew anything consarnin" this business, I"d tell you all about it," added the old man, when he had regained his breath.
"Uncle Nathan, this money is to be paid over to you, and you must know something about it," said Levi, decidedly.
"O, yes; you hate me, and you want to persecute me," replied the old man, bitterly, as he glanced spitefully at his nephew. "There, now, you broke my gla.s.ses," continued the miser, as he picked them up from the hearth, on which they had fallen. "I gin a dollar for them gla.s.ses; I"m a poor man, and "tain"t right I should lose "em."
"Will you tell me where Vincent is, or shall I send a constable to arrest you for conspiracy?" demanded Mr. Watson.
"I don"t know nothin" at all where he is," replied the miser, alarmed by this threat.
"You were to receive this money."
"That may be. Cap"n Vincent did tell me if you paid any money to me for him to keep it till he come for"t. He didn"t tell me nothin" at all he was go"n" to do, nor where he was goin" to. I hain"t no idee in the world where he is."
This was all that either Mr. Watson or Levi could get out of the old man. It was really all he knew; and the visitors, disappointed and disheartened, retired from the miser"s presence, though not till the merchant had declared that he did not intend to pay one penny to Dock to restore his daughter. The old man groaned when they had gone; but it was because he was to lose his reward, and probably the money he had loaned. It was a bitter hour to him.
Mr. Watson and Levi conferred together as they walked home. From that time no one pa.s.sed in or out of the miser"s house without being observed. Levi watched that day; but at nine o"clock in the evening, Mr. C. Augustus Ebenier took his place, to serve for the night.
CHAPTER XXI.
THE CARIBBEE SAILS FOR AUSTRALIA.
If Mrs. Dock Vincent had not been a person of higher moral purposes than her husband, sad indeed would have been the lot of the two children that slept in the captain"s state-room on board of the Caribbee. As is often the case, she knew less of her husband"s moral obliquity than the world at large, though even she knew enough to believe that he was not what he should be. People did not tell her of Dock"s wicked deeds, and he complained bitterly to her of the hard treatment which the world bestowed upon him. That good men frowned at him and spurned him he unjustly attributed to their hypocrisy and self-esteem, rather than to his own evil deeds and evil intentions.
Dock had spent a term in the state prison, and his character was damaged, if not ruined. Men would not trust him, and the reprobate chafed under the public censure. To his wife and his friends he made himself appear like a deeply injured person, like a martyr--in what good cause he could not say. He was going to Australia to begin life anew, to carve out his fortune in a strange land, where he was not known. Mrs. Vincent was willing to leave her native land, and make a new home in a distant country for this purpose, for the motive seemed to be a laudable one.
She had no knowledge, guilty or innocent, of the abduction of Bessie, until after the Caribbee had sailed; but she felt herself powerless to undo the mischief. If her husband had been on board, she would not have dared to oppose him, he was so violent and savage when she interfered with his plans. She could at least protect the poor girl from insult and injury, and she determined to do this at all hazards. It was evident to her that the Caribbee would not proceed immediately to her destination without her owner and captain. It was probably the intention of Captain Gauley to put into some port before she started on her long voyage, when Dock would join her.
Mrs. Vincent pitied Bessie Watson, and almost hated her husband when she realized of what infamy he was capable. She comforted the poor girl as well as she was able, and promised to be her friend under all circ.u.mstances. She conducted her to an unoccupied state-room, which had doubtless been reserved for her use, and spent half the night with her; for Bessie trembled at the thought of being alone on board of the vessel of her great enemy.
Bessie was truly grateful to Mrs. Vincent, who, though rough and rude in her manners, was kind at heart; and her presence was a great comfort. The poor girl, torn thus suddenly from her friends, wept long and bitterly at her sad fate; but at last she fell asleep, committing herself to the care of the heavenly Father, and relying upon him for the succor which he alone could give. No one disturbed her; and Mrs.
Vincent watched over her, as a child, till she was fast asleep.