Joe the Hotel Boy - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Joe the Hotel Boy Part 43 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
When Joe awoke it was with a peculiar, dizzy feeling in his head.
His eyes pained him not a little and for several minutes he could not remember where he was. Then came a faint recollection of having tried to arise during the night but of being held down.
"I must have been dreaming," he thought. "But it was exactly as if somebody was keeping me down and holding something over my mouth and nose."
He stretched himself and then pushed aside the berth curtain and gazed out into the aisle of the car. The porter was already at work, turning some of the berths into seats once more. Joe saw that it was daylight and consulted the nickel watch he carried.
"Eight o'clock!" he exclaimed. "I've overslept myself sure! Mr. Vane must be up long ago."
He slipped into his clothing and then knocked on the lower berth.
He heard a deep sigh.
"Mr. Vane!"
"Eh? Oh, Joe, is that you? What time is it?"
"Eight o'clock."
"What!" Maurice Vane started up. "I've certainly slept fast enough this trip. Are you getting hungry waiting for me?"
"I just woke up myself."
"Oh!" Maurice Vane stretched himself. "My, how dizzy I am."
"I am dizzy too, sir. It must be from the motion of the car."
"Probably, although I rarely feel so, and I ride a great deal. I feel rather sick at my stomach, too," went on the gentleman, as he began to dress.
Joe had just started to go to the lavatory to wash up when he heard his employer utter an exclamation.
"Joe!"
"Yes, sir!"
"Did you see anything of my satchel?"
"You took it into the berth with you."
"I don't see it."
"It must be somewhere around. I saw it when you went to bed."
"Yes, I put it under my pillow."
Both made a hasty search, but the satchel could not be found. The dress-suit case stood under the seat and Joe's was beside it.
"This is strange. Can I have been robbed?"
"Was there much in that satchel, Mr. Vane?"
"Yes, those mining shares and some other articles of value."
"Then we must find the satchel by all means."
"I'll question the porter about this."
The colored man was called and questioned, but he denied having seen the bag. By this time quite a few pa.s.sengers became interested.
"Has anybody left this car?" asked Maurice Vane.
"The gen'men that occupied Numbers 9 and 10, sah," said the porter.
"When did they get off?"
"'Bout three o'clock, sah--when de train stopped at Snapwood."
"I haven't any tickets for Snapwood," said the conductor, who had appeared on the scene.
"Then they must have had tickets for some other point," said Joe.
"That looks black for them."
The porter was asked to describe the two men and did so, to the best of his ability. Then another search was made, and in a corner, under a seat, a bottle was found, half filled with chloroform.
"It's as plain as day to me," said Maurice Vane. "Joe, I was chloroformed."
"Perhaps I was, too. That's what gave us the dizzy feeling."
"And those two men--"
"Must have been Caven and Malone in disguise," finished our hero.
CHAPTER XXVII.
JOE MAKES A DISCOVERY.
"Who are Caven and Malone?" asked the conductor of the train, while a number of pa.s.sengers gathered around, to hear what Maurice Vane and our hero might have to say.
"They are two rascals who are trying to do me out of my share of a mine," explained Maurice Vane. "I had my mining shares in that satchel."
"If you wish I'll telegraph back to Snapwood for you," went on the train official.
"How many miles is that?"