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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The X Bar X boys on Whirlpool River,
-by James Cody Ferris
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The X Bar X boys on Whirlpool River
-
-Author: James Cody Ferris
-
-Illustrator: Walter S Rogers
-
-Release Date: November 14, 2022 [eBook #69352]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Roger Frank and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE X BAR X BOYS ON WHIRLPOOL
-RIVER ***
-
-
-
-THE X BAR X BOYS ON WHIRLPOOL RIVER
-
-[Illustration: THE RUSHING CURRENT SWEPT TEDDY OUT OF REACH OF THE
-ROCK.]
-
---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-THE X BAR X BOYS ON WHIRLPOOL RIVER
-
-BY
-
-JAMES CODY FERRIS
-
-Author of “The X Bar X Boys on the Ranch,”
-“The X Bar X Boys in Thunder Canyon,” etc.
-
-ILLUSTRATED BY
-
-Walter S. Rogers
-
-NEW YORK
-
-GROSSET & DUNLAP
-
-PUBLISHERS
-
-Made in the United States of America
-
---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-WESTERN STORIES FOR BOYS
-
-By JAMES CODY FERRIS
-
-THE X BAR X BOYS BOOKS
-
- THE X BAR X BOYS ON THE RANCH
- THE X BAR X BOYS IN THUNDER CANYON
- THE X BAR X BOYS ON WHIRLPOOL RIVER
- THE X BAR X BOYS ON BIG BISON TRAIL
- THE X BAR X BOYS AT THE ROUND-UP
-
-(OTHER VOLUMES IN PREPARATION.)
-
-GROSSET & DUNLAP, PUBLISHERS, NEW YORK
-
-Copyright, 1926, by
-
-GROSSET & DUNLAP
-
-The X Bar X Boys on Whirlpool River
-
---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-CONTENTS
-
- I King of the Forest
- II The Brainy Beastie
- III An Angry Visitor
- IV Joe Marino
- V Guarded Words
- VI To Whirlpool River
- VII Suspicion
- VIII Follow Us
- IX The Water Trail
- X A Figure among the Trees
- XI A Night in the Woods
- XII Voices in the Night
- XIII The Fugitive
- XIV Failure
- XV A Vain Search
- XVI Separated
- XVII Primitive Tactics
- XVIII Afloat Again
- XIX The Whirlpool
- XX Burying the Hatchet
- XXI The Chase
- XXII The Man at the Fire
- XXIII Boss and Bandit
- XXIV Flying Bullets
- XXV Meet the Wife
-
---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-THE X BAR X BOYS ON WHIRLPOOL RIVER
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-King Of The Forest
-
-
-“If there be such in these woods, then such there be,” announced
-Teddy Manley, and punctuated this cryptic utterance with a slight
-grunt as he bent over the marks in the soft earth.
-
-“No doubt, no doubt,” his brother, Roy, declared dryly. “Speak the
-mother tongue, Teddy. What are you staring at, anyhow?”
-
-“Take a look for yourself,” Teddy answered briefly, and stepped
-aside. Roy moved closer, gazed curiously at the impressions on the
-ground, then gave a low whistle.
-
-“Bear tracks!” he exclaimed excitedly. “Bear tracks, or I’m a shad!”
-
-“You remain as originally intended,” remarked Teddy. “Those are
-definite, certain, and never-to-be-doubted bear tracks. Now the
-burning question is--” he hitched up his belt and turned his head
-from side to side. “Whar am Mister B’ar?”
-
-Roy hunched his shoulders in a gesture expressing entire ignorance
-of the subject. The tracks were fairly fresh, but their maker could
-be many miles away by this time.
-
-It was early fall, and the two brothers had started out from the X
-Bar X Ranch, with the intention of bagging some small game. Teddy
-carried a light shotgun, hoping to get a chance at duck. Roy had
-brought with him a small-bore rifle. Hardly the weapons with which
-to hunt bear.
-
-The boys had picketed their ponies near the foot of the mountain,
-knowing that the steep grade above made riding impractical. Thus far
-they had not sighted any game worth considering, but now, when they
-were near the top, Teddy had come upon the bear tracks.
-
-“Do we follow them?” Teddy, the younger, asked dubiously. He glanced
-down at the gun held in the crook of his arm. “This shotgun I have
-would only take his picture, Roy, and that pea-shooter of yours
-isn’t much better. What’s the verdict?”
-
-Roy looked at his brother and smiled.
-
-“Trying to kid me? After looking for bears in these woods for years,
-when we raise one, you want to know things! Huh! Don’t ask! Look me
-straight in the eye, brother mine, and say: What would you rather
-do, or hunt bear?”
-
-“You’re the doctor,” Teddy responded. “You must be getting reckless
-in your old age, Roy.” This last was to nail any idea that Teddy
-hesitated to face the adventure. He was slightly chagrined at the
-fact that Roy had taken the initiative in suggesting that they
-proceed. Usually it was the other way around, the younger lad
-proposing, and Roy, with what he was pleased to call his “more
-mature judgment,” disposing.
-
-“Far be it from me to dissuade you from entering the lists against a
-baby bear,” Teddy went on. “I hope you see him before he sees you.
-Those animals are easily scared.”
-
-“Yes, Teddy, my lad,” Roy said with a maddening grin. “We shall not
-argue the issue. Come on--let’s go.”
-
-Grumbling half-heartedly to himself, Teddy Manley followed the
-tracks. As he proceeded, the injustice that had been done him was
-forgotten in the mounting excitement of the chase. The tracks led
-diagonally across the mountain, and seemed to get fresher with every
-yard. As the boys came to a clearing, Teddy halted.
-
-“Not long since he passed here!” he exclaimed, as he noticed an ant
-heap that had been disturbed by the animal. “Look--those ants are
-still half crazy with fright--running around every which way.”
-
-It was not by accident that Teddy’s eyes caught this telltale bit of
-evidence. Born and brought up in the West, these boys could
-interpret the signs of the forest with unerring judgment. Where
-another might see merely a broken twig, the young ranchers read a
-story.
-
-“He’s close,” Roy returned laconically. He looked to his rifle. The
-magazine was full, and he pumped a bullet into the chamber. If they
-did come upon the bear, by great good luck Roy might succeed in
-placing a shot through the eye into the brain, which was the only
-place where the small bullet would be effective. If he missed--well,
-several things might happen, and not all of them to the bear.
-
-Teddy gazed intently toward a clump of sage brush just off the
-trail. Absently he bent his left knee, and with his hand he
-dislodged a piece of dirt that had caught on the heel of his shoe.
-This he tossed into the bush carelessly.
-
-There was a sudden deep-throated growl. The bushes stirred, then
-parted. Framed in a circlet of brown sage brush, appeared the shaggy
-head of a huge black bear.
-
-Neither boy spoke. Silently Roy leveled his rifle. The bear stood as
-immobile as a statue, staring fiercely at the intruders, only his
-head showing. Then, as the lips drew back in a snarl, showing the
-sharp teeth and the red gums, Roy pressed the trigger.
-
-There was a sharp crack. The bear started as though it had been
-stung by a hornet, and a crimson spot of blood marked the black fur
-just above the left eye.
-
-“Take it on the run!” Teddy cried hoarsely, and fired as he spoke.
-He knew the buckshot would have small effect, but he hoped it might
-cause the animal to hesitate long enough to give them an opportunity
-to make their escape.
-
-As the bear moved forward Roy sprang to one side. With a yell to
-Teddy to follow, he bounded to the right, then up, toward a ledge
-that jutted out from the mountain over their heads. If they could
-gain that, and the bear could not, they had a good chance for their
-lives.
-
-Teddy leaped after his brother. The bear, growling in rage at the
-pain of his wound, sought to close his teeth in Teddy’s leg. The boy
-gave a shout, and releasing his hold on the gun gave all his
-attention to the business at hand--beating the bear to the ledge.
-Strangely enough, as he scrambled up the incline, Teddy’s thoughts
-reverted to the ranch yard, when only yesterday he and Roy had sat
-on the corral fence and snickered as Pop Burns told about the time a
-bear had tried to make a meal from Nick Looker’s pants, while Nick
-was in swimming at Lomley’s Lake. According to Pop, the bear had
-struck a fishhook in the back pocket, and out of revenge had chased
-Nick all over creation.
-
-“Now I know just how Nick felt,” Teddy panted. “Never--as long as I
-live--will I laugh at another bear story! Hey, Roy! Hang on to your
-gun! Mine’s gone!”
-
-But even as he spoke, he heard a thud and saw their only remaining
-firearm go sliding down the mountain. It hit in the path of the
-oncoming beast, and the animal stopped for a moment to see what this
-was that tumbled toward him. As the rifle reached him, he put out
-his paw, stopped the gun, sniffed at it, then flicked it from him
-with a snort, and once more lumbered on.
-
-But at least the rifle had served one good purpose--for in that
-small interval of time Roy had reached the ledge. He jumped upward,
-careless of consequences, and felt his finger close over the root of
-a tree. Straining every muscle, he gradually drew himself
-up--higher--higher--and, with a gasp of thankfulness, he sank down
-upon the rock.
-
-Then, bracing himself, he stretched his arms over the edge toward
-Teddy. The boy seized his brother’s hands, and, grunting with
-exertion, succeeded in gaining the shelf just as the bear reached
-the spot where he had stood but a moment before.
-
-“Leaping lizards!” Teddy panted. “That was some close! Hey, listen
-to that geezer grunt! Golly, I--”
-
-“I’ll tell a maverick it was close!” Roy gasped. “Another second and
-you’d have been mince-meat! I told you we shouldn’t have followed
-those tracks. If we had had a decent rifle--”
-
-“_You_ told _me_! Well, for the love of Pete! And _you_ were the one
-who wanted to do all this bear hunting! Great snakes! How do you get
-that way? Wow! Listen to our friend! He won’t be able to talk
-to-morrow!”
-
-Below them the bear was uttering dire threats against their safety
-and was trying desperately to reach the ledge by jumping. Every time
-he sprang the boys heard the “scra-a-a-ape” of his claws over the
-rock.
-
-Teddy shook his head.
-
-“Baby,” he remarked, “I sure hope he gets discouraged easily! If he
-ever manages to pull himself up here--good-night!”
-
-Cautiously Roy leaned over.
-
-“He’s still at it. Thank goodness this shelf is narrow. But the
-point is, how are we going to get down? It’s a cinch we can’t climb
-up that cliff.” He motioned with his thumb to the wall back of them,
-which rose straight up. “As long as the old boy wants to hang
-around, we’re his guests,” he finished grimly.
-
-“Well, if you had frozen to that gun of yours we might have a
-chance. But there it is, lying down on the rocks, not doing us a bit
-of good. It might just as well be at home as down there. Say--”
-
-Teddy stopped short. Speechless, he seized his brother’s arm and
-pointed. Roy looked along the side of the mountain, then staggered
-against the wall.
-
-“Jumping catamounts!” he groaned. “We’re cooked! Another one! Start
-the slow music, Teddy. This bear’s brought his gang along with him!”
-
-“Oh, cheer up! It’s not a gang--yet! It’s one bear, only one! And
-that makes two bears, only two! Golly, if we only had a rifle!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-The Brainy Beastie
-
-
-Scuffling rocks down the slope of the mountain in his haste to join
-his comrade, the second bear approached the ledge. Teddy and Roy
-knew that the new arrival could not come at them from the side, as
-the corners of the shelf tapered into the straight wall.
-
-Yet this fact was paramount in the minds of the boys--that two bears
-were one more bear than one bear.
-
-“Come, join the party,” Teddy said bitterly, as he watched the
-scrambling approach of the second beast. “The more the merrier. Roy,
-just tell François to lay another place, will you?”
-
-Roy did not reply, but once more leaned over the edge of the
-projection. The animal they had first encountered had ceased his
-ineffectual attempts to reach the shelf, and was calmly awaiting the
-arrival of his mate.
-
-“The uninvited guest,” Teddy continued, eyeing the oncoming bear
-with a malevolent stare. “Well, there’s always room for one more. We
-strive to please.” He raised his voice to a shout. “Hey, _amigo_,
-would you mind bringing that rifle with you as you come by? There’s
-something in it I want to give you. What? Oh, all right. If you want
-to be nasty about it. The next time I--”
-
-“Teddy, put a buck-strap on that lower lip of yours,” Roy
-interrupted. “I have an idea.”
-
-“Has it got something to do with us leaving here before winter sets
-in? Because if it has, let’s hear it.”
-
-Without speaking, Roy nodded his head, then proceeded to search his
-pockets diligently. At length he brought to light a fishline with a
-hook attached, imbedded in a small cork. He held the line up with a
-triumphant smile.
-
-Teddy looked at it for a moment. Then a grin came over his face.
-
-“Fine!” he cried joyfully. “Just the thing. I haven’t been fishing
-for some time, and it’s well nigh on to three weeks since I fished
-for bear. I’m kind of out of practice. Let’s see now. What is it you
-use for bait? Oh, yes, I remember now. You tie the end of the line
-to a tree, put yourself on the hook, and jump overboard. When the
-bear nibbles you yell, ‘I’ve got him!’ That is, if you can. Then the
-bear laughs and says, ‘Oh, no, quite the contrary, I assure you,’
-and by that time--”
-
-“Save it, and write a joke book,” Roy retorted. “Now control your
-well known faculty for humor for a moment and pay attention. What’s
-that down there?” He pointed, and Teddy stared.
-
-“That? Well, it _looks_ like the rifle you so obligingly dropped. Of
-course, I can’t be sure, for we’re not sure of anything in this
-world. But I _think_ it is.”
-
-“Strangely enough, you’re right. Now my idea is this: I’ll tie a
-weight to this line about a foot below the hook. Make a cast. Catch
-the hook in the rifle. Draw up said rifle. Shoot said bear and his
-little friend. Then go home and eat.”
-
-Teddy gazed silently at his brother. His mouth opened wide. A fixed
-look came into his eyes. Then, gasping for breath, he put out his
-hand gropingly, as though to steady himself.
-
-“I’m not well,” he said thickly, “and I want to go home. It must be
-those cucumbers we had for lunch. Never again, as long as I live,
-will I eat cucumbers. Why, Roy, do you know what I thought you said?
-I thought--”
-
-“Suffering tripe, can’t you be serious for a _minute_?” Roy burst
-out. “I tell you my scheme will work. It’s the only chance we have.
-Look--the other bear has arrived. Hear ’em talking to each other?
-Suppose they’re able to boost themselves up here? ’Course I don’t say
-they _could_--it’s pretty high, thank goodness. But if they did?
-Where would we be then? Now you watch. I’m going to try it. Here she
-goes.”
-
-Teddy settled himself in a sitting position on the ledge with his
-back to the wall, so that he was out of sight of the bears below. He
-waved his hand grandly.
-
-“You may fire when ready, Gridley!” he quoted.
-
-Roy carefully judged the distance from the ledge to the spot where
-the gun lay, estimating the length of line he would have to use. By
-this time the two bears were in close conference. Deep rumblings of
-bear talk came to the boys on the ledge, and finally one
-heavy-throated, decisive grunt.
-
-“Period,” said Teddy, and lapsed once more into silence.
-
-Roy took a firm stand upon the ledge. He had already attached the
-stone to the line and had removed the cork from the fortunately
-large hook. Now he drew back his arm, took careful aim, and threw.
-The line whistled out, then sagged as the stone struck the ground.
-
-“Make it?” Teddy asked, not deigning to arise.
-
-“Missed,” was the laconic reply. “Give me time.”
-
-“Certainly. We have weeks at our disposal. I’ve got nothing to do
-but sit here, anyway.”
-
-Roy grinned good-naturedly and drew the line in. Once more he cast.
-
-“I’ve got those bears worried, at any rate,” he declared, pulling in
-for a third attempt. “Notice how quiet they are?”
-
-Teddy nodded solemnly.
-
-“Sure. They just decided which one was going to have me for lunch.
-I’ll bet the first bear won. He likes me. Tried to kiss me on the
-way up, but I was bashful, and, anyway, we were in a hurry.”
-
-Once more the line whistled through the air. This time, when it
-landed, Roy gave a yell.
-
-“_That’s_ the one! Watch this now, Teddy, and give me credit!”
-
-Teddy, jarred out of his placidity, leaped to his feet. He saw that
-the hook had come to rest about five feet below the gun, and in a
-direct line with the trigger guard.
-
-“Boy--take it easy!” he breathed. “Pull up slow--slo-o-o-w! A little
-more--no--don’t jerk it--gently now--”
-
-“Well, for the love of Pete, will you pipe down for a second?” Roy
-exploded, a grin of amusement on his face. “How do you think I can
-do this with you yelling in my ear? First you sit back and let me do
-all the work, and then, by golly, you want to play director. Hey,
-iss diss a system?”
-
-“Pardon,” Teddy replied, mockingly contrite. “You are right. I am at
-fault, and I await your pleasure. Henceforth I keep my peace.”
-
-With a smile of satisfaction, Roy returned once more to the business
-of catching the hook in the trigger guard. Slowly he drew in. The
-hook neared the rifle. Then, with a foot more to go, it caught on
-the edge of a stone, and stuck. Carefully Roy twitched the line,
-hoping to dislodge it. But the hook resisted all his efforts. Both
-boys took a deep breath. Below them the bears started their growling
-again, and stones and dirt clattered down the mountain as they
-leaped repeatedly up toward the ledge.
-
-“Now may the gods of the hills be with us,” Teddy murmured. “I fear
-me those bears have formed a conspiracy against us!”
-
-Roy jerked the line desperately. If it parted, their last hope was
-gone. They would have to remain on the ledge until the bears left of
-their own accord or until the animals succeeded in their objective.
-Roy shuddered slightly as he thought of this last eventuality.
-_That_ would not be so pleasant.
-
-“Let’s try it,” Teddy suggested hoarsely, afraid almost that his
-voice would cut the line. He took the cord from his brother’s
-unresisting hand.
-
-For a moment it seemed that he would have no greater success than
-Roy. The hook appeared caught firmly. Then, resolutely, Teddy gave
-the line a violent tug.
-
-The hook released its tenacious hold on the stone and snapped
-through the air. Teddy gave a gasp of dismay. Then, suddenly, his
-face cleared and his eyes lit joyfully. He gave a shout of triumph.
-
-The hook, leaping toward the rifle, had become attached to the
-trigger guard!
-
-“Got it!” Teddy yelled. “Don’t know how, but I did! Now, Roy, we’ll
-see just how much this plan of yours is worth! Here, gun, gun, gun,
-gun, gun! Come to papa! Whoa, baby, not so fast! That’s the stuff!
-Nice rifle!”
-
-By fits and starts, the rifle, drawn by the fishline, made its
-eccentric way up the mountainside. Gradually it approached a spot
-just under the ledge where both bears were waiting, crouched against
-the wall, staring frantically at this strange manifestation. Never
-before had they seen a stick travel uphill apparently under its own
-guidance.
-
-“Golly, I hope they leave it alone,” Roy gasped, peering anxiously
-over the edge. “When I yell, Teddy, you give the line a quick pull
-up and I’ll grab the gun. Easy now, it’s almost below me.
-Careful--careful--get away from there, you varmint. Yay-y-y-y! Woof
-woof! Bang bang! Scat! Now, Teddy! Pull! Hey, you! Lookout--”
-
-Teddy, standing above, where he could not see the rifle now that it
-was directly below the shelf, had given the cord a quick tug in
-obedience to Roy’s shouted command. At this very moment the bears
-recovered from their panic. Simultaneously, they made a dive for
-that strange thing dangling in front of them. The animal that had
-chased the boys succeeded in hitting the barrel with one paw, while
-the other paw brushed against the line. The rifle swung around, the
-muzzle pressed against the bear’s chest. With a snort of surprise,
-the beast hugged it to him.
-
-Bang!
-
-There was a quick report, as though some one had slapped two boards
-together. The bear, stung with a pain more violent than any bee
-sting, sprang back with a grunt of outraged dignity--sprang back,
-and, howling in rage, fled ignominiously down the mountain, with his
-astounded companion tumbling after!
-
-There was deep silence on the ledge. Open-mouthed, the boys watched
-the lumbering animals disappear in the foliage at the foot of the
-incline, and the crackling of the brush and the waving of twigs
-testified that their speed was as yet undiminished--they were still
-going, and going fast.
-
-Teddy blinked rapidly. Bending over, he felt with his hand of
-several places on the rocky floor of the shelf. Finally he found one
-to his liking. Then he sank blissfully down, rolled over on his
-back, and the next moment the hills echoed with the laughter of two
-boys lying on a narrow ledge high up in the mountains.
-
-“The--the poor thing was scared!” Roy spluttered, as soon as he got
-his breath. “He tried--oh, golly--he tried to commit suicide! Baby!
-I never expect to see a sight like that again! Teddy, if you had
-only seen him--seen the expression on his face when the gun went
-off! He grabbed the barrel, pointed it at his chest, and pulled the
-trigger! Honestly! Then he looked so gosh-blamed surprised and
-disappointed, and--and--Hold me, Teddy, or I’ll bust!”
-
-“I saw most of it,” Teddy declared, wiping tears of laughter from
-his eyes. “The best part of it all was to see those two hopping down
-the mountain like a couple of silly cows--or like rocking horses out
-on a spree! Man, that was one sweet show! Say, I’ll bet the one who
-shot himself won’t sleep to-night. Or, if he does, he’ll have bad
-dreams. Imagine a bear shooting himself! Won’t Pop Burns like to
-hear about this!”
-
-“Yes, but will he believe it?” Roy asked dubiously. “Pop likes to
-tell ’em, but when it comes to listening--that’s another thing.”
-
-“Well, anyway, this beats his story about the bear eating Nick’s
-pants.”
-
-“I’ll tell a maverick it does! And we know this is true, while that
-other--well, I have me ‘doots.’ Come on, we’d better go now. We’ve
-got to find your gun before we start home. Here--you slide down
-first then grab me. I’ll bet Star and Flash are getting restless by
-now. Neither one has been ridden much lately. All right--over you
-go. There’ll be no bear to welcome you with open arms, either, thank
-goodness. The party is over!”
-
-Still chuckling, the two boys, after finding the two guns where they
-had been dropped, made their way down the mountain toward the
-ponies. Star and Flash whinnied as they came up and pranced about
-ecstatically the moment the boys were in the saddle. The love Teddy
-and Roy had for their broncos was not unreciprocated.
-
-Talking of their adventure with the bears, the boys rode slowly
-home. Teddy was anxious to tell Pop Burns about it, to see what he
-would say. But as they neared the ranch yard of the X Bar X, they
-heard something that drove these topics from their minds.
-
-From around the corner of the bunk-house came voices, loud in anger.
-They listened. One of the speakers was their father!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-An Angry Visitor
-
-
-“What do you reckon is up, Teddy?” asked Roy Manley.
-
-“Haven’t the least idea, but we’ll soon find out!”
-
-The two urged their mounts forward anxiously.
-
-Digressing here, for a moment, it will be recalled that these two
-youths were first introduced in a book called “The X Bar X Boys on
-the Ranch,” the opening volume of this series. Therein was told of
-the long and dangerous hunt they, in company with their father and
-other members of the outfit, had undertaken to round-up a gang of
-rustlers who had stolen Flash, Star, and General, the ponies of
-Teddy, Roy, and Mr. Manley.
-
-The boys felt keenly the loss of their ponies, and braved many
-dangers before regaining them. The fact that the Manley posse caught
-the rustlers when they were about to make a raid on the cattle of X
-Bar X added not a little to the excitement.
-
-In the second book, called “The X Bar X Boys in Thunder Canyon,” the
-adventures of Teddy and Roy on the trail of kidnappers are related.
-These scoundrels, in revenge for a wrong they fancied Mr. Manley had
-done them, took Belle Ada, the boys’ sister, and Nell Willis and
-Ethel Carew, her friends, to a cavern far up Thunder Canyon. Guarded
-there by an old woman and a number of men, the girls had a
-terrifying time until Roy and Teddy found them and brought them
-safely home after rounding up the kidnappers, who turned out to be
-the same gang that had made trouble at the X Bar X Ranch before.
-
-The voice of the man who was quarreling with their father in the
-ranch yard was not an unfamiliar one to the Manley boys. Teddy, who
-was leading, reined up sharply and jerked his head in the direction
-from which the words were coming.
-
-“Jake Trummer,” he said shortly. “Seems to be getting a load off his
-chest. Wonder what the row is about.”
-
-“Plenty, from the noise,” Roy answered. “He’s sure laying it into
-dad. Let’s investigate.”
-
-As the boys were intimately concerned with the running of the X Bar
-X, their decision to learn the cause of the argument was not an
-intrusion. They knew their father wished them to know anything that
-concerned the ranch. So, chirping gently to their ponies, they rode
-around the bunk-house and came in sight of the speaker.
-
-Jake Trummer had his back to them as they trotted up.
-
-“You heard what I said, Bard Manley,” he was thundering. “I ain’t
-got no time for foolin’ around. Either you take yore cattle off my
-ranges, or, by gosh, I’ll drive ’em off, an’ none too gentle,
-either! You hear me!”
-
-“Can’t help it, not bein’ deaf,” Mr. Manley returned. “You make a
-noise like a steam calliope, Jake, only not so pleasant. But you use
-the same kind of power--hot air. Now listen. Just as fast as I can,
-I’ll--hello boys!” their father suddenly broke off. “You’re just in
-time. Jake, here, was tellin’ me a nice little story about a bad
-wolf; wasn’t it, Jake?”
-
-“We heard some of it,” Roy said, with a grin, and dismounted.
-“What’s the matter, Mr. Trummer?”
-
-“Matter enough! And if you think it’s a nice story, you’ll learn
-different, Bard Manley! You get yore cattle off my ranges, an’
-quick! You know the grass down by Whirlpool River is the best
-grazin’ in the state, an’ you know I only got a certain amount of
-it. Hardly enough for my own stock. Then you let yore cows go
-roamin’ all around creation an’--”
-
-“Do you mean that our cattle are using your grass?” Teddy asked,
-sliding from his horse. “If that’s so, we’ll try to get them off as
-quickly as possible.” He turned to his father. “I’m sorry about
-that, Dad. I had Nick an’ Gus riding this week. They didn’t do their
-job very well, I guess. Wait a minute, Mr. Trummer, and we’ll get
-the straight of this. Hey, Nick!” The boy raised his voice in a
-shout. “Nick around? Come over here--pronto!”
-
-“Take it easy,” Mr. Manley said suddenly. “Never mind it, Nick!” he
-called. And as a young puncher appeared from around the bunk-house
-the “boss” waved a hand. “Trot back. If we want you we’ll yell
-again.”
-
-Nick Looker, with a puzzled look on his face, obeyed slowly. Mr.
-Manley turned again to Jake Trummer.
-
-“Listen, Jake. I’ve known you for some years now. We ain’t never had
-no argument before. I’m sorry my dogies got over on yore land. But,
-leapin’ turtles! that’s no reason to come an’ take my head off about
-it! Why’n’t you come up an’ tell me like a man, instead of raisin’
-the dust like a cyclone? Hey?”
-
-Jake Trummer’s face grew red. His neck swelled until the veins stood
-out like knotted cords. His hands clenched.
-
-“’Cause I didn’t want to, that’s why!” he shouted. “Think you can
-run me like you run this here ranch, Bard Manley? Well, you can’t!
-When I says a thing I means it! You hear me! Them cattle of yours
-been on my grass fer a week now. Every day I figures you’ll come
-over an’ take ’em off, but you don’t do nothin’. So finally I has to
-come over to you. But it’ll be the last time! You hear me! You get
-them cows off Whirlpool River, or, by golly, I’ll drive ’em _in_ the
-river! You hear me!”
-
-Turning on his heel, Jake Trummer strode savagely to the corral rail
-where he had tied his pony. Releasing her, he vaulted into the
-saddle, swung the pinto’s head about, and galloped out of the yard.
-Slowly Mr. Manley took a corncob pipe from his pocket, stuck it in
-his mouth, applied a match to its already filled bowl, and then
-grinned.
-
-“The old boy sure had his fur up, didn’t he?”
-
-“I’ll tell a maverick he did,” Roy responded. Then a frown came to
-his face. “What’s the rights of this, dad? When did Jake come over?
-Had he been here long?”
-
-“Not five minutes before you came. Teddy, you trot over and ask Nick
-an’ Gus Tripp to come over here. I want to ask them some questions.
-I didn’t see no sense in lettin’ Jake Trummer have any say in how we
-handle our men, so that was the reason I told Nick to go back
-before. But to tell the truth--” he exhaled a great cloud of
-smoke--“to tell the truth, I thought Jake was foolin’ at first. But
-I guess he was sure enough mad.”
-
-“No doubt about that,” Teddy added grimly. “I’ll get Nick for you,
-Dad. I’m sorry this happened. Jake has always been a good neighbor,
-and I hate to have trouble with him.” Shaking his head, the boy led
-his horse to the hitching rail and then made for the other end of
-the yard.
-
-“Takes it like a veteran,” Mr. Manley remarked to Roy, as he watched
-Teddy walk off. “Roy--” and he placed a hand on his son’s
-shoulder--“I never say much to you two, but I guess you know that
-I’m pretty well satisfied with who I got for youngsters. When the
-time comes for me to take a back seat, I expect you an’ Teddy to
-carry on this ranch like I did when I got it from my father--your
-grandfather. You never saw him, but Pop Burns did. He’ll tell you
-all about him. An’ I tried to do the best I could by him--just like
-you an’ Teddy are doin’ for me. You boys are men, now--yep, real
-men. It took men to locate those rustlers the time we had our broncs
-stole, and to round ’em up. It took men to ride at that cave in
-Thunder Canyon to get Belle Ada an’ the rest without knowin’ how
-many guns you were goin’ up against. Yep, it took men to do those
-jobs--an’ you did ’em. I ain’t kickin’ none. Snakes! what started me
-off on that trail? Son, you see any signs of Father Time around
-here?” and he squeezed Roy’s shoulder affectionately and laughed a
-little.
-
-“Not any, Dad,” Roy responded, and tried to echo his father’s laugh,
-but there was a queer lump in his throat that he could not account
-for. Never before had his father talked like this. And when Mr.
-Manley saw his son’s eyes, he understood. With a yell he grabbed Roy
-about the waist and affected to throw him to the ground.
-
-“Could I do it?” he grinned, desisting. “You bet I could! Snakes,
-Roy, you’re too blame serious! What chance have you got to see me
-take a back seat yet awhile and watch the grasshoppers whizzing by?
-In the words of the immortal poet, not any! Where in thunder is
-Teddy? Oh, here he comes!”
-
-With the arrival of Nick and Teddy, Roy’s mind turned from its
-rather sombre trend to the business of ranching. Roy, but one year
-older than Teddy, had a more serious disposition, frequently
-considering events more important than they really were. This nature
-he inherited from his mother, who, before her marriage to Bardwell
-Manley, had been a school teacher in Denver. From her Roy got his
-taste for the really worthwhile things in life--poetry, literature,
-pictures. But the fact that these tendencies showed early
-development occasioned Teddy, who as yet was quite Roy’s opposite,
-much amusement.
-
-As Nick Looker approached, Mr. Manley’s face took on a frown.
-
-“Hear the news, Nick?” he asked shortly.
-
-“Teddy told me,” Nick returned. An anxious light came into his eyes.
-“Was Jake Trummer real sore, boss?”
-
-“He sure was,” Mr. Manley replied tersely. “Where’s Gus?”
-
-“Town. Nat Raymond an’ Jim Casey are ridin’ from to-day on,
-accordin’ to Teddy. Gus went in to get some mail--says he’s
-expectin’ a letter from some Southern belle he’s got down near the
-border. Kind of uneasy about her, I’m thinkin’. Want him, too,
-boss?”
-
-“Yes, I want him, too. But there’s a few things I want to say to you
-first. Nick, Jake Trummer had a right to be as sore as he liked.
-It’s no joke for another man’s cattle to eat up all your best
-grazin’ grass, especially when you ain’t got too much of it. Jake
-threatened to drive our dogies in the river if we didn’t get ’em out
-of there pronto, an’ of course I couldn’t let him get away with
-that, so I came back at him. But I knew he was right. Well--speak
-up. Got an explanation?”
-
-“Who, me?” Nick’s face expressed hurt surprise. “What have I done,
-boss?”
-
-“Well, outside of lettin’ our Durhams wander over on Jake Trummer’s
-land and makin’ him come over here fit to be tied, I guess nothin’.
-But we all have our own ideas, an’ mine, strange as it may seem, is
-that when a man’s set to ridin’ cattle, he’s supposed to ride ’em,
-and not let ’em mess up a neighbor’s grazin’ ground.”
-
-“Me? I let ’em loose? Why, boss, I didn’t have nothin’ to do with
-it!”
-
-“Weren’t you ridin’ herd?”
-
-“Me? Why, no, boss.”
-
-Mr. Manley turned to Teddy.
-
-“How about that, son? Didn’t you tell me Nick was on herd?”
-
-Teddy looked at Nick, then averted his glance.
-
-“I guess I--” he began.
-
-“Wait!” Nick interrupted. “Teddy did set me out about a week ago!
-But the way I understood it, he shifted plans, an’ I’ve been workin’
-fence fer six days! I ain’t been near the cattle!”
-
-“What do you mean?” Teddy asked sharply.
-
-“Why, Joe Marino--you know, boss, The Pup--he come to me an’ said
-that Teddy, here, told him to tell me he was to take my place, an’ I
-was to ride fence. He an’ Gus been on the job all week. I’ve been
-workin’ on the fence. An’ believe me, it sure needs fixin’. You mean
-to say that The Pup lied, Teddy?”
-
-Teddy nodded his head.
-
-“That’s just what he did, Nick. I guess it’s all my fault. I should
-have been more careful and checked up. But what on earth did The Pup
-do a thing like that for? It sure beats me!”
-
-“Nick, where’s The Pup?” Mr. Manley demanded sharply.
-
-“You got me, boss,” Nick confessed. His eyes were troubled. Somehow,
-this thing that had happened seemed partly his fault, and he found
-it a strange experience to be in wrong with the boss.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-Joe Marino
-
-
-Always, as long as Nick Looker had been on the ranch--five years
-this coming winter--he had done his work cheerfully and well. The
-men on the X Bar X had more than mere employees’ interest in the
-ranch. They looked upon it as a home, and, as such, to be well cared
-for.
-
-“This here Pup--” Nick observed, “now, I don’t like to say nothin’
-against a man when he ain’t here fer a come-back; but--well, boss,
-The Pup sure likes his liquor. I don’t mind a man takin’ a nip now
-and then, if he’s built that-away. But not during workin’ hours.”
-
-“Do you mean to say Joe Marino has been drunk while he’s on the
-job?” Teddy asked quickly.
-
-“Now, maybe we’d better wait till The Pup shows up,” Nick countered,
-shifting his shoulders uneasily. “He’ll be around soon. Maybe he’s
-rode to town with Gus Tripp. Most likely that’s it.”
-
-Mr. Manley puffed thoughtfully at his pipe. Through half shut eyes
-he observed Nick. It was several moments before he spoke.
-
-“Gus hasn’t been doin’ any promiscuous galivantin’, has he, Nick?
-But never mind,” he added quickly, as he saw the cowboy move his
-head from side to side. “I don’t want you to tell tales out of
-school. We’ll wait. Whereabouts were all those breaks in the
-fences?”
-
-It was late in the afternoon before Gus Tripp rode in. With him was
-The Pup. Roy, who had been seated outside the ranch house on a
-bench, mending a broken stirrup, saw them come up. He dropped the
-leather and hurried forward.
-
-“Gus,” he called, “dad wants to see you. Tie your pony and come over
-to the corral, will you? Joe, you too.”
-
-“He want to see me?” The Pup asked, and Roy noticed that his voice
-seemed unduly loud. “Well, I’m all set. Where is he?”
-
-“Over by the corral, as I said. Hurry up. Get your letter Gus?”
-
-“Nope--not any,” Gus answered. As he spoke he swayed slightly in the
-saddle. “Funny--I kind of expected she might write. Guess I’m a back
-number--ha--that’s funny--me a back number! Can ya imagine that,
-Roy? A back number! Like a last year’s calendar! Say, that’s pretty
-good. Get that one--that--that one, Roy? A last year’s calendar.
-Huh! Pretty good! Made it up all--all by myself, too. Yesser! Pretty
-good--pretty good,” and he wagged his head stupidly.
-
-Roy looked at the cowboy sharply. This was unlike Gus. It was plain
-to be seen that he had been drinking, probably at Rimor’s in town.
-Roy approached, and laid hold of the bridle of Gus’s pony.
-
-“Where have you been all day, Gus?” he asked quietly.
-
-“Who, me?” Exaggerated surprise was on the man’s face. “Why, I--I
-been busy. Me an’ The Pup. We both been busy. Awful busy. Ain’t we,
-Joe?”
-
-The Pup disdained to answer. An ugly look on his face, he lashed his
-horse savagely, and jumped him toward the hitching rail. Then he
-dismounted and walked toward Gus.
-
-“Come on,” he snarled. “Don’t sit there talkin’. We got to see the
-boss. Ain’t you heard orders?” and he looked at Roy, a sneer on his
-face.
-
-Roy flushed. He did not wish to seem above the men, but rather as
-working with them. Joe intimated with his glance that Roy’s
-authority was given by virtue of his being “the boss’s son,” and not
-because he deserved it. Roy opened his mouth to reply, thought
-better of it, and walked slowly away. The Pup laughed loudly. Roy
-felt his muscles tighten, but he did not turn. He would not argue
-with a man who had been drinking.
-
-He was not present at the scene between Mr. Manley and Gus and The
-Pup. Teddy told him of it later.
-
-“There’s two we will have no longer with us,” Teddy said that night.
-“Dad was feeding General sugar when they came up. Soon as he heard
-them he whirled around and he knew in a second that they had been
-hitting the bottle. Gus just looked kind of ashamed, but The Pup had
-a mean look on his face.
-
-“‘Gus, where you been?’ dad wanted to know. Gus said he’d been to
-town, to get a letter that didn’t come. Said he’d been expecting it
-for two weeks, and he was kind of disappointed. Say, Roy, I thought
-he was sweet on Norine?” Norine was the daughter of Mrs. Moore, who
-was the housekeeper on the X Bar X. “How about that?”
-
-“Don’t know,” Roy replied. “Gus told me about the letter, too. I
-have an idea that had something to do with his drinking--he never
-used to touch it before. But go ahead. What happened next?”
-
-“Well, as I said, dad caught on right away, and he was some sore.
-Told ’em both to get out--that he wouldn’t have men on his ranch who
-drank during working hours. Then he asked The Pup what was the idea,
-lying to Nick and getting him to change places with him, so The Pup
-could ride herd. At first Joe wouldn’t tell, but when Gus let out a
-few secrets the whole thing came forth. It seems that The Pup wanted
-to take the cows so he could slip away to town when he felt like it
-and liquor up and no one would know about it. How he ever got Gus to
-consent to a thing like that is beyond me unless, as you say, Gus
-isn’t himself on account of that letter.”
-
-“What did Gus do when The Pup spilled the beans?”
-
-“Just acted as if he was mighty sorry. Roy, it isn’t like Gus to
-pull a stunt like that. He isn’t built that way. Joe Marino, now--I
-wouldn’t put it past him. I don’t like that hombre for a cent. When
-he came here last month, dad was short a hand, or he never would
-have taken him. And now look at the trouble he’s got us in. Jake
-Trummer, one of dad’s oldest friends, turned into an enemy. You
-know, Roy, I think something happened up on Whirlpool River at
-Jake’s ranch besides the mere fact that our cattle wandered there.
-That, in itself, wouldn’t cause Jake to raise the row he did. I’ll
-bet The Pup said something to Jake that he didn’t want to repeat,
-knowing dad as he does. So he took it all out in being sore about
-the cattle.”
-
-“Maybe,” Roy said slowly. “So Gus is going to leave, is he?”
-
-“Yep! Fact is, he’s gone now. When dad finished, Gus straightened up
-like a man and shook his head to clear it. Then he spoke right out
-and admitted he’d been in the wrong--that he’d got it coming to him.
-Said it was all his fault about the cows and that dad was perfectly
-right to fire him, and that he’s blamed sorry.”
-
-“He did?” Roy’s eyes lighted. “Good for Gus! I knew he was a
-straight shooter, even if he did make a mistake. What did The Pup
-say then?”
-
-“He looked at Gus with a kind of funny expression on his face. Then
-he let a gob of tobacco juice ride at the ground, laughed, and
-walked away. Gus took it all. He sure feels pretty low over this.”
-
-At that moment Mrs. Manley came to the door, saw Teddy and Roy
-seated on the porch steps, and called to them.
-
-“Boys,” she said, “will you come in a minute? Your father wants to
-see you.”
-
-“And so do I,” a girl’s voice added. Belle Ada, the sister of Roy
-and Teddy, walked out on the porch. “Where’s that new whip you
-promised me, Teddy? Got it?”
-
-“Haven’t had time yet, Belle,” Teddy answered. “Have it to-morrow
-sure. I’m going in to town then, and I’ll stop by and pick it up. It
-ought to be at the express office by now. I ordered it last week.”
-
-“Oh, you’ll forget it,” Belle declared, and then laughed.
-
-Belle was twelve years old, with dark hair and eyes. In disposition
-she was a great deal like Teddy--happy-go-lucky, always ready for
-fun.
-
-“You’d better tie a string around your finger. Or, better still,
-around your toe. You’re liable to miss it on your finger, and you
-stub your toe so often that you can’t miss it there.”
-
-“Aw, take a rest,” and Teddy grinned. “Come on, Roy, we’ll hop in
-and see dad. Where is he, Mother?”
-
-“In his room. I think it’s about Gus that he wants to talk to you.
-I’m so sorry that happened, boys! I told your father that he should
-go more slowly. He was so worked up over Mr. Trummer’s visit that he
-wasn’t quite himself. I tried to calm him as much as I could, and
-now I think he regrets that he acted so hastily. But you go in and
-let him tell you himself.”
-
-Mr. Manley was seated in a chair in his room, with his corncob pipe,
-unlit, between his teeth. This was always a sign of mental
-uneasiness with him. When smoke came from the pipe, all was well.
-When it reposed in his mouth cold and dead, there was usually
-something up.
-
-“Want us, Dad?” Teddy asked.
-
-“Yes. Want to make talk. Come in. Shut the door. Either one of you
-see Gus?”
-
-“He’s gone, Dad,” Roy answered. “Teddy, you saw him go, didn’t you?”
-
-“Yes, I did. He rode away with a bag on his saddle about two hours
-ago. He owned his own horse, didn’t he, Dad?”
-
-“Yes! Gus came to me with a pony, saddle, and nothin’ else, three
-years ago. Wanted a job. I gave it to him. So he’s gone, eh?”
-
-“Afraid so, Dad. Didn’t you tell him to clear out?”
-
-“I did, and I’m sorry now that I did it. Your mother’s been talkin’
-to me, and, as usual, she’s made me see the error of my ways. I was
-too fast. Jake Trummer got me all worked up. He used to be my best
-friend, next to Pete Ball. Well, it’s too late now, I guess. As for
-Joe Marino, I don’t care when he leaves. We never should have taken
-him. He didn’t know much about punchin’, and the first day he was
-here I kind of got set against him. He’s gone, too, I suppose?”
-
-“No, he hasn’t,” Teddy declared. “I saw him at the bunk-house
-talkin’ to Pop Burns a little while ago. Pop didn’t seem to care
-much about listening. He said something sharp and turned away. Guess
-The Pup must have been beefing about you throwing him out.”
-
-“He won’t get far with Pop,” Mr. Manley chuckled. “Imagine Pop
-hearin’ anything against the X Bar X! Not him. Well, I guess that’s
-all, boys. I was hopin’ I could catch Gus and explain to him. The
-poor geezer must have been worried about something, or he never
-would have done a thing like he did.”
-
-“You’re right, Dad,” Teddy declared. “I noticed he hasn’t looked
-well for some time. Keeps talking about a letter all the while. Yep,
-it’s too bad. But it can’t be helped now.”
-
-“No,” and Mr. Manley sighed. Then he arose.
-
-“We got a job ahead of us to-morrow. Got to get those cows off
-Trummer’s land. I don’t want no man but me to feed my cattle. So be
-ready to start early. If you see Marino, you can tell him, for me,
-that the sooner he leaves the better I’ll like it.” Again Mr. Manley
-sighed. “But I sure wish it had been some one else besides Gus,” he
-added.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-Guarded Words
-
-
-Sadly enough, however, it was Gus Tripp who was the storm center.
-This thing had been the only blot on his escutcheon during the three
-years he had worked for the X Bar X. Willingly would Mr. Manley have
-wiped it clean had Gus given him the opportunity. But the die was
-cast. Gus--he of the drawling speech and eyes which were wont to
-grow languid while Norine was near--had gone.
-
-No one gave much thought to Joe Marino, “The Pup.” Though he had
-worked for Bardwell Manley, somehow he had never become a part of
-the ranch, as the rest had. He was a man apart, neither seeking nor
-admitting intimate friendship. His fondness for the cup, alleged to
-cheer, was early discovered, but Mr. Manley was loath to discharge a
-man for a personal defect so long as it did not affect his work. Up
-to this time The Pup had been a lone drinker, but now, when it
-became necessary to send him forth because he shirked his job, he
-dragged one of the most popular boys on the ranch with him.
-
-Pop Burns was loud in his denunciation of the tempter. While the
-boys were saddling their broncos the next morning, preparing to head
-for Whirlpool River, the old man halted The Pup as he was lurching
-past toward the cook house.
-
-“You still eatin’ here?” he wanted to know.
-
-“I am. Anything to you?” The Pup’s eyes, red from the effect of the
-last night’s indiscretion, glared evilly. “Want to ask any more
-questions?”
-
-“Well, now, maybe jest one or two,” the veteran puncher said slowly.
-“First, where’d Gus duck to?”
-
-“How should I know? Think I’m his keeper?”
-
-“Keeper? Not any! I thought you pretended to be his friend, but I
-guess I was mistaken. Usually, when a man tells a fellow certain
-things, that other man kind of likes to keep track of his buddy.”
-
-“Hey? What do you mean--certain things? I don’t know nothin’ about
-Gus. He rode with me a few times, that’s all.” The Pup leered
-suggestively. “If you mean the letter he was waitin’ for from that
-skirt down Togas way, why--”
-
-Pop Burns’ expression changed. His eyes narrowed, and the lines
-about his mouth deepened. His hands clenched until they looked like
-solid balls of brown leather.
-
-“Suppose you just forget about that,” he said evenly, an unwonted
-dignity coming into the old man’s voice and manner. “Understand? We
-ain’t in the habit of talkin’ out in public about another man’s
-affairs. Gus was a friend of mine, I ain’t aimin’ to listen to a
-coyote like you makin’ fun of him. Get me?”
-
-The Pup started to reply, then took a second look at Pop’s face, and
-thought better of it. With an uneasy laugh he turned away and walked
-toward the corral, where his pony was tied. Pop motioned to Teddy,
-who was filling a can of flour some distance away.
-
-“Hear that?”
-
-Teddy nodded.
-
-“Some of it. I didn’t want to interfere, so I kept quiet. Dad wants
-The Pup off the place as soon as possible. He blames him for the
-whole affair.”
-
-“Yore dad’s right about that, Teddy. The Pup has got a streak of
-orneriness in him a yard wide. He ain’t no good to no one, least of
-all himself. Wouldn’t be surprised if we saw some more of him, at
-that, one way or another.”
-
-“You mean he’ll make trouble?”
-
-“Well, he ain’t appeared to be a dove of peace so far, has he?” Pop
-countered. “An’ he’ll not hang his tail between his laigs an’ run
-without one more nip at somebody. You mark my words! I knew them
-kind of waddies. Long ago, when yore grandpop was alive--an’ yore
-dad was only a shaver then, like you are--we had a cuss by the name
-of--” He broke off suddenly. “All right, boss! Comin’!” Pop called
-out, and he hurried off in response to Mr. Manley’s call.
-
-Teddy watched him disappear in the direction of the ranch house,
-then reflectively continued packing the can with flour. But as he
-worked with his hands, a frown came to his face. He was remembering
-Pop’s prophecy.
-
-It would be a shame if anything unpleasant happened now. Why, it was
-not so long ago that they had rescued Belle and Nell Willis and
-Ethel Carew from the kidnappers. How were the girls on the 8 X 8
-getting on? Teddy wondered.
-
-He came to a sudden decision to ride over to Peter Ball’s place to
-visit them as soon as this business was over.
-
-Clamping the lid tight on the flour can, the boy thought of the
-cattle on Whirlpool River and of the absent Gus Tripp.
-
-“Mighty queer that Gus would go to pieces like that,” he muttered to
-himself. “There’s a reason behind it all, or I miss my guess. Gus
-sure looked downhearted when he rode out.”
-
-Teddy carried the can and the flour bin toward the house. It was now
-about eight o’clock, and the bright fall sun brought the landscape
-out in bold relief. Teddy paused a moment before he entered the
-house and peered toward the mountains to the west, where he and Roy
-had lately come to grips with the gang that had run off with his
-sister and her two friends. Then his gaze shifted, and he looked
-over the rolling prairie toward the spot where they had earlier
-captured this same gang of rustlers, though they had later escaped
-to make more mischief. A grim smile curved the boy’s lips.
-
-“Did some one say the West was a quiet place to live in?” he
-muttered, and laughed shortly. “Seems to me we do nothing but meet
-trouble out here! Well, I suppose it’s all in the game. Now we’ve
-got a mean job to get the cows off Whirlpool River. However--” He
-shrugged his shoulders, replaced the flour bin, while the can he had
-filled he carried to the yard and fastened to his saddle. His father
-had told them to prepare for a journey of several days, and this
-flour, mixed as it was with other ingredients, made fine “pan
-bread.”
-
-Roy met him at the corral.
-
-“Can’t leave just yet,” he said. “Dad wants to wait until Nick comes
-back. He rode down to see one of the boys from Jake Trummer’s place
-who has been in town several days, hanging around. Dad wants to get
-all the dope he can on this before he goes ahead, and Nick knows
-this puncher pretty well and said he’d find out all he could. Nick
-ought to be back in about two hours.”
-
-“As soon as Nick returns we go--that the idea?”
-
-“That’s it. Unless dad wants to start sooner, and I don’t think he
-does. Say, is The Pup still around?”
-
-“Yep.” Teddy smiled grimly. “Around, and noisy. He had a session
-with Pop not over ten minutes ago. Pop told him where to get off,
-too. I heard part of it. Started to gas about Gus and his letter.
-But he got shut up quick, let me tell you. Pop wouldn’t stand for
-hearing Gus made fun of. Where does this bacon go--on my saddle?”
-
-“Guess so. I’ve got enough to carry. Golly, dad must expect to spend
-Christmas on Whirlpool River, from the load we’re packing. Bet when
-we get there Jake Trummer will forget his sore-headedness and invite
-us to keep our cows there the rest of the year. That’s the kind Jake
-is--quick to anger, but he gets over it just as fast. He’s a good
-friend of dad’s too. At least he was before this happened. That’s
-what made me think there’s more in this than we suspect. However,
-we’ll know as soon as we hit the river. Jimminy! what in thunder is
-that?”
-
-Roy stopped and gazed up the road that led past the ranch house.
-From behind the house came curious sounds--reminiscent of a load of
-junk being pulled over cobblestones. Now and then a splutter, like
-the gasp of some huge animal, made itself heard over the noise.
-Teddy grinned.
-
-“It will arrive in a moment,” he said.
-
-It did. There soon came into sight one of the strangest contraptions
-ever seen on four wheels. Once it had been a flivver, but those days
-were gone forever. Its body was of shiny red and made to resemble a
-boat, with a rudder in the rear, and a propeller. The wheels were
-nearly concealed in the “hull.” From its pointed bow, blue smoke
-arose.
-
-Within it, on the front seat, sat a cow puncher, his face alight
-with the joy of possession. In the rear were two girls, some two or
-three years older than Belle Manley, trying in vain to suppress the
-laughter that would bubble over.
-
-“Bug Eye!” Teddy yelled. “And Nell and Curly! But what in the name
-of seven sledges is that thing they’re riding in?”
-
-“Howdy, boys!” Bug Eye called, waving one arm and reaching toward
-the “in’ards” of the machine with the other. With a groan the
-contraption subsided. “What do you think of my Fishmobile?”
-
-“Your what?” Roy shouted.
-
-“Fishmobile! P-s-y-c-h-e--Fish. I saw it on a boat once. And this is
-a boat and an automobile, so I call it a Fishmobile. Good, hey?”
-
-“Did you two ride in that all the way over from the 8 X 8?” Roy
-laughed, walking toward Nell and Ethel, the good-looking nieces of
-Peter Ball.
-
-“We certainly did!” Nell answered. “It runs splendidly, doesn’t it,
-Ethel?”
-
-“Great!” was the laughing answer. “How are you, boys? We came to
-visit Belle, though, as I remember, Nell did say something about
-Roy--”
-
-“Oh, hush!” Nell interrupted, blushing. “Teddy, I haven’t seen you
-since you and Roy found us in those terrible caves at Thunder
-Canyon,” and she shuddered slightly. “But we want to forget
-that--although we’ll never forget what you did for us,” and she
-looked quickly at Roy. “But where is Belle?”
-
-“Right here!” a voice called from the porch, and Belle Ada ran into
-the yard.
-
-Greetings were soon over, and then the young folks gathered around
-to inspect Bug Eye’s new creation.
-
-“She goes on land or water,” he explained proudly. “See? Got a
-propeller on her and everything. Works on the fly wheel. The boss
-give me that old flivver--remember?--an’ said I could do what I
-wanted with it. So I done it. Looks great, hey? An’ when I come to a
-lake, why all I have to do is throw the propeller in gear, an’ away
-we go!”
-
-“Yes! But, Bug Eye,” Teddy broke in, with a look at Roy, “where is
-this lake you’re going to sail on?”
-
-A look of amazement spread over the puncher’s face. He snapped his
-fingers and frowned.
-
-“Golly!” he exclaimed. “Never thought about that. Well, I’ll be
-jiggered! Of course there’s Lomley’s Lake--but that would never do.
-Too small. Well, now, that’s too bad.” Then he brightened. “But if I
-_do_ find a lake somewheres, I’ll be all set for it!”
-
-A laugh arose, which did not at all disconcert Bug Eye. All but the
-proprietor of “Psyche, the Fish,” wandered into the house. Bug Eye
-drove toward the bunk-house, there to be the center of a crowd of
-sarcastic cowpunchers. The remarks made concerning the Fishmobile
-were graphic if not flattering.
-
-Much as Roy and Teddy wanted to talk to the visitors, they knew that
-they must continue preparations for the journey to Whirlpool River.
-It was nine-thirty now, and Nick had not yet returned. Mr. Manley
-was pacing about the yard nervously, anxious to get started.
-
-Roy was currying Star over by the hitching rail at the side of the
-cook house. Suddenly he heard a voice that caused him to start. It
-came from behind the cooking shack, and Roy made as though to go
-forward, then thought again and remained where he was.
-
-It was Gus Tripp talking. At first Roy did not recognize the tones
-of his companion, but as the other talked louder, he knew it to be
-The Pup. Gus seemed to be strangely insistent over something.
-
-“No, sir,” he was saying. “Not me! Count me out! The boss only gave
-me what I deserved. I hit the bottle and got fired. All right. I got
-no kick comin’. I’m sorry I did it, but let that go. It’s all over
-now, and you can count me out of any scheme like that, Joe. I may be
-an idiot, but, by golly, I’m no polecat!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-To Whirlpool River
-
-
-“Gus Tripp!” Roy muttered to himself. “And The Pup! I wonder if I--”
-Coming to a sudden decision, he threw the currying brush on the
-ground and stepped forward. It took but a moment to reach the cook
-house, and without hesitating he walked around to the side. It was
-in his mind to speak to Gus and tell him Mr. Manley would like to
-see him. But when he rounded the corner he stopped short. There was
-no one in sight! Puzzled, Roy glanced within the shack. The only
-person there was Sing Lung, the cook, who grinned widely as he saw
-Roy.
-
-“Hungly?” he demanded. “You boy betta’ have plenty eat, you lide
-long, yes?”
-
-“Yep, we got a long ride ahead of us,” Roy returned absently. “Say,
-Sing, did you hear two men talking outside here?”
-
-“Who men?”
-
-“Well, I think they were Gus Tripp and Joe Marino. I could hear ’em
-away over by the hitching rail, so you must have heard ’em too.”
-
-“Me? Nope, I hear nobody. I lun wata--see?” He turned on the kitchen
-faucet, and the noise of the stream beating against the tin of the
-sink made even thinking difficult, let alone talking.
-
-“All right, shut it off,” Roy yelled. “I understand. But why you
-don’t break every dish in the place with that torrent I can’t see.
-Guess you didn’t hear anything.” He stepped into the yard again.
-Gazing toward the road as it rose into the mountains past Eagles,
-the ranch town, Roy discerned two horsemen. The boy nodded.
-
-“There they go--Gus and The Pup. Wish I could have got here sooner,
-so I could have talked to Gus. Now I suppose he’s gone for good.
-Wonder what he meant by saying he may have been an idiot, but he
-wasn’t a polecat? I don’t like that Joe Marino! Chances are he
-wanted Gus to go in with him on some shady scheme, and Gus refused.
-Good for Gus! Wish he was back with us.” Roy shook his head, and,
-seeing Pop Burns walking across the yard, asked him where Teddy was.
-He was told the boy was talking with his father over at the corral,
-and, intending to tell them that Gus had returned but had ridden
-away again, Roy hurried forward.
-
-When he reached the corral he saw that Nick Looker had come back.
-What he was saying evidently was of interest, for both Teddy and Mr.
-Manley were listening eagerly.
-
-“Roy, I want you to hear this,” the ranch owner called as Roy came
-up. “Nick, tell him what you told us.”
-
-“Well, it was just that I had a talk with Bob McKeever--he’s a hand
-on the Whirlpool River Ranch. I’ve knowed him for quite a spell. Bob
-says The Pup told Jake Trummer that we put our cattle to his grass
-on purpose, and that The Pup had orders to let ’em roam as much as
-they wanted. And I found out how all those breaks got in the fence,
-too--they been cut. I came across a pair of wire pliers down by the
-east fence.”
-
-“Marino told Mr. Trummer that we put our cows in his fields on
-purpose?” Roy repeated amazed. “What did he ever say a thing like
-that for?”
-
-Nick shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“Don’t ask me. I only know what I been told. Guess that’s reason
-enough for old man Trummer to go up in the air, hey, boss?”
-
-“It certainly is,” Mr. Manley said slowly. “I wish I had known this
-before. Things would have been different. What else did McKeever
-say, Nick?”
-
-“Well, he said he heard his boss swear that if them dogies weren’t
-off his land by to-morrow, he’d drive ’em into the river. And he
-would, too--old man Trummer is some hot-headed.”
-
-“I know he is,” Mr. Manley said. He thought for a moment. “If I
-thought it would do any good, I’d phone him. But I’m afraid that
-would make things worse. Nope, we got to take our medicine. Drat
-that Joe Marino! I should have thrown him off long ago! Now look at
-the mess he’s got us in! Snap to it now, boys, we start right soon.
-Got no time for delays. Nick, you come with us. Teddy and Roy, I
-expect you to take complete charge of the ranch while we’re gone.”
-
-“You mean we’re to stay, Dad?” Teddy asked, a disappointed look
-coming over his face. Up to this moment the boy had fully expected
-to go with the others to Whirlpool River.
-
-“Afraid so, boys. After what Nick said I can’t afford to leave the
-place without some one who can handle things. We’ve got a long ride
-ahead of us--might be a week. And I’ve got to know that the ranch is
-bein’ taken care of. I didn’t exactly like Marino’s attitude when I
-gave him the gate. If he tries any funny stuff, you’ve got to be on
-the job.”
-
-“I see, Dad,” Roy answered. “That’s the right thing, I guess. If you
-want us to come on later, we can head down the river by boat and get
-there almost as soon as you can. Now what are the orders, Dad?”
-
-It was a disappointment for the boys to stay at home, when they had
-been counting on riding with their father, but both saw the wisdom
-of Mr. Manley’s plan. Their mother would not care to stay any length
-of time on the ranch without some one of responsibility near by,
-especially in view of what had lately happened. She was not a
-nervous woman, but she realized that the presence of a man like Joe
-Marino on the ranch was a constant threat.
-
-Then, as Teddy and Roy thought that their two friends from the 8 X 8
-were visiting Belle, things began to look brighter. They had no real
-reason for expecting trouble from Jake Trummer. As soon as he heard
-the straight of the affair he would probably “snap to,” as Teddy
-expressed it.
-
-“But if you want us, we’ll be ready,” the boy continued. “You’re
-taking five men, aren’t you? That ought to be enough. We haven’t
-more than three hundred head in that herd, from the last checking.
-Guess five can handle ’em.”
-
-Mr. Manley smiled at his son’s assumption of an old rancher’s
-prerogative, but he took care that Teddy did not see the smile. He
-wanted his sons to have full confidence in themselves, and to this
-end he never hesitated to place responsibility on either Teddy or
-Roy.
-
-Before starting, Mr. Manley gave the necessary instructions for the
-running of the ranch, then, with complete assurance that they would
-be carried out to the letter, he set out. Teddy and Roy watched the
-party, led by Mr. Manley, head for the road and toward Whirlpool
-River.
-
-“Kind of wish we were going,” Teddy declared, as he waved a hand in
-farewell. “But dad knows best. Come on--let’s see what Nell and
-Curly are doing.”
-
-The rest of the day passed uneventfully. Teddy and Roy, after they
-had attended to the immediate business of the ranch, went for an
-evening ride with the three girls. Bug Eye and his Fishmobile were
-to stay the night, and possibly several days, to look over some
-cattle on the north range that Peter Ball, his boss, was thinking of
-purchasing to fill out his stock. There had been an epidemic of
-blackleg among the cows of the 8 X 8, and Mr. Ball wanted to get
-some healthy Durhams in to fill out, as he had lately contracted to
-fill a large order from Denver for cattle on the hoof.
-
-On the way back to the ranch, Nell and Ethel, or more popularly,
-“Curly,” rode on ahead, while Teddy and Roy talked in low tones of
-The Pup. Roy had neglected to tell his father of the conversation he
-had heard behind the cook house, but when he informed Teddy, the
-younger lad attached little importance to it.
-
-“The Pup probably wanted Gus to go on a spree with him,” Teddy
-suggested. “I guess Gus has had enough of that sort of thing. He’s
-not built for it. Gus, normally, is a clean liver. He doesn’t take
-much to booze and he would never have touched it if he hadn’t been
-worried about something. Wonder what he’s going to do now?”
-
-“But what did he mean when he said dad had a right to discharge him
-and he wouldn’t hold it against him?” Roy persisted, not answering
-his brother’s question. “Doesn’t that sound as though Marino wanted
-Gus to go into some scheme to get even with dad?”
-
-“Aw, don’t be so pessimistic! Golly, Roy, you’re up to your old
-tricks again, aren’t you? Let it ride! Even if The Pup did have some
-such plan in mind, he’ll forget it as soon as he hits Rimor’s and
-gets lit up, and I’ll bet money that’s what he’s doing this minute.
-I only hope Gus isn’t with him. You say they rode off together?”
-
-“Yes. That’s why I’m worried. But, after all, there’s no use hunting
-for trouble. We’ve got enough as it is.”
-
-Darkness had settled over the land when the riders reached home. The
-supper table seemed strangely vacant with Mr. Manley absent, but the
-girls and Teddy and Roy kept up a running fire of conversation, so
-that Mrs. Manley had not time to think long about her husband riding
-far out on the trail. They tried to keep her, as much as possible,
-from worrying.
-
-Later in the evening Teddy left the porch and walked toward the
-bunk-house, to see Nat Raymond about the next day’s work. As he
-neared the corral he heard Flash neigh as though he knew Teddy was
-near, and the boy turned aside for a moment.
-
-To his surprise he saw a figure dart out from behind a tree, and,
-silently, the boy sprang forward. In a moment he had the man in his
-grasp.
-
-“Let’s have a look at you!” Teddy demanded. The man did not
-struggle. Instead he faced the boy boldly.
-
-“The Pup!” Teddy exclaimed. He released his hold on the man’s arm.
-“I thought you had gone to town.”
-
-“Yes, it’s The Pup,” the other sneered. “And what about it? Gonna
-kick me off? If you are, you’d better start kickin’ now, ’cause it’s
-gonna take you some little time!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-Suspicion
-
-
-The bright moon made the scene almost as light as day. Teddy could
-see the man’s small, close-set eyes and his thin-lipped mouth as The
-Pup thrust his face forward belligerently.
-
-“You’re awfully sure about that, aren’t you?” the boy said in a low
-voice. Perhaps another youth might disclaim such a quarrel as this,
-which seemed purposely thrust upon him. Teddy had no reason to seek
-a fight with Marino, nor even meet him half way. It would have been
-better, perhaps, had the boy at this moment turned on his heel and
-walked away. But Teddy was himself, and no one else. The memory of
-Gus’s betrayal rankled within him.
-
-The Pup moved his shoulders slightly, dropping the right one lower
-than the left. Teddy settled himself firmly.
-
-“Think yore some baby, don’t you?” the man flashed, and Teddy could
-see a dark flush mount to his face. “You an’ that brother of yours!
-Pah! Yuh make me sick!” and he spat energetically.
-
-Teddy clenched his fists, but held his peace. He would not let
-himself be talked into starting hostilities. If Marino wanted to
-fight--well, there were two sides to the story.
-
-Of a sudden The Pup changed his tone. His voice took on a whining,
-ingratiating note.
-
-“What are you two always pickin’ on me for?” he demanded. “I didn’t
-do nothin’ to yuh. A feller can’t--”
-
-Teddy saw the man’s hand leap to his belt. Like a bundle of coiled
-springs the boy leaped forward. His open hand found The Pup’s wrist
-and closed upon it, holding it in a firm grip. The other hand
-pressed back the man’s chin--pressed it back until Marino was
-staring with glassy eyes up into starry night.
-
-“Drop it!” Teddy gasped, and a knife flashed to the ground. Teddy
-kicked it to one side, felt about the man’s shirt to see that no
-more weapons were concealed, and stepped back.
-
-“A fine snake you are!” Teddy said contemptuously. “Tried to pull a
-knife on me, didn’t you? For two cents I’d--”
-
-“Oh, let me alone!” the man burst out. “Yes, I tried to knife you,
-an’ I’m sorry I didn’t! I don’t like your kind! When I came out
-here--” He stopped, and bit his lip.
-
-Teddy gazed at him in wonder. The man’s Western accent had
-disappeared. He carried a knife--a thing no true Westerner ever did
-except for working purposes. Mexicans carried them--it was a Greaser
-trait. Was this man a Mex? Teddy looked at him closely.
-
-“What you starin’ at?” The Pup asked uneasily, once more reverting
-to his former manner. “You got me, didn’t yuh? Well, call it a day!
-Yuh got a shootin’ iron there--why don’t yuh use it?”
-
-“I’m not in the habit of shooting men down in cold blood,” Teddy
-said deliberately. He stepped closer to the man. “Marino! where are
-you from?” he snapped.
-
-Although a cloud dimmed the moon just then, Teddy could have sworn
-he saw fear leap into the man’s eyes. Marino started as though he
-had stepped on a rattler where he had expected to find a garden
-snake, then recovered himself.
-
-“Kind of a funny question to ask a man in these parts, ain’t it?” he
-sneered.
-
-“Not to my notion. But if you want to keep it to yourself, that’s
-your lookout. The days when a gunman could come West and get a job
-on a ranch without any one bothering about him until he let daylight
-into some peaceful citizen, are gone forever.”
-
-“An’ who wants a job on your place, anyhow?”
-
-“That’s not the point. You’re on our land, and you were one of the
-hands of the X Bar X. As long as you stay here you’ve got to watch
-your step. What was the idea of toting that thing around?” Teddy
-nodded toward the long knife, gleaming on the ground a few feet
-away.
-
-“That’s my business, too.”
-
-“Well, when you try to stick me with it that makes it my business! I
-guess it would be better for all concerned if you just moseyed out
-of here, Marino!”
-
-Teddy felt himself growing hot under the collar at the consummate
-nerve of the man. Standing there arguing a question of ethics just
-after having tried to murder him!
-
-“Throwin’ a guy out this time of night, hey?” Marino demanded.
-
-“Yes--I’m throwing you out. Going?”
-
-The Pup looked over toward the corral, then back to Teddy. He
-grinned sardonically.
-
-“Not havin’ no more reason for stayin’, I’ll be on my way,” he
-declared. “Soon as I--” He made a move toward his knife.
-
-Teddy took a quick step forward, and put his foot on the weapon.
-
-“That stays here,” the boy said grimly. “Where’s your pony?”
-
-Marino motioned with his thumb toward a group of trees on the edge
-of the ranch yard.
-
-“Over there. I just rode by to get some duds I left here. But never
-mind ’em now,” he added suddenly. “I’ll get ’em later. Hope you
-choke.”
-
-With this pleasant farewell, the man walked in the direction he had
-said his horse was tied. Teddy watched him go, a fixed look on his
-face.
-
-“Cow-puncher, hey?” the boy muttered. “You’re as much a cow-puncher
-as I am a Chinaman! Let’s have a look at this toad-sticker.” He bent
-over and picked up the knife. Holding it up, he saw that the
-initials “J. K.” were burned in the handle. The blade was long and
-curved slightly.
-
-“J. K.--the K standing for Marino,” the boy mused. “Some day we’ll
-have this little argument out, Mister J. K. Marino. But you won’t
-have one of these things in your hand when we do. Lucky for me I saw
-you make a dive for it, or I’d be plumb tired of living by now.”
-
-A moment more he gazed at the knife, then absently he stuck it in
-his belt. Slowly he continued on his way to the bunk-house, to see
-Nat Raymond.
-
-Before they turned in he told Roy of the occurrence. With the door
-of their room shut tight, so as not to disturb Mrs. Manley, the boys
-talked far into the night. When finally they switched off the light
-they had come to no decision except to agree that Marino was not to
-be allowed on X Bar X property again. Yet, had they known it, this
-was, in effect, locking the stable after the horse had been stolen.
-
-While Teddy and Roy were talking things over in their room, another
-conversation, quite relative to theirs, was being carried on within
-the doors of the bunk-house. Despite the appeals of a few men to
-“can the chatter an’ go to sleep,” Nat Raymond and Pop Burns were
-verbally appointing themselves a committee of investigation.
-
-“Me, I’m goin’ to try to find Gus an’ bring him back,” Pop declared,
-pulling hard on his pipe. “He’s too good a man to--Jim, take yore
-toe outa my eye! He’s too good a man to lose.”
-
-“Well, then go an’ chin somewhere else!” Jim Casey ordered
-petulantly. “You guys loaf all day an’ want to stay up all night.
-Us, we got to work!”
-
-“Who loafs all day?” Pop asked indignantly. “I do a blamed sight
-more work than you do, Jim Casey, young as you are! So fold that
-behind the rim of yore derby!”
-
-“Aw, let him rave,” Nat Raymond pleaded. “He only wants to start an
-argument. Listen! How you gonna find Gus?”
-
-“Don’t know. But I will somehow as soon as the boss comes back.
-He’ll be glad to see the old geezer. The boss hated to fire Gus as
-much as Gus hated to be fired, I’ll bet--maybe more. But Bardwell
-was all het up over what Jake Trummer said.” Being the oldest man on
-the X Bar X, Pop felt privileged to take liberties with the boss’s
-name. “You know, Nat,” he continued, “that time Belle Ada and the
-others were kidnapped took a lot out of the old boy. He ain’t as
-young as he was once--none of us are,” and Pop puffed reminiscently.
-“I mark the time that--”
-
-“For the love of seven kinds of gorillas, will you guys pipe down?”
-came a voice from one of the upper bunks. “What do you think this
-is--a lecture hall?”
-
-Since several others took up their grievances at this point, Pop and
-Nat were compelled to desist and turn in. But Pop called across to
-Nat that when the boss came back he was “goin’ to ask for a few days
-leave an’ hunt Gus up.” Nat added he’d do the same and hunt Marino
-down, and the whole room echoed this sentiment. The Pup had
-succeeded in making himself uniformly unpopular during his stay at
-the X Bar X.
-
-Early the next morning the ranch yard was the scene of a
-consultation. Both Teddy and Roy felt it advisable to tell the
-others of what had occurred the night before, so that they might be
-on their guard and see that Marino kept his distance. Pop grunted
-scornfully when Teddy told of the knife, and expressed himself
-fluently concerning any one who was yellow enough to try to slip a
-sticker into another. After Teddy had concluded his story, heads
-were nodded sagely.
-
-Bug Eye, who was still among those present, declared as his opinion
-that The Pup was nothing more nor less than a Black Hand.
-
-“With that name an’ carryin’ a dirk,” he demanded, “what else could
-he be? I know them kind. Saw one in Frisco one time, an’ again in
-Galveston. They’re all alike.”
-
-“Yore quite some traveled, ain’t you?” inquired Rad Sell
-sarcastically. “Suppose you went in that Fishmobile of yourn.”
-
-“Naw, he walked,” Nat Raymond interrupted. “Ever see the soles of
-his feet? All callous. Ain’t they, Bug Eye?”
-
-“Never mind that,” Roy said, suppressing a smile. “This is more
-important. While dad’s away, Teddy and I have got to manage this
-place, and we don’t want anything to go wrong. So if any one sees
-Marino hanging around, tell him he’s not wanted. We don’t care for
-snakes like that on our ranch--they’re likely to bite and poison
-some one.”
-
-Teddy nodded in approval.
-
-“And also,” he added, “if you happen to see Gus--though I don’t
-suppose you will--tell him to return. All is forgiven!” and the boy
-grinned. “In the meantime there’s plenty to do. Nat, as I started to
-tell you last night--” and Teddy went on explaining some details of
-the day’s work.
-
-The crowd in the yard wandered off to go about their respective
-tasks. Teddy and Roy were to ride to Eagles to see about some new
-blankets and they turned to the corral to saddle Star and Flash.
-
-As they approached the railing, Teddy said to his brother:
-
-“Remember that horse I broke about a month ago--just before we went
-on our little picnic to Thunder Canyon? The one that jumped the
-fence with me?”
-
-“Sure, I remember him. Made a fine riding pony. Dad said he wouldn’t
-trade him for any horse on the place--except, I imagine, General.”
-
-“Yea! Well, I want you to take a look at his left foreleg. Seems to
-have some kind of a sore on it, and it won’t heal. I put ointment on
-it last week, but it didn’t seem to help. Wait here, and I’ll get
-him.”
-
-The boy opened the gate. At this time of year there were only a few
-horses within the enclosure, and no steers, since all these were on
-grazing ground. They would not be brought in until the round-up in
-the late fall.
-
-Striding up to Flash, Teddy rubbed the pony’s nose with his hand and
-gazed about him. Strangely enough, his eye did not catch the mount
-he spoke of, and he looked more carefully among the other horses.
-Still he could not see the bronco.
-
-“Hey, Roy!” he called. “Can you spot that pinto? Blamed if I can. I
-must be getting blind.”
-
-For a long moment both boys swept the corral with their eyes.
-Gradually they were beginning to realize the true state of affairs.
-
-“You say it,” Teddy begged. “Go ahead.”
-
-“I will--the pinto’s gone,” Roy declared grimly. “There’s no doubt
-about it. He’s not here, and none of the boys have him out. Teddy,
-he’s been stolen!”
-
-“An’ I know the waddie that took him!” Teddy burst out. “Last night!
-Oh, what a clown I was not to stop The Pup when I had him instead of
-letting him get away with a horse like that! Kick me, Roy--I deserve
-it!”
-
-“You don’t know for sure,” Roy admonished. “Some one else may have
-taken him--though it certainly does look suspicious. If we--”
-
-He was interrupted by his mother’s voice, calling from the front
-porch.
-
-“Teddy! Roy!” Mrs. Manley exclaimed. “Come in at once! Something has
-happened!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-Follow Us
-
-
-With a bound, the boys were out of the corral and running toward the
-house. As they came closer they saw a look of anxiety on their
-mother’s face.
-
-“What is it?” Roy shouted, not slacking his pace. “Is any one hurt?”
-
-“No, not that! But I just went to your father’s desk to get a
-blotter from the drawer, and a large sum of money is missing! It was
-taken from his desk last night!”
-
-The explanation of Mrs. Manley’s concern came as a relief, rather
-than a shock, to Teddy and Roy. On that short journey from the
-corral to the house, their minds had run the gamut of emotions--they
-did not know what to expect. Since the true character of The Pup was
-known to them, they had almost feared he had attempted to injure
-some one within the house.
-
-“How much was it, Mother?” Roy asked, as he reached the porch.
-
-“About four hundred dollars. Your father drew it from the bank the
-day before yesterday to pay the men with. He must have forgotten to
-tell you about it, though he may have wanted to wait until he
-returned before giving the boys their wages. Now it’s gone! The
-drawer was forced and the money stolen. Do you think any of the
-men--I don’t like to mention it, but--”
-
-“Don’t worry, Mom, none of the boys did it,” Teddy assured her.
-
-“We know who’s got it; but that won’t help much,” Roy said.
-
-“You do?” Mrs. Manley’s eyes expressed her surprise. “How do you
-know?”
-
-“Because the money isn’t the only thing that’s missing. That pony
-dad liked so well is gone, too.”
-
-“The one Belle’s been riding--the one you broke?” A frown came to
-Mrs. Manley’s face. “Your father will be sorry to hear that. Next to
-his own horse, he liked that pony better than any on the place. But
-tell me--who took him? And who took the money?”
-
-“The Pup,” Roy declared, pressing his lips together.
-
-“Joe Marino! The man Gus rode with!” Mrs. Manley shook her head
-sadly. “I’m very sorry. I was afraid he would cause trouble of some
-sort after your father discharged him. But are you sure?”
-
-“I am!” Teddy exclaimed decidedly. “He came back last night, Mother.
-I met him.” Wisely, the boy did not tell of his fight with the man.
-“I told him to stay away from here, and, as I remember now, he was
-near the corral when I caught him! He must have sneaked into dad’s
-office, taken the money, and then he got the pony out. So-o-o
-_that’s_ what he meant when he said his job here was finished!”
-Teddy brought a fist down sharply into his open palm. “And I had him
-in my hands! If I only had that chance over again, I’d certainly
-make the most of it! Wonder how far away he is by now? Maybe we
-could--”
-
-“Cool off,” Roy advised. “No use to beef about a thing that’s
-already happened. The thing to do is to find Joe Marino.”
-
-“Are you certain it was he?” Mrs. Manley asked.
-
-“We sure are!” came from Teddy. “How about it, Roy? Wouldn’t you bet
-your bottom dollar that The Pup did this?”
-
-Both his mother and Teddy waited for the reply. They had confidence
-that Roy would not go off “half cocked,” a trait which Teddy had in
-full measure. Besides this, with Mr. Manley gone, the mother and
-younger brother leaned toward Roy as the natural head of the family.
-
-“Marino,” Roy said slowly, “is the thief, or I’m a ring-tailed
-doodle bird.”
-
-“And there’s no two ways about it!” Teddy added. “Come on,
-Roy--we’ll go get him! He’s got a payroll and a horse of ours!”
-
-“But, boys--” Mrs. Manley began, when Roy threw an arm
-affectionately over her shoulder.
-
-“Don’t worry, Mom,” he interjected. “Dad told us to stick, and stick
-we do until he sends for us, payroll or no payroll. Teddy, you fly
-off the handle too fast. You know what the orders were.”
-
-“That’s right, too,” the younger lad said, a bit regretfully. “But
-it sure does seem a shame to let a skunk get away so easily!”
-
-“He won’t get away,” Roy asserted. “We’ll telephone in to the
-sheriff at Hawley to be on the watch, in case he went that way. Then
-maybe we can reach Nick’s friend at Eagles--the puncher he talked to
-from the Whirlpool River Ranch. If he’s a friend of Nick’s, he’ll
-help us out. Then, when dad comes back, we can start on the hunt.”
-
-“Yea, but when’ll that be?” Teddy half grumbled. “A week, maybe. By
-that time The Pup could be half way across the continent. Oh, I know
-it’s the only thing to do,” he added quickly, as he saw Roy stare at
-him. “But--oh, well, I guess you know how I feel!”
-
-“It wasn’t your fault at all, Teddy,” Mrs. Manley consoled. “How
-could you know that Marino was here to steal?”
-
-“Aw, I might have guessed he’d try some stunt like that,” the boy
-muttered. “After he--I mean when I saw him sneakin’ around. Well, we
-live and learn. Anything else missing, Mother?”
-
-“I don’t believe so, and I certainly hope not,” Mrs. Manley
-answered. “A horse and four hundred dollars are quite enough. Do you
-think--oh, I can’t think--Gus--”
-
-“Not any!” Teddy exploded forcibly. “And that reminds me, Roy! That
-conversation you heard behind the bunk-house! Marino was trying to
-get Gus to go into this scheme with him and split the money. That’s
-it, as sure as shooting! Nope, Mom, Gus had no finger in this! It
-was Marino, all alone. I’ll lay anything on that.”
-
-“You’re probably right, Teddy,” Roy agreed, his face clearing. “At
-least it’s an explanation of what I heard. Of course we can’t be
-sure of that, though it sounds likely. The Pup may have had another
-idea, and just formed the plan to rob our place on the spur of the
-moment when he heard dad was away. Come on, let’s take a look at the
-desk. That may tell us something.”
-
-When they reached Mr. Manley’s office they saw in a moment that the
-drawer of the desk had been pryed open with some sort of knife, and
-the lock sprung. There were marks--small cuts--about the woodwork on
-the edge of the desk. As Roy saw these, he looked at Teddy
-significantly, but said nothing. He did not want his mother to know
-of the knife episode.
-
-A raised window on the side indicated how the intruder had gained
-entrance. Such was the faith that Mr. Manley had in his men that he
-never bothered to lock up at night, and this was the first time in
-all the years he had been the owner of the X Bar X that his trust
-had been violated. Perhaps it was carrying things to extremes to
-allow a large sum of money to remain unprotected, but “the boss” was
-ever an unreliable business man. It was this very quality which so
-endeared him to his family and to his associates--the quality of his
-lovable childishness. Yet there were those who could tell of another
-nature which lay buried beneath this exterior--a nature which men of
-evil character had learned to fear. When aroused, the boss of the X
-Bar X was a “fightin’ fool,” as Pop expressed it.
-
-Realizing that there was nothing more to be learned within the
-office, Roy and Teddy returned to the ranch yard and informed the
-men of what had occurred. There was a quick rush for “shootin’
-irons,” which had to be forcibly quelled. There were many saddened
-faces when Roy told them that they could not start in immediate
-pursuit of the marauder, but must wait for the return of the boss.
-
-“I hate to hang around here as much as you do,” he finished. “But
-dad’ll be back soon, and then we’ll have our inning. There’s a bare
-chance that some one else may pick up The Pup. If that happens,
-we’ll be saved the trouble--although it would almost be a pleasure,”
-and his lips shut tightly.
-
-“An’ we ain’t to do nothin’?” Pop Burns asked wistfully.
-
-“Not yet awhile. We can’t. If dad were only here, we could get up a
-gang and go after him. But we’ve got to stay on the place. That was
-the order, an’ I aim to see it’s enforced. Of course if when you are
-on range you should see The Pup, well--”
-
-“That’s enough, Roy,” Nat interrupted feelingly. “We’ll do the rest.
-There ain’t no need for you to elucidate. But aside from that, if
-you say we stick on the ranch, stick we do. But I hope the boss gets
-back soon. Marino--the polecat! Rustlin’ one of our best horses! The
-ole--” and Nat proceeded to lay bare the secrets of The Pup’s life
-as he understood them.
-
-The first excitement of the discovery over, the ranch settled down
-to its usual workaday tasks. There was much to be done, and the men
-were soon absorbed in their labor. There are dull times about a
-ranch, but the early fall is not one of them, and thus it was that
-when a rider, dusty, hot, and tired, loped into the ranch yard he
-found it deserted. The only person in sight was Sing Lung, who sat
-in the doorway of the cook house enjoying the morning sun, and
-probably dreaming about the pleasanter and more picturesque lands
-across the sea. But when he saw the horseman, a grin came to his
-face and he waved a hand.
-
-“’Lo, Nick,” he beamed. “Why you come back quick? Cows all fixee,
-maybe yes?”
-
-“Maybe no,” Nick answered shortly, “Rustle me some grub, pronto,
-Sing. Where’s Roy an’ Teddy?”
-
-“Horse pen, me t’ink. You find?”
-
-With a grateful sigh, Nick slid from his horse and set out for the
-corral.
-
-“I been ridin’ most of the night,” he sang out over his shoulder,
-“so let that grub be early and plenty.”
-
-He found the boys engaged in replacing one of the corral rails. Roy
-held one end of the new bar in place and Teddy was about to raise
-the other when he saw the man on foot.
-
-“Nick!” he exclaimed, and dropped the rail. “What in thunder--”
-
-“Left yore dad last night late,” Nick interrupted wearily, “an’ rode
-like a fool to get here. I got a message for you.”
-
-He reached in his vest pocket and drew forth a soiled paper. Looking
-at it with a glassy stare for a moment, he passed it over to Roy.
-Wonderingly, the boy took it, and as Nick flung himself full length
-upon the grass he opened it and read:
-
-“Roy and Teddy:
-
-“Got in bad jam. There’s been a slide near Whirlpool River, and the
-cattle are in danger. Need your help. Take two men and come down the
-river in a canoe, pronto. Follow us. Got to get the cows out of
-there. Nick is foreman--he stays. Suggest that Bug Eye, if he’s
-still there, come with you, and Pop. Only hurry up.
-
-“Dad.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-The Water Trail
-
-
-To Teddy’s excited questions, Nick gave only mumbled replies, and
-waved his hand protestingly.
-
-When Roy bent down and raised him to a sitting position he declared
-he knew nothing more than what was in the letter, except that a
-wandering horseman had told of a slide near Whirlpool River, which
-threatened to force the cattle into the water, should it reoccur,
-and would the boys “please give the bronc some water.” This was
-attended to, and the boys got ready to start.
-
-Nick came to life suddenly at Sing Lung’s cry of “come an’ get ’um,”
-and started lurchingly for the mess house. After he was stoked with
-food and coffee, he aroused himself to an interest in life, and
-where he was taciturn before, he was a veritable spring of
-information now. The food acted as a stimulant, after his long fast
-and hard ride, and he talked willingly.
-
-Teddy and Roy, eager as they were to set out, felt it would be worth
-their while to delay long enough to hear Nick’s story, so they
-waited for him to light a cigarette, settle himself comfortably on a
-bunk, and commence.
-
-“We struck camp about seven last night,” Nick said, blowing out a
-swirling cloud of smoke. “The goin’ had been bad, on account of the
-rains, an’ we didn’t make such good time, ’cause the boss wanted to
-save the broncs. We hit that place on the other side of Harver’s
-Gully--forget the name of it--’bout twenty miles west of the gulch.
-Then we got set for the night.
-
-“Long about nine o’clock, just when Slim Holiday was startin’ one of
-them dirges he calls a song, we hears a noise an’ up rides a hombre
-on a pony that looked like it was more use as a hat-rack than a
-horse. This waddy tells us something that sure makes us sit up an’
-take notice.”
-
-“The slide?” Teddy interrupted.
-
-“Check! He says the whole top of Friendly Mountain has shifted, an’
-part of it’s slid down into the valley almost to the edge of
-Whirlpool River. Says he saw it happen, an’ the rest of the mountain
-is likely to go any day now. Says if it does, it’ll about block up
-the river.”
-
-“Just where on the river is this?” Roy asked excitedly. “That river
-is some long, runs into Thunder Canyon, I think. The slide may not
-be near our cattle.”
-
-“May not, an’ then again it may. That’s the way yore dad feels about
-it. Last we heard of that bunch of dogies they was near Friendly
-Mountain. They may be there yet, or they may have wandered Pete
-knows where. But we can’t take no chances. We got to see that the
-cows get out quick. Yore dad says the pick of the whole bunch is in
-that herd.”
-
-“They are, too,” Teddy mused. “All our best short-horns. Was dad
-worried, Nick?”
-
-“Well, he wasn’t any too easy in his mind. So he roots me out to
-ride back--which I done. Yep, which I done.” Nick’s head started to
-nod, and Teddy motioned toward the bunk he was sitting on. Gently
-the two boys deposited the puncher on the bed, took his still
-smoking cigarette from his fingers, and left him to shake the
-rafters with healthy snores.
-
-“I don’t like the looks of this at all,” Roy declared, as soon as
-they reached the yard. “I kind of hate to leave mother alone with
-Marino around. If he should come back--”
-
-“I wouldn’t worry about that,” Teddy assured him. “Marino isn’t
-going to show his face around here for some time to come. And then,
-too, Nick will be here. Mother will be all right. She depends on
-Nick--and he’s a good man. Now we’ve got to tell her, and find Bug
-Eye and Pop. I suppose Bug Eye will want to go in that Fishmobile of
-his--but not with me. Suppose you see mother while I find the
-others?”
-
-Mrs. Manley took the news calmly. Nell and Ethel were disappointed
-that the boys were going to leave, but at Belle’s insistence they
-promised to remain until their return.
-
-“Bring back some fish,” Belle suggested. “Some trout, if you can.”
-
-“If we bring back any fish, they’ll be the kind that walk on land,”
-Roy declared grimly. His mind flew to The Pup, and he wondered if
-there was a chance of meeting him. Then, with a laugh, he dismissed
-the thought. “That would be the kind of thing you read about, but
-never happens,” he decided. “I reckon we’ll never see him again, nor
-our money or horse either.”
-
-Teddy’s idea was to bring the heavy canoe, which lay under a shed in
-the rear of the yard, to the water by one of the ranch trucks. Both
-the boys had often been on the river before in this canoe, but never
-had they been as far as the rapids, which gave the stream its name.
-The part that flowed by the ranch was broad and peaceful, and
-continued this way for some fifteen miles. Then, like a beast
-suddenly released from a cage, it became a roaring, whirling
-torrent, barely navigable, and dangerous always. It was down this
-stream, and past these rapids, that Roy and Teddy had to go to reach
-the cattle.
-
-When Bug Eye and Pop heard the news, they began preparations
-immediately. Pop examined the bottom of the canoe with minute care,
-he and Bug Eye going over every seam, for this was the boat to which
-they were to trust their lives. Bug Eye had received word by phone
-from Pete Ball that he was not needed for a time at the 8 X 8, and
-that Mr. Manley was welcome to his services. By one o’clock
-everything was in order.
-
-Roy, after several attempts, succeeded in awaking Nick for a few
-moments, and under the boy’s eyes the puncher wrote his instructions
-on a slip of paper, for Roy knew in his tired state he would never
-remember them. This over, Nick murmured something that may have been
-Chinese, but that sounded faintly like “good luck,” and, turning
-over, resumed his interrupted slumbers.
-
-Jim Casey was to drive the truck, containing the canoe, to the
-river. All of them were needed to lift it in place on the vehicle,
-so heavy was it, but at last it was in and securely lashed to
-prevent it from jolting. The rest of the stuff, including food and
-blankets, were piled in the front, to be unloaded and put into the
-canoe when the river was reached.
-
-Mrs. Manley, Belle, and the two visitors watched the start from the
-porch. Affectionately the mother kissed her sons good-bye and
-breathed a prayer for their safety. She knew that the journey they
-were about to undertake was dangerous in the extreme, yet she never
-uttered one word of protest. It was necessary that they go--their
-father had called for them. And, as she waved good-bye, she smiled
-cheerfully and bravely. These were her sons--they would come back as
-they had always done, successful, unharmed. Yet strive as she would,
-the mother could not keep a tiny lump from coming into her throat.
-
-The truck containing the five men--Teddy, Roy, Bug Eye, Pop, and
-Casey, the driver, reached the river in half an hour. Carefully the
-canoe was lifted from the platform and carried to the water’s edge.
-
-“Now!” Roy grunted, and they swung it into the stream. Eagerly they
-bent over, watching the bottom with anxious eyes. For a moment they
-waited.
-
-“Not a drop!” Teddy exulted. “You did a good job, Pop. Nary a leak.
-Hope she stays that way, and I guess she will. It’s a good boat. All
-right, Jim. Let’s get the rest of the stuff out. Then you can mosey
-back. Let Nick sleep as long as he wants to--he’s had a hard ride.
-And tell Belle she’ll have to ride to Eagles herself for that whip I
-promised her unless she wants to wait until I get back. It’s at the
-express office now. Wait--take that roll of blankets first, and
-we’ll stow ’em at the bow where they’ll stay dry.”
-
-The canoe was soon loaded and ready to start. Roy and Bug Eye were
-to paddle first, while Teddy and Pop sat in the middle.
-
-“So long!” Jim called. “If you see The Pup tell him we been lookin’
-for him!”
-
-“Now why should we see The Pup?” Roy asked of no one in particular,
-and dipped his paddle deep into the water. “Although I was thinking
-the same thing a while ago. Pipe dreams, I guess. What do you say,
-Bug Eye? Let’s hit it up. Hu, hu, hu, hu....”
-
-The boat glided downstream, both paddlers stroking in unison to
-Roy’s grunted chanty. The gentle current added to their speed, and
-they went along at a good rate. On either side of the river, willows
-trailed their drooping branches into the water and afforded a
-grateful shade from the midday sun. Roy, seated in the rear of the
-craft, steered nearer the edge to take advantage of this protection.
-
-To the left, many miles from the river, but because of its hugeness
-seeming almost to border it, rose the highest peak in that part of
-the country. Its top was capped with eternal snow and framed in a
-wreath of clouds--a picture to make even the most indifferent heart
-beat faster. The sparkling water of the stream reflected the sun
-like a polished mirror. After half an hour of paddling, Roy stopped
-for a moment and shaded his eyes with his hand.
-
-“She curves around here some place, doesn’t she?” he asked. “I don’t
-exactly remember--it’s a long time since I’ve been down this far.”
-
-“If by ‘she’ you mean the river, it does,” Bug Eye grinned, turning
-around slightly. “It swings to the left, then it’s straight for a
-long stretch before the rough water starts. Golly, it’s almost
-smooth enough here to try my Fishmobile! Wish we could have brung
-it--I mean brought it.”
-
-Some one had lately placed into Bug Eye’s hands a copy of “Correct
-English as Used by Gentlemen,” and since then he had laboriously
-tried to pattern his speech after the forms advocated by the book.
-Thus far he had not had much success, most of the time being too
-lazy to retrace his words.
-
-“You know how long that Fishmobile would last?” Teddy laughed.
-“About five minutes--if it didn’t fall to pieces before then. Say,
-Pop, have you ever shot the rapids below here?”
-
-The veteran puncher nodded solemnly. Seated on the bottom of the
-canoe with his long legs curled uncomfortably about the bundle of
-blankets and his bald head exposed to the rays of the sun, Pop Burns
-presented a strange sight. A canoe is no place for a man who appears
-uneasy unless he’s straddling a bronco.
-
-“I bin down twice,” Pop replied. “Once we got spilled--see that
-scar?”
-
-He bent over, exposing a white line on the top of his head.
-
-“Where I hit a rock,” he explained laconically. “But we had a small
-boat then, and she wasn’t well balanced. With this thing, now, we
-got a good chance. She’s heavy, an’ we got lots of weight on the
-bottom. But even at that, it ain’t gonna be no picnic.”
-
-“Isn’t,” Bug Eye corrected. “We’ll make it though, Pop. We got to
-make it. Yore boss wants to get those cattle out quick. We can land
-an’ see can we scare up some broncs. Can’t do a thing on foot. How
-long you calcalate it’ll be before yore dad shows up, Roy?”
-
-“Well, we’ll probably hit Trummer’s range sometime to-morrow or the
-next day. Dad had a start on us of a day. That ought to bring him
-there soon after we arrive. The land route is much longer, on
-account of having to skirt the mountains. But dad’s a hard rider,
-and so are the men with him. I have a hunch they’ll make it almost
-as soon as we shall.”
-
-“You figuring on borrowing broncs from Jake Trummer?” Teddy asked.
-
-“Well, if he wants us to get the cows off his range he’s got to help
-us out that much, anyhow. Besides, if that story about the landslide
-is true, he’ll have his hands full with his own cattle, although his
-herd may not be near the place where the slide occurred. Something
-tells me the bird who told that tale exaggerated more than a little.
-Still, dad believed him, so there may be something in it. We can’t
-afford to take a chance. Say, here’s a peach of a place to stop. How
-about eats?”
-
-There was a general assent to this proposition, and Roy steered into
-a little cove.
-
-“That was a nice, pleasant ride,” Teddy reflected as he seized a
-bundle of foodstuffs. “If it was all like that, I wouldn’t kick. But
-wait till to-morrow! If we don’t have our hands full then, I’m a
-ring-tailed doodle bird!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-A Figure among the Trees
-
-
-Their meal was rather a sketchy one, for the men all felt that time
-was precious and that to delay longer than was absolutely necessary
-lessened, by just that much, their chances of saving their cattle.
-Nevertheless, they ate heartily, though hurriedly, and when once
-more they were in the canoe, with Teddy and Pop paddling, Roy gave a
-sigh of relief.
-
-“Feel like a new man,” he murmured. “Now the thing to do is to give
-the new man some food, I suppose, but I’ll postpone that for awhile.
-Glad you’re doing the paddling, Teddy. I hate to work right after a
-meal.”
-
-“You might leave off those last four words and be nearer the truth,”
-his brother grinned. “Me, I like it! Helps the food to digest.
-Increases the salivary activity, and, by exciting the interior of
-the diaphragm, it adds to--”
-
-“Chuck it,” Roy interrupted calmly. “You’re talking Chocktaw. Here’s
-that bend you spoke of, Bug Eye.”
-
-Before them the river curved gently, sweeping through a broad lane
-of grasses and trees. The current was swifter here, and Pop, who was
-in the rear, and hence occupied the position of steerer, trailed his
-paddle in the water and found that the boat sped along as fast as
-though he were paddling.
-
-“A taste of what’s comin’,” he declared. “The banks are a little
-narrower below here, an’ that’s what makes the current faster. But
-that don’t mean we won’t have no more work, Teddy,” as he saw that
-the boy had followed his example and allowed the stream to carry the
-boat. “It broadens out pretty soon, an’ then we hit it up again.”
-
-“Don’t worry--I know that,” Teddy returned. “Roy and I have both
-been down this far, but not for a long time. But this curve is
-familiar. Golly, it sure is pretty around here!”
-
-Silently the boy gazed ahead, resting his paddle across the canoe.
-The scene was truly magnificent. The sun, past its zenith now, threw
-flecks of gold on the water as it shone through the trees. Fleecy
-clouds drifted slowly overhead. The willows nodded sleepily, as a
-soft breeze stirred them.
-
-“I could enjoy this if we weren’t in such a hurry,” Teddy sighed.
-Then he turned to Roy and grinned. “This is soft for you, hey, Roy?
-Kind of beats a sunset, doesn’t it?”
-
-“Kind of,” Roy answered absently. His eyes were dreamy, and as Teddy
-saw them he winked at Bug Eye.
-
-“‘This is the forest primeval. The murmuring pines and the
-hemlocks,’” he began to quote softly, then suddenly gave a yell.
-“Hey! It’s morning! Wake up!”
-
-“What?” Roy stared at his brother stupidly. Then a sheepish grin
-came over his face. “All right, you Indian! I’ll get you for that.
-But I sure was day-dreaming. Guess it was that meal.”
-
-“Uh-huh,” Teddy grunted, expressing his contempt of such subterfuge.
-
-As the boat shot downstream, Pop Burns cast an appraising eye
-shoreward. The foliage was especially thick at this point, almost
-concealing the hint of mountains which rose back of the pebbly beach
-line. The puncher thought that if a man wanted to make a getaway
-after a crime, he would surely take this route. Unless by some
-chance the pursuers stumbled on the fugitive, there would be very
-little chance of finding him.
-
-“If he hugged the river, he could travel for miles without bein’
-seen,” Pop muttered to himself, and squinted again toward the bank.
-“But I suppose he wouldn’t have sense enough to do that. More than
-likely, if a rustler wanted to dig out for another country, he’d
-take an overland route and have to ride like all get-out to keep
-ahead. An’ if he wanted to, he could mosey along this bank an’ take
-his time. Then, when he got to where he wanted, he could cut for it.
-Seems that when a man takes to stealin’ an’ such like he loses what
-little brains he ever had.”
-
-Strangely enough, thoughts of this same nature were revolving in
-Teddy’s mind as his paddle dipped into the water. But they were more
-definite and were centered about a certain man. That man was The
-Pup. When they had received word that they were to leave the ranch
-and follow their father, the boy had been nervous for fear Marino
-might return and, out of revenge, try to do some damage to the place
-or its occupants. Yet Roy had said there was not much danger of
-this--that The Pup was miles away by this time. Surely if Roy--he of
-the careful, “mature” judgment--was satisfied that the home folks
-were safe, then Teddy had no cause for worry. Nick knew about
-Marino, and knew he was a character to be watched. Nick would see to
-it that Marino had his fangs drawn if ever he ventured to show his
-face at the X Bar X again.
-
-Teddy recalled the long knife with which Marino had attacked him,
-and the boy could not repress an involuntary shudder. Suppose The
-Pup, fired with liquor, should return some night and seek entrance
-to the ranch house? The men would be some three hundred yards away
-in their own sleeping shack. Could they--could Nick--hear a call?
-
-Unconsciously the boy’s muscles tightened and he drove his paddle in
-more forcibly, sending a shower of spray over his brother, who was
-seated on the bottom of the canoe behind him.
-
-“Hey, take it easy!” Roy yelled. He brushed the water from the back
-of his neck and demanded: “Why so strong all of a sudden, Teddy?”
-
-“Just thinking,” Teddy murmured. Roy got a side view of his
-brother’s face as the boy turned his body at the end of the stroke,
-and the older lad frowned. Was Teddy getting the “willies” now?
-There must have been some reason for those set lines around the
-mouth and those tiny knots of muscle just above the jaw bone. Roy
-knew his brother well enough to be sure that the younger lad’s
-thoughts were reflected in his face as though it were a mirror.
-
-“What’s on your mind, boy?” Roy asked softly.
-
-“Nothing--yes there is, too!” Teddy burst out. He ceased from his
-labor and rested the dripping paddle on the bow of the canoe. “I’m
-worried about mother and Belle and the others. Where do you suppose
-The Pup is now?”
-
-“Headin’ for the Border, an’ goin’ strong!” Bug Eye interrupted.
-“That waddy won’t let no grass grow under his feet. He’s afraid he
-might be pushin’ it up a little later if he does. Yore dad ain’t got
-much use fer sneak thieves an’ rustlers.”
-
-“You mean he wouldn’t stay in this part of the country?” Teddy asked
-eagerly.
-
-“Not a chance,” Roy answered. “Is there, Pop? Don’t you think The
-Pup will head south and try to make the Border?”
-
-“That’s my idea of it,” the veteran said decidedly. He mopped the
-top of his shiny head with a huge red handkerchief. “This is some
-hot work! Yep, I reckon Marino is pretty scarce around here now.
-Why, Teddy? Why was you askin’? Hopin’ to run acrost him?”
-
-“Not any,” the boy said shortly, resuming his paddling. “But--well,
-you know how I got this.” He drew from his belt the knife he had
-forced from The Pup’s hand when he had met him near the corral. At
-the last moment, impelled by a motive he himself could not explain,
-the boy had brought the weapon with him. Now he turned it over and
-gazed at the initials burned in the handle. “The man who carries one
-of these is the kind you need eyes in the back of your head to
-watch. And I was afraid he might come back to the ranch some night,
-loaded and sore. Nick might not be handy. I wish--”
-
-“Teddy, believe me, there’s not a chance in the world of that,” Roy
-said earnestly. He sat up straighter, and twisted around so he could
-see his brother. “You know how I feel about those things. In fact, I
-guess you’ve laughed at me plenty for being an old maid. But in this
-instance, I’m not worried. There are five men left to take care of
-the place. I told Nick to let the work ride till we came back, and
-to stick close to the ranch house. I told him if Belle or Ethel or
-Nell go riding, to be sure to have a man or two trail along. There’s
-to be a guard awake through the night, wandering around the place.
-He’ll sleep in the day time. Didn’t know all that, did you?” and Roy
-laughed.
-
-“Well, to tell the truth,” he went on, “I didn’t want to be kidded
-about it, so I kept it quiet. But now that I see you’ve got the
-fever yourself,” and Roy grinned again, “I’ll relieve your mind.”
-
-“And believe me, you have!” Teddy exclaimed fervently. “Roy, if ever
-I kid you again about being too careful, just remind me of this!
-Baby! You know, as I was paddling along there, it struck me all of a
-sudden. Like a cold shower! I started to think, what if The Pup
-comes back and all the boys are out of reach? And golly, I began to
-get the fidgets! I didn’t want to tell you, because I know when you
-start to worry you sure do a good job of it. But, by jingo, you did
-your worrying ahead of time, which is the right way. Woosh! I feel
-better. Funny how you get nervous all of a sudden like that, isn’t
-it? All right, Pop, let’s go! Now we can consider the cattle--and
-we’ll have plenty to think about there, let me tell you! Come on,
-Pop! Hit it up! _One_, two, three, four! _One_, two, three, four!
-Yay! Look at her travel!”
-
-The shore slid by rapidly, and the water started to boil under the
-bow of the canoe. Pop, in the stern, wrinkled his face into a grin.
-Did this youngster think he could turn the boat on him? The old
-puncher dug his paddle deep into the water, and his shoulders moved
-rhythmically. Teddy was hard pushed to keep up with the old man, so
-powerful were the veteran’s strokes, and as the current was swifter
-here, the boat seemed fairly to skim over the water, heavy as it
-was.
-
-“All right, men!” Roy called out. “You’re doing fine! We’re creeping
-up. Another mile to go now. We’ve left Yale behind, and we’re
-passing Harvard.” He began to sway his body back and forward, in the
-manner of a coxswain of a racing shell. “Yo, yo, yo, yo--”
-
-Suddenly he stopped. He had been facing the shore, and now he
-reached forward and seized Teddy’s right arm. The boy yelled,
-floundered, and the boat swung around.
-
-“Roy, you big--” he began, then hesitated as he saw his brother’s
-face.
-
-Roy’s eyes had narrowed to two hazel slits. His forehead was creased
-with a frown. His underjaw shot forward ever so slightly. He pointed
-silently. His grip on Teddy’s arm tightened.
-
-The boy gazed at the shore, puzzled as to the reason of his
-brother’s queer actions. For a moment he could make out nothing
-except the dense trees and brush bordering the bank.
-
-Then, suddenly, he started. His face grew white. Unconsciously his
-hand slid to his belt and seized the butt of his gun.
-
-“The Pup!” Teddy gasped. “The Pup, or I’m a ring-tailed doodle bird!
-And he’s got our pony with him! Come on, Roy! Let’s get him!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-A Night in the Woods
-
-
-“To the shore, Pop!” Roy yelled, realizing that The Pup had seen
-them and it would be useless to hope to catch him unawares. “Wait,
-Teddy--” He saw that the boy had drawn his gun and that his eyes
-were blazing. “Don’t shoot! You may hit the horse! And, anyway, we
-don’t want to kill the skunk! We want to capture him, if we can.”
-
-Unfortunately their craft was almost directly in the middle of the
-stream, some two hundred feet from the shore. The figure on
-horseback had disappeared, but Roy hoped that, due to the tangle of
-brush, Marino might not be able to retreat before they could land.
-Pop set his teeth and leaned on his paddle, and Teddy did the same.
-But they were not working together, and the boat started to swing
-crazily.
-
-“Wait till I get in with you, Pop!” Teddy gasped. “This blame
-current! It sure is strong!”
-
-Gradually the canoe neared the shore. But by that time all four
-realized that their attempt was doomed to failure. The Pup had
-surely seen them and had got away.
-
-“I guess we lose,” Roy sighed, while he mopped his face with his
-handkerchief, for Teddy’s efforts had splashed him considerably.
-“Let up, boys. No use to land now. Besides, those rocks would make
-hash of the boat.” He pointed to some sharp-edged boulders along the
-bank. “No soap. What a fine time to be in the middle of a river! Bet
-The Pup is snickering up his sleeve by this time. It’s a wonder he
-didn’t wave good-bye at us,” and Roy laughed bitterly.
-
-“Merry Christmas!” Bug Eye remarked, and looked about him comically.
-“I am still among those present. Now, if it ain’t too much trouble,
-will you kindly explain this muddle to a poor man what ain’t got his
-right health?”
-
-“Do you mean to say you didn’t see him?” Teddy asked in amazement.
-
-“Who? The Pup? I seen nobody, an’ very little of him. I was sittin’
-here peaceful-like, maybe dozin’ a bit, as boys will do, when all of
-a sudden I hears a yell, gets a free shower bath, an’ wakes up to
-see Teddy an’ Pop paddlin’ like a couple of crazy men. Then I hears
-some one say ‘The Pup,’ an’ I looks, but don’t see a soul. Now, I
-ask you: what happened?”
-
-“Why, we saw Joe Marino!” Roy exclaimed excitedly. “And he was on
-the horse he stole from our corral! I spotted him first, and tipped
-off Teddy. We tried to make the shore, but the current was too
-swift. So I guess he’s plenty far by this time. What a break!”
-
-“Yo’re sure it was him?” Bug Eye asked curiously.
-
-“Positive!” Teddy declared. “I saw him as plain as I see you now. He
-was on our bronc, facing the river. Probably just watered the horse.
-Then, when he saw us he turned and beat it--disappeared like a
-shadow. Pop, you saw him, didn’t you?”
-
-The old puncher nodded forcibly.
-
-“Sure did,” he agreed. “But I was too blame busy to say anything. I
-had all I could do to try an’ keep this fool boat straight, an’ I
-didn’t make out so well at that. We’re a bunch of dubs, I reckon,”
-he admitted reluctantly.
-
-“Well, if yo’re sure you saw him, why don’t you land an’ have a
-look?” Bug Eye inquired eagerly.
-
-Teddy snorted.
-
-“What for? Just to see the scenery? Marino is gone by now. We
-haven’t as much of a chance as a fish on a desert of finding him.”
-
-“Let’s see! Ain’t that what some one said a while ago?” came from
-Bug Eye. “Seems to me I heard a voice say he would try fer the
-Border, an’ that this part of the country would see him no more,”
-and he looked quizzically at Pop.
-
-“Dry up,” Pop said succinctly. “We all make mistakes. But if you
-want to, Roy, we’ll land an’ take a look. Think it would do any
-good?”
-
-“Not a bit,” Roy decided. “We’d only waste our time. I wonder if
-that waddy could have been following us?”
-
-“Hardly, if he didn’t know we were here,” Teddy replied. “And it’s a
-cinch we surprised him, because he ducked like a scared rabbit.
-Nope, we just happened to run across him, that’s all. If we had only
-been on land!”
-
-“If the cow hadn’t stopped to chase a fly off her back, the train
-wouldn’t have hit her,” Roy retorted facetiously. “Suppose we had
-caught The Pup? What would we have done with him?”
-
-“Plenty,” Teddy answered. “Gotten some of dad’s four hundred
-smackies back, anyway. He can’t have spent it all this soon. Chances
-are, he’s got most of it with him.”
-
-“What he ain’t spent fer booze,” Bug Eye interjected contemptuously.
-“The Pup ain’t worth the powder to blow him up, though I’d chip in
-my little bit to stand part of the expense if any one wanted to try
-it,” he chuckled. “Well, I guess you can kiss the money goodbye,
-Roy. An’ the bronc too. Whatever you say about The Pup, he sure can
-ride, an’ he’ll be ridin’ fer election by now. You boys tired
-paddlin’? I’ll spell one of yuh, if yuh wants me to.”
-
-Pop accepted his offer, and once more the canoe slid on toward the
-rapids, still many miles downstream. There was much talk of the
-possibility of seeing The Pup again, and Teddy was in favor of
-unlimbering one of the rifles that lay in the bottom of the boat on
-the chance. But Roy vetoed this idea, saying it was very necessary
-that they keep the guns dry and clean.
-
-“Those rifles are our dinner-checks, you know,” he added. “When we
-land, we’ve got to look lively and do a bit of hunting if we want to
-eat. Sun’s almost down. We ought to make camp shortly. Soon as you
-see a likely spot, Bug Eye, head for it.”
-
-There was a run of some fifteen minutes while not a word was spoken.
-The only sound was the regular dip, dip, dip of the paddles,
-propelling the canoe onward. Pop, the extremist, was either so
-talkative that he’d “gab the ear off a brass monkey,” to use Nick
-Looker’s expression, or else he kept strict silence. Bug Eye was
-content to dream of the possibilities of his Fishmobile, and Teddy
-was wondering how his father was making out.
-
-“They ought to be about in a line with us,” the boy thought, “though
-far back behind those mountains. Hope they reach the cattle about
-the time we get there. If that herd has done much wandering--” He
-shook his head dubiously.
-
-If they had traveled that far off their own range, there was no
-telling how much farther they would go. Teddy hoped they would
-travel beyond the danger of the landslide the stranger had told
-about.
-
-Roy’s thoughts were in a rather chaotic condition. The discovery of
-The Pup had bothered him more than he cared to admit. Why was it he
-was headed toward the Whirlpool River Ranch--Jake Trummer’s place?
-Of course, it might be that he took that route because it offered
-the greatest protection. Unconsciously Roy echoed Pop Burns’
-thoughts, and decided that the heavy brush along the river would
-certainly be ideal for the concealment of a fugitive.
-
-Presently his cogitations were interrupted by Bug Eye, who called
-out:
-
-“How about this place ahead? Me, I’m gettin’ hungry! All right,
-Roy?”
-
-“Sure, I guess so.” Roy gazed at the small cove, then nodded. “Fine,
-Bug Eye. Get her up close, and I’ll hop out and pull the canoe up.
-Steady--”
-
-He leaped to the bank and grasped the bow of the craft. This he held
-while the others stood up and tossed the blankets, food, and rifles
-on the shore. Then the canoe was drawn up until it was nearly out of
-water.
-
-“She stood up well,” Teddy remarked, looking down at the boat.
-“To-morrow will tell. We’ll hit the rapids then, and give the ole
-raft a good try-out. Oh, baby, I’m stiff!” He stretched high and
-wide. “I’d hate to live in a canoe.”
-
-“I’d hate to live in a suitcase, too, but why worry about things
-like that?” Roy laughed. “Here, you navigator, see what you find.”
-He handed his brother a rifle. “If you catch anything less than
-three inches, throw ’em back.”
-
-“Now, by golly, that’s an idea!” Teddy exclaimed. “Fishing with a
-rifle. I’ve heard of it, but I’ve never seen it done. I’d like to
-try it.”
-
-“How do you mean?” Pop asked interestedly, ceasing from his labors
-of untying the blanket roll.
-
-“Why, shoot the fish!”
-
-The old man cackled sarcastically.
-
-“You heard of it, hey? Well, I’ve heard of a willyloo bird, too, but
-I never seen any. But go right ahead. Have yore fun.”
-
-“Just to show you it _can_ be done, I will!” Teddy declared, and
-strode resolutely to the water’s edge. “What would you like, trout
-or pickerel?”
-
-“Chocolate.” Bug Eye responded, with a grin. “Let ’er ride, Teddy.”
-
-The boy peered keenly down at the stream. The others grouped
-themselves eagerly around Teddy, while the sun, almost at the
-horizon, threw a cloth of gold upon the water.
-
-Suddenly Teddy saw a silver flash about five feet out. He brought
-the gun to his shoulder and took careful aim.
-
-Crack!
-
-“Get him?” Pop asked excitedly, forgetting his former declaration of
-unbelief.
-
-“Wait a minute,” Teddy grinned. “Give me time. There--what’s that?”
-
-He pointed toward a spot a little out from where they were standing.
-Bug Eye gave a yell.
-
-“A fish, sure as shootin’! An’ dead! Teddy, yo’re a wonder! I’ll get
-that one for you!” Shoes and all, he waded into the stream and
-seized the trout that floated on the surface of the river.
-
-“Boy, it’s a wonder!” Pop exclaimed, as Bug Eye held the fish up for
-inspection. The veteran rancher gazed at Teddy and shook his head.
-“One too many for me,” he muttered. “You win, Teddy!”
-
-“Golly, it did work, didn’t it?” the young lad marveled, touching
-his prize. “What do you think of that, Roy?”
-
-“I think you’re the luckiest boy in seven counties,” his brother
-laughed. “But, anyway, we’ve got our supper, and we’ll give you
-credit, Ted. Hail to the chief!” and he bowed low. “May he continue
-to have much success in his chosen career.”
-
-“It’s the concussion,” Teddy remarked, apropos of nothing. “The
-bullet hits the water, and the shock stuns the fish. At least that’s
-the technical explanation of the phenomenon,” and he pretended to
-choke over the long words. “But I suppose it’s useless to tell you
-birds that. Come on, let’s eat.”
-
-Had it not been for the fact that the mission before them was of
-such a weighty nature, the memory of that supper underneath the sky
-on the banks of the river would have remained in the minds of Teddy
-and Roy as one of the happiest they had ever enjoyed. But they could
-not entirely throw off the responsibility that burdened them, and
-behind all the jests that enlivened the meal was a feeling that this
-was superficial, and, at most, a respite. Still, worry does not sit
-long on young shoulders, and the occasion was a jolly one.
-
-Supper over, they saw to it that the boat was safe from possible
-attacks by the turbulent river. Then, wrapping themselves tightly in
-their blankets, the four cast themselves down upon nature’s bed. The
-light from their dying campfire flickered eerily, casting strange
-shadows. Above them the wind caressed the tree tops, humming or
-whistling as trees will.
-
-And far down the stream, under these same stars, rode a man with a
-haunted look on his face--a man on a stolen pony and with four
-hundred dollars in bills in his pocket.
-
-He heard no whispering winds, saw no stars; the river to him was no
-friend, nor could he find comfort in the prospect of a camp by the
-side of a stream.
-
-But he soon must stop, for even he must rest and give respite to the
-wearily lagging pony.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-Voices in the Night
-
-
-During the night, Roy tossed about restlessly, and once he sat up,
-under the impression that some one had come upon them. He peered
-about him and listened intently, but could not place the sound which
-had awakened him. Finally, with a grunt of contempt at his own
-nervousness, he rolled over and closed his eyes, at once sinking
-into a more restful slumber, which lasted until the sun was again
-warming the languid world. This time, when he awoke, he sprang to
-his feet and threw the blanket from him quickly.
-
-There was a method in this. The insect tribes of the woods find a
-blanket, inhabited by a sleeping human, a cosy place to spend the
-night, and frequently a camper will discover a strange collection of
-crawling things sharing his covering. Thus, having little fondness
-for snakes or spiders, Roy tossed the blanket to the ground with
-some haste, lest the guest intrude further and stay for breakfast.
-He bent over the cloth to see what he had gathered, but found
-nothing more than a few beetles and a single, undersized scorpion.
-He shook himself well, tossed the blanket on a tree limb to air, and
-called the others.
-
-Teddy, arousing himself gradually, “to avoid sudden shock,” as he
-explained with a grin, walked toward the canoe.
-
-“Francois, my orange juice,” he muttered sleepily, and, reaching
-under the seat, pulled forth a can of beans. This was opened with
-the aid of a revolver barrel, and the contents were soon being
-heated in a pan held over the fire by two green sticks. The four
-made a most satisfying breakfast, and, after piling their belongings
-once more into the craft, set off again down the river.
-
-“Hear anything last night?” Roy, who, together with Teddy, was
-paddling, asked casually.
-
-“Not me,” Teddy answered forcibly, if not grammatically. “This baby
-slept like the well known rock. Why?”
-
-“Oh, nothing--only I thought I did. I woke up with a start, some
-time in the night, and sat up. But I may have been dreaming. Anyway,
-if it was some one sneaking around, he didn’t disturb us.”
-
-“It would have taken a cannon to wake me up,” Bug Eye declared,
-yawning and dipping his hand into the water. “Boy, when I sleeps, I
-sleeps, an’ no mistake. Who did you think it was, Roy, The Pup?”
-
-“Had no idea,” Roy answered. “I dropped off again right afterwards.
-Pop, do we reach the rapids to-day?”
-
-“We should,” the puncher replied. “If nothin’ happens, I expect to
-see Whirlpool River Ranch by night. Then the thing to do is to find
-those locoed steers, that Gus--er, I mean that The Pup--chased.” By
-common consent the subject of Gus’s disappearance had not been
-discussed. It was a painful subject for all of them, since they all
-liked the young cowboy. Each hoped sincerely that, somehow, Gus
-would some day return and take his place with them once more.
-
-“What do you mean, unless something happens?” Bug Eye questioned,
-more to relieve the uncomfortable silence induced by the mention of
-Gus’s name than anything else. “Ain’t gettin’ pessimistic or
-nothin’, are yuh?”
-
-“Well, yuh can’t tell,” Pop said philosophically. “This river is
-treacherous. I’ve seen her when it looked like she wouldn’t drown a
-cat, then it started to rain, an’ in ten minutes she was bubblin’
-like a wash-boiler over a furnace--sweepin’ over the bank, raisin’
-Cain generally. But I reckon the weather’ll stay clear fer a while.”
-He squinted up at the sky. “Yep, we won’t get no rain to-day.”
-
-“Now I’ll bet it’ll pour,” Bug Eye jeered. “Pop, I hearn you
-prophesy before. Yo’re not so hot. Just before we had that
-cloudburst last spring, you said we was in fer a drought.”
-
-Scorning a reply to such calumny, the veteran puncher pulled out his
-pipe and lit it. Then, puffing contentedly, he watched the shore
-line slip by.
-
-Whether the gods of the storm had heard Pop’s boast and decided to
-put him in his place or not, the fact is that it did rain--and rain
-hard. Along about three o’clock the clouds started to gather, and by
-four the first drops fell. Within a few minutes the peaceful scene
-was changed to a furious tempest, with wind, lightning, and finally
-hail scourging the earth.
-
-As soon as white-caps appeared on the surface of the water the boys
-headed for shore, and succeeded in getting their craft to a point of
-safety on the bank before the real deluge started.
-
-They turned the canoe over and piled branches at its sides, thus
-keeping the blankets and rifles dry, while they stood shivering
-under the partial shelter of a tree. They felt that they were as
-secure there as any place, though the lightning flashed almost
-continuously. One bolt struck a quakermast not a hundred feet from
-where they were standing, but it did no more damage than searing off
-the bark. The thunder, following the flash, was deafening.
-
-When the rain had abated somewhat, they ran toward the river. Pop’s
-description of it after a storm had not been exaggerated. The
-current had increased tenfold, and it fairly roared as it dashed
-over the rocks. Yellow foam was tossed high upon the shore.
-
-“That queers our plan of reaching Jake Trummer’s place to-night,”
-Teddy said grimly. “No one but a fool would launch a boat in that.”
-He watched a huge tree limb go floating by. “Are the rapids worse
-than this, Pop? Do you think this storm will make them much more
-dangerous? Will--”
-
-“Take it easy, son,” Pop chuckled. “I’m no bureau of information.
-You’ve seen those rapids, haven’t you, Teddy?”
-
-“Yes; but it was a long time ago. I forget just how swift they are.”
-
-“Well, they’re bad enough, but not quite this bad. It is possible to
-shoot ’em in a heavy canoe like we got. Now what else was it you
-asked?”
-
-“Do you think this rain will make ’em worse?”
-
-“It might. There’s no tellin’. But we won’t take a chance on ’em
-to-night, at any rate. We’ve got to wait till morning. Now let’s
-have a look at the stuff that was placed under the boat.”
-
-The rain had ceased by this time, and now the sun came forth in all
-its glory for a farewell flash before night settled down. The boys
-turned the canoe over carefully and discovered that the rifles and
-blankets were as dry as before the storm. This lightened their
-spirits somewhat, for it meant that they could at least spend a
-fairly comfortable night.
-
-They fretted a good deal at the delay, but there was no help for it,
-and they set about making camp. It took them some time to get a fire
-going, for they had hard work to find dry wood, but finally picked
-up enough to start a small blaze, sufficient to warm them.
-
-“Guess we won’t be at the grazing ground much before dad, at this
-rate,” Roy declared, munching on some bacon and bread. “Golly! I
-hope those Durhams stick around a while longer.”
-
-“Say! I wonder if that storm could have started another slide?” Bug
-Eye questioned suddenly.
-
-“Snakes, I never thought about that!” replied Roy. “Suffering tripe,
-what a break it would be to get there and find the cows all in the
-river, drowned! And if that waddy Nick told us about spoke the
-truth, that may have happened. That will hit dad hard. Our best cows
-are in that bunch.”
-
-“Aw, forget it,” Teddy returned. “I can’t believe that, Roy. It
-doesn’t stand to reason. Cows wander all over the lot, and there’s
-not one chance in a thousand that they’d wait for a landslide to
-fall on ’em. They may have been in danger when that stranger came
-through, but that was three or four days ago. They’re just as likely
-to be a mile away by this time.”
-
-“Hope you’re right,” Roy mused. “And when you look at it that way, I
-guess you are. The story does sound fishy. Golly! I wish those
-blamed trees would stop dripping cold water down my neck.”
-
-With a last parting glow, the sun sank out of sight and darkness
-followed fast. The boys had established themselves some distance
-back from the river, but its roaring song could be plainly heard
-through the black night. Like all good campers, they had brought
-with them a small spade, and now found a use for it. They dug up the
-soft earth in a trench about their camp until a layer of dry sand
-made a comfortable sleeping place for them. But all were rather
-restless, and none of them wished to turn in immediately.
-
-Gradually the voice of the river grew fainter. The torrent was
-subsiding. Bug Eye and Pop had seated themselves on a log near the
-fire, and were puffing away on pipes, waiting for sleepiness to come
-upon them. Roy fed the blaze until he got it going to his
-satisfaction, then called to Teddy:
-
-“What say we have one more look at the stream before we turn in? I
-want to see that the canoe is pulled up far enough. Want to come
-along?”
-
-Teddy stretched himself, and yawned.
-
-“Sure. Might as well. She seems to have gone down quite a bit--you
-can hardly hear it now. Let’s go.”
-
-Together the two brothers walked through the woods. Neither had a
-light, but the clouds were nearly dispelled and the moon shone
-through a faint haze. When they reached the water’s edge Teddy
-remarked:
-
-“I’ll say it’s gone down. We could almost start now, if we wanted
-to. I think we could make it all right. But I suppose there wouldn’t
-be much sense in it.”
-
-“Not much,” Roy laughed. “Golly, it’s lonely here! Listen! Doesn’t
-the river sound queer? Almost as if it were talking to us.”
-
-“Poetical Roy,” Teddy chuckled. “Ask it if it’s going to be a nice
-day to-morrow, will you? Or maybe it doesn’t talk English? Maybe--”
-
-He stopped, and a puzzled look came over his face. He grasped his
-brother’s arm.
-
-“By golly, it _is_ talking!” he whispered tensely. “Listen!”
-
-To their ears came a sound of voices--men’s voices! And they came
-from the surface of the river!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-The Fugitive
-
-
-Long, weary miles stretched out behind The Pup as he wheeled his
-tired pony through the brush bordering the stream and allowed him to
-dip his nose in the cool water, drinking in noisy mouthfuls. Long,
-weary miles behind--and what before? Would the miles be any shorter,
-the road less wearisome? Would the midday sun be more merciful, or
-the nights more friendly?
-
-As his horse drank, The Pup shifted uneasily in the saddle, and,
-turning his head, peered quickly behind him. This gesture had become
-almost automatic in these last few days. Always, whenever he halted,
-his eyes would seek for some hidden enemy, and at the slightest
-sound his hand would twitch down to the gun at his side. But how
-guard against one enemy when the very woods themselves seemed
-hostile and the song of the birds sounded a note of continual
-warning? The man shivered apprehensively.
-
-Savagely The Pup pulled his pony’s head up, causing the animal to
-whinny in pain at the suddenness of it.
-
-“Gonna drink all day?” the man muttered, then shivered slightly. It
-was long since he had tasted food. Perhaps the memory of his last
-meal caused him to regret his cruelty to the bronco, for he allowed
-him to continue his drinking until fully satisfied.
-
-He was about to dismount and quench his own thirst when a sound of
-voices and the splash of paddles pulled him up short, froze the
-blood in his veins. Panic-stricken, he gazed frantically out from
-the small bower of brush in which he was encased. As the splash of
-paddles grew nearer, The Pup’s heart kept time with their beat,
-almost choking him with its fierce throbbing. Men! On his trail! He
-_must_ move--_must_ force his muscles to act! Yet he sat there, his
-face a sickly grey, his breath coming in short gasps.
-
-Now the bow of the canoe slid into his line of vision. In another
-second--a fifth of a second--those in the craft would see him. Who
-were they? Did they know him? Could they be--
-
-His lips pressed together suddenly, forcing back the cry of fear
-that strove for utterance. They were! Roy and Teddy Manley! And two
-others! The men he had robbed! There, before him, looking at him!
-
-With a sob he threw off the coils of terror that held him rooted to
-the spot and jerked his pony around desperately, sinking spurs deep
-into the animal’s sides. A single, frantic bound took him through
-the brush and out of sight of those on the river. Then, trembling
-violently, he gave the pain-maddened brute his head and clung
-fiercely to the saddle as the horse bore him swiftly over the uneven
-ground--back, far back from that dangerous stream.
-
-Gradually his mind resumed more normal action, realizing that, for
-the present at least, he was safe from pursuit. Teddy and Roy were
-in a boat. He was on horseback, and miles from them now. Safe--he
-was safe! The Pup drew a wavering sigh of relief.
-
-Slowly, stolidly, he continued his onward ride, once more parallel
-with the river, but at some distance from it. He had not gotten his
-drink after all, and thirst clutched his throat with hot, feverish
-fingers. Would he dare to return to the stream, to brave his
-pursuers, to shout--“Come an’ take me! But I’m thirsty, I tell
-you--thirsty!”
-
-The very thought set him to trembling again. He must not think of
-such things. Of what use now was the roll of bills in his pocket?
-The whole sum could not buy him a single drink. He took them out and
-gazed at the greenbacks dully. Then, shrugging his shoulders, he
-replaced them and ran his tongue over his parched lips. Part of the
-money was gone--spent for whiskey that had proved a traitor, that
-burned him now, as it had soothed before.
-
-He had to go on--always on. Mexico was ahead--Mexico and safety,
-Mexico and long, cooling drinks in tall glasses. The Pup grinned to
-himself. Togas, the town of his birth, lay just across the Border.
-They had thought his name was Marino! Well, that name was as good as
-any other. If he had given his real name, old Manley would never
-have hired him, for it was a name that still lingered in the minds
-of some of the vaqueros of the South. Marino--or, to give him his
-right name, Jules Kolto--was born a Mexican, although early in life
-he had recognized the value of concealing the place of his birth
-from his companions. A Mexican was not respected in his line of
-business--a business carried on at the muzzle of a revolver or at
-the point of a knife. For Jules Kolto had been a highwayman.
-
-It was seven years since he had robbed any one. There was a girl in
-Togas--his sister--who had decided the matter for him. He had
-supported her and his mother out of the fruits of his profession,
-and neither of them knew what that profession was until one day his
-sister met him at the door of their home and led him gently within.
-His mother lay on a couch, her face waxen. In her hand she grasped a
-paper--a paper with his picture on it and “Five Hundred Dollars
-Reward” printed below. He had killed his own mother.
-
-Then his sister made him promise to go straight. He had, too--until
-now. But the temptation had been too great. Rimor’s, with its
-whiskey, had been too convenient, and riding cattle was dusty work.
-So he had fallen into the old ways again, after seven years of
-peacefulness. And what was more natural than that the whiskey should
-remind him of those other days when money was to be had for the
-taking!
-
-Mr. Manley’s departure had given him his chance. Like a rattler he
-had struck and glided away. Now he regretted it. Not remorse--Jules
-Kolto remorseful? But anger, anger at his own foolishness. The hill
-he had climbed up from evil had been hard and steep. Now, with a
-single jump, he was just where he had started from!
-
-Jules shook his head bitterly. He had been happy before--well,
-fairly happy. At least he had known what it was to face a man, then,
-without fear, turn one’s back and walk away. That was all gone now.
-He was a fugitive--hunted, trailed by other men.
-
-If he could make Mexico, he would be safe. He would seek his sister.
-She would understand, would shelter him and help him to come back
-again. Togas--why, that was the town where Gus had his girl, the
-girl who hadn’t written, and who had sent Gus to seek forgetfulness
-in alcohol! Gus--poor, deluded Gus! To worry over a girl! Funny
-Jules hadn’t recalled that Gus had told him that she lived in Togas.
-But perhaps it was just as well. He might have given himself away.
-
-How far was it to the Border? A good eight days’ ride, at least.
-He’d have to leave the river soon. It was too dangerous, anyway,
-with Teddy and Roy Manley around. But they wouldn’t catch him!
-Never--never!
-
-Then a sudden thought came to the man. Why, they might not have been
-chasing him at all! Those cattle--those cows that had wandered on
-Jake Trummer’s place while he and Gus were in town, drinking! Of
-course Mr. Manley had gone on ahead to round them up! He had known
-that. Then the boys followed, to help. That’s what had happened!
-Jules felt great relief surge through him. They were not chasing
-him!
-
-He rode forward with a lighter heart. There was some chance for him
-after all. If he could reach Togas and find his sister, all would be
-well. He would buy an interest in a small store with his four
-hundred dollars, then, when he had earned more money, he might send
-the amount he had stolen back to the X Bar X, just to square things.
-The horse--well, he’d see about that. It was a fine bronc.
-
-Later that day it rained. The wind beat upon him and the lightning
-blinded him and the storm left him wet and shivering. He tried to
-start a fire, but could find no dry wood. He put his hand to his
-belt for his knife, that he might cut some, then remembered. Teddy
-Manley had the knife now. He had not really meant to harm the young
-fellow, just to scare him. But the boy was too quick. Jules grinned
-faintly. If Teddy had known it, he was the first man ever to get the
-best of Jules Kolto in a knife fight. The kid sure had nerve!
-
-Well, he would have to do without his fire. But now he could move
-more openly and with less fear of detection, for night was closing
-in. Having slaked his thirst, he pulled his belt in another notch,
-to lessen the pangs of hunger, and rode on. Togas was ahead--Togas
-and his sister and an easy chair in their tiny patio. Worth living
-for!
-
-If he reached it with his money still intact, his troubles would be
-over. He would have enough to start a small business and live the
-rest of his life in contentment, fearing no man. He would return the
-four hundred--as soon as he made that much--and send it back to
-Bardwell Manley. He would start square.
-
-He knew that the region he was now in was a favorite place for
-bandits. Many gangs had made the banks of Whirlpool River their
-stronghold in days gone by, and rumor had it that one still
-flourished--the Denver Smith gang. A lone rider, like Jules, with a
-roll of bills in his pocket, would be meat for them. He had better
-stop and camp for the night before he ran across any highwaymen.
-Jules dismounted. He picketed his horse nearby. Then the former
-bandit drew his coat about him and lay down to rest, fearful that if
-he proceeded through these dark woods the money he had stolen would
-be stolen from him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-Failure
-
-
-A moment, a breathless, hushed moment, Teddy and Roy stood beneath
-trees which still dripped from the recent rain, the drops falling in
-a patter whenever the light breeze stirred the branches. Through the
-darkness came those low, tense tones. As the boys listened, words
-separated themselves from the mumble of sound.
-
-“... just heard about it,” some one was saying. The speaker had a
-high, nervous voice which he apparently kept softened by an effort.
-“Stay out from that shore, Bunk! Wanta have those fools on our
-necks?”
-
-“Aw, yo’re too touchy, Denver,” another whined, and the boys heard
-the swirl of a paddle being held in the water, evidently to swing
-the boat around. The craft was probably drifting with the current
-now, for the listeners could not detect the dip of blades forcing it
-onward. “They ain’t near here,” the speaker went on. “Go ahead.
-Let’s have the dope.”
-
-Roy leaned closer to Teddy and spoke with his mouth close to his
-brother’s ear.
-
-“We’ll follow,” Roy whispered, and Teddy nodded to show that he
-understood. Carefully the two boys picked their way along the bank,
-hoping to hear more before the canoe drifted out of range.
-
-“How many times do I have to repeat this?” the one called Denver
-snarled. “Now listen, you guys. Manley, up on the X Bar X, let a
-herd of his cattle wander off his ground on to the grazin’ field of
-Jake Trummer, of Whirlpool River Ranch.”
-
-Teddy started, and nudged Roy. His brother did not respond. He was
-listening intently.
-
-“Now I happen to know--never mind how--that old man Trummer went to
-Manley an’ told him if the dogies weren’t off there soon he’d drive
-’em into the river. That was two or three days ago. Manley started
-out to round ’em up. But he went overland, so he’ll be some time
-gettin’ there. That’s where we come in.”
-
-“And so do we!” Teddy whispered. “Roy, get this!”
-
-“We’ll keep goin’ now,” Denver continued, “an’ take a little rest in
-the morning just before we hit the rapids. Then we take our time
-with the cows. Mike said he’d have ponies waitin’ for us. We drive
-the cows off Trummer’s range, hide ’em somewhere, an’ when Manley
-comes up, his Durhams are gone, an’ he says Trummer drove ’em into
-the river, like he said he would! What could be simpler?”
-
-“You sure got it down pat, Denver,” said a third voice. “Lucky for
-us that storm came up. All we have to do is to sit back an’ drift
-along--make good time, too.”
-
-“You allus was a great feller fer work, Porky,” Denver said
-contemptuously. “How you ever--”
-
-The voice died away. Bunk had evidently steered the canoe further
-from the shore, and the murmur of the still turbulent waters drowned
-out the words that followed.
-
-Teddy turned excitedly to Roy.
-
-“Did you hear that?” he whispered. “Come on! Let’s get the gang!
-Rustlers, that’s what they are! After our cattle! And they’ll beat
-us to it, unless we can nab ’em!”
-
-Roy had already turned and was running toward their camp.
-
-“See to the canoe!” he called over his shoulder. “I’ll get the
-others. Take out all the stuff except the rifles. We’ll get those
-waddies yet!”
-
-Realizing that haste was imperative, Teddy stumbled toward the
-canoe. Frantically he started to unload. Heedless of consequences,
-he threw the articles right and left, concentrating on the job of
-emptying the craft as soon as possible. Every moment the rustlers
-were getting farther and farther away.
-
-“This is our chance to save the cattle,” the boy panted, as he
-tossed out the last can of foodstuff. “The dirty rustlers! Trying to
-frame Trummer, too. If I could only--”
-
-Seizing hold of the boat, he sought to pull it to the water’s edge,
-but the task was too much for him. Gasping, he finally desisted, and
-at that moment Roy, Bug Eye and Pop Burns appeared.
-
-“All right, boys!” Roy exclaimed. “In she goes--ho! Teddy, take the
-front! Grab this paddle! I’ll stay in the stern! Bug Eye, you and
-Pop keep those rifles loaded--we may need ’em!”
-
-The canoe was in the water now, and swung about madly. The current
-was stronger than they had imagined.
-
-“With luck, we’ll catch up to them soon!” Teddy panted. “If we can
-get close enough before they know we’re comin’--”
-
-Roy did not reply, needing all his energy to keep the boat straight.
-The larger craft received the full force of the stream, and also it
-was much less heavily weighted than it had been.
-
-“Want me to--” Bug Eye began. But when he saw, by the moonlight, the
-lines of intense effort in Roy’s face he stopped. This was no time
-for talk.
-
-“Can you--hear ’em?” Teddy gasped, digging his paddle in deeper.
-
-“Nope!” Pop answered laconically. He, alone, seemed to accept the
-situation calmly, staring straight ahead as he sat rigidly in the
-bottom of the canoe. Perhaps he feared the chase would be futile, or
-perhaps he realized that their best chance of success lay in going
-about the affair in a businesslike manner. His rifle, loaded, lay
-across his knees.
-
-As the canoe shot downstream, Teddy, in the front, strained his ears
-for some indication of the boat they were following. But it seemed
-to have been swallowed up by the river. Surely they were going much
-faster than the other craft and should have caught them by this
-time. Unless--and Teddy frowned at the thought--unless they knew
-they were being pursued and made for the shore, pulling their
-lighter boat up out of sight.
-
-Now the river seemed to take their canoe in a powerful grip and
-shake it. Roy paddled desperately, and succeeded in steadying it.
-
-“Close!” he gasped. “Thought we were over then!”
-
-“If I had my Fishmobile--” Bug Eye muttered, then closed his mouth
-tightly. The shore seemed far away at this moment.
-
-“Better head in,” Pop suggested quietly. “Afraid they got away,
-boys. I don’t like the sound of this river.”
-
-“Hate to give up,” Roy responded, but even he was beginning to see
-the wisdom of Pop’s advice. Somehow, the roar of the stream seemed
-to have increased in volume. Whether it was because the banks were
-closer together here, thus adding to the force of the current, the
-boys could not tell. At all events, both Teddy and Roy decided that
-they had best attempt to land.
-
-“Take the left side for a minute,” Roy called. The sweat was running
-off the paddlers in small rivulets and their breaths were coming in
-short gasps. “We’ll have to--get together. With me, now!
-Ho--ho--ho--ho--” Slowly the craft turned her nose to the bank. The
-shoreline was barely distinguishable, and the boys had no means of
-estimating their speed. But they knew that they were going fast
-enough to sink, surely, if they hit anything.
-
-“Make it?” Bug Eye asked anxiously. He was holding on to the sides
-of the boat with both hands, his rifle, forgotten now, lying in the
-bottom. Indeed, all thought of their quarry had vanished from the
-minds of both Teddy and Roy. All they knew was that they were out in
-the middle of a river which was trying its best to whirl them onward
-to destruction.
-
-Even Pop Burns was startled out of his complacency. He turned and
-looked sharply at Roy.
-
-“Mebby--mebby not,” he said enigmatically, and began to peel off his
-vest. “Yo’re gettin’ near, though. A little more, boys. I’d help if
-I could, but if I tried to shift we’d go over sure.”
-
-“Stick--to it,” Teddy panted. “Roy, you take the left--we’re gaining
-now--she’s swingin’ closer--”
-
-Teddy had a wild idea that if they came near enough, he could tumble
-overboard and swim with the canoe to land. But he dismissed the
-thought as soon as it came to him, for the craft was much too heavy
-for any such plan as that to work. Besides, there were huge, sharp
-rocks along here, and if his head struck one he would be lost.
-
-“Got--to stick--to the ship,” the boy murmured, as he strained at
-the paddle.
-
-Suddenly Roy gave a yell. The boat lurched, and swung about in a
-circle.
-
-“Paddle’s gone!” he cried. “Broke! We’ll have to swim for it!”
-
-“Take this!” Teddy shouted, and thrust his own paddle back. Bug Eye,
-who was behind him, seized it and passed it to Roy. “Never mind
-trying to make shore now! Keep her straight!”
-
-Desperately Roy tried to do this. There was a sickening moment when
-the river seemed to fall from beneath them and for an instant they
-hung in space.
-
-A wave slapped them broadside.
-
-“Here--she--” Bug Eye yelled, and that was all. A rock, huge and
-black, loomed up before them. A crash, then a crunching sound. Water
-poured over the side.
-
-Then all four were struggling for their lives in a current that
-sought to draw them into the depths!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-A Vain Search
-
-
-When Teddy felt the dark waters close over his head, his first
-thought was that now, after their long journey, they were to fail.
-He did not fear for his own safety, unless it was that his absence
-would cause his father and mother worry. The rushing current swept
-him out of reach of the rock which had been their Scylla, and, in
-one vivid flash, Teddy saw Roy clinging to its ebony sides with arms
-that seemed almost lifeless.
-
-“Hang on, Roy!” Teddy gasped, and then he was borne out of hearing.
-Weighted down as he was by heavy clothes, Teddy had hard work
-keeping his head above the water long enough to take a full breath
-before being forced below the surface again. Luckily, there were no
-sharp-pointed rocks in his path.
-
-With desperation, Teddy struck out for the shore he saw looming in
-front of him. But it was impossible to make much headway against the
-fierce current that pulled him onward and tumbled him over like a
-basket in a waterfall. Finally, exhausted by his struggles, he
-contented himself with keeping afloat, and was promptly spilled upon
-the bank.
-
-So surprising was the transition from water to land that, for a
-moment, the boy could not realize it. One second he had been
-floating down a darkened, turbulent stream and the next he was
-tossed upon the shore, his breath almost driven from his body by the
-suddenness of it.
-
-“The--ole river--is full of tricks!” he gasped, and sat up.
-“Good-bye, canoe! I’ll bet there’s a hole in her big enough to drive
-a steer through!” He cleared the water from his eyes, pulled himself
-farther from the edge, and peered into the night.
-
-“Roy!” he yelled. “Where are you? Hey, Roy!”
-
-For a long moment he waited, then fear stole darkly upon him.
-Breathing quickly, he shouted once more.
-
-When there was no answer to this hail, he sprang to his feet and
-started to run back along the bank, calling as he ran. He saw that
-he had landed on the same shore they had put out from, and hoped
-that his brother might have done the same and perhaps have started
-back for their camp. But this hope was dispelled when Teddy came
-upon two bedraggled and forlorn wanderers--Bug Eye and Pop. They
-were staggering around aimlessly, now and then letting out a weak
-call for Teddy and Roy.
-
-“Did you see Roy?” Teddy asked them anxiously, as he ran up,
-breathless.
-
-“Teddy!” Pop gasped. “Yo’re safe! Boy, I was afraid! Where’s Roy?”
-
-“I don’t know!” Teddy answered frantically. “I thought he might have
-come ashore with you! Didn’t you see him?”
-
-“Not--not me!” Bug Eye stuttered, shivering and resting one hand
-against a tree to steady himself. “I thought--”
-
-“Never mind about that!” Teddy cried tensely, fully aroused now to
-the dangers of the situation. “We’ve got to hunt for him! Bug Eye,
-you go downstream! Pop, you come with me!”
-
-“I seen him hanging on to that rock we hit,” Pop declared, craning
-his neck forward and seeking to pierce the blackness. To add to
-their troubles the moon had disappeared behind clouds and the night
-was as dark as pitch.
-
-“I saw that, too!” Teddy exclaimed, opening and closing his hands.
-“You two--for heaven’s sake don’t stand there gaping! Roy is
-lost--maybe--”
-
-“Now, maybe nothin’,” Pop Burns interrupted. “If you want to help
-him most, Teddy, just take it easy an’ don’t waste none of yore
-energy in boilin’ over. We’ll find Roy all right. He just came
-ashore at another place.”
-
-“I sure hope so!” Teddy breathed. “It’s so blamed dark here! The
-moon is gone--we haven’t a dog’s chance of seeing him. But we can
-yell.” He raised his voice once more in a shout. “Roy! Yay-y-y,
-Roy!”
-
-“That won’t do no good,” Pop said gently. “We got to hunt. He may be
-hurt, an’ lyin’ on the shore somewheres. We’ll get him, sure, when
-daylight comes.”
-
-“We’ll get him before that!” Teddy said determinedly, and started to
-run along the bank.
-
-“You go the other way,” Pop directed in a low voice to Bug Eye.
-“I’ll follow Teddy--I don’t like the way he’s talkin’. Roy may be
-pretty badly hurt after all, an’ Teddy feels it. I seen Roy go
-head-on to that rock, but I wouldn’t tell Ted that. We’ll meet you
-at camp. If you find Roy, give a good loud yell--that is, if
-he’s--not hurt too bad.” And Pop swallowed quickly. Then he turned
-and followed Teddy.
-
-The boy was a good distance ahead, and Pop had to hurry to catch
-him. He located him by the crashing of the bushes as Teddy ran
-along, almost blindly, calling Roy every five yards.
-
-“Son, son,” the veteran puncher admonished, laying a hand on Teddy’s
-shoulder, “don’t take it so hard. We’ll find Roy, sure as shootin’!
-Yuh can’t down him with a little spill in the river! Like as not
-he’s laughin’ over it now an’ bettin’ he could have made the shore
-with the one paddle if we hadn’t hit that rock. Shake yore stumps,
-Teddy, an’ get a hold on yore liver. Roy ain’t hurt!”
-
-Teddy took a deep breath and slowed down to a walk.
-
-“Can’t tell, Pop,” he declared gloomily. “I’m afraid of--I don’t
-know what. Why didn’t Roy come right ashore if he could?”
-
-“But great snakes, boy, he may be on the other side, or he may have
-been washed far downstream!” Pop exploded. “Just because he ain’t
-here, don’t say he’s still sittin’ out there on that bloomin’ rock!”
-
-“That’s right, too!” Teddy agreed, and brightened. “I’ll bet he’s
-across from us! If we only had that canoe now, we could--”
-
-“Oh, no we couldn’t,” Pop interrupted grimly. “That current is too
-blame strong. I reckon we can find the canoe all right, come
-mornin’. She’ll probably need patchin’, but I can fix her if she
-ain’t too bad.”
-
-It was just this sort of talk that Teddy needed, and when he spoke
-again his voice was stronger and more spirited.
-
-“Do you really think we can mend the canoe, Pop?”
-
-“Sure we can! Won’t be nothin’ to it. Now, Teddy, we better give up
-lookin’ for Roy until she gets light. We’re only wastin’ time this
-way, an’ I got an idea he’s over on the other bank. If that’s so, we
-got to find the boat first an’ go get him. Let’s hit for camp,
-Teddy.”
-
-For a moment the boy hesitated, and Pop feared he was going to
-insist on continuing. But at last the boy sighed, and turned.
-
-“You’re the doctor,” he said dully. “Camp it is.”
-
-Had Teddy known the real reason for Pop’s insistence upon returning,
-he would have slept little that night. The fact is that the veteran
-rancher feared the worst. He had seen Roy dashed head foremost upon
-the rock, then go limp. At that moment the moon was blotted out, and
-he lost sight of the boy. But he had seen enough to feel that there
-was little hope for Roy.
-
-There had never been for a moment the question of rescue. It had all
-happened too quickly--the rock, then the crash, and then that
-horrible drop. They had been swept apart in a flash, and were not
-near enough to offer each other assistance. Pop knew that ordinarily
-Roy would have made the shore safely. But injured, perhaps
-unconscious--The old man shook his head sadly and was thankful for
-the darkness that hid the tragedy even for a little.
-
-Their fire was still going well when they reached camp, and half
-heartedly they set about drying themselves. None of them talked
-much. Their hearts were too heavy. Pop made an effort at
-conversation, but did not meet with much success, and at last
-decided that it would be best to leave Teddy alone with his
-thoughts. Perhaps the boy might find inward comfort as the night
-wore on. Pop hoped so, fervently.
-
-The hours passed slowly, as none of the three even attempted to
-sleep.
-
-As soon as the gray dawn lightened into brightness, Teddy sprang to
-his feet.
-
-“Now,” he said sharply, “we can start. We won’t stop--” his eyes
-narrowed and he clenched his fists. “We’ll find Roy if we have to
-stay here a week! Come on!”
-
-“No breakfast, son?” Pop expostulated questioningly, thinking that
-unless Teddy kept up his strength he might collapse when he learned
-the truth. For Pop was firmly convinced that they would see Roy
-alive no more. Yet, even with this weight on his heart, he presented
-to Teddy a face that had nothing in it but hope.
-
-“Eat?” Teddy asked contemptuously. “Not me! I’ve eaten my last meal
-until Roy comes back and eats with me!”
-
-“Keep yore nerve, kid,” Pop muttered. “I’m afraid this day’s gonna
-be a tough one. Poor Roy!” and with leaden steps he followed Teddy.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-Separated
-
-
-Slowly, as though awaking from a drugged sleep, Roy Manley came to
-himself. His eyes stared upward through a screen of green foliage
-tangled above him. He twitched his shoulders and felt the hard earth
-beneath them. Weakly, he turned his head from side to side, trying
-vainly to force his sluggish brain into activity by impressing upon
-it some familiar sight, so that he might recall his situation. Of
-course he knew where he was. It was just that he was tired and
-couldn’t think well. In a moment it would come to him. He would lie
-here a bit longer until those confounded trees stopped whirling
-around, then he’d get up.
-
-Let’s see, now. He was in the woods, that was certain. And that
-murmuring in the distance--or was the whirr within his own head?
-Cautiously Roy raised his hand, passed it gently over his disheveled
-hair. Snakes, what a lump! How did he get that? Dully he rubbed the
-spot where the bruise was and found the hair matted.
-
-“Must have gotten a terrific sock,” he muttered. “That’s blood.
-Funny it doesn’t ache. Golly, it’s cold! Better build a fire.”
-
-He sat up uncertainly. Then he made a stupendous discovery.
-
-“Why, I’m all wet!” he exclaimed in amazement. He fingered his soggy
-vest and stared stupidly down at his soaked shoes. “How did that
-happen? No wonder I’m cold! And I guess I won’t build a fire,
-either, for if I’m wet the matches will be wet; that is, if I have
-any. And if the matches are wet I’ll be wet--I mean the opposite--”
-He snapped his fingers and shook his head impatiently. Talking to
-himself like a little child! The thing to do was to find out where
-he was and how he arrived here. Perhaps if he got out in the sun and
-away from the shade of this tree he might be warmer. Automatically
-he struggled to his feet.
-
-A moan of pain escaped him, and he sat down suddenly, his hand
-twitching to his right ankle. Broken? He moved the foot carefully,
-and, although the effort was agony, he found that it was just a
-little sprained. Well, he’d have to take it easy. A sprain was bad
-while it lasted, but it would mend itself. There was no need of
-setting it, like a fracture.
-
-Again he arose, gently this time, and it was a relief to discover
-that by favoring the injured ankle he could move about slowly.
-Without knowing exactly where he was going, except that it was
-warmer in the sun, he limped forward. The liquid murmur he had heard
-before grew louder as he moved toward it, and presently he came in
-sight of a river. It recalled nothing to him beyond the fact that he
-was very thirsty, and, making his way to the bank, he threw himself
-face downward and drank. Refreshed, he arose once more and looked
-about him.
-
-The opposite side of the stream was about four hundred yards away,
-with no sign of help there. Turning to the left, he limped along the
-shore, and found that the river broadened greatly just below him.
-Following the shore line he made another discovery--that he was on
-an island!
-
-As his eye followed the rim of land he saw that it swept about in a
-half circle, the other half of the ring being behind him. Again he
-put his hand to his head, this time in wondering amazement. An
-island! How did he get here? The river! Undoubtedly that was the
-cause of his saturated clothing. But why had he gone in the water
-with his clothes on? Desperately he tried to concentrate, to
-remember. He closed his eyes and lashed his memory cruelly. Think!
-Think! A black shape in front. Darkness. A flash of fire, blinding
-in its intensity. His fingers reaching out for that black shape,
-seeking to cling to it, to draw him up. Water roaring in his ears.
-The rock!
-
-Now it was coming. He must not break the thread. He must follow it
-to the end. The rock. A cry, in some well-remembered voice, calling
-to him to “hang on.” His arms straining to retain their hold. Then
-oblivion.
-
-But what had gone before? Had he been in a boat and fallen
-overboard? That was it! The canoe! Teddy! Pop! Now memory came to
-him in a flood, sweeping over him, leaving him weak and gasping for
-breath. He recalled the launching of the craft in the night and the
-effort to catch the rustlers they had heard planning to steal their
-cattle. Then the current had seized them and his paddle had broken.
-Then the rock, and after that--nothing. Now this--the island, and
-he, wet and shivering, with his head cut and his ankle sprained,
-limping about aimlessly!
-
-Where were the others? A great fear struck at him, catching him by
-the throat. If they had drowned! If Teddy was gone--floating face
-downward on the surface of the water, silent, inert, dead! A quick
-shiver passed over Roy’s frame, then he gritted his teeth. He
-_would_ not think of that! Teddy had surely escaped, as he himself
-had. Perhaps he had swum ashore and was even now looking for Roy.
-Teddy was a strong swimmer. And when the canoe had crashed, Teddy
-was in the far end. He probably had not touched the rock, but had
-swum directly for shore.
-
-Could he, too, be on this island? Hopefully, Roy threw back his head
-and called loudly Teddy’s name. There was no answer. A second time,
-then a third time he called. No welcome sound came back in return.
-But suppose his brother had been washed ashore as he had! Clenching
-his fists tightly, to withstand the pain of his injured ankle, Roy
-started a circuit of the island, for he must make a search.
-
-The island was not large, so the search was soon concluded. Roy was
-alone. If Teddy had gotten ashore, he must be on the mainland; but
-on which side? Their camp of the night before had been on the left
-bank. If Teddy had kept his bearings, he would, of course, head for
-that. As Roy remembered, the canoe had been about in the center of
-the river when it foundered, so that Teddy and the others might
-possibly be on the right shore.
-
-The pain in Roy’s ankle was still great, and the boy sat down and
-removed his shoe and sock. He saw that the limb was swollen, and,
-hopping to the water’s edge, he soaked his already damp sock in the
-stream and bound it tightly about the ankle. This should help reduce
-the swelling and lessen the irritating pain. The cut on his head was
-a small matter, he decided, and so gave it no attention other than
-to bathe it with his wet handkerchief.
-
-Now that the first sensation of uneasy wonderment had worn off, Roy
-began to realize that he was hungry. His firearms had gone down with
-the boat, so that even if there was game on the island he would have
-no means of capturing it. He searched his pockets, and thankfully
-his fingers closed upon his jackknife. This might be of some use.
-The knife was a heavy one and the blade long. Roy balanced it in the
-palm of his hand. Then, experimentally, he raised his hand over his
-head and threw. The blade bit into a tree some ten feet distant.
-
-“Haven’t lost the old eye,” he chuckled, then limped over and drew
-the knife out. “Haven’t done this since Teddy and I were kids.
-Golly, I’m glad I remember how to throw. Wonder if I’ve got any
-string in my pocket?”
-
-But this time his search was in vain. All he found besides the knife
-were two handkerchiefs and a buffalo nickel. He looked at the coin
-musingly.
-
-“You’re not much help out here,” he muttered, with a grin. “Can’t
-even buy a stamp with you. Well, maybe you’ll bring me luck. I sure
-need it. Back you go,” and he replaced the five-cent piece in his
-soggy pocket.
-
-Suddenly an idea struck him. He took one of the handkerchiefs, the
-one he had wet in the river, and cut the hem off with his knife.
-This he tested by pulling it.
-
-“Feels strong,” he declared to himself. “We’ll take a shot at it,
-anyhow. Can’t any more than fail.”
-
-He looked about him until he found a stick and a small dry log.
-
-“Now, Mr. Scout, do your stuff,” he chuckled, and arranged his
-implements. The strip of handkerchief he wound about the stick in
-such a manner that, when made the string of a bow and sawed back and
-forth, the stick spun rapidly around. Then he whittled one end of
-the stick to a point, found a flat grooved rock to hold the other
-end with, and bent to his task.
-
-“Handkerchief, stay with me!” he breathed, and he started the stick
-whirling in a small hole cut in his log. He had piled some fine, dry
-bark shavings close to this hole, and now he watched them anxiously.
-Faster and faster he twirled the stick. If the strip of cloth held,
-he might-- Ah! There it was! The shavings were smoking! A little
-more now!
-
-He blew gently on his fuel and was rewarded by seeing a thready
-spiral of smoke ascend. Then he cast the stick aside and fed the
-tiny flame with dry leaves. Within five minutes he had a respectable
-blaze going, actually a fire started! Did a wood fire ever before
-send out such welcome incense? Not for Roy Manley--nor for many
-another boy, perhaps, situated as he was just then.
-
-“The boy firemaker!” he laughed, and strutted about until he came
-down too hard on his sore leg. But the warmth of the flame was
-grateful, for the day was cool and his wet clothes anything but
-comfortable. Presently Roy removed his outer garments and spread
-them around the fire. Standing near the blaze, he dried his
-underthings and, after a time, dressed again with considerable
-ceremony. Dry clothes are real clothes, he decided, while wet
-clothes are worse than fetters. He felt better; much better.
-
-“The next thing to do is to eat,” he told himself. Building a wall
-of dirt around the fire so it could not spread, he went in search of
-food, holding his knife in readiness in case an opportunity to use
-it should present itself. He saw several rabbits and some squirrels,
-but none of them was near enough to bring down. But at last he
-espied a porcupine slowly crossing a log in front of him. Discarding
-the knife in favor of a heavy stick he picked up, Roy rushed upon
-the quilled animal. With one sharp blow on the head he killed it.
-
-“That was luck!” he chuckled, looking over the queer thing that lay
-there.
-
-“We saw your brother about a month ago,” he mused, while he carried
-his game back to the fire and soon prepared the beast for cooking.
-“But there was no need of killing him. Teddy wanted to cart him back
-and show him to Pop,” Roy ruminated. At the thought of Teddy, a
-frown of anxiety crossed Roy’s face, but he quickly dismissed it.
-Worrying was worse than useless. Besides, Teddy must be some place.
-
-“Yep,” he went on absently, “ole porky sure did help me out.” Like a
-great many men, he was talking to himself when alone in the woods.
-And now, with the smell of meat cooking, for he was hungry and
-wasted no time in preliminaries, his situation assumed a more normal
-aspect. Somehow, he felt that this would turn out all right, black
-as things seemed just now. When a person’s hunger is satisfied, he
-looks at the world with a clearer, more optimistic vision, and the
-eating of “porky” worked that sort of miracle for Roy.
-
-When his makeshift meal was over, he breathed a sigh of relief,
-yawned, and stretched lazily. The reaction from the strain he had
-been under came with a rush, and now, scarcely able to keep his eyes
-open, the boy threw himself full length on the ground by the river’s
-edge.
-
-For a moment he lay there, his head on his arms, thinking drowsily
-that he must arouse himself and hunt Teddy. He must keep going, he
-must not give in.
-
-“Can’t let him get lost like that,” Roy muttered, forgetting that
-he, too, was in trouble. “Good ole Teddy--have to find him.”
-
-He pushed himself up with his hands and shook his head wearily,
-determined to fight off fatigue. But he was so tired--so tired. If
-he could only sleep--
-
-Above him sounded a rush of wings. A shrill scream sounded almost in
-his ear, and he felt a fierce, slashing wind surround him. Roy’s
-heart leaped into his throat, and he awoke now with a terrific jolt,
-his pulses hammering. Once more the scream sounded.
-
-With an effort Roy rolled over. Then, swift as light, he threw up an
-arm to protect his face.
-
-Directly over him hovered a huge eagle, talons outstretched, beak
-open, eyes glaring fiercely, ready for attack!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-Primitive Tactics
-
-
-When Roy Manley saw the great bird above him, poised and hovering,
-ready to strike, something in the lad suddenly jerked him to his
-feet in prompt alertness.
-
-Oblivious of everything save that he was confronted by a creature
-intent upon attacking him, the savage, primitive man was aroused in
-the young rancher. He realized that he must, in this emergency,
-depend for defense upon his hands alone--as must have an ancient
-dweller in a cave of the stone age.
-
-As the bird, with a savage scream, swooped down at him, Roy lashed
-out with his bare fists. One blow caught the eagle full upon its
-feathered breast, knocking him aside. A wild yell burst from the
-boy’s lips, rivaling the bird’s screech in its intensity. He
-shouted. He called out meaningless phrases. He was a savage,
-battling for his life against an ancient enemy.
-
-As the eagle, knocked from its course, fluttered to the ground,
-Roy’s eyes lit with a strange, fierce gleam. He sprang for the bird
-and sought to grasp the creature, but, to his surprise, the great
-dweller of the upper regions was not there. With a single beat of
-its powerful wings it had gained the air once more.
-
-Sobbing in rage, Roy leaped to his feet, his injured ankle
-forgotten. Some ten feet above the ground the bird wheeled,
-screamed, and returned to the attack. This time it was more wary,
-and did not plunge directly for the boy, but shot down a little to
-one side, then, spreading its pinions wide, glided in. Roy, his lips
-drawn back in a snarl, met it fully. The beak stabbed once, as quick
-as a rattler striking, and Roy felt a searing pain in his right
-shoulder. A dark stain spread over his shirt. At the same time the
-boy was able to seize one of the wings in both hands, and he hung on
-desperately, twisting it with all his strength. Another quick stab
-of the powerful beak, and Roy released his hold, blood now streaming
-from his left arm.
-
-The eagle, realizing now that his adversary was no weakling, but
-able to strike him down with one blow, retreated for the moment to
-consider matters. This gave Roy the chance he needed, and he quickly
-drew the knife from his pocket and opened it.
-
-“Now, come on!” he yelled, taking a step forward toward the bird
-that was resting on the ground, reassembling his ruffled plumage.
-“Start something, you buzzard!” It is not to be wondered at that the
-boy in his excitement had mistaken his huge antagonist. “Buzzard”
-was the first thought that had come to his mind, and he shouted it
-out.
-
-The bird held off, considering. His wing had been cruelly twisted by
-this strange-looking foe before him. Some one should suffer for
-that. And then, with a scream of defiance, the eagle arose again in
-the air.
-
-Roy stood tense, waiting, his knife held in readiness. The moment’s
-respite had given the boy time to realize his danger. This was no
-buzzard, but an eagle that seemed bent upon the boy’s destruction.
-Tales of strong men being killed by this species of bird flashed
-through Roy’s mind, and he clenched the knife more firmly. If he was
-to die, he would put up a good fight first!
-
-The bird was diving again. The pain in his wing had rendered the
-eagle careless of consequences, as he must punish this impudent
-being, and now he swooped directly at Roy. The boy drew back his
-arm. The sun glittered on the open blade as he held the knife poised
-for action. A harsh cry from the bird--a grunt of fierce effort from
-the boy--and the eagle, a long jagged rip in his side, lay gasping
-upon the ground!
-
-Roy sprang forward, his hand red from blood that was not all his
-own. He knew that he must finish this now, before the bird had a
-chance to recover. Again the knife sank deep in feathers and flesh,
-and this time Roy knew his work was well done. The eagle sounded a
-single cry that floated upward and wavered to silence in the blue
-regions of its element, the body of the bird gave a convulsive
-shudder--then the tremulous breathing stopped, the head sank down,
-and the wings folded themselves quietly to rest.
-
-There, on the shore of Whirlpool River, Roy Manley looked down upon
-his kill--looked down with eyes from which all anger, all blood-lust
-had fled, and which held only pity for the death of such a splendid
-creature.
-
-Silently he wiped his knife clean, shut the blade, and replaced it
-in his pocket. Then, for the first time, he saw the long cut on his
-arm, and felt the stiffening of his shoulder where the eagle had
-struck. Stumbling, he made his way to the water’s edge, and, ripping
-the remnants of his shirt from him, bathed the wounds. Strange that
-he felt no pain, but instead a growing wonder that he, and not the
-bird, had been the conqueror in that mighty battle. He had a queer
-inclination to kneel for a moment and do homage to a worthy fighter,
-but the feeling passed and the reaction slowly set in. He felt
-himself grow faint, and he staggered from the water. A growing
-blackness encompassed him, as though night were coming. A horrible
-nausea seized him, close to the dead bird, and he sank upon the
-earth, already all but unconscious.
-
-The sun was at its zenith when Roy once more opened his eyes. This
-time there was no wonderment in them. He knew definitely and with
-certainty what had happened. And if he needed proof that it was not
-all a dream--and indeed, somehow it did create in his mind a
-sensation akin to a nightmare--there was the bird lying at his side.
-Yes, it had actually occurred--he, practically weaponless, had
-fought an eagle and won.
-
-He sat up, moving his arms gingerly. Everything appeared to be in
-working order. He examined the cuts, and saw that they had been but
-superficial and had already stopped bleeding.
-
-Then he grinned.
-
-“Bids are open for the moving picture rights,” he chuckled. “First I
-get in a scrap with a bear and then an eagle! But the boy, here,
-nothing daunted, immediately enters the cave of the lion. Isn’t
-there a lion somewhere around?”
-
-Slowly he got to his feet. Then he noticed the wet sock tied about
-his ankle. Except for this, he would have forgotten that the limb
-had ever been hurt.
-
-“The pain must have been scared out of me,” he said aloud, and
-laughed again. His laughter was not hysterical. It was the wholesome
-amusement of a boy who had a sense of humor, and the reaction from
-his late suspense.
-
-Then his mind leaped to thoughts of Teddy and the others.
-
-“They’ll be worried stiff,” he declared. “They’ll think I’m drowned,
-sure. I’d better find some way of getting back to them.” Never an
-idea that his brother and Pop and Bug Eye might have failed to reach
-the shore--might have been caught in the current, and killed. These
-sombre thoughts had gone from him completely.
-
-He retraced his steps to the water’s edge. The river was once more a
-placidly flowing stream, its surface harmless and innocent of
-treachery.
-
-“You’re a hypocrite,” Roy said. “You are a two-faced fraud. However,
-I’ll try you once more.”
-
-It came to him that if he was to reach the mainland he must swim for
-it. He breathed deeply, filling his lungs with the keen air.
-
-“My powers of recuperation are extraordinary, to say the least,” he
-laughed. “Good thing I found that porcupine! All right--camera
-ready? The boy hero will attempt to swim the terrible rapids--only
-they’re more like a lake now. But we’ll call ’em rapids to make it
-look harder.”
-
-He removed his outer clothing and waded in. The opposite shore
-seemed much nearer now, probably because the water had receded. At
-all events, he struck out with a will and arrived on the bank not at
-all exhausted. As he left the water he thought of the spectacle he
-must present, with the wounds on his shoulder and arm still showing
-plainly and dressed in a soggy suit of underwear. He burst into a
-loud laugh.
-
-“Come, take a snapshot!” he exclaimed. “Having a wonderful time!
-Wish you were here! The bathing is great!”
-
-“Roy!”
-
-He turned his face alight with expectation.
-
-“Roy! Oh, golly, it’s Roy!”
-
-From the bushes leaped three figures--three happy, excited, capering
-figures.
-
-“Teddy! And Pop and Bug Eye! The reception committee! The lost
-mariners! Well, you old marmadukes!”
-
-Tears stood in Teddy’s eyes as he clasped his brother’s hand. Frank,
-honest tears, and Teddy was not ashamed of them.
-
-“Roy--” he said brokenly, “we thought you were--”
-
-“We thought you was lost!” Bug Eye finished, with a side glance at
-Pop. “Snakes, we been lookin’ all over creation for yuh!”
-
-“Son,” Pop said simply, holding out his hand, “I’m glad to see yuh.
-Mighty glad. We been worried.”
-
-“You’re hurt, Roy!” Teddy exclaimed, as he noticed for the first
-time the cuts on the boy’s arm and shoulder. “How did you get
-those?”
-
-“It’s a long story, me lad,” Roy answered, smiling. He threw his arm
-about his brother’s shoulders. “But first, if you don’t mind, I’ll
-eat! The last meal I had was roast porcupine!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-Afloat Again
-
-
-Back to camp tramped these two brothers, the one in a torn suit of
-underwear, the other fully dressed, but both wearing wide grins.
-
-They were both happy--recklessly so. All things dwindled into
-insignificance except the fact that they were together
-again--together, after a night of terror. The cattle of Whirlpool
-River Ranch--The Pup--the reported landslide--all these were for the
-moment forgotten. They would return later, with their
-responsibilities. But now, for Teddy and Roy, there was happiness
-where they had feared to find sorrow.
-
-Their tremendous relief was not the sort that is communicated by
-words. A firm handclasp, an arm thrown carelessly around the
-shoulders, speaks louder than any well-turned sentence. Thus it was
-that on that journey back to their camp there was little said
-besides Pop’s interminable: “Snakes!” and Roy’s: “I’ll tell a
-maverick!” whenever Teddy made a statement.
-
-Roy’s story was soon told. Pop marveled much and examined the boy’s
-wounds with care, treating them with the antiseptic they had brought
-along. When Roy’s tale was finished, Teddy sprang his bit of news.
-
-“We found the canoe!”
-
-Roy’s eyes opened wide.
-
-“You mean to say there is anything left of it?”
-
-“Sure, there is!” Bug Eye exclaimed. “We can fix her up in no time!
-She’s got quite a hole in her, but Pop can mend that. Hey, Pop?”
-
-“Betcher boots,” the veteran rancher replied, as he grinned. “I am
-one grand little fixer. Let’s take another look at it.”
-
-Roy, clothed “in assembled finery,” as Bug Eye said, was delighted
-when he saw that the craft was not irreparably damaged. It had been
-washed ashore a short distance below the rock, and, aside from the
-hole in the stern, it was as good as ever.
-
-“Guess dad’ll be at Jake Trummer’s by now,” Teddy declared. “But
-we’ll soon have the old boat on the way. Give your orders, Pop! You
-can be the boss carpenter. What do we do first?”
-
-“Get out that strip of canvas,” Pop suggested. “Where’s yore knife,
-Roy? Snakes, you ain’t washed it yet!” He took it from the boy and
-looked at it silently. Darkening the blades was dried blood--the
-blood of the eagle. Sticking to the blade were a few tiny, grey
-feathers. Pop held it in the palm of his hand and nodded his head
-slowly.
-
-“There’s not many knives that can say they killed an eagle,” he said
-musingly. “This’ll make a great token, Roy.” Then his voice took on
-a businesslike tone again. The incident was over. The chapter
-closed. Pop bent down, inserted the blade in the canvas, and drew it
-along with a ripping sound.
-
-Soon all four were deep in their task. The hole had to be well
-mended, as the rapids were still ahead of them and the rocks would
-search hungrily for a weak spot on which to fasten their needle-like
-fingers. Pop went about the job slowly and deliberately, and it was
-afternoon before it was finished to his satisfaction.
-
-“Might as well eat,” Bug Eye said as he straightened up and threw
-his shoulders back to get the kinks out. “Somehow I never did get
-over that there habit. So you had roast porcupine this morning, Roy?
-Well, we can’t promise you that, but we have got some pork an’ beans
-left unless Pop eat ’em all. You feel all right now, Roy?”
-
-“Sure I do!” The boy flexed his muscles. “Those cuts have stiffened
-up a little, but they’ll soon work out. Yea, Bug Eye, I feel great!
-I’m mighty hungry, though.”
-
-“You can do the paddlin’,” Teddy remarked with a grin. “And if you
-see a rock, duck!”
-
-Unconsciously the boy’s healthy mind was bringing to the fore the
-events of that fear-ridden night just passed, and instead of hiding
-them deep in the recesses of the subconscious, later to emerge as
-tangled emotions, Teddy was baring them and destroying their power
-to haunt. Of course he did not realize all this. He knew only that
-an unpleasant experience cannot be forcibly forgotten--that it must
-be aired, shaken, and dry-cleaned.
-
-But now, his eyes seemed still to hold some of the terror of last
-night when he had thought that his brother was killed. Roy had had
-other emotions to occupy his mind--pain, amazement, and
-self-preservation. Teddy had had nothing--nothing but an
-overpowering dread that increased hourly until, when dawn had come,
-it seemed to permeate his whole being, sickening him.
-
-When he had seen Roy wading ashore, happiness caught him a sudden
-blow, and he had staggered for a moment. Then he had rushed forward,
-unable to do more than cry: “Roy--Roy!” in a voice that was a hoarse
-whisper. His brother had returned. The world had lurched, hesitated,
-and then had gone on spinning merrily. They were together again.
-
-Now the repairs on the canoe were finished. Pop yawned, stretched,
-and pulled out his pipe. Then he followed Bug Eye to camp and spent
-the next fifteen minutes in disputing Teddy’s mastery over
-bean-eating. At length their appetites were satisfied. The pans were
-washed by the simple method of rubbing sand on them and rinsing them
-in the river. Blankets were folded. Then, having carried their
-possessions to the craft, they were ready to start once more.
-
-“Remember those old books in our school library?” Teddy asked Roy,
-as he stood with his hand on the stern, ready to launch the canoe.
-“The Amazon Adventurers, or something like that. Where the heroes
-always come bobbing up from tornadoes, volcanoes, or what have you,
-with a smile on their faces ready to stop a revolution single
-handed. Remember the verse Spike Murphy wrote--you know, he played
-tackle our second year at Hopper. Like this, I think:
-
- “‘The Amazon Adventurers are always to the mus-tard.
- They cut an elephant in half as if he was a cus-tard!’
-
-“And a lot more, but I forget the rest. Spike used to walk around
-the campus singing it. Well, the point of this is that that’s the
-way I feel now. It’s a good thing there aren’t any elephants around.
-But something tells me I’ll have my work-out yet. There is still
-much to be done, as the cook said, turning the whale steak he was
-roasting. I’ll bet--”
-
-“You’ll bet nothing!” Roy interrupted, with a laugh. “What is this,
-a political speech? You’ve been talking an hour by the clock. Grab
-hold, and shove. Ready, Pop and Bug Eye? Then let’s go!”
-
-All four bent down and seized the gunwales. There was a straining of
-backs, and the canoe slid noiselessly into the river with scarcely a
-splash.
-
-“No leakee!” Teddy shouted, capering around the bank. “No leakee, no
-shirtee! Watch it, boys. I’ll bet two bits she don’t leak!”
-
-“Doesn’t,” Bug Eye corrected, a certain page of his English book
-before his mind. “A plural predicate takes the nominative singular.
-Or something. Anyway, ‘don’t’ ain’t nowheres near right.”
-
-“Did you say singular?” Teddy asked, grinning. “It is that, at
-least! But tell me, boys--I’m afraid to look. Does she leak?”
-
-“Nary leak!” Pop exclaimed, leaning close. “Guess I qualify for an
-expert boat-maker, don’t I? All right, Teddy, stop yore solo an’ hop
-in.”
-
-“_Après vous, m’sieu_,” Teddy smirked, and bowed low. “I assure you
-I crave to see you get wet first.”
-
-“Don’t mind him, Pop,” Roy laughed. “That’s French, and not what you
-think it means. He just said: ‘after you!’ so don’t get sore. Come
-on, Teddy, you tomato! Get in there before I toss you in!”
-
-“_Now_ you said something!” the boy ejaculated. “I obey with
-pleasure--but I’ll be back--oh, I’ll be ba-a-a-a-ak!” and he waved a
-hand vigorously as he settled himself in the bottom of the canoe.
-
-“You’ll be back before you’re gone,” Roy remarked. “You paddle, my
-young gentleman of leisure. Oh, yes, there’s more than one. Bug Eye
-found the one that wasn’t broken, and this stick will do for the bow
-paddle. Here. On your horse, cowboy!”
-
-Teddy took the flat board Roy held out to him and looked at it
-wonderingly.
-
-“I am to paddle with _this_?” he said in a shocked voice. “Roy, my
-social position! I could never forgive myself--paddling Whirlpool
-River with a flat board! Dear, dear, what will Mrs. Percy Van Pelt
-say when she hears about this? I shall never, _never_ hear the last
-of it!”
-
-“We’ll try to keep it out of the papers,” Roy replied, laughing
-loudly. “Pipe down now, and go to work. Just forget Mrs. Percy Van
-Pelt and remember me sitting back of you here with a strong paddle
-and a good reach.”
-
-“I desire an objection noted,” Teddy murmured, as he took the stick
-and shifted to the bow seat. “I obey, but under protest. All right,
-cap’in, whenever you say! I’m all set.”
-
-“Everything in?” Roy asked, looking about him. “Rifles in the
-bottom? Yep. We’re off, boys. The Amazon Adventurers!”
-
-The canoe shot for the middle of the river, propelled by Teddy and
-Roy. The stream was again placid, as it had been before the storm. A
-gentle current bore them along.
-
-As they left their camping site, Roy turned his head and looked
-back. Many things had happened in the space of twenty-four hours,
-since they had first lit their fire. They had heard thieves planning
-to rustle the cattle on the Whirlpool River range. Then the pursuit
-and the rock ahead. The crash, and the roaring flood. Then his life
-had hung in the balance. How close it had come to being taken, he
-probably would never know. How had he gotten ashore? Why hadn’t he
-been drowned? Why--
-
-Roy shook his head slowly.
-
-“Mother must have been on the job then,” he said to himself, and
-smiled. “She said she’d put in a good word, and I guess she did!
-Surely, something besides me kept my head above water!”
-
-Then another thought came to him. They were approaching the rapids
-with a mended canoe. The cattle were beyond, and rustlers were bent
-on taking them, if they had not already done so. There was the
-possible landslide that the stranger had reported.
-
-“There’s plenty to worry about yet, I reckon,” Roy thought grimly.
-“But what good is worry? Answer--none! We’ll get those cattle, and
-we won’t come back till we do! Hey, Teddy!” he exclaimed aloud.
-“Snap to it! All right, boy--ho, ho ho, ho! _Stick_ in there!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-The Whirlpool
-
-
-Yes, there was still plenty to worry about, if one was in a worrying
-mood. The Manley boys and their companions were faced with the
-prospect of having their whole journey, with its dangers and
-hardships, go for nothing, if the rustlers reached the cattle first.
-There was a bare chance that Mr. Manley and his party had gotten to
-the Whirlpool River range in time to prevent the theft; but even
-Teddy admitted that this chance was a slim one. The overland route
-was long and tedious, and could not be accomplished in less than
-four days at the minimum.
-
-“Guess we’d better resign ourselves to a long chase after those
-rustlers,” Roy said regretfully. “That is if they go through with
-their plan, and I don’t see why they shouldn’t. It sounded
-fool-proof to me. Certainly if the cattle were gone when dad got
-there, he would naturally suspect Jake Trummer of carrying out his
-threat and driving them into the river. Suppose we hadn’t heard the
-thieves talking that night? We would have gone on and probably
-backed dad up in saying Trummer had drowned the cows. When you think
-of it, we were pretty lucky after all.”
-
-“But what good is our luck going to do us if we get there after the
-cattle are stolen?” Teddy asked, as he shifted his “paddle” to get a
-better grip on it.
-
-“Seems to me I heered tell of a couple of fellers chasin’ some
-rustlers an’ makin’ out pretty well,” Pop drawled. “Could it have
-been you an’ Roy, Teddy?”
-
-“Oh, that was different,” Teddy objected. “We got right on their
-trail then and rounded them up before they had a chance to escape.
-But now we won’t even know which way to start. They may take the
-cattle any place.”
-
-“Can’t take ’em in the river an’ get much good out of ’em,” Bug Eye
-snickered. “They won’t drive ’em back toward X Bar X, ’cause you
-said they knew about yore dad comin’ along that trail. And as I
-remember it, there’s mountains back of Whirlpool River range that
-’ud make travelin’ with a herd of dogies pretty risky--especially if
-the dirt on them hills is tearin’ loose. So it looks like there’s
-only one way they could go, Teddy--an’ that’s straight ahead.”
-
-“That’s one way too many,” Pop remarked, bending over to see if the
-patch he had put in place was still firm. It was, and he leaned back
-again. “There’s a straight trail through to the Border, branchin’
-left from the river,” he continued. “They’ll head for that, sure as
-shootin’. Course I ain’t sayin’ they’ll make it, but they’ll try
-to.”
-
-“No such word as ‘ain’t,’” Bug Eye said absently. “But Pop, how far
-is it to the Border? Good eight days’ ride, ain’t it--isn’t it?”
-
-“All of that. But what’s eight days? I been in saddle longer than
-that many a time. I remember, back in ’97--stop that splashin’, Bug
-Eye! I had my bath!”
-
-“Back in ’97?” Bug Eye grinned.
-
-Pop became absorbed in the shore line and refused to answer. Bug Eye
-winked, and, resting his head on his arm, started to snore loudly. A
-sharp dig in the ribs from Pop convinced him of the error of his
-ways, and he sat up, an innocent look on his face.
-
-“Me, I’m tired!” he proclaimed. “When do we hit those rapids you
-been talkin’ so much about, Pop? Last time I came over here they was
-nothin’ but a few waves. I craves excitement, I do.”
-
-“You’ll get it,” Pop said laconically. “They’ll be more than a few
-waves this time. An’ that reminds me. Roy, you an’ Teddy been
-workin’ long enough. What say you give me an’ Bug Eye a crack at it?
-The rapids are just below here, an’ I want to do the steerin’ as we
-hit ’em. I been over ’em many times, an’ I think I can put us
-through all right.”
-
-“Yo’re a great thinker,” Bug Eye murmured, as he changed places with
-Teddy and received the board he was to use as a paddle. “Pop, what
-am I supposed to do with this here barrel stave, or whatever it is?
-Cheer you, or somethin’?”
-
-“When I say left, you paddle on the left. When I say right, you
-shift. That’s all.”
-
-“An’ when you say ‘here she goes,’ I take my little bath,” Bug Eye
-snickered. “All right, Pop. O.K.! Me an’ my flat board is ready.”
-
-“Are ready,” grinned Pop. “Yuh forget yore plural nominative, Bug
-Eye. Well, let’s see you work now!”
-
-Roy, who had given up his place and paddle to Pop and was seated in
-the bottom facing front, saw ahead of him that the banks of the
-stream were coming together--closing in. It had been long since he
-and Teddy had come over this route, and the landmarks were
-unfamiliar. But he knew that just below the point where the shores
-converged were the rapids.
-
-The river seemed to take on new strength now. The soft purr was
-developing into a roar, and Teddy, remembering the last time they
-had heard that, hunched his shoulders. But this sound was different,
-somehow, from the boiling of the stream after the storm. That had
-been an unwholesome noise, as though the river had suddenly taken
-upon itself an evil accomplishment, whereas the deep thunder that
-came to Teddy’s ears from the rapids below was the voice of a giant
-who is proud of his strength and who gives fair warning to any one
-who contests his supremacy.
-
-“Feel it pull?” Pop Burns asked excitedly, as they came nearer and
-nearer the rapids. “Wait till we hit the worst part! You’ll know
-yo’re in somethin’ then, let me tell yuh!”
-
-Teddy and Roy were too absorbed in the spectacle to answer. Directly
-before them a curtain of spray arose like a white cloud, pierced now
-and then by a jet of water that leaped upward like a silver fish. A
-cold haze hung over the boat--penetrating, knife-like--that sent the
-blood tingling through the veins. All four were leaning forward now,
-waiting, ready.
-
-“Left!” Pop yelled, and Bug Eye shifted his paddle swiftly.
-“Steady--steady--_Take it!_”
-
-The canoe plunged into the maelstrom. About them the waters tumbled
-and tossed in an agony of movement. The craft shot forward like an
-arrow from a bow.
-
-“Yay!” Teddy yelled, his eyes alight with a fierce joy. “Let’s go!”
-
-Roy was too fascinated to exclaim. He sat perfectly still, gripping
-the sides of the boat, his head thrown back, his lips smiling.
-_This_ was life!
-
-A deep whirlpool lay directly in their path. Teddy saw that it was
-spinning with incredible rapidity, and thought that if they hit it
-destruction was certain. He turned to Pop to sound a warning.
-
-But the veteran had seen it. Not an inch did he swerve from his
-course. For a moment the boat hung on the edge, poised for a dive.
-Then it leaped.
-
-Straight into the heart of that silver-lined, foaming vortex it
-shot.
-
-“Right” Pop yelled, and Bug Eye shifted again.
-
-There was a space of time, seemingly interminable, when the boat
-appeared to stand still while the waters whirled beneath it. Then a
-quick lurch--and the whirlpool was left behind.
-
-Stunned by the suddenness of it, Teddy jerked his head around. The
-whirlpool was far in the rear. They had been in and out in less than
-a second.
-
-“Pop!” the boy called above the roaring, “what happened?”
-
-“Nothin’ much,” Pop chuckled. “We just took it at the right time,
-that’s all. It tossed us out. Like it?”
-
-“Certainly did!” Teddy cried enthusiastically. “Hit ’em again, Pop!”
-
-They came now to a place where the stream undulated like a huge
-white snake. There were hills and valleys of water; smooth, shining
-water. It seemed that the rocks over which the river was flowing
-were just beneath the surface--that they must surely crush them to
-pieces. Teddy saw that Pop’s face lost none of its calmness, so he
-settled himself once more with an attempt at serenity which deceived
-no one. Just what in thunder _was_ keeping them from all going to
-the bottom?
-
-The craft was tossing like a ship on the ocean. First the bow would
-almost bury itself in a smother of foam, then it would lift until it
-seemed that it must turn over backward. Bug Eye wrapped his legs
-firmly about the seat.
-
-“Roller coaster!” he shouted, and went down again, nearly out of
-sight.
-
-“My Fishmobile--” he began when once more he rose straight in the
-air, but at that moment they came to an especially deep pool and the
-words froze on his lips. Teddy watched him with amusement and saw
-that when he was level again Bug Eye had a wild look about him.
-
-“I’ll stick to crazy steers after this!” the cowboy yelled. “They
-stay on the ground, anyway!”
-
-But the worst of it was over. The water resumed a more normal flow
-and the banks widened. They still shot downstream at an alarming
-rate, but the canoe kept on a fairly level keel.
-
-Bug Eye drew a breath of relief and rested his paddle across the
-gunwales.
-
-“I’m cured,” he declared solemnly. “I wanted to be a sailor when I
-was young. But never again! That was some circus! What made it like
-that, Pop? I’ve been over here before. But snakes, that was a
-millpond compared to to-day. What happened?”
-
-“The storm,” Pop grinned. “I kinda thought it would be pretty bad.
-But we’re through now. And Jake Trummer’s place is just ahead. One
-more bend and we’re there.”
-
-Eagerly the boys waited until they should come in sight of Whirlpool
-River Ranch. The end of their trip was at hand. Would they find
-their cattle grazing peacefully, waiting to be driven home? Would
-their father be there yet? They sat tense, leaning forward.
-
-They rounded the bend. A broad vista of land lay before them, green,
-rolling range land. Back of the grazing fields mountains rose
-sublimely, fleecy clouds capping their summits. The late afternoon
-sun turned the scene into a picture of pastoral beauty.
-
-But on the range was not a hair, hide, or hoof of a single
-shorthorn.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-Burying the Hatchet
-
-
-There was tender grass to be munched. There was warm sun to bask in.
-There was the placid river to drink from. Yet of cattle there was
-none, nor any sign of them.
-
-“Just in time to be late!” Bug Eye groaned, and rested on his
-paddle.
-
-“They may be further on,” Teddy remarked hopefully. “Beyond the
-rise, there.”
-
-“Much beyond,” Roy said bitterly. “If they were there, some would
-wander off to this range. Yet we’ll look.”
-
-Once more the canoe went forward, this time slowly, dispiritedly.
-Their journey had been in vain. Their cattle were gone.
-
-As Roy had feared, once past the rise in the land, they saw that
-surely the herd had departed. Pop said nothing, but sat and smoked
-in silence, his paddle dragging. Bug Eye made a few remarks under
-his breath.
-
-“We’ll have to land and find Jake Trummer,” Teddy declared. “That
-gang we heard on the river at night has been here before us.”
-
-“They rustled ’em, hey?” Bug Eye asked inanely.
-
-“Exactly,” Teddy replied. “How far away they’ve gotten with them,
-there’s no telling. We’re worse than useless without broncs. We’ll
-have to wait for dad.”
-
-“You’ll not have to do much waitin’,” Pop remarked suddenly. “I seen
-General just over that hill.”
-
-“With dad on him?” Teddy questioned eagerly.
-
-“Nope. Guess he’s up at the ranch house talkin’ to Trummer.
-General’s been turned out to grass. We’ll beach, an’ walk over.”
-
-“How far?” Bug Eye wanted to know.
-
-“Four miles. Do you good. We can leave the stuff here. Be all right.
-Trummer is the only man I know who’s got his range in his back
-yard.”
-
-The canoe was driven ashore, and Teddy leaped out.
-
-“If we hadn’t hit that rock,” he said bitterly, “we could have been
-here before the rustlers and saved the cows.”
-
-“Mebby,” Pop said laconically. “There’s lots of things to be
-considered. We’ll see yore dad first, an’ talk later.”
-
-The four set off across country, after having pulled the canoe up
-out of reach of the water. As they walked, they turned frequently,
-as though they expected to find the missing cattle. The way was
-long, but evening brought coolness, and they were not tired when
-they came in sight of the ranch house.
-
-Jake Trummer’s place was like a hundred others in the state. The
-low, broad building where the “boss” and his family lived, the
-high-fenced corral; the bunk-house; and, separated a little from it,
-the cook house. A few horses were in the corral, and among them
-Teddy recognized the bronc Nat Raymond usually rode.
-
-“All here but General,” Roy murmured. “You said you saw him out on
-the range, Pop. Then dad must be inside.”
-
-Coming nearer the ranch house, a mutter of voices reached them. Loud
-above the others, sounded Jake Trummer’s, with his repeated:
-
-“You hear me, now--you hear me!”
-
-“Hot times,” Bug Eye remarked.
-
-Then they reached the side steps, and another speaker interrupted.
-The voice was low, but vibrant.
-
-“That’s dad,” Roy said tensely. “He’s good and mad about something.”
-
-“Jake Trummer,” Mr. Manley was saying, “I’ve known you for a long
-time. An’ I never thought you’d pull a low-down trick like this.”
-
-“Bardwell Manley, you go careful! I kin only stand so much! You’re
-at my house, my guest, an’ as such I respect you. But you hear me
-when I tell you I didn’t touch your dogies, an’ I mean it. An’ if
-you’re wantin’ to call me a liar to my face, start now!”
-
-“But, Jake you tole me you’d drive ’em into the river, an’ when I
-get here they’re gone! What would you say in a case like that? Don’t
-it _look_ as if you’d done it?”
-
-“But I tell you I didn’t! They was there last night. To-day they was
-gone. That’s all I know about ’em.”
-
-“Well--” Mr. Manley shook his head, and at that moment Roy bounded
-up the steps.
-
-“Dad! We’re here at last. Had a tough time of it.”
-
-“Roy! Teddy! Glad to see you, boys. I was beginnin’ to worry, but I
-figured you might have been delayed on account of the storm. And now
-you’re here--” he spread his hands expressively--“we might as well
-turn around an’ go home. The cows are gone. Trummer--”
-
-“Wait, Dad,” Teddy said quickly. “You’re wrong. Mr. Trummer had
-nothing to do with the cattle being stolen.”
-
-“Stolen! How do you know that? Who stole ’em? Jake Trummer--”
-
-“Give the boy a chance, Bardwell!” Mr. Trummer interrupted testily.
-“He knows more about it than you do. Let him speak.”
-
-“It’s just this,” Teddy went on, with a look at the others. “Two
-nights ago we camped by the stream, because the storm came up, and
-we couldn’t see our way clear to taking a chance on keeping afloat.
-Late at night--at least it seemed late--Roy and I walked down to the
-river, leavin’ Pop an’ Bug Eye by the fire. That right, Pop?”
-
-The veteran nodded.
-
-“Yuh tell it, Teddy. Yuh know more about it than what I do.”
-
-“We headed for the river,” the boy went on, “and when we got there
-we heard some men talking. They were in a boat on the stream. Some
-one they called Denver--”
-
-“Denver!” Jake Trummer broke in. “That’s--But go ahead, son. I’ll
-have my say later,” he added, with a glance at Mr. Manley.
-
-“This Denver had a plan to rustle our cattle that had strayed over
-here, an’ he aimed to let you think Mr. Trummer did as he had
-threatened,” Teddy went on swiftly. “They’d found out, somehow,
-about the whole business; maybe from The Pup, though he didn’t
-appear to be with them. They were going to drive the cows off at
-night, and, by golly, that’s what they did!”
-
-For a moment there was silence. Mr. Manley looked at Jake Trummer,
-his face a deep red. Then he threw back his head and thrust out his
-hand.
-
-“Jake,” he said falteringly, “I ain’t sayin’ nothin’ now. I’ve done
-all my talkin’--a sight too much, I reckon. I’ll stay dumb for the
-rest of my life. But if you can forgive an old fool--”
-
-With a grin, Jake Trummer clasped the hand offered him, and gripped
-hard.
-
-“We all make mistakes,” he said softly. “I made the first one. All
-the forgivin’ to be done ain’t on my side. I come to you like a bag
-o’ wind an’ shot my mouth off when I shouldn’t. Some hand of yourn
-told one of my men that the orders were to let the cattle stray as
-far as they wanted, on my range if possible, because the grazin’ was
-good an’ they needed fattenin’. I was a fool to believe it.”
-
-“The Pup!” Teddy and Roy exclaimed in the same breath.
-
-“Was he tall, Mr. Trummer?” Teddy asked. “Dark?”
-
-“Never saw him,” Mr. Trummer answered, releasing Mr. Manley’s hand.
-“He told one of my men. Well, Bardwell, we’ll forget it. We were
-both wrong, I, mebby, more than you. Now let’s get this thing
-straight. First I want to ask yore boy: Did that man you said they
-called Denver have a high-pitched, cracked voice?”
-
-“I’ll tell a maverick he did!” Roy replied excitedly. “High as a
-girl’s, almost. Why?”
-
-“That was Denver Smith,” Mr. Trummer declared. “They’re the last of
-the old gangs, an’ the sooner they go the better. They make their
-headquarters on the banks of Whirlpool River an’ try to pick up tips
-they can use in their business, which is everything from
-high-jackin’ to rustlin’. I pity the man that rides that river road
-alone an’ with money in his pocket. They’d get him sure. Yep, boys,
-it was Denver Smith an’ his bunch fer a sure bet. What did they say,
-again?”
-
-“They were planning to steal our cattle and let you take the blame,”
-Roy replied. “They knew you’d had an argument with dad up on our
-ranch, though I don’t know how.”
-
-“It’ll be the last one we’ll have, eh, Bardwell?” Mr. Trummer said,
-and grinned. “As fer them findin’ out, they have ways an’ means. But
-that’s not the point. Yore cattle’s gone, Bardwell. What you aimin’
-to do?”
-
-“Get ’em back!” Mr. Manley said grimly. “I hate to ask it, Jake; but
-if you can spare a few horses for the boys, here--”
-
-“Spare a few horses?” Mr. Trummer ejaculated. “What kind of a game
-is this, Bardwell?”
-
-“I’m sorry,” Mr. Manley muttered, and turned away. “I kind of
-thought--”
-
-“Spare a few _horses_! By cripes, you got nerve! An’ what about me?
-Think I’ll stay here? We’ll ride together, like we done before,
-Bardwell! You can have all the horses yuh want; but yuh got to take
-me with ’em! We’ll get them rustlers, an’ every one of yore cows!
-Spare a few _horses_! Huh! I’ll spare more than that! You hear me?”
-
-Mr. Manley grinned. He clapped his friend on the back, and then
-laughed.
-
-“For a minute yuh had me scared, Jake. But I might o’ known--I might
-o’ known. We ride together, then. Tell yore cook to throw some
-victuals together. Boys, I’m sure glad you showed up! We’ll clean up
-Denver Smith an’ his gang--an’ dry-clean ’em at that! Saddle what
-broncs Jake wants to give you, an’ we’ll eat an’ get!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-The Chase
-
-
-The meal was soon concluded, and Roy and Teddy told of their
-adventures on the river.
-
-Inwardly Mr. Manley was much concerned over their mishaps, but he
-only nodded and smiled. He wanted to let his boys know that he
-expected nothing less from them.
-
-At the same time his face flushed with a glow of pride when Roy
-told, modestly enough, of his fight with the eagle. He looked at the
-knife with which his son had slain the bird, and silently put the
-weapon in his pocket. By this the boy knew he was really affected by
-the story. The knife would remain a relic, a proof of his son’s
-bravery. With the exception of Roy, Pop was the only one who
-realized this. The others thought he had absent-mindedly put it in
-his own pocket instead of returning it to Roy.
-
-For a while Roy hesitated to tell his father of the payroll robbery
-and Teddy knew he was holding off purposely, so he said nothing. But
-when they were walking toward the corral, Roy decided it would be
-best for his father to know the whole story, even if it did add to
-his worry, so he told him.
-
-Mr. Manley took it silently, only shaking his head sorrowfully. The
-loss of the money affected him not so much as realizing that The Pup
-was a thief. He had never liked the man, but a horse-thief and
-payroll bandit--that was different from “plain orneriness.”
-
-“Guess I made a mistake in Marino,” he declared. “Got in the house
-an’ stole my four hundred, did he! Well, maybe it was partly my
-fault for lettin’ it lay around like that, so open. But none of the
-boys I ever had would steal a cent. Gus, now--” he stopped, and bit
-his lip. Gus was a topic that bothered him. “You don’t think Gus--”
-
-“No, Dad, Gus had nothing to do with it,” Teddy said positively.
-“I’m sure of that, Dad!”
-
-“That’s good,” Mr. Manley sighed. “I didn’t think Gus was that kind.
-Pshaw, I knew he wasn’t! Wonder if we’ll see him again? Well--” and
-he shrugged his shoulders. “But this is no time for wonderin’. We
-got to be on our way. So The Pup stole--right from the house! Stole
-my payroll!” He shook his head again, slowly, and walked off
-muttering.
-
-“Dad would rather have that money taken twice than to think Gus was
-mixed up in it,” Teddy said to Roy in a low voice. “He’s sorry The
-Pup did it, too. He may have disliked Marino, as I guess we all did,
-but dad hates to think any one is a thief.”
-
-The horses, saddled and ready, were waiting for them. Those who had
-come with Mr. Manley had, of course, their own broncos, and Jake
-Trummer supplied Teddy, Roy, Pop Burns and Bug Eye with other
-mounts. They took with them food, and each saddle packed a rifle and
-a blanket. The chase, even if it was successful, might take several
-days to conclude. They had one big advantage--the rustlers did not
-know they were being trailed. Thus they would take their time, and
-Mr. Manley counted largely on this.
-
-“Guess we’re all set,” the boss of the X Bar X stated, as he looked
-about him. The men were mounted, waiting for the word to start.
-
-“Whenever you say, Bardwell,” Jake Trummer suggested.
-
-“Then let’s go!”
-
-The riders filed out of the yard and headed once more for the river.
-Mr. Trummer had left word with one of his men on the ranch that the
-canoe and its contents were to be taken care of, so there was no
-need to return to the place where they had left it. Instead, the
-riders cut diagonally across the range and headed away from the
-direction the boys had come.
-
-“Dad, what about that landslide?” Roy remarked, spurring his mount
-up closer to his father. “Nick arrived all fagged out and told us a
-stranger gave you a wild tale about an avalanche.”
-
-“It _was_ a wild tale,” Mr. Manley declared. “Jake said no such
-thing occurred. Didn’t you, Jake? But it had me worried, all the
-same. By golly, if it’s not one thing it’s another!”
-
-“I’ll tell a maverick,” Roy muttered, and then rode forward
-silently. He was thinking of The Pup and Gus. Where had The Pup fled
-to? They had seen him at the edge of the stream on the horse he had
-stolen. Did he follow the river? Or did he branch out? Was there a
-chance of catching him, as well as the cattle rustlers?
-
-“Pipe dreams,” the boy muttered. “We’ve seen all we ever shall of
-Joe Marino.”
-
-“Roy, quit that mumbling and speak up!” Teddy exclaimed. “What’s on
-your mind?”
-
-“The Pup, for one thing,” Roy answered grimly. “He’s got a horse of
-ours, and four hundred dollars. I hate to let him get away with a
-raw thing like that without an effort to catch him.”
-
-“We’ll make more than an effort, Roy, when we get this cattle
-business finished,” Mr. Manley called back. “We’ll have every
-sheriff in the state on his trail, and maybe we’ll take a hand in it
-ourselves. He was the man who put Gus on the bum. I can’t forget
-that.”
-
-“There’s another little item that sticks in my mind,” Teddy remarked
-in a low voice. “It happened near the corral the night the horse and
-the money were stolen. Guess you know what I mean, Roy. Though I’d
-rather have it sticking in my mind than in my chest,” he added
-significantly.
-
-“The knife with J. K. on it,” Roy returned. “Sure, I know, Teddy.
-But the sooner we forget The Pup the better. He’s gone. If we catch
-him, fine! If not--well, charge it up to profit and loss.”
-
-“That’s the right idea, Roy,” Mr. Manley agreed. “We’ve got enough
-on our hands now. If we get our cattle back I’ll be satisfied.”
-
-“I suppose I ought to be--and maybe I’ll have to be; but it sure
-sticks in my craw to let a thing like that get by me!” muttered
-Teddy.
-
-The gloom of evening was at hand, and the men rode in close
-formation, talking in subdued tones. Pop and Bug Eye were ahead,
-leading. Roy and Teddy brought up the rear, their father riding just
-ahead of them. They had planned to cover as much distance as
-possible before dark, so that when morning came they would be near
-enough to the rustlers to seize them before they had a chance to
-escape.
-
-They soon came to the lowlands just beyond the range of Whirlpool
-River Ranch. The air here was damp and chill, due to the moisture
-from the river which had settled in the depressions. To add to this,
-the night promised to be cloudy, with no moon showing. Already the
-dull, gray canopy was curtaining the evening sky, cutting off, in
-the fullness of its glory, the western sunset.
-
-“This is the first real touch of fall we’ve had,” Roy remarked,
-buttoning his shirt collar higher. Then, raising his voice: “Where
-are you figuring to stop, Dad? Going to ride part of the night?”
-
-Mr. Manley, the better to reply, wheeled his pony and circled back
-toward his son.
-
-“Nope,” he answered. “Soon as we top this rise ahead we’ll call a
-halt. We sure don’t want to camp in this place. Golly, it’s damp!”
-and he shivered slightly.
-
-The leaders of the column quickened their pace, so that they might
-leave the lowlands as quickly as possible. Pop, like most old
-ranchmen, had his pet superstitions, and one of them was that it was
-unlucky to stay long in such a place.
-
-“Things happen,” he declared vaguely. “The mountains are all
-right--don’t care how high they are. Open range is all right. But
-every time I ride through land that sets low, I get a feelin’ that
-somethin’ is goin’ to turn up. Don’t know why, but I do.”
-
-“Ever hear that dampness was bad for rheumatism?” Teddy chuckled.
-“That might have something to do with it, Pop.”
-
-“No sir,” and Pop shook his head obstinately. “It’s got nothin’ to
-do with rheumatism. Even Nat Raymond’s pony knows what I mean. Look
-at the way he’s actin’.”
-
-In truth, the bronco Nat rode, which had come from the home ranch
-with him, was acting queerly. The pony would come to a dead stop,
-lift its head, whinny, and proceed. This performance was repeated
-several times.
-
-Mr. Manley observed the horse with interest.
-
-“What makes him do that, Nat?” he asked. “You pullin’ him up?”
-
-“Not any, boss.” Nat answered sincerely. “He’s doin’ it himself.
-Like Pop said, I guess, he don’t like lowlands.”
-
-“Seems to me as though he sensed a stranger around,” Teddy said to
-Roy in a low tone. “I’ve seen Nat’s bronco do that before, when a
-new man came into the yard of the X Bar X. It’s got nothing to do
-with the place we’re in now.”
-
-“Well, there’s enough men with us he never saw before,” Roy
-countered. He motioned toward Jake Trummer and his followers. “Think
-they’re the reason, Teddy?”
-
-“No, I don’t and I’ll tell you why. Because I noticed that it’s only
-a man that comes alone who effects the bronc like that. Nat,” he
-called, “did you ever see your horse act like that before?”
-
-“Well, he does get kind of nervous when a stranger comes around,”
-Nat admitted. “But usually it’s only if the stranger rides alone. I
-can’t figure why the bronc should do it here unless Pop’s right
-about him bein’ leary of lowlands.”
-
-Teddy shook his head, but said nothing in reply.
-
-Darkness was nearly upon them, and Mr. Manley held up his hand for a
-halt.
-
-“Stick close now, men,” he ordered. “Jake, you want to show us the
-way out of here? Guess you know it better than I do. We want to camp
-as soon as possible.”
-
-“Right, Bardwell!” Jake agreed. “All set, men? Follow me. Don’t get
-too far apart. We don’t want no stragglers.”
-
-He rode forward again, and the others strung along behind him. Just
-as he reached a knoll, which marked the end of the lowland, those
-following heard him give an exclamation of surprise. Mr. Manley
-spurred his horse forward.
-
-“What is it, Jake?” he asked.
-
-“Look!” Jake answered shortly. “There’s a horse without a rider.
-Maybe that’s why Nat’s bronc was actin’ up. He’s got a saddle on,
-too.”
-
-Ahead of them, half concealed by the settling dusk, stood a pinto.
-On his back was a saddle, but no rider. When the animal saw the
-group in front of him, it ran toward them.
-
-“Jimminy!” Teddy breathed. “His right foreleg is hurt. Notice how
-he’s limping? What does he remind you of, Roy?”
-
-“He doesn’t _remind_ me of anything; he _is_!” Roy answered
-forcibly. The horse came closer. “Teddy, that’s the pony The Pup
-stole, or I’m a ring-tailed doodle bird!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-The Man at the Fire
-
-
-“Our pony!”
-
-Mr. Manley almost shouted it.
-
-“Do you mean to say that’s the bronc that Marino stole?”
-
-“Look at him yourself, Dad!” Teddy cried excitedly. “Wait, I’ll see
-if I can get him. He knows me--I broke him. Stay here.”
-
-The boy rode rapidly forward. The horse did not turn and run, but
-stood, waiting. In a moment Teddy had hold of his bridle rein and
-was leading him back.
-
-“See? Isn’t he?”
-
-Mr. Manley looked closer.
-
-“He certainly is, Teddy! Well, for the love of Pete! how’d _he_ get
-here--an’ where’s The Pup?”
-
-“Can’t tell you that, Dad,” Teddy replied. He turned to Roy. “Now
-are you so sure that we’ll never see Marino again? He’s around here
-somewhere, I’ll bet a plugged nickel! Maybe he got thrown. If it
-wasn’t so dark we could have a look for him.”
-
-“By golly, it’s the pinto!” Pop exclaimed, riding up. “Where’d he
-come from, Teddy? I saw that horse out yonder, but I didn’t pay no
-attention to him. Thought he had a man with him. The pinto! The Pup
-must have followed up the river from the time we saw him! Snakes!
-wonder if he’s around?”
-
-“That bronc of yours is a good watch dog,” Roy declared to Nat. “It
-was this horse he sensed, and the lowlands had nothin’ to do with
-it. Pop, you’re all twisted. Nat’s pony was calling in this pinto.”
-
-“Meybe,” Pop agreed doubtfully. “I ain’t sayin’ nothin’. Well, boss,
-do we camp? We can picket this hoss and come back for him later.
-He’ll stand, I reckon.”
-
-“Won’t do much wanderin’ with his leg like that,” Bug Eye remarked.
-It was practically the first sentence he had uttered since they had
-left Jake Trummer’s place. “He’s got a sore there that seems as if
-it might have been made some time ago.”
-
-“It was,” Teddy remarked laconically. “I brought Roy in to look at
-it the night he was stolen. That’s how I found he was gone. Wherever
-The Pup is, he’s on foot. Unless he got thrown, and is lying hurt
-somewhere.”
-
-“And alone,” added Roy, with a note of pity in his voice.
-
-The uselessness of attempting to find Marino in the dark was
-apparent to all, and, leaving the knoll on which he stood, Mr.
-Manley rode forward until he and Jake Trummer came to a spot which
-bordered on a group of trees.
-
-“We can pitch camp here,” Mr. Trummer suggested. “There’s a spring
-in them trees, good an’ cold. In the mornin’ we can start at sun-up,
-and then, by golly, we’ll run them rustlers to earth. They don’t
-know we’re comin’, but they’ll learn soon enough. Tryin’ to lay the
-blame on me fer the cattle bein’ gone! Huh, I’m kinda anxious to
-meet Denver Smith an’ his gang!”
-
-The horses were picketed some distance from the camping spot, a fire
-was built and blankets were unrolled. The night was cold, and the
-men huddled as closely as possible to the blaze, wrapped tightly in
-their thick coverings. The heavens were entirely obscured by clouds,
-and beyond the fire a blackness, like heavy velvet, covered the
-land.
-
-Supper was soon concluded, for the party was “traveling light.” But
-three men had been told to carry rations, and, consequently, there
-was hardly enough from which to make a feast. But beans and bacon
-are filling, and no one went actually hungry.
-
-There was little talk after supper. The finding of The Pup’s pony
-was commented upon, and guesses were hazarded concerning the
-whereabouts of Marino, but that was all. The men were tired, and
-tired men waste no time in idle talk. Definitely and directly they
-go to sleep.
-
-Within an hour the only sounds to be heard were the uneasy neighings
-of the horses and the crackling of the fire as it burned brightly
-and then sank down again. Each man had his rifle by his side, in
-case he was awakened by a curious beast sniffing at his ear, but no
-one actually anticipated having to use the firearm.
-
-Certainly they expected no human visitor. The rustlers, even if they
-were in the neighborhood, would avoid them studiously. True, each
-man there hoped that the ground they had covered brought them nearer
-their quarry, for a herd of cattle moves slowly. The only direction
-the thieves could have taken was the one in which they were
-traveling. Sooner or later they would come upon the missing cows,
-and, they hoped, also the beasts’ self-constituted guards.
-
-The rustlers had certainly hoped to gain a long start on possible
-pursuers, because of the delay occasioned by reason of Jake
-Trummer’s being blamed for the disappearance of the Durhams. But
-their plans had miscarried, and this they did not know. Their
-conversation on the river had betrayed them.
-
-Teddy’s sleep was troubled with dreams--dreams of cattle and huge
-bales of money and long knives with queer initials burned in the
-handle. Then he saw Gus, alone, weary, staggering over the prairie,
-shouting his name. So vivid was the impression that some one was
-calling him that he sat suddenly upright, with the word “Teddy!”
-still ringing clearly in his ears.
-
-Then, as one aroused from a sleep gradually realizes the true state
-of affairs, the boy grinned, and once more lay down on the soft
-earth and pulled his blanket about him. Dreams are funny things, he
-thought. Sometimes they’re so real the rest of life seems unreal,
-and a dream itself.
-
-“Getting poetical,” he muttered, and composed himself to rest, “just
-like old Roy.” The fire was still going, the embers glowing
-brightly.
-
-Try as he would, Teddy could not sink again into slumber. He shut
-his eyes tightly and counted innumerable sheep, but sheep reminded
-him of cattle, and cattle brought a host of thoughts that were most
-disturbing. At last the boy sat up and threw his blanket from him.
-
-“Guess I’ll chuck a few pieces of wood on the fire,” he said to
-himself. His mind formed clear sentences before him, describing his
-every movement, as is often the case of one who finds himself the
-victim of insomnia. As the boy made his way carefully from between
-the sleeping forms lying near, he murmured:
-
-“Easy, now--mustn’t wake the others. Golly, it’s dark--cold, too!
-Glad the fire’s not out. I’m hungry. Listen to those horses whinny!
-Why don’t they go to sleep? I wonder where Gus is to-night? Funny
-how we came across The Pup’s horse and not The Pup. Here’s a stick
-that’ll do fine.” He threw it on the fire. “There, that’s better.
-Warmer! That Pop snoring? Must be. Sounds like a saw mill. Funny old
-geezer, Pop. Wish I could sleep like that.”
-
-Small, unconnected thoughts kept buzzing through his brain. He
-walked around the fire, then seated himself near it, his knees drawn
-up, his chin resting on his hands. His dream came back to him, and
-he recalled that he had awakened with his own name ringing in his
-ears.
-
-“Sure sounded as though some one was calling me,” he muttered,
-kicking a piece of wood further in to the heart of the flames.
-“Wonder what time it is? Must be after midnight. Snakes, there’s not
-a star out!”
-
-He raised his head and stared vacantly up into the blackness. For a
-long moment he stayed in this position, then closed his eyes. He
-came to himself with a start.
-
-“Well!” and he grinned. “Almost went to sleep sitting up. Guess I’ll
-seek my downy bed once more.”
-
-He arose, and stretched. He stood there, his arms outstretched,
-staring at a dark form looming up on the opposite side of the
-fire--a strange, staggering form.
-
-Teddy’s right hand leaped down to his belt and closed over the butt
-of his gun. But he did not draw, for at that moment the form of a
-man pitched headlong at his feet and lay still!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-Boss and Bandit
-
-
-Teddy, hand resting on the gun, eyes wide, stared at the prostrate
-intruder. Something about the man seemed familiar. As he lay there,
-his arms thrown wide, head turned to one side, he appeared to have
-been dropped from a great height and pressed into the earth from the
-force of descent. The fingers weakly opened and closed, but aside
-from that the figure was motionless, silent.
-
-Teddy dropped on one knee, and laid a hand on the man’s shoulder. A
-shudder ran through the body.
-
-“Here!” Teddy said sharply. “What’s the matter? Can you speak?”
-
-“Tired,” the man mumbled. “Hungry. Let me be.”
-
-Roy, who was lying near by, awoke and sat up, blinking. When he saw
-his brother bending over the man he thought at first that Teddy was
-trying to rouse one of the sleepers.
-
-“Shake him, Teddy,” he advised in a drowsy voice. “What’s the
-matter--did he steal your blanket?”
-
-“Roy, come here,” Teddy said quickly. “I think this is some one you
-know.”
-
-“Some one I--” Then the meaning of Teddy’s sentence penetrated his
-brother’s half-awakened mind, and he struggled to his feet. By this
-time the others were stirring, asking questions in sleepy tones and
-rolling about to see the cause of the disturbance.
-
-Roy hastened to his brother’s side. Together, the two boys turned
-the man over, so that he faced the fire. As the glare of the newly
-fed flames glinted in his face, he made a feeble gesture of protest
-and covered his eyes with his hand. Then letting the arm drop like a
-dead thing, he sighed painfully.
-
-Teddy, seeing the face, started back.
-
-“The Pup!” he exclaimed, and turned at a touch on his shoulder. His
-father was peering down at their visitor.
-
-“It’s Marino, all right,” Mr. Manley agreed grimly, staring at the
-dust-streaked face. “Is he hurt? What’s the matter?”
-
-Teddy shook the man gently.
-
-“Are you hurt, Joe?” the boy asked loudly. “Can’t you talk?”
-
-“Talk all right--too tired,” The Pup mumbled. “Not
-hurt--tired--hungry.” Then for the first time he seemed to realize
-that he was surrounded by a ring of inquiring, puzzled faces. He
-pulled himself together and glared haggardly at Teddy, then shifted
-his gaze to Roy, and finally to Mr. Manley. Suddenly the light of
-fear came into his eyes, and he leaped to his feet, trembling.
-
-“Don’t--don’t shoot me,” he begged piteously. “I’ll go! But don’t
-shoot me!”
-
-“No one’s going to shoot you,” Mr. Manley said soothingly. “Here,
-sit down. Take this blanket. Man, you’re shiverin’ like a leaf. Get
-closer to the fire--that’s it! Pop rustle up some beans for this
-feller, will you? He looks half starved.”
-
-“Half starved!” the man gasped, querulously, and sank within
-himself. “Worse’n that. Three days without food--lost--horse gone--”
-
-Pop Burns brought some cold beans to him, and, hungrily, ravenously,
-the man reached for them. They watched him while he ate, more like a
-wild beast than a human being, and later Pop brought him a cup of
-steaming coffee. When he had finished this he sighed with relief and
-wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. His voice, when again he
-spoke, was stronger.
-
-“Boss,” he said, turning to Mr. Manley, “I don’t deserve this. By
-rights you should have thrown me out on my neck. Instead you--” he
-hesitated, and waved his arm in an expressive gesture--“you treat me
-like a man instead of like a--a mangy dog.” He gulped, and his
-listeners shifted uneasily. “I ain’t worth it. I’m a thief--a hoss
-thief an’ a common robber. Once I-- But we’ll let that go. I ain’t
-got yore money, boss,” he said suddenly, and looked up appealingly.
-“I ain’t got a cent of it left.”
-
-“You spent it?” Mr. Manley asked sharply.
-
-“I been robbed,” The Pup continued, and gulped again. “Been robbed
-of everything I had except the hoss, an’ he ran away. For three days
-I been walkin’--tryin’ to find some one--any one--tryin’ to find
-food--”
-
-“Who robbed you?”
-
-“Denver Smith an’ his bunch.”
-
-“Denver Smith!” Jake Trummer ejaculated, and bent over The Pup.
-“When did yuh see them? Where are they? Have they got--”
-
-“Give the man a chance, Jake,” Mr. Manley advised gently. “He’s all
-in. Listen Marino,” he said in a louder tone, “do you know where
-Denver Smith is now?”
-
-“Said he was goin’ to rustle your cattle an’ follow the river to the
-Border,” The Pup whispered weakly. “Wanted me to go in it with him,
-but I figured I’d done enough to you. Then Denver hit me--hit me
-with somethin’--” stupidly he put his hand to his head. “Hit me, an’
-took the four hundred dollars, an’ when I woke up my hoss was gone
-an’ I was lyin’ near some trees. The four hundred bucks--I was
-hopin’ to make Togas an’ find my sister--an’ I was goin’ to
-work--buy a store, maybe--an’ send the money back to you,
-boss--honest I was--every cent--”
-
-“And buy a few more knives with some one else’s initials burned in
-the handle,” Teddy interrupted bitterly. “The story listens fine,
-Marino!”
-
-“I ain’t lyin’!” Marino almost screamed. “It’s the truth! I wanted
-to start clean! I been a long time livin’ down--what I used to be.
-Then, that night--I must have been crazy, I guess. I’d been drinkin’
-too much an’ I thought I could turn a trick just once more an’ go
-back home an’ live straight. My mother--I killed her, I guess,
-’cause she died when she found out what I was. It was then I
-promised my sister I’d give up--that stuff. Oh, you might as well
-know it all,” he burst out, his words tumbling over one another as
-if in agony to escape before being called back. “I was a
-bandit--that knife was marked with my initials, Teddy. My real
-name’s Jules Kolto--”
-
-“You--Jules Kolto?” Pop cried incredulously. “I heard lots about you
-years ago! Then yuh are a Mex, after all!”
-
-“Yep, I’m Mex,” Kolto went on bitterly. “A Mex, a hoss thief, an’ a
-bandit. Now you know. If yuh want to string me up, go ahead!” he
-exclaimed defiantly. “I ain’t any good to nobody, least of all to
-myself! So do what you want with me--an’ I won’t do no cryin’,
-neither!” He took a deep breath, then a sudden tremor shook his
-frame.
-
-“Take it easy, son,” Mr. Manley said kindly. “You ain’t in no fit
-condition to be hung. What you want is rest an’ food. Hangin’
-wouldn’t make you feel a bit better. Guess you’ve learned yore
-lesson. Jules Kolto! Well, well! And you been straight for so many
-years only to backslide an’ have the money you stole taken from you
-by another thief! The longer we live the queerer things we see,” and
-Mr. Manley smiled grimly. “Yore hoss--or, rather, the one you
-stole--is picketed over yonder. We found him. You took a mighty poor
-way to start straight. No good ever comes of stolen money. An’ while
-I ain’t a preacher, I’m preachin’ now.
-
-“You wanted to get to Mexico an’ see yore sister, maybe live there
-the rest of yore life, an’ to do that you undid all the work of ten
-years in one grand spree. Suppose you had gotten away with it? What
-would yore sister have said to you? Think she’d have anything to do
-with stolen money when she’d made you promise to quit? An’ what else
-was that you said--that yore mother died when she found out that you
-was a bandit? Then you went ahead and stole again! Humans are funny
-animals,” and Mr. Manley shook his head. “I can’t figure ’em.
-
-“Now listen, Jules Kolto. I’ll give you another chance. You help us
-find Denver Smith an’ his gang an’ get our cattle back. Then you
-come home with me an’ work--work until that four hundred is paid.
-Then you can find yore sister an’ she won’t be ashamed to see you.
-Jules Kolto, I’m offerin’ you a chance to go straight. Will yuh take
-it?”
-
-Jules stood up. He threw back his head and the gleam from the fire
-shone on the face of a man with his jaw set firmly and with the
-light of a new purpose in his eyes.
-
-“Boss,” he said huskily, “I’m for you! I can’t say much,--but I’ll
-do whatever you want me to--barrin’ nothin’. I’ll trail Denver Smith
-till we get the cattle back if I drop in my tracks doin’ it. I’ll
-work my fingers off for you. Boss--will you shake?”
-
-There was a tense silence, broken only by the crackle of the fire,
-as the hands of boss and bandit met in a firm clasp.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-Flying Bullets
-
-
-A rosy dawn broke over the prairie. It shone on a group of men
-moving quickly about. Near them the smoke from a campfire arose. A
-few pans, containing the remains of a range breakfast, lay near it
-on the ground. Horses were being saddled, blankets rolled, rifles
-were being wiped dry from the morning dew. But there was an
-orderliness about this activity, a purpose in every movement of the
-figures. Every man knew exactly what he had to do, and was doing it,
-swiftly and definitely.
-
-Teddy was tightening a cinch-strap, and he looked up as Roy called
-to him:
-
-“Need any help? I’m all set.”
-
-“No thanks, Roy. I’ll make it.” The strap was quickly adjusted, and
-Teddy vaulted into the saddle.
-
-The others were mounting now, and the party soon started to move
-forward. Mr. Manley and Jake Trummer were leading, while Teddy, Roy
-and Jules Kolto, the latter seeming like a new man after his sleep,
-followed directly behind. The rest rode along in the rear. Kolto was
-astride the pinto he had stolen, but now he sat with his head held
-firmly and his chin thrust forward. He was a hunted thief no longer,
-but a man.
-
-Down toward the river the line of riders swept. They came fast and
-silently. In the crook of each right arm rested a rifle. On every
-face was a look of fixed determination.
-
-The sun was high when the leaders held up cautioning hands, and the
-column of horsemen stopped suddenly.
-
-“There’s a bunch of cows just ahead,” Mr. Manley said tensely.
-“Can’t tell yet if they’re ours, but I think they are. Now ride slow
-an’ easy. We’ll come up careful an’ have a look.”
-
-Once more the riders started forward, this time spread further
-apart, so that they came upon the cattle from different directions.
-Pop was the first to single out a cow and look at her brand. Then he
-rode swiftly toward Teddy and Roy, who were nearest.
-
-“They’re ours, boys!” he yelled. “I spotted the ole X Bar X brand in
-a minute! When I invented that, long ago, I figgered it would be
-easy to see at a distance! Yep, boys, they’re here!”
-
-“Tell dad!” Roy called. “Teddy, we’ll ride around them and see where
-his dis-honor, Denver Smith, is!”
-
-Spurring their ponies forward, the two boys flashed over the ground,
-making a wide circle around the milling cattle.
-
-“Looks like the cows are all safe!” Teddy yelled as he sped along.
-“Now for Denver Smith!”
-
-Behind Teddy and Roy came Bug Eye and Nat Raymond, bending low in
-their saddles, holding their rifles in readiness. Their pistols were
-loose in the holsters, should close range fighting hamper the use of
-the longer barreled rifles.
-
-The four punchers dashed over the ground. Now they came to the head
-of the cattle herd.
-
-“They ought to be near here!” Teddy shouted, referring to the
-rustlers, “unless they got scared an’ beat it!”
-
-But he saw almost immediately that this latter was not so. From the
-opposite side of the herd four men came riding, their guns out,
-their horses in a lather of foam.
-
-“Spread!” Roy yelled. “Get apart! And fire low--they’ll kill us if
-they can!”
-
-As the approaching rustlers came closer, their guns began to bark.
-Bullets whined overhead, and Teddy answered with a shot from his
-rifle. But this weapon was useless on the back of a rearing bronco.
-The boy thrust it into his saddle holster and drew his six-gun.
-
-The four rustlers were bunched together and coming like a flying
-wedge. Teddy realized the wisdom of Roy’s shouted advice to “spread”
-when he took quick aim at the group and fired. One of the rustlers
-gave a wild yell and clapped his hand to his side.
-
-“Hope that was Denver,” Teddy said to himself grimly. “Let ’em have
-it, Roy!” he yelled. “Pepper ’em!”
-
-Roy was doing that very thing. The bullets of the rustlers were
-coming uncomfortably close, and when they swept past, Roy saw one of
-them take deliberate aim at Pop Burns and pull the trigger. The
-veteran lurched, recovered himself, and, wheeling his pony about,
-followed the outlaws.
-
-“Hurt bad, Pop?” Roy called, his face white.
-
-“Nope! Shoulder--left!” Pop shouted back. “All right. Go get ’em!”
-
-Greatly relieved at Pop’s answer, Roy sped onward. He thought that
-the rustlers would seek to escape, but this did not now appear to be
-their plan. They had worked hard to drive the cattle thus far, and
-were not going to give them up without a struggle.
-
-However, they changed their minds when Mr. Manley, Jake Trummer, and
-the others came into sight from beyond a rise.
-
-The boss of the X Bar X had ridden in from the south side, trying to
-see if the cattle were indeed his, but the two men and their
-companions had whirled about as soon as they heard the firing. Now,
-with guns out, they rode for the rustlers.
-
-Leading the attackers who were in the reserves, was Jules Kolto. The
-pinto he was on had outdistanced the others, and, before he knew it,
-he was face to face with the four cattle thieves.
-
-“Denver!” Teddy heard Kolto yell, “I want you!”
-
-There was a reply from the group of thieves, but it was
-unintelligible to Teddy. Then a single shot snapped and Kolto swayed
-in the saddle. Releasing his hold, he fell heavily to the ground,
-while his pony, mad with fright, raced on without him.
-
-Teddy and Roy reached his side at the same instant and leaped from
-their horses. The rustlers were in full flight now, so there was no
-danger that they would attack the boys on foot.
-
-As Roy leaned over the former bandit, Kolto grinned faintly.
-
-“Got me--at last,” he gasped. “Denver--shot me. That’s poetical
-justice--or somethin’--ain’t it? One bandit shoots another!”
-
-“Where did you get it?” Teddy asked quickly.
-
-“Chest--” and Kolto went into a fit of coughing. When it subsided he
-asked:
-
-“Where’s Denver?”
-
-Roy pointed silently, and, pushing himself up on one elbow, Kolto
-stared over the prairie. In the distance four horsemen were burning
-up the ground. They were beaten--they had failed. Two of them had
-bullet holes in their skins. The score was even.
-
-“Good riddance,” Kolto whispered. “Say, where’s yore dad?”
-
-Mr. Manley rode up at the moment. He had ordered the chase
-discontinued, as useless. They had got their cattle back. What good
-would it do to kill the rustlers?
-
-Mr. Manley had seen Kolto fall, but he knew Teddy and Roy were
-nearer than he, so he had continued to gallop after Denver Smith.
-But now the fight was over. Mr. Manley rode up to where Jules Kolto
-lay and quickly dismounted.
-
-“What’s the trouble, son?” he asked solicitously. He bent over and
-ripped Kolto’s shirt open. There was a small wound in the right
-shoulder. He turned the man over gently, and found a corresponding
-hole at the back. The bullet had passed completely through.
-
-“Whoever used a bullet like that is a mighty poor judge of
-firearms,” Mr. Manley said grimly. “You’re lucky, Kolto. Not a
-chance of your passin’ out. The bullet hit your collar bone and
-knocked you off your horse. You got a nice hole in you--but that’s
-all it’ll amount to.”
-
-“I--I won’t die?” Kolto asked, sitting up and looking uncertainly
-about.
-
-“Nary die! You got to work fer me, young feller! No, don’t get up
-yet. We’ll bandage you first to stop the bleedin’. Where’s that
-other cripple? Pop, come over here! What do you mean ridin’ around
-with a forty-five bullet bouncin’ around inside you? Get off that
-bronc--an’ quick! You bald-headed ole hoss-wrangler!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-Meet the Wife
-
-
-Into the ranch yard of the X Bar X rode ten men--ten tired, dusty,
-but triumphant men. Their job had been done. Every Durham had been
-driven all the way from Whirlpool River Ranch to their own range,
-and once more safely enclosed within their own fences. The long
-journey was completed. They were home again.
-
-The whole ranch turned out to welcome them. Mrs. Manley, her eyes
-shining with happiness, walked down the steps of the porch. A moment
-later the front door opened again, and Belle Ada, Ethel and Nell
-came rushing out.
-
-“Hello, Dad!” Belle called shrilly. “Hello, Roy! Climb down off that
-bronco and give your sister a kiss, Teddy!”
-
-“I’ll think it over,” Teddy laughed, and slid off his pony. “Hello,
-Mother! Back again as good as new!”
-
-Ethel Carew and Nell Willis were frankly delighted to see the boys
-again. They demanded the story of the trip “with complete details,”
-as Ethel said, and sat with wide-eyed fascination as the story was
-related.
-
-Teddy insisted on telling of Roy’s fight with the eagle, though he
-had not seen it, because he said “Roy was too modest.” It lost none
-of its excitement by his recital.
-
-Mrs. Manley was anxious to learn if any one was injured, but her
-husband, with a wink at the boys, asked her if she ever heard of any
-one getting hurt at a picnic.
-
-“Of course, sometimes they fall into the brook an’ get wet,” he
-added, with a grin, “so Teddy an’ Roy had to do that, too. But we’re
-all home now, an’ hungry. Think we can stop this gab-fest long
-enough to eat?”
-
-It was then three o’clock in the afternoon, so Mrs. Manley decided
-to have an early supper. She went to help Mrs. Moore, the
-housekeeper, and her daughter Norine prepare the meal, while Teddy
-and Roy continued the tale of their adventures at the urgent request
-of Nell and of Curly.
-
-By five o’clock all was in readiness for the adventurers’ first meal
-since their arrival home. When they entered the long dining room,
-they saw that the table had been enlarged by the addition of many
-leaves and that there were places set for every one of the punchers.
-
-“Celebration,” Mrs. Manley said, as she smiled. “Teddy, go and tell
-the boys to come in. And don’t forget Sing Lung. We want everybody!
-Tell every man on the place to come!”
-
-“You bet I will, Mom!” Teddy shouted, and made for the door. In a
-few minutes he was back, followed by a crowd of grinning, jostling
-cowboys. Jules Kolto had recovered sufficiently to return with them,
-and he, of course, was included in the invitation, although he
-protested that “he wasn’t fit to eat with honest folks.”
-
-Pop Burns was there, with his shoulder conspicuously bandaged. He
-was accorded the place of honor--next to the boss. Sing Lung,
-chatting like a parrot, was placed near Jules. Teddy and Roy sat on
-either side of their mother, while Belle, Ethel, and Nell were
-distributed about “to keep the boys from scrappin’ over the
-chicken,” Mr. Manley laughingly insisted.
-
-The punchers were a bit bashful at first to be eating in “the big
-house,” but this soon wore off. There are few punchers who stay
-bashful in the presence of roast chicken and cranberry sauce. There
-was but one fly in the ointment. Gus Tripp was not there. Holding in
-his hand a glass of water, Mr. Manley arose.
-
-“Boys,” he said, “I want to propose a toast--that right, Mother?--I
-want to propose a toast to an absent member. Fellers, here’s to Gus
-Tripp--may he some day come back to us!”
-
-Nick Looker, who was sitting next to Teddy, jumped to his feet.
-
-“Wait, boss!” he exclaimed. “Don’t drink it yet! I been waitin’ fer
-this! Hang on to yore seats a minute!” and he ran out of the door
-toward the yard. Roy and Teddy looked at each other with surprised
-faces. What was Nick up to, for Pete’s sake?
-
-They saw in a moment. The door flew open, and on the threshold stood
-Gus, not alone, but holding by the hand a blushing girl!
-
-“Boss,” he said, “meet the wife!”
-
-Jules Kolto started. He staggered to his feet, trembling.
-
-“Sister!” he cried, and opened his arms to the girl.
-
-“Jules!” She rushed to him, sobbing and laughing at the same time.
-“Jules! You here? Oh, Jules, I thought I’d never see you again!”
-
-Gus stood as though turned to stone.
-
-“What--what--” he stammered.
-
-“Oh, Gus, this is my brother!” the blushing young wife cried, and
-running to him pulled him forward by the hand. “My brother, Gus!
-Don’t you understand?”
-
-“Well, not very good--” Gus muttered, then his face cleared and he
-thrust out his hand. “Joe,” he said, “I don’t know what this is all
-about, but if she’s yore sister, shake! We’re brother-in-laws.”
-
-“Brothers-in-law,” Bug Eye corrected. “The plural here takes the
-possessive case.”
-
-“Gus,” Mr. Manley said haltingly, “so yore back? Son, I’m glad! Put
-’er there! I’m sorry I--”
-
-“Boss!” Gus interrupted, “you needn’t be sorry for nothin’. It was
-all my fault--the whole blame thing. But, boss, see what it got
-me--ain’t she a beauty?” And he looked at his wife proudly.
-
-“She sure is, Gus! Now let’s get this thing straight. Nick
-Looker--where is that bowlegged wild man? Where’d you find Gus,
-Nick?”
-
-“He wandered back two days after Teddy an’ Roy left,” Nick chuckled.
-“He’d been all the way to Togas, Mexico, an’ got married--You tell
-it, Gus!”
-
-“Well, boss, it was this way,” Gus began, as he gripped an arm of
-Teddy and Roy affectionately. “You know I was worried about not
-gettin’ no letters from the lady here--I mean my wife,” and he
-blushed. “You know, Teddy--I told you about it. Gee, ain’t it funny
-to have a wife? Well, she didn’t write for a long time, so I got
-worried, an’ started to--do some things I shouldn’t. I thought she’d
-threw me down.”
-
-“But, Gus, I did write, every day!” his wife interrupted.
-
-“Sure she did!” Nick burst out. “Gus, that dumb postmaster down at
-Eagles mislaid the letters! I got ’em now in my bunk--a whole raft
-of ’em!”
-
-“You have? Well, I’m a ring-tailed doodle bird!” Gus said slowly,
-and sat down. “An’ I went an’ got sick, almost, with worry, an’ let
-the cattle stray ’cause I went to town an’ got drunk, an’ all this
-happened because the postmaster lost my letters!
-Can--you--beat--that?”
-
-“Golly, Teddy, he’s right!” Roy exclaimed. “Snakes, it’s just like a
-story! We went up Whirlpool River--got tipped over--found The
-Pup--had the fight with the rustlers--everything--all on account of
-some missing letters! Golly, that’s funny! If Gus had gotten those
-letters he never would have neglected the cattle, would you, Gus?”
-
-“Nope, not me! I hardly knew what I was doin’, I was so worried. I
-thought you was dead, or somethin’,” and he felt bashfully for his
-wife’s hand. When he caught it, after not much trouble, he went on:
-
-“An’ that’s the way it was. So I heads fer Togas, after the boss
-lets me out, an’ goes straight fer the little girl here. So we gets
-hitched an’ come home!”
-
-“You did come _home_, Gus,” Mr. Manley murmured. “This is your home
-from now on!”
-
-“Oh, Dad, isn’t this too romantic for words!” Belle Ada burst out.
-“And all this happened because the letters Mrs. Tripp sent were
-mislaid! But, Gus, didn’t you know your wife was Joe Marino’s
-sister?” she asked, her eyes wide.
-
-“Nope! That’s one too many for me, even now. His name’s Marino, an’
-hers is--I mean was--Kolto. I don’t see--”
-
-“Gus, if you do any more thinkin’ you’ll get a headache!” Mr. Manley
-exclaimed, laughing loudly. Then he clapped his re-engaged cowboy on
-the back. “Pull up that chair an’ dive into this here roast chicken!
-Now, boys, I’ll drink that toast I started--here’s to Mr. and Mrs.
-Tripp. May they live long an’ happy an’ never have more than one
-scrap a day!”
-
-“Bardwell!” Mrs. Manley chided, and smiled. “I’m sure Gus and his
-wife won’t have one single dispute as long as they’re married!”
-
-“Well, I don’t reckon we will either; hey, honey?” Gus exclaimed,
-and glanced at his wife lovingly. “Boss, you ought to see this
-little girl ride. I want to match her with Teddy some day. Honestly,
-boss, she--”
-
-“Gus, sit down!” his wife, her face pink, pulled his arm. “They
-don’t want to hear all that.”
-
-“Sure we do!” Roy declared. “Jules, you sit over next to your
-sister. I guess Sing Lung won’t mind if you leave him. Will you,
-Sing?”
-
-“Me no min’ anyt’ing! Me happy--Me likee loast chickee velly, velly
-much! You glandflather--him do too,” and he proceeded to test the
-capacity of his mouth.
-
-“He means so does your old man--an’ he’s right, at that!” Mr. Manley
-laughed. “Sing Lung, you’re not gettin’ ahead of the boss at chicken
-eatin’!”
-
-Jules Kolto, a happy smile on his face, took the place Roy had
-indicated. He had forgotten entirely about his wound, and with good
-reason. This was his sister--the girl he had stolen for--the girl he
-had traveled many weary, long miles for, only to have the money, for
-which he had sacrificed so much, taken from him and himself left to
-wander three days without food, until he had found Mr. Manley. This
-was the girl--here, sitting beside him! No wonder he held his head
-high, no wonder his eyes sparkled!
-
-Gus, pulling his chair close to his wife, obeyed the instruction of
-the boss to “dive in.” But his eating ability was somewhat hampered
-by the fact that he used only one hand. The other was elsewhere
-engaged--as was his wife’s.
-
-All these friends we shall meet again in the next volume, to be
-called “The X Bar X Boys on Big Bison Trail.”
-
-Of course Teddy and Roy will be there--in fact, very much in
-evidence. But now watch them at the table, surrounded by the boys
-who had been their companions in many adventures. Teddy is holding
-up a drum-stick from which the meat has been cleanly picked and
-waving it around his head.
-
-“As our friend Shakespeare said,” he exclaimed, “the world is a
-stage--an’ I’m glad I got a ring-side seat!”
-
-“_I’ve_ got,” came from Bug Eye. “The plural takes the possessive
-case.”
-
-“Sink him! He’s got that Fishmobile of his on the brain, an’ he’s
-seein’ double!” Pop Burns called out. “Roy, you get him to race his
-Fishmobile against Star--an’ I’ll bet your bronc wins; hey?”
-
-Roy looked around at him and grinned. Then he took a deep breath,
-reached for a chicken wing, and said:
-
-“I’ll tell a maverick!”
-
- THE END
-
---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- This Isn’t All!
-
-Would you like to know what became of the good friends you have
-made in this book?
-
-Would you like to read other stories continuing their adventures
-and experiences, or other books quite as entertaining by the same
-author?
-
-On the _reverse side_ of the wrapper which comes with this book,
-you will find a wonderful list of stories which you can buy at the
-same store where you got this book.
-
- Don’t throw away the Wrapper
-
-Use it as a handy catalog of the books you want some day to have.
-But in case you do mislay it, write to the Publishers for a
-complete catalog.
-
---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-THE TOM SWIFT SERIES
-
-By VICTOR APPLETON
-
-Uniform Style of Binding. Individual Colored Wrappers.
-
-Every Volume Complete in Itself.
-
-Every boy possesses some form of inventive genius. Tom Swift is a
-bright, ingenious boy and his inventions and adventures make the
-most interesting kind of reading.
-
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS MOTOR CYCLE
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS MOTOR BOAT
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS AIRSHIP
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS SUBMARINE BOAT
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS ELECTRIC RUNABOUT
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS WIRELESS MESSAGE
- TOM SWIFT AMONG THE DIAMOND MAKERS
- TOM SWIFT IN THE CAVES OF ICE
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS SKY RACER
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS ELECTRIC RIFLE
- TOM SWIFT IN THE CITY OF GOLD
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS AIR GLIDER
- TOM SWIFT IN CAPTIVITY
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS WIZARD CAMERA
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS GREAT SEARCHLIGHT
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS GIANT CANNON
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS PHOTO TELEPHONE
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS AERIAL WARSHIP
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS BIG TUNNEL
- TOM SWIFT IN THE LAND OF WONDERS
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS WAR TANK
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS AIR SCOUT
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS UNDERSEA SEARCH
- TOM SWIFT AMONG THE FIRE FIGHTERS
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS ELECTRIC LOCOMOTIVE
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS FLYING BOAT
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS GREAT OIL GUSHER
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS CHEST OF SECRETS
- TOM SWIFT AND HIS AIRLINE EXPRESS
-
-Grosset & Dunlap, Publishers, New York
-
---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-THE DON STURDY SERIES
-
-By VICTOR APPLETON
-
-Individual Colored Wrappers and Text
-
-Illustrations by WALTER S. ROGERS
-
-Every Volume Complete in Itself
-
-In company with his uncles, one a mighty hunter and the other a
-noted scientist, Don Sturdy travels far and wide, gaining much
-useful knowledge and meeting many thrilling adventures.
-
- DON STURDY ON THE DESERT OF MYSTERY;
-
- An engrossing tale of the Sahara Desert, of encounters with
- wild animals and crafty Arabs.
-
- DON STURDY WITH THE BIG SNAKE HUNTERS;
-
- Don’s uncle, the hunter, took an order for some of the biggest
- snakes to be found in South America--to be delivered alive!
-
- DON STURDY IN THE TOMBS OF GOLD;
-
- A fascinating tale of exploration and adventure in the Valley
- of Kings in Egypt.
-
- DON STURDY ACROSS THE NORTH POLE;
-
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