Hawaiian Sea Hunt Mystery. Adams Andy

Hawaiian Sea Hunt Mystery - Adams Andy


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      Hawaiian Sea Hunt Mystery / A Biff Brewster Mystery Adventure

      CHAPTER I

      Peril in Paradise

      In the tropical, jungle-like garden behind the hotel, a man stood absolutely motionless. The broad trunk of the coconut palm tree behind which he lurked protected him from being seen by anyone on the hotel’s wide, sweeping porch.

      The tense set of the man’s features showed his growing impatience.

      The broad porch ran around all four sides of the white, sprawling Royal Poinciana Hotel on Waikiki Beach, in Honolulu, Hawaii. The porch was called the “deck,” and it had been designed to resemble the promenade deck of an ocean liner. It was an open porch, or deck, with brightly colored floral-patterned umbrellas spreading welcome shade. The deck was spotted with lounge and captain’s chairs, and its teak-wood floor was marked off at regular intervals with shuffleboard courts.

      The fore deck, that part of the porch running across the front of the hotel, overlooked the beautiful beach and its rolling, coiling breakers. Chairs and tables scattered on it were occupied by people waiting for the noon meal. On the rear deck, overlooking the carefully planned, luxuriant jungle-garden, only one couple could be seen.

      “Will they never leave?” the man muttered to himself. He looked at his watch, then carefully peered around the tree, looking up at the deck jutting out from the hotel’s second floor.

      Just as he did so, the couple got up from their chairs and walked leisurely away, heading for the other side. The man waited until they rounded a corner and were out of sight. Then he moved swiftly.

      His linen-clad figure was a white flash against broad green leaves as he dashed for the steps leading up to the now unoccupied porch. Once on the deck, he moved casually, as though he were just another tourist. He walked softly on crepe-soled shoes, making not a sound.

      Nearing the center of the porch, the man pressed his back against the white-painted wall, almost blending into it except for his dark, swarthy face. Now he moved sidewise, crab-like, until he reached a partly opened latticed door. He stopped, pressing his head against the slight crack where the door was hinged.

      Moments passed. Then he heard the sharp jangling sound of a telephone ringing from within the room beyond. Next he heard the soft pad of feet on thick piled carpet as the room’s occupant crossed the floor to take the call.

      Now the prowler abandoned his extreme caution. He looked through the partly opened door. He saw the back of a man sitting at a telephone table. The prowler carefully pulled the door open and slipped into the room. Its occupant had the phone’s receiver to his ear.

      “On your call to Mr. Thomas Brewster in Indianapolis, Indiana, sir,” the operator was saying, “they are ringing that number now.”

      The prowler crept closer until he was within an arm’s length of the seated man.

      “Yes,” the man said into the telephone. “I’ll hold the line.” With his free hand he pulled a well-used pipe from his jacket pocket and stuck it in his mouth. Then he patted the table for matches. He opened a drawer and felt in it.

      The prowler watched his prey anxiously. He was an old man, with shaggy white hair hanging down almost to his collar.

      Unable to find a match, the old man had just started to turn when the operator spoke again.

      “This is Honolulu, Hawaii, calling Mr. Thomas Brewster,” she said. A few seconds passed. “Here’s your party, sir.”

      The prowler stood there, arms raised, the fingers of his cupped hands spread like talons just over the old man’s shoulders.

      CHAPTER II

      A Disturbing Call

      “I’ll get it! I’ll get it!”

      It was the voice of eleven-year-old Monica Brewster.

      “You always do,” grumbled her twin brother Ted. “I never do get to answer the telephone. Not when you’re in the house.”

      Monica wasn’t listening. She was flying into the kitchen to answer the steady ring before her mother could lift the phone from its cradle. Mr. Brewster’s study was nearer, and there was a telephone in there, too. But Monica knew that her father was in the study, talking to her older brother Biff. She was sure the call was from her friend Betsy, because Betsy generally called her about five o’clock in the afternoon. Monica didn’t want her father interrupting her talk with Betts. Daddy didn’t approve of long phone gabs.

      Moments later, Monica came bursting through the living room. Her excitement was at a pitch as high as her voice.

      “Daddy! Daddy! The call’s from Honolulu! Someone’s calling you from Honolulu!”

      “Take it easy, sis, or you’ll explode.” Biff grinned as he saw the eagerness on his sister’s flushed face.

      Thomas Brewster picked up the telephone. He listened briefly, then cupped his hand over the mouthpiece and spoke to his older son.

      “Close the door, Biff. Behind your sister.”

      Biff got up from his chair and gently ushered Monica, protesting, out of the study. When he turned back, he was startled to see that an expression of worry clouded his father’s face.

      “Yes, Johann, I agree.” Mr. Brewster gave the name its Germanic pronunciation, “Yohann.”

      Biff could only distinguish a mumble of words coming from nearly four thousand miles away.

      “Well, Johann, don’t you take any chances yourself,” Mr. Brewster continued. “Wait until I get there… Danger? There’s always danger when the stakes are as high as those we’re playing for… What!” Thomas Brewster’s frown deepened. “Perez Soto? You say Perez Soto is there? I don’t like that one little bit. The letter, though, you have that safely hidden?”

      Again the speaker at the other end took over the conversation. Biff could hear only a scramble of sounds coming from the telephone. He saw his father nod his head absently. His brows knitted into deeper thought.

      “You think your room was searched?” he exclaimed. “Had you hidden the letter?”

      Biff watched his father intently. Mr. Brewster listened attentively to a long reply. At last he said, “That’s bad, Johann. Very bad. We’ll have to make the best of it, though. All right, Johann… Yes, leaving here tomorrow … Northwest Airlines… Take off from Seattle early the next morning, Wednesday, at five A.M. Be in Hawaii about eight o’clock your time… You’re stopping at the Royal Poinciana, aren’t you?.. Hello … hello … Johann?” Thomas Brewster waited a few moments. “Hello…” Then he hung up and turned to Biff. “That’s funny. He didn’t answer. Maybe we were cut off.”

      “Maybe the three minutes were up,” Biff suggested with a smile.

      “That’s not as funny as you think, my boy,” his father chuckled. “Dr. Weber’s a peculiar man about some things having to do with money. A call from Honolulu to Indianapolis means nothing to him. But if the operator told him his three minutes were up, he’d hang up quickly. He obeys what he thinks are the rules.”

      Biff laughed. “Isn’t Dr. Weber the famous scientist? I’m sure I’ve heard you speak of him.”

      “That’s right, Biff. He’s a staff consultant for Ajax. I’ve worked with him before.”

      Biff nodded his head. “I thought so.”

      Thomas Brewster was the chief field engineer for the Ajax Mining Company, headquarters Indianapolis, Indiana. His job took him all over the world, to many of the strangest and least known spots on the globe. Whenever it was possible, he took sixteen-year-old Biff along.

      “One of my reasons for going to Hawaii is to meet Dr. Weber,” Biff’s father continued now.

      “You mean the Engineers’ Conference isn’t the main reason?” Biff asked.

      Thomas Brewster shook his head. “No. Oh, the meeting is important, all right. But I doubt if I would have gone out there for that alone. Dr. Weber wrote me over a month ago. Said he wanted to meet with me and Jim Huntington. He said it was very important. But he didn’t go into


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