Bess spoke. “Maybe one of them should make a run over to Crocodile Island.”
“I’ll see to it,” the captain promised. “It would only take a few minutes.” Then he teased, “But that periscope you saw had better be there!”
They passed a building where students learned how to read sonar, and another containing advanced undersea weaponry, which was used as a teaching facility for the naval personnel.
“We have a great course here in underwater swimming and diving,” the officer stated. “Some of the men later go into deep-sea diving work. You’ve probably seen pictures of them on television.”
All the girls said they had and were fascinated by the sea life the pictures showed.
Bess commented, “But some of those creatures are too dangerous for me!”
The captain laughed. Then Nancy asked if by any chance there was a nuclear submarine in port.
“No, there isn’t,” he replied. “Just one of the older types. Would you like to go into it and have a look?”
“I’d love to,” Nancy replied, and George and Bess wanted to, also.
When they reached it, a sailor standing on the deck saluted his superior officer. Captain Townsend offered to show the girls the interior.
The hatch was open and he led the way down the iron ladder to the deck below. As the girls gazed ahead, they noticed a long, narrow, center passageway.
George remarked, “I never saw so many things in such a tiny space. This is like a small apartment with a whole crew living in it!”
“And everything is so neat!” Bess added. “If I could keep my room like this, my mother would be very happy.”
Nancy was interested in the crews’ quarters. One bunk was perched high above a tremendous black tube. As Captain Townsend saw her eyeing it, he asked, “How would you like to sleep on top of a torpedo?”
“I wouldn’t!” she replied.
The “kitchen” intrigued Bess. Every inch of the galley was used, and the equipment, including stove and refrigerator, was so compact that it amazed the visitors. She asked how many men could be served from such small quarters.
“Of course that depends on the size of the sub,” the captain replied. “I think this one carries a complement of about thirty men.”
As the visitors proceeded, Nancy inquired about the many upright lockers. “What is kept in them?”
Captain Townsend opened one. It was full of coiled rope, most of it hanging on hooks.
Another sailor’s locker held work clothes. Nancy could see several M-16 rifles in slots behind the clothing. She wondered why they were on a sub that used only torpedoes. “Perhaps the men carry them when they’re on land,” she thought.
The officer said that the sub contained a ship-to-shore telephone. “Nancy, would you like to call someone?”
“Oh, yes,” she replied. “I’ll phone Mr. Cosgrove. Maybe you’d like to speak to him.”
The captain placed the call and spoke to his old friend, then he handed the instrument to Nancy. Mr. Cosgrove said, “An important call came for you.”
“Oh!” she said. “From home?”
“No, from your friend Ned Nickerson.” Nancy could feel her face reddening. “He and Burt and Dave would like to come down here and see you. Ned said he’d call again for an answer. Mrs. Cosgrove and I would be happy to have them stay with us.”
Bess and George were excited by the news. It would be such fun to see the boys again!
Captain Townsend said they must leave now as it was time for the crewmen to return and go through a drill.
The visitors climbed topside and went to the car. After the girls had thanked the captain profusely and left him at his home, Nancy drove off.
On the way to the Cosgroves, she said, “I have an idea. How about the boys staying with Mr. Gonzales instead of at the Cosgroves? Gimler and Sacco don’t know them, so Ned, Burt, and Dave might pick up some good tips.”
The other girls liked the idea, so Nancy drove to Mr. Gonzales’s club. They all walked inside. The man at the desk recognized Nancy and said, “Miss Boonton, are you looking for Mr. Gonzales?”
“Yes, I am,” she replied. “Is he here?”
Fortunately Mr. Gonzales was there. He came to meet Nancy. She introduced the other girls, then asked him, “How would you like a three-man bodyguard?”
Mr. Gonzales burst into laughter. “Is it that bad? Have you uncovered some new evidence?”
Nancy explained why she had made the request, and he accepted her suggestion that the three boys stay with him.
“Now that you girls will have some escorts, how would you like to come to the Saturday night dinner-dance here?” Mr. Gonzales asked. “The food is always excellent, and the music exactly what you like.”
“We’d love to accept,” Nancy said.
The man looked at her and teased, “Don’t get yourself involved in some fix related to the mystery of Crocodile Island so you can’t get here.”
“I’ll do my best,” Nancy promised, grinning.
As she was about to drive out of the club grounds, Nancy saw Colombo. He apparently was headed for a bus. She stopped the car and called to him.
“Would you like a ride into town?” she asked.
“Indeed I would,” Colombo replied. “Thank you so much.” He opened the door to the rear seat and stepped in. “I’m glad I met you. I just received a phone call from my friend Sol. He wants me to meet him at a garage. He sounded excited.”
“He didn’t say why?” Nancy asked.
“No. When we get to the garage, why don’t you girls wait outside? I’ll go in and talk to Sol. He may have some important news from Crocodile Island.”
CHAPTER XVII
Deadly Golf Ball
IN a few minutes Colombo brought his friend Sol outside and introduced him. To start a conversation Nancy asked him how he had managed to come to Key Biscayne from Crocodile Island.
The broad-shouldered, dark-skinned man replied, “I begged for a ride with a sightseer who wasn’t allowed to land. I waded out into the water and asked him to bring me to town. I was glad he didn’t ask me why sightseers were not allowed to see the reptiles that day, so I didn’t have to say anything. I hate to go back, but I need the money.”
Colombo asked him how he planned to return.
“I’ll hire a boat and pilot to take me out there after dark. Meanwhile I want to have a good time here. You know, it’s pretty dull in that place.”
Colombo said, “I know. Sol, I’ve told you these girls are detectives. Tell them your latest news.”
Sol nodded. “I think you know a good deal already. But if you can solve the latest mystery of Crocodile Island, you’ll put Mr. Gimler and Mr. Sacco to shame. There’s no doubt that they’re covering up something big.”
Nancy asked him if he knew what it was, but Sol shook his head. “I overheard the bosses bragging about the huge amount of money they were making. I know very well it’s not from selling crocodiles to zoos and animal parks.”
Colombo suggested that maybe there were some under-the-table sales, which Sol knew nothing about.
“There could be,” his friend replied. “But I see the company’s books, and I’m sure they report every sale of crocodiles faithfully.”
Nancy was puzzled, and asked about
The Whisper’s
comings and goings. Sol knew little. “Mr. Gimler often goes out in it, but he never says where. Sometimes he brings back food.”
Bess remarked that it sounded secretive. “I guess Mr. Gimler doesn’t want anybody finding out what’s going on at the island.”
Sol agreed. “By the way, those of us who are still working there are likely to lose our jobs any time.”
“Why?” Nancy asked.
Sol said he had overheard the bosses say that they planned to sell out. They were going to offer all their shares of stock to Mr. Gonzales or some other people.
“That’s strange,” Nancy reflected. “Not long ago Mr. Gimler and Mr. Sacco were offering to buy Mr. Gonzales’s stock in the Crocodile Ecology Company.”
No one had an answer to this puzzle. Sol changed the subject. “Whether I lose my job or not, I’d like to get away from that place. It scares me. I have a feeling that the police are going to find out that something crooked is going on at the island and arrest the top men. Then I’ll be called in as a witness. Mr. Gimler and Mr. Sacco might even tell lies about me and I’ll be sent to jail!”
Nancy was shocked to hear this. “You mean that the partners are really mean and mad enough to do that?”
“I wouldn’t put it past them,” Sol replied.
George told him that the girls were only visitors and had very few contacts at Key Biscayne. “But if we ever hear of a job you could fill, we’ll let Colombo know.”
“Thank you,” Sol said. “I’d appreciate it. I don’t even like the men I work with out on the island. In fact, I don’t trust any of them. If something dishonest is going on, they’re probably in league with the bosses.”
Nancy said that under the circumstances she was amazed that they had not already discharged Sol. “Unless you haven’t given any indication that you’re suspicious.”
“Oh, I haven’t,” he told her. “And I don’t think the other men have any idea I’m squealing on them.”
“That’s good,” Nancy praised him. “You’re sort of playing detective. Keep up the good work and report to us as often as you can.”
Sol promised to do so, but said it was becoming more difficult to get away from the island. The few times he had tried it, Gimler had docked his pay.
“That’s wicked!” George exclaimed. “Nobody should be expected to stay in one place and work all the time without any recreation!”
After a little more conversation, the girls thanked Sol again and left him and Colombo. As Nancy drove off, Bess asked, “Where to now?”
Nancy said she had a hunch that they should go back to the golf club and report this latest bit of information to Mr. Gonzales. At the desk the girls learned that he was playing golf.
“But he should be back soon,” the clerk told them. “Why don’t you go out to the porch? From there you can watch him come in on the eighteenth green.”
The three friends hurried to the porch and took chairs near the railing. They had a clear view of the green and part of the fairway. Nancy, who played golf well, noticed that there were trees on one side of the fairway just before it ended at the green. “That really makes it hard,” she thought. “A person would have to aim a straight shot not to hit those trees.”
“Remember that beautiful golf course at the Deer Mountain Hotel, where we solved the mystery of
The Haunted Bridge?”
George asked.
“I sure do,” Bess said. “Nancy won a tournament there.” She giggled. “Here comes Father Time!”
An elderly man, who was almost as round as he was high and had long white hair and a flowing white beard, putted for the cup, missed it, and made a wry face.
Bess sighed. “This sure is a frustrating game.”
“It is,” Nancy said. “I’ve seen people get so mad that they threw their clubs away. Once a fellow almost hit his poor caddy!”
“Here comes Mr. Gonzales,” George said. “He’s a good distance away from the green. I wonder how he’ll make out?”
The girls watched in silence as he took his position behind the ball and swung his club in a few practice strokes. Just as he placed the club behind the ball and got ready for his approach shot, another player’s ball whizzed from among the trees to his right and hit him hard on the temple. Mr. Gonzales dropped his club and fell to the ground, unconscious.
“Oh!” all three girls cried out in horror.
Nancy, Bess, and George expected the other player to emerge from the woods and run up to the victim. But no one did.
“That ball must have been sent on purpose to hit Mr. Gonzales!” Nancy exclaimed.
The three girls jumped up and ran toward an outside stairway.
Bess suddenly pointed. “I see somebody running beyond those trees. He’s carrying a bag of clubs. He must be the one who shot that ball!”
“Maybe he’s a caddy,” George added.
Nancy was torn between the desire to hurry after the suspect and the need to help Mr. Gonzales. By the time the girls reached the foot of the stairs, they noticed that several people had surrounded their friend. But no one was taking off after the suspect. This helped Nancy decide what to do, although the man was out of sight.
“Let’s go!” she said. “We must catch him!”
“Where do you think he’ll run?” Bess asked. “To the caddy house?”
“He doesn’t seem to be heading in that direction,” George replied. “Maybe he isn’t a caddy, but a member who is running scared.”
Nancy was already racing across another fairway toward a public road. The man with the golf bag suddenly came into view. He looked back and realized he was being chased. Despite the weight of the bag, he put on extra speed. Before the girls could get to him, he reached the road. A car was waiting for him. He jumped in and it roared off.
“Now we’ll never know who he is,” Bess wailed.
Nancy said she had seen the license plate and repeated the number to the girls.
“What’s more, the glimpse I got of the man makes me think he’s the one who spied on us out at the Easton estate!” She added, “Since we can’t chase him, let’s return to the clubhouse and phone the police.”
The girls hurried back and told the manager what they had seen and asked him to call headquarters and give the license number. He did so, and the sergeant on duty promised to send two officers out at once.
While they were waiting, Nancy asked how Mr. Gonzales was. The manager replied, “He’s still unconscious, but a doctor is with him. He’s in a room down the hall.”
Bess decided to go there and see if she could find out anything further. Nancy and George remained in the lobby. When the police officers arrived, the manager introduced them as Parks and Joyce.
“This young lady saw a man with a bag of clubs running away. She’ll give you the details,” the manager said.