summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--40548-0.txt396
-rw-r--r--40548-0.zipbin231266 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--40548-8.txt12515
-rw-r--r--40548-8.zipbin229793 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--40548-h.zipbin597810 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--40548-h/40548-h.htm419
-rw-r--r--40548.txt12515
-rw-r--r--40548.zipbin229767 -> 0 bytes
8 files changed, 5 insertions, 25840 deletions
diff --git a/40548-0.txt b/40548-0.txt
index c9f4ad5..624f08a 100644
--- a/40548-0.txt
+++ b/40548-0.txt
@@ -1,40 +1,4 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Rival Campers, by Ruel Perley Smith
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
-
-
-Title: The Rival Campers
- or, The Adventures of Henry Burns
-
-Author: Ruel Perley Smith
-
-Illustrator: A. B. Shute
-
-Release Date: August 20, 2012 [EBook #40548]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RIVAL CAMPERS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Rod Crawford, Dave Morgan
-and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40548 ***
THE
RIVAL CAMPERS
@@ -12151,360 +12115,4 @@ will be heartily welcomed in this new and attractive edition.
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Rival Campers, by Ruel Perley Smith
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RIVAL CAMPERS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 40548-0.txt or 40548-0.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/4/0/5/4/40548/
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Rod Crawford, Dave Morgan
-and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
-will be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
-one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
-(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
-permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
-set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
-copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
-protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
-Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
-charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
-do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
-rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
-such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
-research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
-practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
-subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
-redistribution.
-
-
-
-*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
- www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
-all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
-If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
-terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
-entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
-and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
-or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
-collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
-individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
-located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
-copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
-works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
-are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
-Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
-freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
-this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
-the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
-keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
-a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
-the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
-before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
-creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
-Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
-the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
-States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
-access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
-whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
-copied or distributed:
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
-from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
-posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
-and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
-or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
-with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
-work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
-through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
-Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
-1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
-terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
-to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
-permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
-word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
-distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
-"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
-posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
-you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
-copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
-request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
-form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
-that
-
-- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
- owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
- has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
- Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
- must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
- prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
- returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
- sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
- address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
- the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or
- destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
- and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
- Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
- money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
- of receipt of the work.
-
-- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
-forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
-both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
-Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
-Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
-collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
-"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
-corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
-property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
-computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
-your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
-your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
-the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
-refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
-providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
-receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
-is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
-opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
-WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
-WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
-If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
-law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
-interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
-the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
-provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
-with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
-promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
-harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
-that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
-or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
-work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
-Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
-
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
-including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
-because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
-people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
-To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
-and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
-Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
-permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
-Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
-throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at 809
-North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email
-contact links and up to date contact information can be found at the
-Foundation's web site and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
-SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
-particular state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
-To donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
-with anyone. For forty years, he produced and distributed Project
-Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
-unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
-keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
-
- www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40548 ***
diff --git a/40548-0.zip b/40548-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 3ccbdfa..0000000
--- a/40548-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/40548-8.txt b/40548-8.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index bd3fb23..0000000
--- a/40548-8.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,12515 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Rival Campers, by Ruel Perley Smith
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
-
-
-Title: The Rival Campers
- or, The Adventures of Henry Burns
-
-Author: Ruel Perley Smith
-
-Illustrator: A. B. Shute
-
-Release Date: August 20, 2012 [EBook #40548]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RIVAL CAMPERS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Rod Crawford, Dave Morgan
-and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE
- RIVAL CAMPERS
- Or,
- THE ADVENTURES OF HENRY BURNS
-
-
- By
- Ruel P. Smith
-
- ILLUSTRATED BY
- A. B. SHUTE
-
- BOSTON
- L. C. PAGE & COMPANY
- 1905
-
-
- _Copyright_, _1905_
- By L. C. Page & Company
- (INCORPORATED)
-
- _All rights reserved_
-
-
- Published July, 1905
-
-
- _Second Impression_
- _Third Impression, July, 1906_
-
-
- _COLONIAL PRESS
- Electrotyped and Printed by C. H. Simonds & Co.
- Boston. U. S. A._
-
-
- WITH LOVE TO
- _Ruel Stevenson Smith_
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I. The Camp 1
- II. To the Rescue 17
- III. A Surprise 32
- IV. A Night with Henry Burns 51
- V. A Hidden Cave 72
- VI. Jack Harvey Investigates 90
- VII. Squire Brackett's Dog 109
- VIII. The Haunted House 125
- IX. Setting a Trap 142
- X. A Midnight Adventure 160
- XI. An Unpleasant Discovery 181
- XII. A Cruise Around the Island 199
- XIII. Storm Driven 220
- XIV. The Man in the Boat 238
- XV. Good for Evil 259
- XVI. A Treaty of Friendship 278
- XVII. The Fire 290
- XVIII. The Flight 306
- XIX. The Pursuit 324
- XX. Among the Islands 343
- XXI. The Trial 364
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PAGE
- "'Look, Bob! Look!' he cried. 'What have we done?'"
- (_Frontispiece_) 86
- "'What's the matter with you?' roared the Colonel" 67
- "'You're the worst one of all, Jack Harvey'" 114
- "Craigie reeled under the blow and staggered back against the
- wall" 173
- "Boys and lobster-pot slumped into the sea" 211
- "'Will you shake hands with me?' he asked" 279
-
-
-
-
- THE RIVAL CAMPERS
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
- THE CAMP
-
-
-On a certain afternoon in the latter part of the month of June, the
-little fishing village of Southport, on Grand Island in Samoset Bay, was
-awakened from its customary nap by the familiar whistle of the steamboat
-from up the river. Southport, opening a sleepy eye at the sound, made
-deliberate preparation to receive its daily visitor, knowing that the
-steamer was as yet some distance up the island, and not even in sight,
-for behind the bluff around which the steamer must eventually come the
-town lay straggling irregularly along the shore of a deeply indented
-cove.
-
-A few loungers about the village grocery-store seemed roused to a renewed
-interest in life, removed their pipes, and, with evident satisfaction at
-this relief from island monotony, sauntered lazily down to the wharf. The
-storekeeper and the freight-agent, as became men burdened with the
-present responsibility of seeing that the steamer was offered all
-possible assistance in making its landing, bustled about with importance.
-
-Soon a wagon or two from down the island came rattling into the village,
-while from the hotel, a quarter of a mile distant, a number of guests
-appeared on the veranda, curious to scrutinize such new arrivals as might
-appear. From the summer cottages here and there flags were hastily run
-up, and from one a salute was fired; all of which might be taken to
-indicate that the coming of the steamer was the event of the day at
-Southport--as, indeed, it was.
-
-Now another whistle sounded shrilly from just behind the bluff, and the
-next moment the little steamer shoved its bow from out a jagged screen of
-rock, while the chorused exclamation, "Thar she is!" from the assembled
-villagers announced that they were fully awake to the situation.
-
-Among the crowd gathered on the wharf, three boys, between whom there
-existed sufficient family resemblance to indicate that they were
-brothers, scanned eagerly the faces of the passengers as the steamer came
-slowly to the landing. The eldest of the three, a boy of about sixteen
-years, turned at length to the other two, and remarked, in a tone of
-disappointment:
-
-"They are not aboard. I can't see a sign of them. Something must have
-kept them."
-
-"Unless," said one of the others, "they are hiding somewhere to surprise
-us."
-
-"It's impossible," said the first boy, "for any one to hide away when he
-gets in sight of this island. No, if they were aboard we should have seen
-them the minute the steamer turned the bluff, waving to us and yelling at
-the top of their lungs. There's something in the air here that makes one
-feel like tearing around and making a noise."
-
-"Especially at night, when the cottagers are asleep," said the third boy.
-
-"Besides," continued the eldest, "their canoe is not aboard, and you
-would not catch Tom Harris and Bob White coming down here for the summer
-without it, when they spend half their time in it on the river at home
-and are as expert at handling it as Indians,--and yet, they wrote that
-they would be here to-day."
-
-It was evident the boys they were looking for were not aboard. The little
-steamer, after a violent demonstration of puffing and snorting, during
-which it made apparently several desperate attempts to rush headlong on
-the rocks, but was checked with a hasty scrambling of paddle-wheels, and
-was bawled at by captain and mates, was finally subdued and made fast to
-the wharf by the deck-hands. The passengers disembarked, and the same
-lusty, brown-armed crew, with a series of rushes, as though they feared
-their captive might at any moment break its bonds and make a dash for
-liberty, proceeded to unload the freight and baggage. Trucks laden with
-leaning towers of baggage were trundled noisily ashore and overturned
-upon the wharf.
-
-In the midst of the bustle and commotion the group of three boys was
-joined by another boy, who had just come from the hotel.
-
-"Hulloa, there!" said the new boy. "Where's Tom and Bob?"
-
-"They are not aboard, Henry," said the eldest boy of the group.
-
-The new arrival gave a whistle of surprise.
-
-"How do you feel this afternoon, Henry?" asked the second of the
-brothers.
-
-"Oh, very poorly--very miserable. In fact, I don't seem to get any
-better."
-
-This lugubrious reply, strange to say, did not evoke the sympathy which a
-listener might have expected. The boys burst into roars of laughter.
-
-"Poor Henry Burns!" exclaimed the eldest boy, giving the self-declared
-invalid a blow on the chest that would have meant the annihilation of
-weak lungs. "He will never be any better."
-
-"And he may be a great deal worse," said the second boy, slapping the
-other on the back so hard that the dust flew under the blow.
-
-"Won't the boys like him, though?" asked the third and youngest
-boy,--"that is, if they ever come."
-
-Henry Burns received these sallies with the utmost unconcern. If he
-enjoyed the effect which his remarks had produced, it was denoted only by
-a twinkle in his eyes. He was rather a slender, pale-complexioned youth,
-of fourteen years. A physiognomist might have found in his features an
-unusual degree of coolness and self-control, united with an abnormal
-fondness for mischief; but Henry Burns would have passed with the
-ordinary person as a frail boy, fonder of books than of sports.
-
-Just then the captain of the steamer put his head out of the pilot-house
-and called to the eldest of the brothers:
-
-"I've got a note for you, George Warren. A young chap who said he was on
-his way here in a canoe came aboard at Millville and asked me to give it
-to you; and there was another young chap in a canoe alongside who asked
-me to say they'd be here to-night."
-
-"Hooray!" cried George Warren, opening and reading the note. "It's the
-boys, sure enough. They started at four o'clock this morning in the
-canoe, and will be here to-night. Much obliged, Captain Chase."
-
-"Not a bit," responded the captain. "But let me tell you boys something.
-You needn't look for these 'ere young chaps to-night, because they won't
-get here. What's more," added the captain, as he surveyed the water and
-sky with the air of one defying the elements to withhold a secret from
-him, "if they try to cross the bay to-night you needn't look for them at
-all. The bay is nothing too smooth now; but wait till the tide turns and
-the wind in those clouds off to the east is let loose! There's going to
-be fun out there, and that before many hours, too."
-
-With this dismally prophetic remark the captain gave orders to cast off
-the lines, and the steamer was soon on its way down the bay.
-
-The three brothers, George, Arthur, and Joe Warren, and Henry Burns left
-the wharf and were walking in the direction of the hotel, when a remark
-from the latter stopped them short.
-
-"Did it occur to any of you," asked Henry Burns, speaking in a slightly
-drawling tone, "that we shall never have a better opportunity to play a
-practical joke on your friends than we have to-day--?"
-
-"What friends?" exclaimed George Warren, indignantly.
-
-"I thought you said Tom Harris and Bob White were coming down the river
-to-day in a canoe," said Henry Burns, in the most innocent manner.
-
-"And so they are. And you think we would play a joke on them the first
-day they arrive, do you? I believe you would get up in the night, Henry
-Burns, to play a joke on your own grandmother. No, sirree, count me out
-of that," said George Warren. "It will be time enough to play jokes on
-them after they get here. I don't believe in treating friends in that
-way."
-
-"Rather a mean thing to do, I think," said Arthur Warren.
-
-"I'm out of it," said Joe.
-
-"It doesn't occur to any of you to ask what the joke is, does it?" asked
-Henry Burns, dryly.
-
-"Don't want to know," replied George.
-
-"Nor I, either," said Arthur.
-
-"Keep it to play on Witham," said Joe.
-
-"Then I'll enlighten you without your asking," continued Henry Burns,
-nothing abashed. "You did not notice, perhaps, that though your friends,
-Tom and Bob, did not come ashore to-day, their baggage did, and it is
-back there on the wharf. Now I propose that we get John Briggs to let us
-take his wheelbarrow, wheel their traps over to the point, pitch their
-tent for them, and have everything ready by the time they get here. It's
-rather a mean thing to do, I know, and not the kind of a trick I'd play
-on old Witham; but there's nothing particular on hand in that line for
-to-day."
-
-Henry Burns paused, with a sly twinkle in his eyes, to note the effect of
-his words.
-
-"Capital!" roared George Warren, slapping Henry Burns again on the back,
-regardless of the delicate state of that young gentleman's health. "We
-might have known better than to take Henry Burns seriously."
-
-"Same old Henry Burns," said Arthur. "Take notice, boys, that he never is
-beaten in anything he sets his heart on, and that his delicate health
-will never, never be any better;" and he was about to imitate his elder
-brother's example in the matter of a punch at Henry Burns, but the
-latter, though of slighter build, grappled with him, and after a moment's
-friendly wrestling laid him on his back on the greensward, thereby
-illustrating the force of his remark as to Henry Burns's invincibility.
-
-The suggestion was at once followed. Within an hour the boys had wheeled
-the baggage of the campers to a point of land overlooking the bay.
-
-"It's all here," said Henry Burns, finally, as two of the boys deposited
-a big canvas bag, containing the tent, upon the grass, "except that one
-box on the wharf, which looks as though it contained food."
-
-"We can let that stay there till we get things shipshape here, or get
-Briggs to put it in the storehouse by and by," suggested young Joe.
-
-But if they could have foreseen then that the leaving of the box there
-upon the wharf, seemingly such an inconsequential thing, was to be the
-means of creating no end of trouble, it is quite possible that even young
-Joe himself, though rather fond of his ease, would have brought it away
-on his own shoulders; but it seemed of no consequence whether it should
-be removed then or later, and so the box remained where it was.
-
-It required but a brief time to pitch the tent. It was a large,
-square-shaped canvas, with high walls on two sides, so that a person of
-medium height could stand erect there, and running to a peak at the top
-in the usual "A" shape. Putting the frame, of two poles and a
-cross-piece, together, and drawing the canvas over it as it lay on the
-ground, the two larger boys raised it into position while the others
-drove the pegs and stretched the guy-ropes.
-
-"Now, then," drawled Henry Burns, "if you care to, we can carry the joke
-still further by cutting some poles and putting up the bunks."
-
-This proposition also meeting with approval, Henry Burns and the eldest
-of the Warrens started for the woods, about a mile distant, to cut some
-spruce poles, leaving the younger brothers to complete the pegging of the
-tent, ditching it, and getting things in order.
-
-The spot which had been selected for the camping-ground was one of the
-most beautiful on the island. It was a small point of land projecting
-into the bay, with a sandy beach on either side. Its outermost extremity,
-however, ended in a wall of ledge, which went down abruptly, so that the
-water at high tide came up to within a few feet of the greensward, and at
-low tide dropped down, rather than receded, leaving no bare rocks
-exposed.
-
-A few spruce-trees grew on the point, sufficient to give shade, and in
-the midst of a clump of them was a clear spring of water that was cool to
-iciness during the hottest days. The point commanded a view of the entire
-bay on the eastern side of the island, so that when the breeze came up
-from the south, as it did almost daily through the summer, blowing fresh
-and steadily, the billows over all its broad surface seemed to be aiming
-their blows directly at it, while every breath of wind was laden with a
-salt odour that was health-giving and inspiring.
-
-It was a choice bit of land that Bob's uncle had purchased several years
-ago, when a few speculators had thought the island might be "boomed" as a
-summer resort. The little fishing village of Southport, which numbered
-then some twenty odd houses, had, indeed, been augmented by the "boom" by
-about the same number of cottages; and adjoining the old tavern there had
-been built a more imposing structure, the new and the old composing the
-summer hotel.
-
-But the village had not "boomed." It remained the same peaceful, quiet,
-quaint, and interesting village as of yore. Those cottagers who remained
-after the boom died out were rather glad than otherwise that the
-picturesque place had not been transformed into a fashionable resort.
-They liked it for its tranquillity and quaintness, and soon came into
-sympathy and friendliness with the villagers, who had parted with their
-lands only with the greatest reluctance, and who viewed the new order of
-things with a suspicion born of years of conservativeness.
-
-The gaiety of the place centred about the hotel, where, too, the greater
-number of the guests were those who came year after year, and who would
-as soon have thought of going to Jericho as to any other place than the
-island.
-
-The leading citizen of the village was Squire James Brackett, and its
-moving spirit one Captain Curtis, or "Cap'n Sam," as he was familiarly
-known. The former owned the best house in the village, a big, rambling,
-two-story farmhouse, perched on the hill overlooking the harbour. He was
-a vessel-owner and a man of importance. He was the only man in the town
-who had persistently refused to associate with the summer residents,
-which some attributed to the fact that he feared lest their coming might
-disturb his sway over town affairs.
-
-Captain Sam was a man of altogether different stamp. It is safe to say he
-was on good terms with everybody on the island. He was for ever busy; the
-first man to arise in the town, and the last to retire at night. In fact,
-it is a fair assumption that, had Captain Sam deserted the island at an
-early date in its history, the town might have eventually fallen so sound
-asleep that it would not have awakened to this day.
-
-Captain Sam united in his activities the duties of storekeeper, coal and
-ice merchant, musician, constable, and schoolmaster, the latter vocation
-occupying his winter months. The energy of the village was concentrated
-in this one man, who seemed tireless. He was on intimate terms with
-everybody, and knew everybody's business. That he was rather good-looking
-was the cause of some pangs of jealousy on the part of young Mrs. Curtis,
-when business called her husband away among the housewives and maids of
-the village. Finally, Captain Sam had a voice which defied walls and
-distance. It was even told by some of the village humourists that he had
-once stood at the head of the island and hailed a vessel sailing around
-the extreme southern end, thirteen miles distant.
-
-Grand Island, lying in the middle of the bay, almost divides the upper
-part of it into two big bodies of water, so that there are two great
-thoroughfares for vessels, leading out to sea, the western being the more
-generally used, for it is a more direct passage. The eastern bay is
-filled with islands at the entrance to the sea.
-
-In the course of an hour, the boys who had gone to the woods returned to
-the camp, bringing with them four spruce poles. These were quickly
-trimmed of their branches, and cut to an even length of about seven feet.
-Then, four stakes being driven into the ground on each side of the tent
-under the walls, to form the legs of the bunks, the poles were mounted on
-these and made fast. Then pieces of board were nailed across from pole to
-pole, and on these were placed mattresses stuffed with dry hay from
-Captain Sam's stable.
-
-"There," said young Joe, throwing himself on one of them, "is a spring
-bed that can't be beaten anywhere. I know some think spruce boughs are
-better, but they dry, and the needles fall off, and the bed gets hard.
-These will last all summer."
-
-The pliant spruce poles were as good, indeed, as springs.
-
-In the meantime the younger boys had dug a trench completely around the
-tent, extending to the edge of the bank on one side of the point, so that
-a heavy rain could not flood the floor. In the rear of the tent they had
-set a huge box belonging to the campers, made of a packing-case and
-provided with a cover that lifted on leather hinges, and a padlock. It
-was, presumably, filled with the camp outfit. In one corner of the tent,
-on a box, they placed a large oil-stove and oven. The bedding was taken
-inside, and everything made shipshape. The comfort of the prospective
-campers seemed assured.
-
-Over the top of the tent they had also stretched a big piece of stout
-cloth, made for the purpose, which was fastened to the ground at the ends
-with guy-ropes and pegs, and which was to protect the tent against
-leaking water in any long rainy period, and also serve as additional
-shade in hot weather.
-
-The boys had done a hard afternoon's work. Pinning back the flaps of the
-tent, they sat at the entrance and looked out across the bay. The wind,
-which blew from the southeast, had not grown idle during the afternoon,
-but had increased steadily, and now came strong and damp from off the
-bay, rushing in at the opening of the tent and bulging it out so that it
-tugged violently at the ropes.
-
-"It won't do to leave the tent-door unpinned," said Henry Burns. "It's
-going to blow great guns to-night." So, closing the entrance and making
-it fast, they went to the edge of the bank and sat there.
-
-"It's rough out there now," said George Warren, pointing to the bay,
-which was one mass of foaming waves; "but it will be worse from now till
-midnight. The wind is going to blow harder and the tide is just beginning
-to run out."
-
-The tide indeed set strongly down the island shore, so that when it met
-the wind and waves blown up from oceanward it made a rough and turbulent
-chop sea.
-
-All at once as they sat there a sailboat rushed out from behind the
-headland across the cove and thrashed its way through the white-capped
-waves, heading down the island and throwing the spray at every plunge
-into the seas. Those aboard had evidently a reckless disregard for their
-own safety, for, although such few coasters as could be seen in the
-distance were scudding for harbour, fearful of the approaching storm,
-this craft carried not only full mainsail and forestaysail,--sail, too,
-that was large for the boat at all times,--but a topsail and a jib. The
-boat was hauled well into the wind and heeled over, so that the water
-again and again came over the board into the cockpit.
-
-Perched upon the windward rail were three boys. A fourth, a boy evidently
-near George Warren's age, stood at the wheel, seemingly the most
-unconcerned of all. He was large of his age and powerfully built, and his
-sleeves, rolled above the elbow, showed two brown and brawny arms. A
-fifth boy, somewhat younger in appearance, lying in the bottom of the
-boat, with feet braced against the side, held the main-sheet.
-
-The boat was a white sloop, about thirty feet in length over all, and
-clearly fast and able.
-
-"I'll say one thing for Jack Harvey and his crew," exclaimed George
-Warren, as the yacht rushed by the point, "although I think they're a
-mean lot. They can handle a boat as well as any skipper on the island.
-And as for fear, they don't know what it means."
-
-"Look!" he cried. "Do you see what they are doing?" as the yacht was
-suddenly brought, quivering, into the wind and headed away from the
-island on the other tack. "There's nothing in the world Jack Harvey's
-doing that for except to frighten the hotel guests. He sees the crowd on
-the piazza watching him, and is just making game of their fright. He'll
-sail out there as long as he dares, or until his topmast goes, just to
-keep them watching him."
-
-And so indeed it proved. An anxious crowd of summer guests at the hotel
-had no sooner begun to rejoice at the boat's apparent safety, than they
-saw it go about and head out into the bay once more. Then they breathed
-easier as it headed about again, and came rushing in. Then as it once
-more headed for the bay, they realized that what they were witnessing was
-a sheer bit of folly and recklessness. Angry as they were, they could but
-stand there and watch the yacht manoeuvre, the women crying out whenever
-a flaw threw the yacht over so that the mainsail was wet by the waves;
-the men angry at the bravado of the youthful yachtsmen, and vowing that
-the yacht might sink and the crew go with it before they would lift a
-hand to save one of them. All of which they knew they did not mean,--a
-fact which only increased their irritation.
-
-"Ah!" said George Warren, as a big drop of rain suddenly splashed on his
-cheek. "Perhaps this will drive them in, if the wind won't." It had,
-indeed, begun to rain hard, and, although the crew of the yacht must have
-been drenched through and through with the flying spray, the water from
-the sky had, evidently, a more dampening effect on their spirits, for the
-yacht was headed inshore, and soon ran into a cove about three-quarters
-of a mile down the island, behind a point of land where, through the
-trees, the indistinct outlines of a tent could be seen.
-
-And so, as it was now the time when the sun would have set upon the bay,
-if it had not been shut out from sight by a heavy mass of clouds, and as
-the wind came laden with rain, which dashed in the faces of those who
-were out-of-doors to encounter it, the boys turned from the spot where
-they had gathered and hurried for shelter, the brothers to their cottage,
-and Henry Burns to the hotel.
-
-The tent, swayed by the fierce gusts of wind, tugged at its ropes; the
-reckless crew of the white sloop had found shelter, and those vessels
-that were out upon the bay eagerly sought the same.
-
-But in that part of the bay which rolled between the northern end of the
-island and the mouth of the river, fifteen miles away, a greater piece of
-recklessness was being enacted than was ever dared by Harvey and his
-careless crew. There was none on shore there to witness it, for the
-island at that extreme end was bare of settlement.
-
-A mile from the nearest land, seemingly at the mercy of a wild sea which
-threatened every moment to engulf it, a small canoe slowly and stubbornly
-fought its way toward the island shore. At a distance one would have
-thought it a mere log, tossed about at random by the waves; and yet, one
-watching it would have seen it slowly draw ahead, glide from under the
-spray that broke constantly over its bow, and still make progress;
-sometimes beaten back by billows that tumbled fast one upon another, but
-gaining something through it all.
-
-There were two occupants of the craft, and, though but mere youths, none
-could have handled the paddles more skilfully. Yet it was a question of
-the great sea's strength against their endurance. What would happen
-should they find that there came a time when they made no gain? If they
-turned about, even supposing that were possible, the storm might drive
-them across the bay once more, but their strength and courage would be
-gone, and they could hardly hope to reach the shore. It was either the
-island goal or nothing.
-
-One standing on the shore would scarce have seen them now. Darkness began
-to hide them. But the island loomed up, dim and shadowy, before them, and
-they struggled on against the storm.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
- TO THE RESCUE
-
-
-A person leaving the wharf at Southport would ordinarily take one of
-three roads: the one directly ahead leading up through the village and
-past the hotel; the one to the left passing by, though at some distance
-from, the cottages that were scattered irregularly along the south shore
-of the bay; the road to the right leading similarly to the cottages on
-that shore. The shore there, however, made a deep sweep, bordering on a
-cove of some considerable extent.
-
-From the shore in all directions the land sloped back, with a gradual
-rise for about a mile. Cottages dotted the slope here and there.
-
-To the right of the wharf and the farthest away from it of any dwelling
-was the Warren cottage. Somewhat hidden in a grove of spruce-trees, its
-broad piazza commanded a fine view of the bay and the islands in the
-distance.
-
-On this particular evening, however, there was little inducement of wind
-or weather for one to linger there. The rain, driven by the wind through
-fluttering tree-branches, dashed itself against the cottage windows as
-though the drops were drawn, like moths, to the light which shone from
-within; then fell in pools and was swept away by driving gusts. Nought to
-be seen there now but sea and sky in wild commotion; darkness in all the
-air, blackness over all the bay.
-
-But, despite the dreariness of the storm outside, there was pleasing
-comfort within the cottage. The increasing darkness of the night, the
-dashing rain and the noisy wind, like unwelcome guests, came only to the
-threshold and gained no admittance. A fire of driftwood blazed in the big
-stone fireplace, and the soft rays shed by a lamp suspended from the
-ceiling further lighted up the cosy room.
-
-There were four occupants of the room. Mrs. Warren, a sweet-faced, cheery
-little woman, and the three brothers, were seated about the fire. They
-were conversing earnestly, and, as the talk progressed, it seemed as
-though the influence of the storm was getting into the room.
-
-"It's no use, mother," said George Warren, who stood in front of the
-fireplace, facing the others, "trying to make us think that Tom and Bob
-did not start to cross the bay. Ever since the boys were out in the big
-storm on Moosehead Lake they've been afraid of nothing. Tom Harris
-declares his canoe will stand as rough a sea as a dory,--and, what's
-more, the storm hadn't begun by the time they must have left the mouth of
-the river."
-
-"Yes, but Captain Chase would warn them not to cross."
-
-"I've no doubt he did, mother; and, if he did, that might make it so much
-the worse. If the boys had been in a sailboat they probably would have
-listened to him; but the captain would sneer at that canoe, and would
-like as not tell them it wasn't fit to cross the bay in at any time, much
-less in rough water. And that would be just enough to put them on their
-mettle. They'd make the attempt, even if they had to put back."
-
-"Yes, and Tom said in the note that they would be here to-night," broke
-in young Joe. "And when he gave that to Captain Chase to bring, it showed
-he meant to start, anyway."
-
-"But when the storm increased they would put back," urged Mrs. Warren.
-
-"No," answered George, "they must have gotten two-thirds of the way
-across the bay before the worst of the storm broke. The storm seemed to
-hold up for an hour or two during the latter part of the afternoon, and
-then increased all of a sudden with the turn of the tide. The boys would
-have gotten so far across that it would be too late to turn back, and
-they would have to keep on."
-
-"And yet you boys want to imitate their recklessness!" cried Mrs. Warren,
-impatiently. "Come, Arthur," and she turned to the boy who had remained
-silent thus far during the discussion. "Help me convince your brothers of
-their mistake. You don't agree with them, I am sure."
-
-The boy thus addressed, though a year younger than his elder brother, was
-the one on whose judgment the mother more often relied. He was fully as
-active as the other two, but his was a calmer temperament than theirs.
-This confidence in him really extended to his brothers, though they joked
-him on his moderate, studious ways, and called him the "professor,"
-because he was a little near-sighted and sometimes wore glasses. He came
-forward now and stood by his mother's chair.
-
-"I can't help thinking, mother, that George and Joe are right," he said,
-deliberately, while poor Mrs. Warren gasped with dismay. "You wouldn't
-have us play the parts of cowards while the boys may be in danger, and
-when we can perhaps save them. There isn't half the danger you imagine,
-either. The wind is blowing now squarely from the east, and once we have
-beaten out of the cove we can sail alongshore without heading out to sea.
-
-"Then, too," he continued, "the yacht is nearly new, and was fitted with
-new rigging this year. We'll promise to sail only a little past the head
-of the island and return, or run into Bryant's Cove and walk back. It's
-no more than we ought to do for the best friends we've got. There's not
-another sailboat in the harbour to-night that is as stiff as ours, except
-Jack Harvey's, and it's out of the question to ask him. The other boats
-went out to the races at Seal Harbour, or we would get Captain Sam to go
-in his yacht. We can't ask Jack Harvey to go--that's certain."
-
-"Wouldn't he laugh at us, though!" said George. "He would offer to tow
-our boat along, too, or something of that sort, just to be mean, and then
-there'd be a nice row."
-
-Besieged on all sides, Mrs. Warren could but yield a partial consent.
-
-"You and George can go," she said, turning to Arthur, "but Joe must stay
-with me. I can't spare you all to take such an awful risk."
-
-"I won't stay!" cried young Joe, hotly. "That is to say, I--I don't want
-to," he hastened to add, as Mrs. Warren looked reproachfully at him.
-"They need me to help sail the _Spray_,--don't you, fellows?"
-
-"There ought to be three to manage the boat in this wind," said George,
-somewhat reluctantly. "I guess you'll have to let him go, mother--"
-
-But at this moment there was the sound of footsteps upon the piazza. Some
-one walked around the house, gave a premonitory knock at the door, and
-let himself in.
-
-It was Henry Burns. He was equipped for the storm, in oilskins, rubber
-boots, and a tarpaulin hat. The water ran from his clothing in little
-streams and made a series of pools on the polished wood floor. Declining
-Mrs. Warren's offer of a seat, on the ground that he was too wet, Henry
-Burns stood by the mantel near the fireplace, and, with tarpaulin
-removed, still looked the pale and delicate student, despite his rough
-garments.
-
-"Ahoy there, shipmates," he said, with great gravity, waving the
-tarpaulin at the group. "You weren't thinking of cruising for your health
-this evening, were you? Because, if you were, my health isn't as good as
-it might be, and I think a little salt air would do it good."
-
-"Bravo!" cried George Warren. "You might know Henry Burns would be on
-hand if there was any excitement going on. Never knew him to fail,--Joe,
-you'll have to stay at home now and keep mother company. We don't need
-more than three. Come, Arthur, hurry! We mustn't lose a minute longer."
-
-And while young Joe turned away, almost in tears at the verdict, the
-other two boys scrambled about, hastily donning reefers, oilskins, and
-heavy boots. Then they were gone with a rush and a bang of the door, and
-Mrs. Warren and Joe composed themselves as best they could to await their
-return.
-
-And could any of them have imagined then, looking forth through the
-darkness and the storm, an overturned canoe pounding helplessly upon the
-beach of that island shore, it surely would not have comforted the
-watchers nor have given courage to those who went forth to rescue.
-
-Descending the bank to the shore of the cove, the boys quickly launched a
-rowboat, the tender to the yacht, and, with Henry Burns seated in the
-stern, tiller-ropes in hand, the brothers, about equal in strength,
-pulled vigorously across the cove, where the sloop lay at anchor under
-the lee of the bluff. It was no easy task to cross the cove in that sea;
-and often Henry Burns turned the boat from its course and headed out
-toward the entrance, to meet some enormous wave that, had it broken over
-the side of the boat, would have filled and swamped it.
-
-The yacht _Spray_, sheltered as it was from the brunt of the storm, was
-tossing about uneasily as the boys climbed aboard and made the tender
-fast astern. It was a small craft, about twenty-five feet over all, with
-the hull painted black. It was trim and was able for its size, but, safe
-to say, not a fisherman in the village would have cared to put out in it
-this night. Still, the boat had been built on an outer island of the bay
-for fishing in heavy weather, and was seaworthy.
-
-There were three sets of reefing-points in the mainsail, and, after some
-discussion, it was decided to reef the sail down to its smallest size.
-While Henry Burns hoisted the sail slightly, the brothers hastily tied in
-the reefs, and the halyards were then drawn taut at throat and peak and
-made fast. The tender was tied to the buoy. There was no use trying to
-tow it in that sea. Then, with George Warren at the tiller, Arthur and
-Henry Burns cast off, and the voyage was begun.
-
-When Mr. Warren purchased the boat for his boys, he had it rigged with
-especial care for an emergency. The main-sheet was rigged to run through
-a double set of pulleys, so that the mainsail could be hauled with
-comparative ease in a heavy gale. The sail he had cut down smaller than
-the boat had been carrying, so there was less danger of her capsizing.
-That very precaution was, however, to prove a source of trouble on this
-particular night.
-
-Arthur Warren and Henry Burns now came aft, the iron centreboard was
-dropped, and the yacht was almost instantly under headway, standing out
-by the bluff and heading almost directly across the cove. Arthur Warren
-held the main-sheet, while Henry Burns seated himself, with feet braced
-against the centreboard-box, ready for any emergency.
-
-For a moment they were in comparatively smooth water, and then, as they
-emerged from the lee of the headland, it seemed as though they had been
-suddenly transported into another sea. The wind that struck them careened
-the boat over violently, as they were as yet under but little headway.
-Easing the yacht for a moment with the sheet, they righted somewhat, but
-the prospect was not pleasing. The _Spray_ did not head into the wind
-well, and they soon found they could not make even a straight course
-across the harbour, with the slant of wind they had.
-
-"We may make something on the next tack," said George, "but it doesn't
-look very encouraging."
-
-"Supposing you see how she comes about before we run in near shore,"
-suggested Arthur, after some minutes.
-
-In answer, George put the tiller hard down, after giving the little boat
-a good headway. The yacht went sluggishly in stays, hung almost in the
-eye of the wind for a moment, and then, failing to make headway against
-the heavy seas, fell off once more and would not come about.
-
-"There's only one thing we can do, boys," said George. "We must run in
-under the shelter of the wharf and shake out that last reef. The sail is
-too small to reef down so close. I'm sure she will beat under a double
-reef. It's the only thing left to do."
-
-It was the work of but a few minutes to carry out this plan. The third
-reef was shaken out and the sail hoisted. Once more the yacht emerged
-from shelter. The change for the better in its working was at once
-apparent. It pointed higher into the wind, though careening over so that
-the water came unpleasantly near the top of the high wash-boards. But the
-yacht would stand this. The question now to be tested was, would she act
-and come about under the still small sail she was carrying against the
-force of such a sea.
-
-"Now, then," said George, as they neared the bluff again, "we will try
-her once more. If she fails now we are beaten. We cannot carry more sail.
-That's sure."
-
-He put the tiller down as he spoke, and the _Spray_, responding bravely,
-headed into the seas. They strove angrily to overwhelm the little craft,
-and dashed furiously against her bows, while the wind worried the
-flapping sails as though it would tear them from boom and mast; but the
-_Spray_ held on and came about nobly, and they were away again on the
-other tack, standing across the harbour.
-
-It seemed an hour before they had beaten out where they dared to stand
-past the bluff and head alongshore. They had left all shelter hopelessly
-behind; on one side of them a wilderness of foaming waves rushed upon
-them from the darkness; on the other side lay the lee shore, high and
-rock-bound for the most part, but now and then broken by small stretches
-of beach. Against the former, the seas broke with heavy crashings; upon
-the other, with an ominous booming.
-
-But they headed off the wind a trifle, eased the sheet, made by the
-point, and stood along the shore as near as they dared to run. It was
-well for them that the little yacht was a good sea boat. Again and again,
-as some wave, lifting its white crest above the others, threatened to
-overwhelm them, the yacht was headed out to sea, and then the wave,
-lifting the boat high on its crest and rolling rapidly from beneath it
-till half the length of the yacht seemed poised in air, left it to fall
-heavily upon the next oncoming wave, or, worse still, to plunge into a
-watery gulf, there to be half-buried by the next big sea.
-
-But the yacht lived through it all and kept bravely on its course. Henry
-Burns's arms ached with bailing out the cockpit, where the seas broke in
-over the quarter, or came aboard in clouds of spray as they headed into
-the wind.
-
-They dared not sail near the shore, and could see it but indistinctly,
-save when some larger wave broke upon the beach and carved out a white
-line of foam, which vanished as quickly as it appeared. So against the
-cliffs that they passed they could see a sudden blur of white as a big
-wave hurled itself to destruction. Beyond this all was blear and
-indistinct.
-
-They were now within half a mile of the head of the island, and, looking
-ahead into the darkness, which, with the rain, had greatly increased
-within the last hour, like the beginning of a fog, they realized how
-useless was the search they had begun. They could see but the merest
-distance in any direction. The storm was steadily increasing, and already
-a new condition confronted them. The wind was shifting to the southeast,
-from east, so that their return was rendered impossible. It was worse
-than folly to think of beating back in such a head sea. The wind on their
-quarter was driving them along furiously. It was madness to dream of
-keeping on past the head of the island.
-
-"We can't make Bryant's Cove any too soon to suit me," said George. "The
-_Spray_ has got more wind now than she knows what to do with."
-
-The little boat was, indeed, burying her bows under at every plunge, and
-trembled in all her timbers at the fearful strain. It was plain that she
-had reached the limit of her seaworthiness. Bryant's Cove was a short
-distance around the head of the island. Once there, they would be
-sheltered from the storm.
-
-The boys had ceased to speak of a possible rescue of their friends. It
-was a question of their own salvation now, and the instinct of
-self-preservation asserted itself. Henry Burns peered eagerly ahead, but
-looked only for the point of land behind which lay their safety. Suddenly
-he turned and uttered a shrill cry of fright, such as no one had ever
-heard from him before.
-
-"Luff her, George! Luff quick--quick, for your life!" he cried, and,
-springing for the tiller, threw his weight against it ere the startled
-helmsman could find strength to act.
-
-The yacht, with sails slatting, came into the wind amid a cloud of spray.
-The boom, striking a wave, had nearly snapped in two. But it was not an
-instant too soon.
-
-A black object that looked enormous rose suddenly out of the sea in front
-of the _Spray_. The next wave lifted it high in the air, and hurled it
-down upon them. It was a ship's yawl-boat, of immense size, fully as
-large as the yacht itself. Down the watery declivity it shot, swift and
-straight, like some sea-monster in pursuit of its quarry.
-
-But the little yacht had answered her helm well. There was a crash and a
-splintering of wood, and the yawl drifted rapidly past and was lost in
-the darkness. The yacht _Spray_, her bowsprit and fore-rigging torn away,
-once more fell off the wind and was driven on by the storm. It was an
-escape so narrow that a moment more and they had been dashed to pieces.
-
-Henry Burns was the first to regain his courage.
-
-"It's better the bowsprit than the rudder," he said, coolly. And his
-courage gave them strength. A few minutes later they had passed the head
-of the island and gained the lee of the land, and in fifteen minutes more
-they had cast anchor in Bryant's Cove.
-
-"I am willing to do whatever you boys think is best," said George Warren,
-as they lowered and furled the sail and made the yacht snug for the
-night. "But I think it's of no use for us to make any search for the boys
-along this shore. If they capsized in the bay to-night, neither they nor
-their canoe would come ashore here. The canoe would be blown across the
-bay; and they-- Well, we're bound to believe that they didn't start, or,
-if they did, that they put back."
-
-"I don't see but what we have done all we can to-night," responded his
-brother; "and, as we have got five miles of muddy road to travel, the
-sooner we start the better. We could stay in the boat to-night, but we
-must get back on mother's account. Depend upon it, she has worried every
-single minute we have been gone, and I don't blame her, either. Now it's
-all over, I don't mind saying I think we were fools to come out. But we
-meant well, so perhaps the less said the better. We'll have to leave the
-_Spray_ to herself till the storm goes down. Nobody will harm her."
-
-"I don't mind staying here to-night and looking after her," said Henry
-Burns. "To be sure, old Witham doesn't know I have left the hotel, but I
-tumbled my bed up before I came away, and he will only think I got up
-early in the morning, if he wonders where I am."
-
-"No, no, old fellow. We won't let you stay. We won't hear of it," said
-both brothers. "The sooner we all get home and get dry clothes on, the
-better. There's no need of any of us staying. The _Spray_ won't sail out
-of the cove of herself, and every one on the island knows her."
-
-So, as they had left the tender behind, they removed their clothing, tied
-it into bundles, slung them around their necks, and, slipping overboard,
-swam to shore.
-
-"If I ever was more glad to get on land alive than I am at present," said
-Henry Burns, his teeth chattering with the cold, as he hastily scrambled
-into his clothes, "I don't happen to remember it just at this instant. I
-wonder if my aunt would send me down here again for my health if she
-could see me now."
-
-There was something so ludicrous in the idea that the boys could not help
-bursting into roars of laughter,--though they felt little enough like
-merriment.
-
-"The more I think of it," said Henry Burns, "the more I believe the boys
-are snug ashore at Millville, and that they haven't been within ten miles
-of Grand Island to-night."
-
-"I think you are right, Henry," responded Arthur.
-
-"It must be so," said George.
-
-And yet not one of them dared to believe absolutely that what he said was
-true.
-
-They started off across lots now, walking as rapidly as their wet and
-heavy clothing would allow, to strike the road which led to the harbour.
-Coming at length into this road, they had walked but a short distance,
-and were at the top of a hill at a turn of the road where it left the
-shore, when Henry Burns, pointing down along the shore, said:
-
-"We ought to remember that part of the bay as long as we live, for we
-shall never be much nearer to death than we were right there."
-
-"Sure enough," responded Arthur, "it was just about off there that the
-big yawl smashed our bowsprit off."
-
-"The yawl must have been driven ashore by this time," said George. "Wait
-a minute and I will take a look." And he disappeared over the bank and
-was lost in the bushes. The two boys seated themselves by the side of the
-road to await his return, but started up with a horror in their hearts as
-a shrill cry came up to them from the shore. There was that in the cry
-that told them that George Warren had found other than the ship's
-long-boat. They scarcely dared to think what. Then they, too, dashed down
-the slope to the shore.
-
-When they reached his side, George Warren could scarcely speak from
-emotion.
-
-"Look! Look!" he cried, in a trembling, choking voice, and pointed out
-upon the beach where the tide had gone down.
-
-There were two strange objects there that the sea had buffeted in its
-wild play that night, and then, as though grown tired of them, had cast
-upon the shore, among the rocks and seaweed.
-
-One was the long-boat, no longer an object of danger, for the sea had
-hurled it against a rock and stove its side in. The other was a canoe.
-The sea had overturned it and tossed it upon the shore. Two of its
-thwarts were smashed where it had been dropped down and pinioned upon a
-rock--and the rock held it fast.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
- A SURPRISE
-
-
-With hearts beating quick and hard, they lifted the canoe from the rock,
-fearful of what they might find beneath it; but there was nothing there.
-Then they searched along the beach in the darkness as best they could,
-peering anxiously into clumps of seaweed, and standing now and again
-fixed with horror as some dim object, cast up by the sea, assumed in
-shadowy outline the semblance of a human form. The shore was heaped here
-and there with piles of driftwood and ends of logs that had come down
-through countless tides and currents from the lumber-mills miles up the
-river, and this stuff had lodged among the ledges and boulders at various
-points along the beach. Here and there among these they hunted, groping
-amid the seaweed, cold and chill to the touch, and suggesting to their
-minds, already alert with dread, the most gruesome of discoveries which
-they feared to make.
-
-That the boys had crossed the bay in the frail craft which they had just
-found there seemed to be no possible doubt. Furthermore, they were now
-led to believe that Tom and Bob, having once reached a point where they
-could have found shelter, had chosen to keep on past the head of the
-island in an effort to make the harbour of Southport. They must at least,
-as the wind had blown, have reached a point opposite where the boys had
-found the canoe, and have, perhaps, paddled some distance beyond.
-
-But it was clearly useless to continue the search further in the darkness
-and storm. They lifted the canoe and carried it up from the beach, and
-hid it in the bushes upon the bank. Then they went slowly back to the
-road.
-
-"I tell you what we can do," said Arthur Warren. "I hate to go back to
-the cottage without making one more search. Let's get a lantern and come
-back. We shall not have to go far for one,--and we shall have done all we
-can, then, though it is a bad night to see anything."
-
-The rain was, indeed, pouring in torrents and driving in sheets against
-their faces.
-
-"Yes, we must do that much," said George. "And then--then we can come
-back in the morning--" His voice choked, and he could not say more. They
-went on down the muddy road in silence.
-
-Shortly below the hill, upon the road, was a big farmhouse, arriving at
-which they turned into the yard. The house was in darkness, save one dim
-light in a chamber; but they pounded at the door with the heavy brass
-knocker till they heard the shuffling of feet in the entry, and a voice
-inquired roughly what was wanted. They answered, and the door was opened
-cautiously a few inches, where it was held fast by a heavy chain. An old
-man's face peered out at them. The sight of the boys was evidently
-reassuring, for, in a moment more, the man threw open the door and
-invited them to walk in.
-
-"There be rough sailors come by some nights," he said, in a manner
-apologizing for his suspicion. "I'm here alone, and"--he lowered his
-voice to a husky whisper--"they do say that I have a bit of money hid
-away in the old house. But it's a lie. It's a lie. It's the sea and the
-garden I live on. There's not a bit of money in the old house. But what
-brings you out in such a storm? You haven't lost your way, have you?"
-
-They told their story, while the old man sat in a chair, shaking his head
-dubiously. When they told him of the finding of the canoe, and their
-certainty that the boys had crossed in it, he declared that it could
-never have lived to get to the island.
-
-"It must have come from down below," he said. "It could never have been
-paddled across the bay against this sea. Two boys, d'ye say, paddled it?
-No. No, my lads, never--upon my life, never. Two stout men in a dory, and
-used to these waters, might have done it; but two lads in a cockle-shell
-like that would never have reached the Head, let alone getting beyond
-it."
-
-He seemed to regard them almost with suspicion, when they told him of how
-they had sailed up along shore in search of their comrades, and was
-perhaps inclined to believe their whole story as some kind of a hoax.
-Certain it was he gave them little comfort, except to say he would look
-alongshore in the morning. If any one had drowned offshore in the
-evening, they might not come ashore till the next day, he said.
-
-But he got a battered lantern for them and handed it over with a
-trembling hand, cautioning them to be careful of it, and to leave it by
-the door on their way back. They heard him bolt the heavy door behind
-them as they turned out of the yard into the road. A clock in the kitchen
-had struck the hour of ten as they left the house.
-
-"Isn't it very probable, after all," said George, as they walked along,
-"that the man may be right, and that this canoe we have found is one that
-has been lost off some steamer?"
-
-"It seems to me perhaps as probable," answered Henry Burns, "as that the
-boys should have attempted to keep on in the storm, having once reached a
-place of safety."
-
-"I wish I could think so," said Arthur. "But I can't help fearing the
-worst,--and if the boys are lost," he exclaimed bitterly, "I've seen all
-I want to of this island for one summer. I'd never enjoy another day
-here."
-
-"I won't believe it's their canoe until I have to," said George. "They
-are not such reckless chaps as we have been making them out."
-
-And he tried to say this bravely, as though he really meant it.
-
-They tramped along the rest of the way to the shore in silence, for none
-of them dared to admit to another that which he could not but believe.
-
-By the lantern's dim and flickering light they searched the beach again
-for a half-mile along in the vicinity of where the canoe had come ashore.
-But nothing rewarded their hunt.
-
-"The old man must be right," said George Warren. "The canoe must have
-come ashore from some steamer. Let's go home, anyway. We've done all we
-can."
-
-Heart-sick and weary, they began the tramp back to the cottage. At about
-a mile from the old farmhouse, where they left the lantern, they turned
-off from the road and made a cut across fields, till they came at length
-to the shore of the cove opposite the Warren cottage. They could see
-across the water the gleam of a large lantern which young Joe had hung on
-the piazza for them; but the boat they had expected to find drawn up on
-shore was gone.
-
-"Old Slade must be over in town," said Henry Burns; "and he won't be back
-to-night, probably. So it's either walk two miles more around the cove or
-swim out to the tender. We're all of us tired out. Shall we draw lots to
-see who swims?"
-
-"I'll go, myself," volunteered George. "I'd rather swim that short
-distance than do any more walking. I'm about done up, but I am good for
-that much." And he threw off his clothing once more, and swam pluckily
-out to the tender and brought it ashore. They pulled across the cove to
-the shore back of the cottage, and, springing out, carried the boat high
-up on land.
-
-They were at the cottage then in a twinkling; but, even before they had
-reached the door, dear Mrs. Warren, who had heard their steps upon the
-walk, was outside in the rain, hugging her boys who had braved the storm
-and who had come back safe. She was altogether too much overcome at the
-sight of them, it seemed, to inquire if they had found those in search of
-whom they had set out.
-
-And then the dear little woman, having embraced and kissed them as though
-they had been shipwrecked mariners, long given up for lost,--not
-forgetting Henry Burns, who wasn't used to it, but who took it calmly all
-the same, as he did everything else,--hurried them into the kitchen,
-where young Joe had the big cook-stove all of a red heat, and where dry
-clothing for the three from the extensive Warren wardrobe was warming by
-the fire.
-
-A comical welcome they got from young Joe, who had been just as much
-worried as Mrs. Warren, but who hadn't admitted it to his mother for a
-moment, and had scornfully denied the existence of danger, and yet who
-was every bit as relieved as she to see the boys safe. He tried not to
-appear as though a great weight had been removed from his mind by their
-return, but made altogether a most commendable failure.
-
-The big, roomy, old-fashioned kitchen--for the Warren cottage had
-originally been a rambling old farmhouse, which they had remodelled and
-modernized--had never seemed so cosy before. And the fire had never
-seemed more cheery than it did now. And when they had scrambled into dry,
-warm clothing, and Mrs. Warren had taken the teakettle from the hob, and
-poured them each a steaming cup of tea, to "draw out the chill," they
-forgot for the moment what they had been through and their sad discovery.
-
-In fact, it seemed as though Mrs. Warren and young Joe were strangely
-indifferent to what had sent them forth, and were easily satisfied with
-the opinions expressed by the boys, who had agreed not to mention the
-finding of the canoe until something more definite was learned, that Tom
-and Bob had in all probability not left the river.
-
-So easily satisfied, indeed, and so little affected by the fruitless
-errand they had been on, that all at once Henry Burns, who had been eying
-Mrs. Warren sharply for some moments, suddenly rose up from where he was
-sitting, and rushed out of the kitchen, through the dining-room, into the
-front part of the house. Wondering what had come over him, the others
-followed.
-
-What they saw was a tableau, with Henry Burns as exhibitor. He had drawn
-aside the heavy portière with one hand, and stood pointing into the room
-with the other.
-
-There, seated before the fireplace, were two boys so much like Tom and
-Bob, whom they had given up for lost, that their own mothers, had they
-been there, would have wept for joy at the sight of them. And then, what
-with the Warren boys pounding them and hugging them, like young bears, to
-make sure they were flesh and blood, and not the ghosts of Tom and Bob,
-and with the cheers that fairly made the old rafters ring, and the
-happiness of Mrs. Warren, who was always willing to adopt every boy from
-far and near who was a friend of one of her boys,--what with all this,
-there was altogether a scene that would have done any one's heart good,
-and might have shamed the storm outside, if it had been any other kind of
-a storm than a pitiless southeaster.
-
-Then, though the hour was getting late, they all sat about the big
-fireplace, and Tom narrated the story of the shipwreck.
-
-But, just as he began, young Joe said, with mock gravity:
-
-"We haven't introduced Henry Burns to the boys yet. Henry, this is Tom
-Harris, and this is Bob White."
-
-"I don't think we need an introduction to one who has risked his life for
-us," said Tom Harris, heartily, as he and Bob sprang up to shake hands
-with Henry Burns. But Henry Burns, carrying out the joke, bowed very
-formally, and politely said he was extremely happy to make their
-acquaintance. At which Tom and Bob, unfamiliar with the ways of Henry
-Burns, stared in astonishment, which sent the Warren boys into roars of
-laughter.
-
-The boys thus introduced to Henry Burns were handsome young fellows,
-evidently about the same age,--in fact, each lacked but a few months of
-fifteen,--thick-set and strongly built. The sons of well-to-do parents,
-and neighbours, they had been inseparable companions ever since they
-could remember. Tom Harris's father was the owner of extensive tracts in
-the Maine woods, from which lumber was cut yearly and rafted down the
-streams to his lumber-mills. In company with him on several surveying and
-exploring expeditions, the boys had hunted and fished together, and had
-paddled for weeks along the streams and on the lakes of the great Maine
-wilderness.
-
-They had hunted and fished in the Parmachenee and the Rangeley Lake
-region, and knew a great deal more of real camp life than most boys of
-double their age. Further than this, they were schoolmates, and were so
-equally matched in athletic sports, in which they both excelled, that
-neither had ever been able to gain a decided victory over the other. Tom
-was of rather light complexion, while Bob was dark, with curly, black
-hair.
-
-It was through their friendship with the Warren boys, who lived not far
-from them, in the same town, that they had decided to spend the summer
-camping on Grand Island.
-
-As they all gathered around the cheerful blaze of the fire, Tom told the
-story of the day's adventures.
-
-With so much of their camp kit as they needed for cooking along the
-river, they had started from the town of Benton at about four o'clock
-that morning, just as the tide began to ebb. Hardened as they were to the
-use of the paddle, by the time the tide had ceased to ebb and slack water
-ensued, they had left the city miles behind and were well down the river.
-
-Then the flood tide began to set strong against them, and a wind arose
-that furrowed the river with waves that were not big enough to be
-noticeable to larger craft, but which seriously impeded the progress of
-the frail canoe. They kept steadily on, but made slow headway.
-
-At Millville, a few miles above the mouth of the river, where it
-broadened out into the bay, they had met the steamer, and had hastily
-scrawled the note which Captain Chase had brought to the Warren boys.
-
-Sure enough, Captain Chase had warned them of the impending storm, and,
-furthermore, had offered to transport them and their canoe across the
-bay; but they had declined his offer, wishing to paddle the entire
-distance to the island. They had set their hearts on making the trip of
-forty miles in one day; and partly for this reason, and partly because
-Captain Chase had looked askance at their canoe, and had assured them
-that it was not a fit craft for bay work in any weather, let alone in a
-heavy sea, they had set out, toward the latter part of the afternoon, to
-cross the fifteen miles of bay which lay between them and Grand Island.
-
-The storm which had threatened gradually closed in around them, but they
-held on stubbornly, until, when too far across the bay to put back, it
-rapidly gathered strength, and soon turned what had been a comparatively
-safe pathway across the sea into a wilderness of waves, that at one
-moment rose high above the bow of the canoe, dashing them with spray as
-the sharp canoe cleaved them, and the next dropped down beneath them,
-opening a watery trench, into which they plunged.
-
-They had seen storms like this, that came quick and sharp upon the lakes,
-heaving up a sea almost in a moment, with squalls that swept down from
-the hills. They had been safely through them before; but at those times
-it had been a short, sharp battle for a half-hour at most, before they
-could reach a friendly shore. But here it was different. Here were miles
-of intervening water between them and the nearest land. This was no lake,
-to be quickly within the shelter of some protecting point of land.
-
-But they had never for a moment lost courage nor despaired of coming
-through all right. They struggled pluckily on, and might have gotten
-safely to land without mishap, if they had been familiar with the shore
-of the island. To a stranger, the shore about the head of the island
-presented a sheer front of forbidding cliffs, rising abruptly from the
-water, and against which, in a storm, the sea dashed furiously.
-
-There was apparently no place at which a boat could be landed; and yet,
-hidden behind the very barrier of ledge that sheltered it, lay Bryant's
-Cove, as quiet and sequestered a pool as any fugitive craft could wish to
-find. Had the boys known of its existence, they would have landed there,
-and have been at the Warren cottage before the _Spray_ had left the
-harbour.
-
-As it was, there seemed to them to be no alternative but to keep on to a
-point about half a mile farther along the shore, where they hoped to be
-able to make a landing upon the beach.
-
-They had accomplished the distance, and were fast nearing a place where
-they could land in safety, when a most unexpected and disastrous accident
-happened. Suddenly, and without the slightest warning of its weakness,
-the paddle which Bob was using snapped in two in his hands. At the same
-moment a wave hit the canoe, and, with nothing with which to keep his
-balance, Bob was thrown bodily from the canoe into the sea, upsetting the
-canoe and spilling Tom out at the same time.
-
-The boys were able to grasp the canoe and cling on for a few minutes.
-They were both good swimmers, and often, in smooth water, had practised
-swimming, with the canoe upset, and were able to accomplish the feat of
-righting it, bailing it with a dipper, which they always carried attached
-to one of the thwarts by a cord, and then climbing aboard over the ends.
-But it was useless to attempt such a thing in this boisterous sea.
-
-Indeed, it was more than they could do, even, to cling to the overturned
-craft, for soon an enormous wave struck it a blow broadside and tore it
-from their grasp. Then ensued a fight for life that seemed almost
-hopeless. They were near to shore, but the sea seemed to delight in
-mocking them; tossing them in at one moment, so that they could grasp at
-seaweed that lay above the ledges, and then clutching at them and drawing
-them relentlessly back.
-
-It was then that their athletic training stood them in good stead. Less
-hardy constitutions and weaker muscles than theirs would have quickly
-tired under the strain. Refraining from useless struggles to gain the
-shore, they waited their opportunity, and strove merely for the moment to
-keep themselves afloat. In this manner they were, several times, almost
-cast up on shore.
-
-All at once Tom Harris felt a sharp pain in his right hand. Then he
-realized, with a thrill of hope, that he had struck it upon a rock. It
-was, indeed, a narrow reef that made out some distance from shore. They
-had narrowly escaped being dashed upon it head-foremost. Tom waited and
-gathered his strength as the next wave hurled him on its crest in the
-direction of the ledge. Then, as the wave bore him with great force
-against it, he broke the force of the shock with his hands, was thrown
-roughly up against it, and managed to cling fast, with his fingers in a
-niche of the rock, as the wave, receding, strove to drag him back again.
-
-Then, holding on with one hand, he managed somehow to grasp at Bob as he
-was drifting by, and hold him fast and draw him in. Clinging to the ledge
-as each succeeding wave broke over them, they waited till they had
-regained their strength and recovered their wind, and then slowly worked
-their way along the ledge to shore, and at length were safe, out of the
-sea's fury.
-
-Then they had rested awhile, before setting out on foot. Their canoe they
-could see at some distance out from shore, tossing about at the mercy of
-the waves. It must of necessity come ashore in due time, but it might not
-be for an hour, and they resolved not to wait for it, but to push on to
-their destination, returning on the morrow to look for it. They followed
-the shore for about a mile down the island, till they met a fisherman,
-who told them how to get to the Warren cottage by the same route the
-Warren boys and Henry Burns had taken a few hours later.
-
-They had crossed the cove in old Slade's boat, and, expecting to astonish
-the Warren boys by their appearance, in the midst of the storm, had
-found, to their dismay, that those whom they had expected to find safe at
-home were imperilling their lives for them out in the bay.
-
-"Well, I must be up and moving," said Henry Burns, when Tom had concluded
-his narrative. "I don't mind saying I'm a bit tired with this night's
-work--and I guess you are, by the looks. I can sleep, too, now that I
-know that you are not down among the mermaids at the bottom of Samoset
-Bay."
-
-"Why don't you stay here with the boys to-night, Henry?" said Mrs.
-Warren. "You cannot get into the hotel at this hour of the night, without
-waking everybody up. Colonel Witham closes up early, you know."
-
-"No one but Henry Burns can, mother," said Joe Warren. "Henry has a
-private staircase of his own."
-
-"It's a lightning-rod staircase, Mrs. Warren," explained Henry Burns. "I
-use it sometimes after ten o'clock, for that is my bedtime, you know.
-Mrs. Carlin--good soul--sends me off to bed regularly at that hour, no
-matter what is going on; and so I have to make use of it occasionally."
-
-Mrs. Warren shook her head doubtfully.
-
-"You shouldn't do it, Henry," she said. "Although I know it is hard for a
-strong, healthy boy to go off to bed every night at ten o'clock. Well,
-that comes of being too strict, I suppose,--but do look out and don't
-break your neck. It's a bad night to be climbing around."
-
-"Don't worry about Henry Burns, mother," said Arthur. "He wouldn't do it,
-if he wasn't forced to it,--and he knows how to take care of himself, if
-anybody does."
-
-"Well, good night," said Henry Burns. "And don't forget, I hold my
-reception to-morrow night; and I extend to Tom and Bob a special
-invitation to be present." And, with a knowing glance at George Warren,
-Henry Burns took his departure.
-
-As the boys went off to bed that night, George Warren explained to them
-that on the next night, the occasion being an entertainment in place of
-the regular Wednesday night hop at the hotel, he and Henry Burns had
-planned a joke on Colonel Witham, in which they were all to take part,
-and, with this prospect in view, they dropped asleep.
-
-In the meantime Henry Burns, arriving at the hotel, and having learned by
-previous experience that a lock on a rear door of the old part of the
-hotel, which was not connected with the new by any door, could be
-manipulated with the aid of a thin blade of a jack-knife, crept up to the
-garret by way of a rickety pair of back stairs, and from thence emerged
-upon the roof through a scuttle. Then, carefully making his way along the
-ridge-pole to where the new part joined the old, he climbed a short
-distance up a lightning-rod, to the roof of the new part.
-
-This was a large roof, nearly flat. He walked across, about midway of the
-building, to where another rod, fastened at the top to a chimney, came
-up. Clinging to this, Henry Burns disappeared over the edge of the roof,
-found a resting-place for his foot on a projection which was directly
-over his own window, and then lowered himself, like an acrobat, down the
-rod to a veranda. Raising the window directly beside the rod, he slipped
-inside, closed it softly, and in a few minutes more was abed and sound
-asleep.
-
-While all Southport slept, the storm spent its force, and toward morning
-gradually subsided. In the place of the beating rain there stole up
-through the islands, in the early morning hours, great detached banks of
-fog,--themselves like strange, white islands,--which shut out the bay
-from the shore. They lay heavy over the water, and, as the boisterous
-seas gradually gave way to the long, smooth waves that rolled in without
-breaking, one might have fancied that the fog, itself, had a depressing
-and tranquillizing influence upon the sea.
-
-Yet old fishermen would have ventured out then, without fear, for there
-were signs, that might be read by the weather-wise, that a light west
-wind was soon to be stirring that would scatter the fog at its first
-advance, and sweep it back out to sea.
-
-But, brief as was the visitation of the fog, it sufficed to hide all
-things from sight. And if a boat, in which one boy rowed vigorously, had
-put forth from the camp of Jack Harvey, down in the woods, and had come
-up along the shore to the wharf, and the box, which was a part of the
-belongings of Tom Harris and Bob White, had been lowered from the wharf
-into the boat and conveyed back to the camp and hidden away there,--if
-all this had happened, it is safe to say that no one would have seen what
-was done, nor would any one have been the wiser.
-
-Perhaps some such a thing might, indeed, have occurred, for when Tom and
-Bob, Henry Burns, and the Warren boys met at the wharf the next
-fore-noon, they found the box gone. They hunted everywhere, ransacked the
-storehouse from one end to the other, but it was nowhere to be found.
-
-"And to think that it's all my fault," groaned young Joe, as they stood
-at the edge of the wharf, after the unsuccessful search. "I might have
-known John Briggs would forget to lock it up! It was left in the open
-shed there, boys, protected from the rain, and he promised to look out
-for it; but he must have forgotten. I spoke to him about it the last
-thing last night, on our way home to the cottage."
-
-"Was it very valuable?" asked Henry Burns.
-
-"Ask Tom what he thinks," laughed Bob, while Tom tried to look
-unconscious, but blushed furiously.
-
-"There's a pretty sister of mine," continued Bob, "that thinks so much of
-us that she spent a week cooking up a lot of things for us to start our
-camping with. There's a box full of the best stuff to eat you ever
-tasted, that somebody will gobble up, I suppose, without once thinking or
-caring about the one that made them. Pretty tough, isn't it, Tom?"
-
-Tom turned redder still, and felt of his biceps, as though he was
-speculating what he would do to a certain person, if that person could
-only be discovered and come up with.
-
-"I tell you what it is, boys," said George Warren; "things have had a
-strange way of disappearing here this summer, as they never did before;
-and, what's more, if Jack Harvey and his crew haven't stolen them, they
-have at least got the credit for taking the most of it,--and you may
-depend upon it, that box is down there in the woods, somewhere about that
-camp."
-
-"Then what's to hinder our raiding the camp and getting it?" Tom broke
-in, angrily. "Bob and I, with two of you, could make a good fight against
-all of them."
-
-"No doubt of that, Tom," answered George Warren; "but there are two
-things to be considered. First, we want to get the box back; and, second,
-we are not absolutely certain that they have it. If they have it, you may
-be certain that it is carefully hidden away, and we shouldn't recover it
-by making an attack on them. We must find out where it is hidden first,
-and then, if we cannot get it away otherwise, we will fight for it."
-
-"So it seems that we have two scores to settle now," said Henry Burns,
-dryly. "We owe a debt now to Jack Harvey and his crew, and there's a
-long-standing account with Colonel Witham, part of which we must pay
-to-night. Be on hand early. The latch-string will be out at number
-twenty-one." So saying, Henry Burns left them.
-
-Late that afternoon Tom and Bob, looking from the door of their tent
-across the cove, saw a sight that was at once familiar and strange. It
-was a canoe, in which were two occupants, and it was being paddled toward
-their camp. The long seas, smooth though they were, still rolled in
-heavily, and the light canoe tossed about on their crests like a mere
-toy. Still, it did not take long for them to discover that the canoe was
-their own. They had supposed it lost, though they had intended to set out
-in search of it on the following morning.
-
-In the bow and stern, propelling the craft with paddles roughly
-improvised from broken oars, were George and Arthur Warren.
-
-"Tom, old fellow," said Bob, as the canoe came dancing toward them,
-"we've lost the box, but we've got the luck with us, after all. Not only
-are we proof against drowning, but we own a canoe that refuses to be
-wrecked."
-
-And then the bow of the canoe grated on the sandy shore.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
- A NIGHT WITH HENRY BURNS
-
-
-Henry Burns, having neither father nor mother living, had been taken in
-charge several years before this by an elderly maiden aunt, whose home
-was in the city of Medford, Massachusetts. She was fairly well-to-do,
-and, as there had been a moderate inheritance left in trust for the boy
-by his parents, they were in comfortable circumstances.
-
-But Henry Burns was made, unfortunately, to realize that this does not
-necessarily mean a home, with the happiness that the word implies. Good
-Miss Matilda Burns, a sister of Henry's late father, never having known
-the care of a family of her own, had devoted her life to the interests of
-a half a score of missions and ladies' societies of different kinds,
-until at length she had become so wrapped up in these that there was
-really no room in her life left for the personality of a boy to enter.
-
-Henry Burns was a problem which she failed utterly to solve. Perhaps she
-might have succeeded, if she had seen fit to devote less of her time to
-her various societies, and more to the boy. But she deemed the former of
-far more importance, and felt her duty for the day well performed, in the
-matter of his upbringing, if she kept him out of mischief, saw that he
-went off to school at the proper hour, and that he did not fall ill.
-
-To achieve two of these ends the most conveniently to her, Miss Matilda
-exercised a restraint over Henry Burns which was entirely unnecessary and
-altogether too severe. Henry Burns was naturally of a studious turn of
-mind, and cared more for a quiet evening with a book than he did for
-playing pranks about the neighbourhood at night. At the same time, he had
-a healthy fondness for sports, and excelled in them.
-
-He was captain of his ball team, until Miss Matilda found it out and
-ordered him to stop playing the game. She considered it too rough for
-boys, having had no experience with boys of her own. And so on, with
-swimming and several other of his healthful sports. They were altogether
-too risky for Miss Matilda's piece of mind. It came about that Henry
-Burns, in order to take part with his companions in their out-of-door
-sports, found it necessary to play "hookey" and indulge in them without
-her knowing it. He won a medal in a swimming-match, but never dared to
-show it to Miss Matilda.
-
-Withal a healthy and athletic youth, he had a pale complexion, which
-deceived Miss Matilda into the impression that he was sickly. He was
-slight of build, too, which confirmed in her that impression. When once
-her mind was made up, there was no convincing Miss Matilda. The family
-doctor, called in by her for an examination, found nothing the matter
-with him; but that did not avail to alter her opinion. The boy was
-delicate, she said, and must not be allowed to overdo.
-
-Accordingly, she made life miserable for Henry Burns. She kept a watchful
-eye over him, so far as her other duties would admit of, sent him off to
-bed at nine o'clock, tried to dose him with home remedies, which Henry
-Burns found it availed him best to carry submissively to his room and
-then pitch out of the window, and, in short, so worried over, meddled
-with, and nagged at Henry Burns, that, if he had been other than exactly
-what he was, she would have succeeded in utterly spoiling him, or have
-made him run away in sheer despair.
-
-Henry Burns never got excited about things. He had a coolness that defied
-annoyances and disappointments, and a calm persistence that set him to
-studying the best way out of a difficulty, instead of flying into a
-passion over it. He had, in fact, without fully appreciating it, the
-qualities of success.
-
-If, as was true, he was a problem to Miss Matilda, which she did not
-succeed in solving, it was not so in the case of his dealings with her.
-He made a study of her and of the situation in which he found himself,
-and proceeded deliberately to take advantage of what he discovered. He
-knew all her weaknesses and little vanities to a degree that would have
-amazed her, and cleverly used them to his advantage, in whatever he
-wanted to do. Fortunately for her, he had no inclination to bad habits,
-and, if he succeeded in outwitting her, the worst use he made of it was
-to indulge in some harmless joke, for he had, underlying his quiet
-demeanour, an unusual fondness for mischief.
-
-What to do with Henry Burns summers had been a puzzle for some time to
-Miss Matilda. She was accustomed, through these months, to visit an
-encampment, or summer home, composed of several ladies' societies, and
-the presence of a boy was a decided inconvenience. When, one day, she
-learned that an old friend, one Mrs. Carlin, a fussy old soul after her
-own heart, was engaged as housekeeper at the Hotel Bayview, at Southport,
-on Grand Island, in Samoset Bay, she conceived the idea of sending Henry
-Burns there in charge of Mrs. Carlin.
-
-So it came about that Henry Burns was duly despatched to Maine for the
-summer, as a guest of Colonel Witham. He had a room on the second floor,
-next to that occupied by the colonel, who was supposed also to exercise a
-guardianship over him. As Colonel Witham's disposition was such that he
-disliked nearly everybody, with the exception of Squire Brackett, and as
-he had a particular aversion to boys of all ages and sizes, he did not
-take pains to make life agreeable to Henry Burns. He was suspicious of
-him, as he was of all boys.
-
-Boys, according to Colonel Witham's view of life, were born for the
-purpose, or, at least, with the sole mission in life, of annoying older
-people. Accordingly, the worthy colonel lost no opportunity of thwarting
-them and opposing them,--"showing them where they belonged," he called
-it.
-
-But this disagreeable ambition on the part of the colonel was not,
-unfortunately, confined to his attitude toward boys. He exercised it
-toward every one with whom he came in contact. Despite the fact that he
-had a three years' lease of the hotel, he took absolutely no pains to
-make himself agreeable to any of his guests. He looked upon them secretly
-as his natural enemies, men and women and children whom he hoped to get
-as much out of as was possible, and to give as little as he could in
-return.
-
-He was noted for his meanness and for his surly disposition toward all.
-Then why did he come there to keep a hotel? Because he had discovered
-that guests would come, whether they were treated well or not. The place
-had too many attractions of boating, swimming, sailing, and excellent
-fishing, winding wood-roads, and a thousand and one natural beauties, to
-be denied. Guests left in the fall, vowing they would not put up with the
-colonel's niggardliness and petty impositions another year; but the
-following season found them registered there again, with the same cordial
-antipathy existing as before between them and their landlord.
-
-In person, Colonel Witham was decidedly corpulent, with a fiery red face,
-which turned purple when he became angry--which was upon the slightest
-occasion.
-
-"Here's another boy come to annoy me with his noise and tomfoolery," was
-the colonel's inward comment, when Mrs. Carlin, the housekeeper, informed
-him that Henry Burns was coming, and was to be under her charge.
-
-So the colonel gave him the room next to his, where he could keep an eye
-on him, and see that he was in his room every night not later than ten
-o'clock, for that was the hour Mrs. Carlin had set for that young
-gentleman's bedtime.
-
-Henry Burns, having in due time made the acquaintance of the Warren boys,
-as well as a few other youths of his age, had no idea of ending up his
-evenings' entertainments at ten o'clock each and every night; so he set
-about to discover some means of evading the espionage of the colonel and
-Mrs. Carlin. It did not take him more than one evening of experimenting
-to find that, by stepping out on to the veranda that ran past his own and
-Colonel Witham's windows, he could gain the ascent to the roof by a
-clever bit of acrobatics up a lightning-rod. Once there, he found he
-could reach the ground by way of the old part of the hotel, in the manner
-before described. It is only fair to Henry Burns to state that he did not
-take undue advantage of this discovery, but kept on the whole as good
-hours as most boys of his age. Still, if there was a clambake, or some
-other moonlight jollification, at the extreme end of the island, where
-Henry Burns had made friends among a little fishing community, he was now
-and then to be seen, sometimes as the village clock was proclaiming a
-much later hour than that prescribed by Mrs. Carlin, spinning along on
-his bicycle like a ghost awheel. He was generally known and well liked
-throughout the entire island.
-
-On the night following the arrival of Tom and Bob, the sounds of a
-violin, a clarionet, and a piano, coming from the big parlour of the
-Hotel Bayview, told that a dance was in progress. These dances, withal
-the music was provided by the guests themselves, were extremely
-irritating to Colonel Witham. They meant late hours for everybody, more
-lights to be furnished, more guests late to breakfast on the following
-morning, and, on the whole, an evening of noise and excitement, which
-interfered more or less with his invariable habit of going to bed at a
-quarter after ten o'clock every night of his life.
-
-They brought, moreover, a crowd of cottagers to the hotel, who were given
-anything but a cordial welcome by Colonel Witham. He argued that they
-spent no money at his hotel, and were, therefore, only in the way,
-besides adding to the noise.
-
-The guests at the Bayview were, on the whole, accustomed to the ways of
-Colonel Witham by experience, and really paid but little attention to
-him. They went ahead, planned their own dances and card-parties, and left
-him to make the best of it.
-
-This particular evening's entertainment was rather out of the ordinary,
-inasmuch as it was given by a Mr. and Mrs. Wellington, of New York, in
-honour of their daughter's birthday, and, on her account, invitations to
-the spread, which was to be served after the dancing, were extended to
-the young people of the hotel. In these invitations Henry Burns had, of
-course, been included; but Mrs. Carlin and Colonel Witham were obdurate.
-It was too late an hour for him; his eating of rich salads and ices was
-not to be thought of; in short, he must decline, or they must decline for
-him, and that was the end of it.
-
-"Never you mind, Henry," said good-hearted Bridget Carrington, who was
-Mrs. Carlin's assistant, and with whom Henry Burns had made friendship.
-"It's not you that'll be going without some of the salad and the
-ice-cream, not if I know it. Sure, and Mrs. Wellington says you're to
-have some, too. So just breathe easy, and there'll be a bit for you and a
-little more, too, a-waitin' just outside the kitchen window about nine
-o'clock. So go on now and say never a word."
-
-So Henry Burns, with the connivance of Bridget, and by the judicious
-outlay of a part of his own pocket-money, in the matter of sweet things
-and other delicacies dear to youthful appetites, had prepared and planned
-for a small banquet of his own in his room, next to that of Colonel
-Witham.
-
-"But how will you manage so that Colonel Witham won't hear us, as he will
-be right alongside of us?" George Warren, who was a partner in Henry
-Burns's enterprise, had asked.
-
-"Leave that to me," said Henry Burns.
-
-The evening wore on; the strains of the music sounded merrily along the
-halls; dancing was in full swing,--everybody seemed to be enjoying the
-occasion, save Colonel Witham. He had at least conceded to the occasion
-the courtesy of a black frock coat and an immaculate white tie, but he
-was plainly ill at ease. He stood in the office, the door of which was
-open into the parlour, his hands twisting nervously behind his back,
-while he glanced, with no good humour in his expression, now at the blaze
-of lights in the parlour, and now at the clock, which, however, even
-under his impatient gaze, only ticked along in its most provokingly
-methodical fashion.
-
-The outer door opened and in walked young Joe Warren, recognized by
-Colonel Witham as one of the plagues of his summer existence.
-
-"Good evening, Colonel Witham," said young Joe, with studied politeness,
-and in a tone that ostensibly anticipated an equally cordial response.
-
-"Good evening!" snapped the colonel.
-
-"Good evening, Colonel Witham," chimed Arthur Warren, close at his
-brother's heels.
-
-The colonel responded gruffly.
-
-"Good evening, colonel," came an equally cordial greeting from Tom and
-Bob, and from George Warren, smiling at Colonel Witham, as though he had
-extended them a hearty invitation to be present.
-
-The colonel snorted impatiently, while the colour in his red face
-deepened. He did not respond to their salutations.
-
-The boys seated themselves comfortably in the office chairs, and listened
-to the music.
-
-"You needn't think you're going to get Henry Burns to go off with you,"
-the colonel said, finally. "It's half-past nine now, and his bedtime is
-ten o'clock. I wonder where he is."
-
-Arthur Warren chuckled quietly to himself. He could have told the colonel
-just where Henry Burns was at that moment; that he was busily engaged in
-conveying a certain basket of supplies from outside the kitchen window,
-up a pair of back stairs, to his room on the second floor above.
-
-"You go and keep an eye on Colonel Witham," he had said to Arthur Warren,
-"and if he starts to look for me, you go to the door and whistle."
-
-Which accounted for the sudden appearance of all the Warrens and Tom and
-Bob in the presence of Colonel Witham.
-
-Fifteen minutes elapsed, and one by one they had all disappeared.
-
-"Good riddance," was the colonel's mental ejaculation when he found them
-gone.
-
-Great would have been his amazement and indignation could he have but
-seen them, a few minutes later, seated comfortably on the bed in Henry
-Burns's room. It was approaching ten o'clock.
-
-"Where's Bob?" asked Henry Burns, as the boys quietly entered, and he
-made the door fast behind them.
-
-"Hm!" said Tom, shaking his head regretfully. "It's a sad thing about
-Bob. It's too bad, but I don't think he will be here, after all."
-
-"Why, what's the matter?" exclaimed Henry Burns, with surprise. "He isn't
-hurt, is he? I saw him a few hours ago, and he seemed all right."
-
-"No, he isn't hurt,--at least, not the way you mean, Henry. The fact is,
-he was dancing out on the piazza about half an hour ago with pretty
-little Miss Wilson,--you know, the one in the cottage down on the
-shore,--and the last I saw of Bob he was escorting her home. I'm afraid
-we shall have to give him up for to-night."
-
-"That's too bad," said Henry Burns, solemnly, as though some grievous
-misfortune had come upon Tom's chum. "And the worst of it is, it may last
-all summer. Well, Bob will miss a very pleasant surprise-party to Colonel
-Witham, to say nothing of the spread. That, by the way, is stowed away in
-those baskets over behind the bed and the wash-stand,--but, first, we've
-got to clear the coast of Colonel Witham."
-
-"We're yours to command, Henry," replied George Warren. "Tell us what to
-do."
-
-"Well, in the first place," said Henry Burns, opening one of his windows
-that led out on to the veranda, as he spoke, "the rest of you just listen
-as hard as ever you can at my door, while George and I make a brief visit
-to the colonel's room. If you hear footsteps, just pound on the wall, so
-we can get back in time. It's pretty certain he won't be here, though,
-until we are ready for him. He hasn't missed a night in weeks in getting
-to bed exactly at a quarter past ten o'clock. He's as regular as a
-steamboat; always on time. And he's a good deal like a steamboat, too,
-for he snores like a fog-horn all night long."
-
-Henry Burns and George Warren disappeared through the window and were
-gone but a moment, when they reappeared, each bearing in one hand a lamp
-from the colonel's room.
-
-"The colonel is always talking about economy," explained Henry Burns, "so
-I am not going to let him burn any oil to-night, if I can help it. My
-lamps happen to need filling,--I've borrowed an extra one for this
-occasion, and so, you see, I don't intend to waste any of the colonel's
-oil by throwing it away. I'll see that not a drop of the colonel's oil is
-wasted."
-
-Henry Burns carefully proceeded to pour the oil from each lamp which he
-and George Warren had brought from the colonel's room into those in his
-own room.
-
-"There," he said, "there's enough oil in each of those wicks to burn for
-several minutes, so the colonel will have a little light to start in on.
-But we don't want to return his lamps empty, and so I'll just fill them
-up again. I'm sure the colonel would approve of this economy."
-
-And Henry Burns carefully refilled the colonel's lamps from his
-water-pitcher.
-
-"It won't burn very well," he said. "But I'm sure it looks better."
-
-"Now, we'll just take these back again," he continued, addressing George
-Warren. "And there's another little matter we want to arrange while we
-are in there. The colonel is always finding fault with the housemaids.
-Now we'll see if we can't improve on their work."
-
-Again the two boys disappeared, while the remaining three stood watch
-against the colonel's sudden appearance.
-
-Once in the colonel's room, Henry Burns seized hold of the bedclothes and
-threw them over the foot-board. Then he snatched out three of the slats
-from the middle of the bed, replacing them with three slender sticks,
-which he had brought from his own room.
-
-"Those will do to support the bedclothes and the mattress," he explained,
-"though I'm really afraid they would break if any one who was kind of
-heavy should put his weight on them." Then he carefully replaced the
-mattress and the bedclothes, making up the colonel's bed again in the
-most approved style, with his friend's assistance.
-
-"You take notice," he said to George Warren, as he opened a closet door
-in the colonel's room, "that I am careful to destroy nothing of the
-colonel's property. I might have sawed these slats in two, and left them
-just hanging so they would support the bedclothes, and would not have
-been any more trouble; but, being of a highly conscientious nature, I
-carefully put the colonel's property away, where it can be found later
-and restored."
-
-"I'm afraid the colonel wouldn't appreciate your thoughtfulness," said
-George Warren.
-
-"Alas, I'm afraid not," said Henry Burns. "But that's often the reward of
-those who try to look after another's interests. However, I'll put these
-slats in this closet, shut and lock the door, and put the key here on the
-mantelpiece, just behind this picture. It would be just as easy to hide
-the key, but I don't think that would be right, do you?"
-
-"Certainly not," laughed George Warren.
-
-"There," said Henry Burns, taking a final survey of everything. "We've
-done all we can, I'm sure, to provide for the colonel's comfort. If he
-chooses to find fault with it, it will surely be from force of habit."
-They took their departure by way of the colonel's window, closing it
-after them, and quickly rejoined their companions in the next room.
-
-"I deeply regret," said Henry Burns to his guests, "that this banquet
-cannot begin at once. But we should surely be interrupted by the colonel,
-and, on the whole, I think it is best to wait until the colonel has taken
-his departure for the night from that room,--which I feel sure he will
-do, when the situation dawns fully upon him.
-
-"It also pains me," he added, "to be obliged to invite you all to make
-yourselves uncomfortable in that closet for a short time. At least, you
-will hear all that is going on in the colonel's room, for the partition
-is thin between that and his room. So you will have to be careful and
-make no noise. I feel quite certain that the colonel will make me a
-sudden call soon after he retires, if not before, and he really wouldn't
-approve of your being here. He's likely to have a decidedly unpleasant
-way of showing his disapproval, too."
-
-"I think we can assure our kind and thoughtful host that we fully
-appreciate the situation," said Arthur Warren, gravely, "and will be
-pleased to comply with his suggestion to withdraw. Come on, boys, let's
-get in. It's after ten now, and time is getting short."
-
-"You take the key with you," said Henry Burns, "and lock the door on the
-inside. It's just an extra precaution; but I can say I don't know who has
-the key, if anything happens. I won't know which one of you takes it."
-
-The four boys stowed themselves away in the stuffy closet, turned the key
-in the lock, and waited. Henry Burns quickly divested himself of his
-clothing, put a bowl of water beside his bed, placed a clean white
-handkerchief near it, set a lamp near by on a chair, turned it down so
-that it burned dim, unlocked his door so that it could be opened readily,
-and jumped into bed.
-
-He did not have long to wait. Promptly at a quarter past ten o'clock the
-heavy, lumbering steps of the corpulent colonel were heard, as he came up
-the hallway. The colonel was puffing with the exertion which it always
-cost him to climb the stairs, and muttering, as was his custom when
-anything displeased him.
-
-"Suppose they'll bang away on that old piano half the night," he
-exclaimed, as he passed Henry Burns's door. "And every light burning till
-midnight. How do they expect me to make any money, if they go on this
-way?"
-
-He opened the door to his room and went inside, locking it after him.
-Henry Burns pressed his ear close to the wall and listened.
-
-The colonel, still talking angrily to himself, scratched a match and
-lighted one of the lamps. Then he divested himself of his collar and tie,
-threw his coat and waistcoat on a chair, and reseated himself, to take
-off his boots.
-
-All at once they heard him utter a loud exclamation of disgust.
-
-"What on earth is the matter with that lamp?" he cried. "That comes of
-having hired help from the city. Never look after things, unless you keep
-right after them. How many times have I spoken about having these lamps
-filled every day!"
-
-The colonel scratched a match. "Hulloa," he exclaimed, "it's full, after
-all. Well, I see, the wick hasn't been trimmed. There's always something
-wrong." The colonel proceeded to scrape the wick. Then he scratched
-another match. The wick sputtered as he held the match to it.
-
-"Confound the thing!" yelled the colonel, now utterly out of temper. "The
-thing's bewitched. Where's that other lamp? Oh, there it is. We'll see if
-that will burn. I'll discharge that housemaid to-morrow."
-
-He scratched still another match, held it to the wick of the other lamp,
-and was evidently satisfied with that, for they heard him replace the
-lamp-chimney and go on with his undressing.
-
-In a few minutes more there came another eruption from the colonel.
-
-"There goes the other one," he yelled. "I know what's the matter.
-Somebody's been fooling with those lamps. I'll make 'em smart for it."
-The colonel unscrewed the part of the lamp containing the wick, took the
-bowls of the lamps, one by one, over to his window, opened them, and
-poured the contents of the lamps out upon the veranda.
-
-"Water!" he yelled. "Water! That's what's the matter. Oh, but I'd just
-like to know whether it's that pale-faced Burns boy, or some of those
-other young imps in the house. I'll find out. I'll make somebody smart
-for this. Wasting my oil, too. I'll make 'em pay for it."
-
-The colonel set down the lamps, rushed out of his room into the hall for
-the lamp that usually occupied a standard there. He did not find it,
-because Henry Burns had taken the pains to remove it. The colonel made a
-sudden dash for Henry Burns's door, rattled the door-knob and pounded,
-and then, finding that in his confusion he had failed to discover that it
-was unlocked, hurled it open and burst into the room.
-
-What the colonel saw was the pale, calm face of Henry Burns, peering out
-at him from the bed, as that young gentleman lifted himself up on one
-elbow. Around his forehead was bound the handkerchief, which he had
-wetted in the bowl of water. The lamp burning dimly completed the picture
-of his distress.
-
-"Hi, you there! You young--" The colonel checked himself abruptly, as
-Henry Burns slowly raised himself up in bed and pressed one hand to his
-forehead. "What's the matter with you?" roared the colonel, completely
-taken aback by Henry Burns's appearance.
-
-"Oh, nothing," said Henry Burns, resignedly. "It's nothing."
-
-The colonel little realized how much of truthfulness there was in this
-answer.
-
-"Did you want me for anything?" asked Henry Burns, in his softest voice.
-
-"No, I didn't," said the colonel, sullenly. "Somebody has been fooling
-with my lamps, and I--I thought I would use yours, if you didn't mind."
-
-"Certainly," replied Henry Burns. "I may not need mine again for the rest
-of the night." Again he pressed his hand dismally to his forehead.
-
-"I won't take it!" snapped the colonel. "You may need it again. Why don't
-you tell Mrs. Carlin you've got a headache? She'll look after you. It's
-eating too much--eating too much, that does it. I've always said it. Stop
-stuffing two pieces of pie every day at dinner, and you won't have any
-headache."
-
-With this parting injunction, the irate colonel abruptly took his
-departure, slamming the door behind him.
-
-Henry Burns dived beneath the bedclothes and smothered his roars of
-laughter. The colonel, disappointed in his quest for a lamp, and not
-caring to search further in his present condition of undress, returned
-once more to his room and finished undressing in the dark.
-
-"I'll make somebody smart for this to-morrow," he kept repeating. "Like
-as not that little white-faced scamp in the next room had some hand in
-it. I can't quite make him out. Well, I'll go to bed and sleep over it."
-
-The colonel rolled into bed.
-
-There was a crash and a howl of rage from the colonel. He floundered
-about in a tangle of bedclothes for a moment, filling the room with his
-angry ejaculations, and endeavouring, helplessly, for a moment, to
-extricate himself from his uncomfortable position on the floor. Then he
-arose, raging like a tempest, stumbling over a chair in his confusion,
-and nearly sprawling on the floor again.
-
-He rang the electric button in his room till the clerk in the office
-thought the house was on fire, and came running up, breathless, to see
-what was the matter.
-
-"Fire! Who said there was any fire, you idiot!" shrieked the colonel, as
-his clerk dashed into the room and ran plump into him. "There isn't any
-fire," he cried. "Somebody's been breaking the furniture in here; tearing
-down the beds, ruining the lamps. Get that room on the next floor, down
-at the end of the hall, ready for me. I can't stay here to-night. Don't
-stand there, gaping like a frog. Hurry up. Get Mrs. Carlin to fix that
-bed up for me. She's gone to bed, do you say? Well, then, get somebody
-else. Don't stand there. Go along!"
-
-The clerk hurried away, as much to prevent the colonel seeing the broad
-grin on his face as to obey orders. The colonel, stumbling around in the
-darkness, managed to partly dress himself; and, five minutes later, the
-boys heard him go storming along the hall to the stairway, which he
-mounted, and was seen no more that night.
-
-The closet door in Henry Burns's room swung softly open, and there rolled
-out helplessly on the floor four boys, choking with suppressed laughter,
-the tears fairly running down their cheeks.
-
-Henry Burns, calm as ever, quietly arose from bed, removed the bandage
-from his brow, slid into his clothes, and remarked, softly, "I feel
-better now."
-
-"Oh, don't, Henry," begged George Warren. "If you say any more I shall
-die. I can't laugh now without its hurting me."
-
-"You need something to eat," said Henry Burns. Pinning a blanket up over
-the transom to hide the light, and stopping his keyhole, to prevent any
-ray of light from penetrating into the hallway, and throwing down a
-blanket at the door-sill for the same purpose, Henry Burns lighted both
-his lamps, carefully locked his door, and made ready to entertain his
-guests.
-
-"It's not just according to the rules of etiquette," he said, producing a
-package from the basket, "but we'll have to start on the ice-cream first
-before it melts. Then we'll work back along the line, to salad and ginger
-ale."
-
-He drew forth from the package, which proved to be a box filled with
-chopped ice, a small brick of ice-cream. It was beginning to melt about
-the edges, but they made short work of it.
-
-"Now," said Henry Burns, "if you please, we'll start all over again. Here
-are the sandwiches."
-
-"It's the finest spread I ever had," said young Joe, appreciatively, as
-he stowed away his fourth sandwich and helped himself to an orange.
-
-"Joe always goes on the principle that he may be cast away on a desert
-island before he has another square meal," said Arthur, "so he always
-fills up accordingly."
-
-"It's a good principle to go on," responded Henry Burns. "George, you
-open the ginger ale."
-
-So they dined most sumptuously, and had gotten down to nuts and raisins,
-when Henry Burns, whose ears were always on the alert, suddenly sprang
-up, with a warning "Sh-h-h," and, quickly stepping across the room,
-turned the lamps down, signalling at the same time for the boys to be
-silent.
-
-Not one of the others had heard a sound; but now they were aware that
-soft footsteps were pattering along the hallway.
-
-Presently some one came to Henry Burns's door, turned the knob, and
-rapped very gently.
-
-Not a sound came from the room.
-
-Then a voice said: "Henry, Henry."
-
-There was no reply.
-
-"Strange," said the person outside; "I could have sworn that I heard his
-voice as I came up. Well, I must have been mistaken. He seems to be sound
-asleep. I guess his headache is better."
-
-They heard the footsteps die away again along the hallway.
-
-"Whew!" said Henry Burns; "that was a narrow escape. That was Mrs.
-Carlin. Somebody must have told her I was sick. She sleeps all night with
-one eye and one ear open, they say."
-
-"Well," said George Warren, "I reckon we'd better take it as a warning
-that it's time to be going, anyway. It's eleven o'clock, I should say,
-and we have got to get up early and overhaul the _Spray_. She's up at
-Bryant's Cove yet, and we have got to bring her down and have a new
-bowsprit put in, and reeve some new rigging. We've had a great time,
-Henry. Count us in on the next feed, and give our regards to Colonel
-Witham. Come on, boys."
-
-"Sorry to have to show you out the back way," said Henry Burns, "but the
-front way would be dangerous now, and my lightning-rod staircase seems to
-be the only way. It's a very nice way when one is used to it; but look
-out and don't slip."
-
-By the time the last boy was on the roof, Henry Burns was half-undressed;
-and by the time the last one had reached the ground, his light was out
-and he was half-asleep. That was Henry Burns's way. When he did a thing,
-he did it and wasted no time--whether it was working or playing or
-sleeping.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
- A HIDDEN CAVE
-
-
-It was a little after eleven o'clock when Tom left the hotel. His mind
-was so occupied with the events of the evening that he started at once
-toward his camp, forgetting an intention he had earlier in the night of
-visiting the locality of Jack Harvey's camp in search of the missing box.
-He stopped every few minutes to laugh long and heartily, as, one by one,
-the mishaps of Colonel Witham came to his mind.
-
-All at once he remembered the missing box. He had nearly reached his tent
-by this time, but he stopped short. He called to mind the contents of the
-box; among other things, a certain big cake, with frosting on it, and,
-although he and Bob, as young athletes, were bound to hold such food in
-little regard, there was one thing about it which particularly impressed
-him just now, and that was the remembrance of how he had watched Bob's
-sister, with her dainty little fingers, mould the frosting on the top,
-and how she had slyly wondered--as if there could be any doubt of
-it--whether they, meaning Tom, would think of her while they were eating
-it.
-
-The thought of that cake falling into the hands of Jack Harvey and of Tim
-Reardon and the others of Harvey's crew, and of the jokes they would
-crack at Tom's expense, made his blood boil. He started in the direction
-of Harvey's camp, then turned back to get Bob to accompany him,--and then
-paused and went on again, saying to himself that he would not awaken his
-chum at that hour of the night. He started off through the woods alone.
-
-The night was warm and pleasant, though it was quite dark, as there was
-no moon. He passed by the cottages, and then turned into a foot-path that
-followed the windings of the shore. The path led for some distance
-through a thicket of alders and underbrush, from which at length it
-emerged into an open field. Crossing this, Tom again entered a growth of
-wood, the path winding among the roots of some old hemlocks and cedars.
-
-All at once he saw a light shining indistinctly through the trees, and
-knew that it must be in the immediate vicinity of Harvey's camp.
-
-"So much the better, if they are up," muttered Tom. "If they're sitting
-around that fire they are sure to be talking." He hurried on in the
-direction of the light, still following the path.
-
-The fire soon became plainly visible. At a point where the path divided
-he could see the white tent, lit up by a big fire of driftwood that
-blazed in front of it. He could hear the sound of voices, and
-distinguished that of Harvey above the others. There seemed to be some
-insubordination in camp, for Harvey's tones were loud and angry.
-
-Tom concluded not to take the path to the left, which was the one leading
-direct to the camp, but continued on for a distance along the main path.
-It was well he did so, for presently he heard some one coming toward him.
-The paths were at this point so near together that he could not
-distinguish which one the person was taking; so he drew aside and
-crouched in the bushes, which were very dense between the two paths. A
-boy, whom he recognized as Tim Reardon, soon came in sight, and passed
-close by the spot where Tom was concealed. He carried a pail in his hand,
-and was evidently going to a spring near by for water. He was grumbling
-to himself as he passed along.
-
-"I'm always the one!" he said. "Why don't he make some one else lug the
-water part of the time? I'm not going to be bullied by any Jack Harvey,
-and he needn't think I am."
-
-He kept on to the spring, however. Tom remained where he was, and Tim
-soon returned, carrying the pail filled with water. Tom waited till he
-saw Tim arrive at the camp and deposit the pail of water near the fire,
-before he again emerged from the clump of bushes into the path that led
-past the camp. He followed this cautiously. He could not as yet see
-whether all the members of the crew were present about the camp-fire, and
-he knew that to encounter any one of them at that hour near the camp
-would not only put an end to all hopes of recovering the box, by
-revealing to Harvey and his crew that he suspected them of having stolen
-it, but that, once an alarm being given, he should have the whole crew at
-his heels in a twinkling.
-
-Tom was sufficiently acquainted with the reputation of Harvey's crew to
-know that it would go hard with him if they found him there. He stole
-quietly along past the camp some little distance, and then, turning from
-the path, got down on his hands and knees and crept toward the camp
-through the bushes.
-
-Near the camp was a hemlock-tree, with large, broad, heavy branches, that
-grew so low down on the trunk that some of them rested on the ground. It
-offered a place of concealment, and Tom, at the imminent risk of being
-discovered, reached it and crawled in between the branches. If the
-campers had been expecting any one, and had been on the watch, he must
-surely have been discovered, for several times branches cracked under
-him, and once so loudly that he thought it was all up with him, expecting
-them to come and see what had made the noise. But they took no notice of
-it, either because they were accustomed to hearing noises in the woods,
-of cattle or dogs, or thought nothing at all about it.
-
-From where he now lay, Tom could see the entire camp, and hear everything
-the boys said. It was a picturesque spot which Harvey had chosen. The
-land here ran out in one of those irregular points which was
-characteristic of the shores of the island, and ended in a little,
-low-lying bluff, that overlooked the bay. On the side nearer the village,
-the shore curved in with a graceful sweep, making a perfect bow, and the
-land for some distance back sloped gradually down to the beach. The beach
-here was composed of a fine white sand, making an ideal landing-place for
-rowboats. On the side farther from the village, the waterfront was of a
-different character. It rounded out, instead of curving in, and the shore
-was bold, instead of sloping. It was not easily approached, even by small
-boats, as the water, for some distance out, was choked up with reefs and
-ledges, which were barely covered at high tide, and at low water were
-exposed here and there.
-
-This apparently unapproachable shore had been taken advantage of by
-Harvey in a way which no one in the village had ever suspected. There was
-a channel among the reefs, which a small sailboat could pursue, if one
-were accurately acquainted with its windings. With this channel, which
-they had discovered by chance, the campers had become thoroughly
-familiar, at both low and high water.
-
-The point had been cleared of undergrowth, and most of the larger trees
-had been cut down for some little distance back from the water. In the
-rear of this clearing there were thick woods, extending into the island
-for a mile or more.
-
-The campers had pitched a big canvas tent at the edge of the clearing,
-where they lived in free and easy fashion, cooking mostly out-of-doors.
-They scorned the idea of making bunks, as smacking too much of
-civilization, and at night slept on boughs covered with blankets. They
-lived out-of-doors in front of the tent when the weather was pleasant,
-and, when it was stormy, they went aboard the yacht and did their cooking
-in the cabin, over a small sheet-iron stove.
-
-It was altogether a romantic and picturesque sight that Tom saw as he
-looked out from his hiding-place. At a little distance from the tent the
-fire was blazing, while the members of the crew either sat around it or
-lay, stretched out at full length, upon the ground. A pot of coffee was
-placed on a flat stone by the side of the fire, near enough to get the
-heat from it, and the delicious odour of it as it steamed made Tom
-hungry.
-
-The members of Harvey's crew were utterly without restraint, saving that
-which was imposed capriciously by Harvey himself. Harvey was not
-naturally vicious. His mind had been perverted by the books he had read,
-so that he failed to see that his acts of petty thievery were meannesses
-and acts of cowardice of which he would some day be ashamed.
-
-He fashioned his conduct as much according to the books he read as
-possible, and, if he had been but trained rightly, would have been proud
-to do courageous things, instead of playing mean jokes, for he had at
-heart much bravery. He rarely wore a hat, and was as bronzed as any
-sailor. The sleeves of his flannel blouse were usually rolled up to the
-elbows, showing on his forearms several tattooed designs in red and blue
-ink. He was large and strong.
-
-The boys around the fire were telling stories and relating in turn
-incidents of adventure that had taken place since their arrival on the
-island. At the close of their story-telling, they arose and began making
-preparations for a meal. Near by the fireplace they had built a rough
-table, of stakes driven into the ground, and boards, with benches on
-either side of it, fashioned in the same way. Two of the boys went to the
-tent and brought out some tin dishes, and the steaming pot of coffee was
-taken from the stone and set on the table.
-
-Then Joe Hinman, taking a long pole in his hand, went to the fire and
-proceeded to scatter the brands about, while a shower of sparks rose up
-and floated off into the forest. Presently Joe raked from among the
-embers a dozen or more black, shapeless objects. These he placed one by
-one on a block of wood and broke the clay--for such it was--with a
-hatchet. The odour of cooked fish pervaded the camp and saluted Tom's
-nostrils most temptingly. Inside of the lumps of clay were fish of some
-kind, which Tom took to be cunners. As fast as they were ready, Tim
-Reardon carried them to the table, where they were heaped up on a big
-earthen platter.
-
-The boys then fell to and ate as though they were starving. Tom wondered
-for some time if this could be their usual hour for supper; but
-remembered that he had seen the _Surprise_ several miles off in the bay
-that evening, and concluded that the evening meal had been long delayed.
-The _Surprise_ now lay a few rods offshore, with a lantern hanging at her
-mast.
-
-The boys continued to talk, as they ate, of tricks they had played and of
-raids they had taken part in, down the island. In fact, the good citizens
-of Southport would have given a good deal for the secrets Tom learned
-from his hiding-place that night. Tom waited impatiently, however, for
-some mention of the missing box. Could he be mistaken in suspecting them
-of having taken it? No, he was sure not. That they were capable of doing
-so, their own conversation left no room for doubt. Tom felt certain the
-box was in their possession.
-
-But he began to feel that his errand of discovery to-night would be
-fruitless. They must, he argued, have some sort of storehouse, where they
-hid such plunder as this, but no one had as yet made the slightest
-mention of it. It was clearly useless for him to grope about in the
-vicinity of the camp at night, and he began to think it would be better
-after all to wait until day and select a time for his search, if
-possible, when all the members of the crew were off on the yacht. But
-that might come too late, and Tom wondered what to do.
-
-All at once Joe Hinman made a remark that caused Tom to raise himself
-upon his elbow and listen intently.
-
-"Boys," said Joe, "I've got a little surprise for you."
-
-The crew, one and all, stopped eating, rested their elbows on the table,
-and looked at Joe curiously.
-
-"I'll bet it's a salmon from old Slade's nets," said George Baker. "Joe's
-sworn for a week that he'd have one."
-
-"He's all right, is Joe," remarked Harvey, patronizingly. "There isn't
-one of you that can touch Joe for smartness."
-
-Thus encouraged, Joe told how he had seen the box that had been a part of
-Tom's and Bob's luggage left on the wharf the night it arrived; how he
-had ascertained that it contained food, by prying up the cover; and how,
-early on the following morning, he had rowed up under cover of the fog,
-and had brought back the box to the camp.
-
-"It's down in the cave now," said Joe. Tom gave a start. "There's a
-meat-pie in it that is good for a dinner to-morrow, and a big frosted
-cake, if you fellows want it to-night."
-
-"Hooray!" cried Jack Harvey. "You and I will go and get it." Whereupon he
-and Joe sprang up and made directly for the spot where Tom lay, passing
-by so close that he could have reached out and touched them, and hurried
-along the bank, down to the shore.
-
-Tom allowed them to get well in advance before he ventured to crawl from
-his hiding-place and follow them. He saw them at length disappear over
-the bank at a point where there grew a thick clump of cedars. He turned
-from the path into the woods, made his way cautiously past the place
-where he had seen them disappear, turned into the path again, and then
-climbed down the bank, which was there very steep, holding on to the
-bushes, and looked for the boys, but they were nowhere to be seen.
-
-Tom knew they could not have passed him. They had not reappeared over the
-edge of the bank, and they were nowhere in sight along the shore. There
-could be but one conclusion. The entrance to the cave must be located in
-the clump of cedars.
-
-It seemed to Tom that he had waited at least a quarter of an hour,
-though, in fact, it was not more than five minutes, when he saw the boys
-reappear. Tom groaned as he saw the big cake in Joe's hand. Joe laid it
-down on the ground, while he and Jack picked up several armfuls of loose
-boughs lying about, and threw them up carelessly against the bank. Then
-Joe took up the cake again, and they emerged from the cedars, climbed up
-over the bank, and disappeared in the direction of their camp.
-
-Tom lost no time in scrambling to the spot. The hiding-place was
-cunningly concealed. It was an awkward place to crawl to from any part of
-the bank, and no one would have thought of trying to land there in a
-boat. The entrance to the cave might have been left open, with little
-chance of its ever being discovered. Tom threw aside the boughs
-sufficiently to discover that beneath them was a sort of trap-door, made
-of pieces of board carelessly nailed together. Then he replaced the
-boughs and, without even attempting to lift the board door, regained the
-path at the top of the bank.
-
-"There'll be time enough to explore that later," he muttered. "I'm not
-the only one that will have lost something out of that cave before
-morning, though." He made his way cautiously past the camp once more, and
-then started on a run for his own camp. His hare and hounds practice at
-school stood him in good stead, and he did not stop running till he had
-come to the door of his tent. He unfastened the flap and entered, panting
-for breath. Bob was sleeping soundly. He shook him, but Bob was loath to
-awake, and resented being so roughly disturbed.
-
-"Wake up, Bob! Wake!" cried Tom, shaking him again.
-
-Bob opened his eyes. "Why, is it morning, Tom?" he asked.
-
-"No, it isn't, Bob, but it soon will be. I've found the box, Bob.
-Harvey's got it, and I know where it is hidden,--down near his camp in a
-cave."
-
-Bob shivered, for Tom had pulled the blanket off the bed, and the moist
-sea air penetrated the tent. He dressed, stupidly, for he was not fully
-rid of his drowsiness.
-
-The boys went down to the beach, and Bob washed his face in the salt
-water.
-
-"I'm all right now, Tom, old fellow," he said, "but, honest, Tom, I feel
-ugly enough at being waked up, not at you, though, to just enjoy a fight
-with those fellows."
-
-"There's little prospect of that, if we are careful," answered Tom. "What
-we want to do is to show them we are smart enough to get the box back,
-and, perhaps, play them a trick of our own."
-
-Then they carried the canoe down to the shore, launched it, and set off.
-It was about one o'clock in the morning. They paddled away from the tent
-and down along the shore, noiselessly as Indians. Past the village and
-past the cottages, and not a sign of life anywhere, not even a wisp of
-smoke from a chimney. The canoe glided swiftly along, making the only
-ripples there were on the glassy surface of the bay.
-
-As they came to the beach near Harvey's camp, they landed, and Tom crept
-up over the bank to reconnoitre. He came back presently, reporting that
-the crew were all sound asleep, and everything quiet around the camp.
-Then they paddled quickly by the end of the bluff and along the bold
-shore beyond, picking their way carefully among the reefs, as they could
-not have done in these unknown waters with any other craft than the
-buoyant canoe.
-
-They disembarked at the clump of cedars, and made the canoe fast to the
-trunk of one that overhung the water. Tom took from the bow of the canoe
-a lantern, and they scrambled up the bank. Throwing aside the boughs,
-they disclosed the trap-door, which they lifted up. Tom lit the lantern
-and they entered the cave.
-
-They found it much larger than the opening indicated. It was excavated
-from the hard clay of which the bank was composed, and, though not high
-enough for them to stand quite erect, it was about eight feet long and
-five feet wide.
-
-It was filled with stuff of all sorts. There were spare topsails
-and staysails,--possibly from coasters that had anchored in the
-harbour,--sets of oars from ships' boats, several boxes of canned goods,
-that the grocer of the village had hunted for far and wide, coils of
-rope, two shotguns, carefully wrapped in pieces of flannel and well
-oiled, to prevent the rust from eating them, four lanterns, two axes and
-a hatchet, and odds and ends of all descriptions useful in and about a
-camp or a yacht.
-
-The roof of the cave was shored up with boards, supported by joists. In
-one corner of the cave was the box for which they sought, broken into,
-and with the gorgeous cake gone; but that was all. The rest of the
-contents were untouched.
-
-They took the box, carried it down to the shore and placed it in the
-canoe. Tom started to return to the cave.
-
-"What are you going to do now, Tom?" queried Bob. "We don't want to take
-anything of theirs, of course."
-
-"Not a thing," answered Tom. "We don't go in for that sort of business,
-but I just want to show them that we have been here and had the
-opportunity to destroy anything that we were of a mind to. Perhaps it
-will teach them a good lesson. It will show them that we are as smart as
-they are, anyway."
-
-So saying, Tom began to gather up the guns, the good sails, the boxes of
-provisions, and other things of value, and carry them outside the cave,
-setting them down on the bank at some distance from the mouth of it.
-
-"We won't destroy anything of value," said Tom. "But here are some odds
-and ends of old stuff, some of these pieces of oars, empty crates,
-bagging, and that sort of thing, which will make a good blaze, and which
-would have to be thrown away some day. They are of no use to anybody. I
-propose to make a bonfire of these in the cave, just to show Jack Harvey
-that we have been here. He'll find all his stuff that's good for anything
-put carefully outside the cave, and no harm come to it. But he'll be just
-as furious to find his cave discovered and on fire, for all that."
-
-"All right," said Bob, "here goes."
-
-Bob was thinking of that cake.
-
-Tom took one of the axes and chopped a small hole in the top of the cave,
-some distance above the door.
-
-"That will make a draught," he said, in answer to Bob's inquiry.
-
-Then he blew out the lantern and poured the oil with which it was filled
-over the pile of rubbish. There was still a small heap of stuff in one
-corner of the cave, some old boards, and a few pieces of sail, thrown
-carelessly in a pile, as though of no value. They did not stop to bother
-with these, as they seemed of no consequence, and they were in a hurry.
-
-Tom struck a match and set fire to the heap that he had accumulated.
-
-"We can't get away from here any too soon, now, Bob," he said. "There'll
-be some furious chaps out here, when that fire gets to crackling and
-smoking. We don't care to be about here at that time. They are too many
-for us."
-
-The boys scrambled down the bank, got into the canoe, and pushed off. As
-they paddled away, the light of the fire gleamed in the mouth of the
-cave. As soon as they had gotten clear of the reefs, they did not stop to
-reconnoitre the camp, but pushed by at full speed. It was a race against
-fire--and they little dreamed of its swiftness, nor of the hidden force
-which they had let loose.
-
-Along the shore they sped, speaking not a word till they had got the
-village in sight and their arms were cracking in the joints. Then they
-paused a moment for breath, for their little craft was out of sight of
-the camp now, in the dull morning light.
-
-Tom, who had the stern paddle, had looked back from time to time, but if
-there was any light to be seen through the bushes it was very slight. The
-spot was hidden now, too, by the intervening point of land.
-
-"I don't know whether I see a light or not," he said. "There's a lot of
-smoke, though, and I can imagine, anyway, that I see a gleam of fire in
-the midst of it."
-
-The words were scarcely out of his mouth before he swung the canoe around
-with one quick sweep of his paddle.
-
-"Look, Bob! Look!" he cried. "What have we done?"
-
-The sight that met their eyes was amazing.
-
-A sheet of flame shot suddenly into the sky. It looked like a tiny
-volcano, belching up fire and débris and pushing up through the midst of
-it a great black canopy of smoke. This was followed by the report of an
-explosion that echoed and reëchoed through the village, reverberating on
-the rocks across the harbour, and filling the whole country around with
-its noise--at once startling and terrifying. Then the light as suddenly
-went out, a shower of burning sticks and shreds of blazing canvas drifted
-lazily down through the air, and a cloud of smoke hung over the spot.
-
-Tom and Bob trembled like rushes. It seemed as though every particle of
-strength had left them. There could be but one conclusion. They had blown
-up the camp. Harvey and all his crew were, perhaps, killed.
-
-Bob was the first to speak.
-
-"Come, Tom," he said. "We must get to camp before we are seen. Brace up
-and try to paddle."
-
-Somehow or other they got to camp and dragged the canoe ashore. They
-carried the box up to the tent and locked it up in the big chest. Bob's
-hand trembled so he could hardly put the key into the lock.
-
-Tom seated himself, dejectedly, on the edge of one of the bunks, the
-picture of despair.
-
-"I guess I may as well go and give myself up first as last," he said. "I
-suppose I'll have to go to jail, if they're killed. What can there have
-been in the cave? I didn't see anything to explode, did you?"
-
-"No," answered Bob, "unless it was something over in that pile of stuff
-in one corner. I didn't examine it, but they must have had something
-stored or hidden underneath there, either kerosene or gunpowder. By Jove!
-Tom, I remember now hearing Captain Sam Curtis say he had missed a keg of
-blasting-powder that he had bought for the Fourth of July, and he said he
-thought some of the sailors down the island had stolen it. That's where
-it went to; it was hidden in that corner."
-
-"That doesn't help matters much, if they're all dead," said Tom. "I'll be
-to blame, just the same. Oh, Bob, what shall I do?"
-
-"Whatever you do," answered Bob, "I stand my share of it, just as much as
-you. I'm just as guilty as you are. But don't go to pieces that way, Tom.
-We don't know yet whether they are hurt or not. The best thing we can do
-is to get down there as quick as ever we can. Shall we take the canoe and
-make a race for it?"
-
-"I can't do it," answered Tom. "I haven't got the strength,--and, to be
-honest, Bob, the courage. It's taken every bit of strength and nerve out
-of me. Bob, I tell you, I'm afraid we've killed them,--and I, for one,
-don't dare to go and look."
-
-And Tom hid his face in his hands, while the tears trickled through his
-fingers.
-
-"I don't believe they're killed," said Bob, stoutly. "They were some
-distance away from the cave, you know. Come, we'll go with the crowd, for
-the whole town must be out by this time."
-
-And so he half-persuaded, half-dragged Tom away from the tent, and they
-started for the hotel.
-
-The explosion had, indeed, aroused every one. Men were running to and
-fro, and the greatest excitement prevailed. The news quickly spread that
-some frightful accident had happened at Harvey's camp, and Tom and Bob
-heard expressions of sympathy for them on all sides, from many who had
-been the victims of their tricks, and who had time and again wished the
-island rid of them. A rumour spread among the crowd of villagers--no one
-knew where it originated--that a keg of powder, which the campers had
-left to dry near the fire, had exploded, and blown them all to pieces.
-This was only one of a number of wild rumours that were noised about that
-morning in the confusion and uncertainty. It was generally believed that
-the crew must have been killed.
-
-Tom and Bob hung on to the edge of the excited crowd, which had assembled
-in front of the hotel, and listened to these various expressions with
-horror. Then, when the crowd moved on for the camp, they followed, with
-sinking hearts.
-
-It was a strange procession that went down along the shore that morning.
-There were cottage-owners, who had grievances against the crew;
-villagers, who had been tormented and tricked by them time and again; and
-fishermen, who had lost many a tide's fishing, because their dories had
-been found sunk alongside the wharf, with heaping loads of stones aboard.
-Yet, now that disaster had befallen the crew, they were one and all
-willing to condone the offences, and anxious to render what help they
-could.
-
-They went on rapidly. Tom and Bob soon heard a cry from those in advance
-that the tent was still standing. Then hope rose in Tom's heart, that
-spurred him forward.
-
-He dashed ahead, rushed past the leaders, cutting through the woods where
-the path made a circuit. There was the tent still standing, and
-apparently uninjured by the storm of stones and débris that had rained
-down about it. But the crew! Not the sound of a voice was to be heard.
-Not a soul was stirring anywhere in the locality.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
- JACK HARVEY INVESTIGATES
-
-
-Tom's heart sank as he approached the tent, stepping over stones and
-fragments of wood that lay all about. Pulling open the flap of the tent,
-he looked anxiously inside. There lay the crew, to a man, stretched upon
-the ground, motionless. A sudden fear seized on Tom that the shock had
-killed them as they lay sleeping, and he reeled and clutched one of the
-guy-ropes to keep from falling.
-
-The next minute the crowd of villagers had arrived, and several heads
-were thrust inside the tent. Just at that moment one of the crew slowly
-raised himself on an elbow and said, angrily:
-
-"What's all this fuss about? Aren't you people satisfied with trying to
-blow us up, without coming around and making such a rumpus and keeping us
-awake?"
-
-It was Jack Harvey. The others of the crew, taking their cue from him,
-made a pretence of rousing themselves up from sleep, yawned and rubbed
-their eyes, and asked what was wanted.
-
-Then, perceiving for the first time that there were several stalwart
-fishermen in the party, and not daring to go too far, Harvey added, in a
-sneering tone:
-
-"Oh, we're obliged to you all for coming down here. It wasn't curiosity
-on your part--of course not. You came down because you thought we were
-hurt, and we're much obliged to you. Of course we are. We're glad to see
-you, moreover, now we're awake. Wait a minute, and we will stir up the
-fire and boil a pot of coffee."
-
-This was maddening to the rescuers. Some of the fishermen suggested
-pitching in and giving the crew a sound thrashing; but, so Squire
-Brackett said, "there was really no ground for such a proceeding, though
-he, for one, would be more than glad to do it." They could blame
-themselves for trying to help a pack of young hyenas like these. For his
-part, he was going back home to bed. "They'll drown themselves out in the
-bay if let alone," he commented. However, he ventured the query to
-Harvey: "Guess you boys had a little powder stored around here, didn't
-you?"
-
-"Guess again, squire," answered Harvey, roughly. "Maybe we had a fort
-with cannon mounted on it,--and maybe we'd like to go to sleep again, if
-you people would let us. We're not trespassing. We've got permission to
-camp here, so don't try to go bullying us, squire."
-
-This was the satisfaction, then, that the rescuers got at the hands of
-the crew. They had come, burying their grievances, and with hearts full
-of sympathy and kindness for the unfortunate boys, and they had
-encountered only the same reckless crew, that mocked them for their
-pains. So they turned away again, angry and disappointed, and nursing
-their wrath for a day to come.
-
-And then, as the sound of the last of their footsteps died away through
-the woods, Jack Harvey, chuckling with vast satisfaction to himself,
-said: "Wasn't that fine, though? Wasn't old Brackett and the others
-furious?"
-
-"Wild!" exclaimed Joe Hinman. "But I don't think, after all, Jack, that
-it paid. We ought to have treated them better, after they had come all
-the way down here to help us."
-
-"Pshaw!" answered Harvey. "Don't you go getting squeamish, Joe. For my
-part, I'm mad enough at somebody to fight the whole village. There's our
-cave that it took us weeks to dig, and hidden in the only spot around
-here that couldn't be discovered, gone to smash, with everything we had
-in it. Those two guns that the governor bought me were worth a pretty
-price, let me tell you. They must have gone clear into the bay, for I
-can't even find a piece of the stock of either one of them."
-
-"It looks to me as though somebody did discover the cave, after all,"
-said Joe Hinman. "You can't make me believe that it blew itself up."
-
-"Nonsense!" exclaimed Harvey--and then he paused abruptly; for, of a
-sudden, there came sharply to his mind the white face of Tom Harris,
-peering in at the tent door, with a haggard, ghastly expression. He
-recalled how Tom had started back and nearly fallen at the sight of the
-crew lying still.
-
-"He was the first one at the tent, too," muttered Harvey to himself.
-
-"What's that?" asked Joe Hinman.
-
-"Nothing," said Harvey. "But you may be right, Joe. You may be right,
-after all. Come, let's all go out and look over the ground once more.
-There may be a few things yet, to save from the wreck."
-
-The explosion, strangely enough, had not injured a single member of the
-crew. Not a piece of the wreckage had struck the tent. Pieces of rock and
-bits of branches and boards lay on every hand about the camp, and a
-stone, torn from the bank, had crashed down on the bowsprit of the
-_Surprise_, breaking it short off, carrying away rigging and sails. There
-was also a hole broken in the yacht's deck by a falling piece of ledge.
-
-The crew, awakened from sound slumber by the awful crash and by the
-shower of earth and stones, had rushed out, frightened half out of their
-wits, and at an utter loss at first to know what had happened. The full
-discovery of what had occurred only served to deepen the mystery. How it
-had happened no one could tell. To be sure, they knew what had escaped
-the notice of Tom and Bob, that four lanterns in a corner of the cave
-were filled with kerosene oil, and that in another corner, in a hole
-under the floor, covered with a few pieces of board and a thin sprinkling
-of earth, were two kegs of blasting-powder.
-
-It had been a narrow escape for them. A hole was torn in the bank big
-enough to hold several yachts the size of the _Surprise_. Not a vestige
-remained to show that a cave had ever been dug there. Several boulders
-had been dislodged from the bank and carried bodily down to the water's
-edge, besides the one that had hit the bowsprit of the _Surprise_. Of the
-stuff that Tom and Bob had placed carefully outside the cave, not a scrap
-remained. Every bit of it must have been blown into the sea. But not a
-rock nor so much as a stick had struck the tent. Beyond being dazed for
-some moments by the shock of the explosion, not one of the crew was hurt.
-
-When they had made a second and unavailing search for anything that might
-have escaped the destruction, and some half-hour after the villagers had
-departed, the crew went back to the tent and laid themselves down again
-for a morning's nap. They were soon off to sleep, save one.
-
-As often as he closed his eyes, Jack Harvey could see, in his mind's eye,
-Tom Harris come again to the door of the tent; and he could see him start
-back and almost fall. Could Tom Harris have had anything to do with the
-explosion? And if so, how? It hardly seemed possible, but Harvey could
-not put the idea out of his head. Tom's frightened face looked in at him,
-in his troubled sleep that morning, and, long before his crew were awake
-again and stirring, he rose and stole out of the tent to the shore, where
-the cave had been.
-
-And so, while Tom and Bob rolled in on to their bunks that morning,
-thankful in their hearts that no harm had come to the crew, Jack Harvey
-was down there by the shore, examining the ground over and over again,
-every inch of it, from the place where the entrance to the cave had been
-to the place where the canoe had been made fast. Much of the bank had
-been torn away there, but where the canoe had been moored there was a
-spot for some few feet that was undisturbed. Jack Harvey, after studying
-the spot carefully, went back to camp. If he had found anything that
-surprised him, he did not, for the present, mention it to his crew.
-
-Jack Harvey was a curious mixture of good and bad qualities. His parents
-were wealthy, but uneducated and unrefined. They allowed him to have all
-the money he wished to spend, and permitted him to do pretty much as he
-pleased about everything. Harvey's father had been a miner, and had
-"struck it rich," after knocking about the California gold-fields for
-nearly a score of years. Because he had managed to get along well in the
-world without any education, and without the influence of any restraint,
-such as society imposes, he had a theory that it was the best thing for a
-boy to work out his own upbringing. As a consequence, his son was rarely
-thwarted in anything. Left to himself, Harvey, though not naturally bad,
-fell in with a rough, lawless class of boys, read only the cheapest kind
-of books, which inspired him to lead an idle, good-for-nothing life, and,
-as a result, went wild.
-
-He was strong and, among his associates, a leader. They gladly awarded
-him this distinction, as they were, for the most part, poor, and he spent
-his allowance freely. He was captain of a ball nine, for which he bought
-the uniforms and the necessary equipment; captain of his yacht's crew,
-and, in all things, their acknowledged leader. His companions came
-generally to be known as Harvey's crew.
-
-Tom and Bob had a mere speaking acquaintance with him, as they all
-attended the same school at home,--from which, however, Harvey was more
-often truant than present. Beyond that association they had nothing to do
-with him. There were four members of the yacht's crew, although that term
-was applied by the people of the town to some dozen or more boys. Of
-these four, Joe Hinman was a thin, hatchet-faced, shrewd-looking boy,
-whose father was employed by a railroad in some capacity that kept him
-much away from home; George Baker and Allan Harding were cousins, whose
-parents had a rather doubtful reputation, as dealers in second-hand goods
-and articles pawned, at a little shop in an obscure quarter of the town.
-Tim Reardon had no parents that he knew of, and earned an uncertain
-living, doing chores and working at odd jobs through the winter. In the
-summer, he was usually to be found aboard Harvey's yacht, where he was
-fairly content to do the drudgery, for the sake of the livelihood and the
-fun of yachting and camping.
-
-It was not the sort of companionship that a wise and careful parent would
-have chosen for his son, but they sufficed for Harvey, and no one
-interfered with him. These boys did as he said, and that was what he
-wanted.
-
-Nearly every one in the entire village had gone down to Harvey's camp in
-the next hour following the explosion. Curiously enough, however, Henry
-Burns was not of this number. He had jumped out of bed at the crash and
-the shock, and had hastily dressed and rushed down-stairs, ready to go
-with the crowd. For once, however, Mrs. Carlin got ahead of him.
-
-"Why, Henry Burns," she had exclaimed, catching sight of him as he dodged
-out of the door. "Where do you think you are going at this hour of the
-night, and you that was feeling so bad only a few hours ago. You're not
-going off through those woods to-night, not if I know it. You can just
-take yourself back to bed, if you don't want to be laid up with a sick
-spell."
-
-And Henry Burns, now that attention was thus publicly attracted to him,
-did not dare to steal out later and join the others, lest Mrs. Carlin
-should hear of it, and, perchance, become suspicious of him. So he went
-back unwillingly to bed, but not to sleep. He was wide-awake when the
-angry party returned. Listening from his window, he heard their
-description of the explosion and their impudent reception by Harvey's
-crew; and proceeded to draw his own conclusion from it all.
-
-The more he thought of it, the more his suspicion grew that, in some way,
-Tom or Bob, or both, had had a hand in the thing. Tom, indeed, had
-expressed his intention to Henry Burns of spying on the camp in his hunt
-to find the missing box; and, although it seemed a most unlikely hour for
-him to have gone down there, Henry Burns wisely conjectured that that was
-what he must have done.
-
-Accordingly, shortly after Henry Burns had arisen that morning, and after
-he had gathered from a few villagers who were abroad some fuller details
-of the night's adventures, he made his way to the camp on the point.
-There were no signs of life about the camp, and, softly opening the flap
-of the tent, he peered within. Tom and Bob lay stretched out, sound
-asleep.
-
-Henry Burns stepped noiselessly inside. He called them by name in a low
-tone, but they did not awaken.
-
-"Last night's excitement was too much for one of them, at least, I
-guess," was his comment. And then he added: "If my suspicions are true,
-their fun lasted later than mine, and was far more exciting--but I'll
-find that out."
-
-There was a camp-stool beside each bunk, upon which Tom and Bob had
-thrown their clothes before turning in. Henry Burns quietly removed the
-clothing from these chairs, made them into a bundle, and, tucking the
-bundle under his arm, walked out of the tent and lay down on the grass,
-just outside.
-
-It seemed to him as though another hour had passed before he heard a
-creaking of one of the bunks, and a voice, which he recognized as Bob's,
-said: "Hulloa, there, Tom, wake up!"
-
-"Ay, ay," growled Tom, sleepily, but made no move.
-
-Again Bob's voice: "Say, Tom?"
-
-No answer.
-
-"Tom--hulloa, old fellow--come, let's get up. It's late."
-
-"All right, all right, Bob, so it is." And Tom roused up on an elbow and
-rubbed his eyes. Then he gave a prodigious yawn.
-
-"Whew!" he exclaimed. "What a night I had of it. I don't wonder we slept
-late, do you?"
-
-"Well, hardly," answered Bob. "My! But I can hear that explosion go off
-now, it seems to me. And wasn't that an awful sight when the flame shot
-up against the sky? I'll never forget it as long as I live."
-
-"We'll have to keep our eyes on Harvey after this for awhile," said Tom.
-"Hulloa!" he exclaimed, suddenly, as they tumbled out on to the floor.
-"Where are our clothes? We left them right here when we turned in, didn't
-we?"
-
-The boys looked at each other and stared in astonishment.
-
-"Of course we did," answered Bob.
-
-"What can it mean?" gasped Tom.
-
-"Hope to die if I can guess," said Bob. "It's plain enough, though, that
-some one has been in here while we were asleep and cleaned out our
-wardrobe. Not a thing left. You don't suppose that Harvey--"
-
-"Nonsense," interrupted Tom. "It's that young scoundrel of a Joe Warren.
-He's always up to his monkey-shines. It's some of his doings. He was the
-one, mind you, that proposed yesterday that we carry our change of good
-clothing up to his cottage for safe-keeping. Here we are, now, without a
-rag to put on."
-
-"I suppose he thinks we'll have to march up to his cottage in blankets,
-like Indians," said Bob. "Well, if it comes to that, I'll stay right here
-till night. You don't catch me parading around in a blanket in the
-daytime, to be laughed at by everybody."
-
-"We'll have to pay him up for this," said Tom.
-
-At this moment Henry Burns appeared at the doorway.
-
-"I have some cheap second-hand clothes here," he said. "They're pretty
-well worn out, and you can have them for a small consideration, seeing
-that you need them so bad. I want the money for my poor mother, who's
-sick at home with the smallpox."
-
-"Scoundrel!" yelled Tom.
-
-"Pirate!" muttered Bob.
-
-They rushed fiercely at Henry Burns, who, however, smiling serenely,
-still held on tightly to the bundle of clothing.
-
-"Pay me my price for them, and you can have them all," he said.
-
-"How much?" asked Tom.
-
-"Wait till we try them on and see if they still fit," said Bob.
-
-"My price," answered Henry Burns, depositing the bundle on a chair and
-seating himself upon an end of one of the bunks, "is that you tell me how
-you came so near to blowing up Jack Harvey's camp last night."
-
-It was a long shot on his part, but it went straight to the mark. There
-was an awkward silence for almost a minute. Finally Tom said:
-
-"There's no use trying to keep a secret from him, Bob. He knows half
-already. We may as well tell him all, and see what he thinks of it."
-
-"Fire away, Tom," said Bob. "No one was injured, anyway, so no great harm
-can come of it."
-
-So Tom related to Henry Burns the story of the night's adventure. Henry
-listened with the greatest interest.
-
-"I'd have given a good deal," he said, "to see Jack Harvey when he found
-his cave blown up, with all their spoils along with it."
-
-When the story was finished, however, he was inclined to treat the matter
-more seriously than they had supposed he would.
-
-"I'm afraid it's a bad scrape to be in," he said at length. "From what I
-have heard about our friend Harvey, I judge he is not one of the kind to
-let a thing of this sort go without paying somebody back for it. And I
-believe he is as sure to find out who blew up that cave as I am that I am
-sitting here."
-
-"How can that be?" asked Bob.
-
-"I can't say," replied Henry Burns; "but if you keep your eyes open, you
-will see that he suspects you. I'll warrant if we could see Jack Harvey
-now, we should see him out examining every inch of the shore, looking at
-the rocks on the beach for any paint that might be scraped off your
-canoe, and all such things as that. He is a shrewd one, and, when he has
-once satisfied himself that you and Tom wrecked his cave, why, I wouldn't
-give a fig for your camp here,--that is, unless you propose to stay at
-home all the time to guard it."
-
-Strange to say, if they could have seen Jack Harvey just then, they would
-have witnessed a most startling confirmation of Henry Burns's words. For
-Jack Harvey, at that moment, was at the shore once more. He was examining
-every inch of it. He was scrutinizing every rock along the beach. He was
-out among the ledges, looking carefully along their sides. He was
-searching here, and he was searching there,--but what he found he neither
-confided to his crew nor to any one else, but kept locked for the present
-in his own breast.
-
-"I believe Henry is right," said Tom. "And it isn't the most pleasant
-prospect to think that our camp may be overhauled at any time, whenever
-we happen to be away, and perhaps disappear altogether some dark night,
-if we happen to be caught out on the bay or down the island. But what to
-do I don't see, for the life of me,--except to keep as quiet as possible
-about it."
-
-"I may not be right," suggested Henry Burns, "but my advice would be to
-do just the opposite,--that is, when you once feel certain that Harvey is
-hunting for you.
-
-"Tell Harvey," continued Henry, "that you blew up his camp, and how you
-did it, and why. Tell him what you saw in that cave. Ask him point-blank
-if he would want the villagers to know what you saw in there. Strike a
-bargain with him to call it even. He will be glad to do it; whereas, if
-he finds you and Bob out, without your knowing what he is up to, he will
-watch night and day for a chance to harm you."
-
-"The fact is," added Henry Burns, as he arose to go, "what with Jack
-Harvey and Colonel Witham on the war-path after you, you are likely to
-have quite a lively summer before you get through. So keep your eyes open
-and look out. And remember, when in trouble, always apply to H. A. Burns,
-care Colonel Witham--always ready to serve you." And Henry Burns walked
-away, whistling.
-
-Tom and Bob went about their breakfast preparations, looking rather
-serious for a time; but a hearty meal made them look at the matter
-somewhat less seriously.
-
-"Henry Burns is quite apt to be right about things, so the Warrens say,"
-commented Tom, after awhile, as they were finishing their meal. "But I
-guess he likes to talk some, too, just to make an impression. I don't see
-how Harvey can find out who blew up his cave in a hundred years, if we
-only keep quiet and don't give it away ourselves."
-
-"I'm not so sure," answered Bob. "Those things do get out."
-
-Jack Harvey, in the meantime, having completed a careful survey of the
-shore, and either finding or not finding what he sought for, went back to
-his camp and crew. Toward noon, however, he left his camp, and a little
-later Tom saw him coming up along the shore.
-
-When he came to where the canoe lay on the beach, Harvey paused and
-examined it closely. Then, as though to test its weight, he lifted it up
-on his broad shoulders, and then set it down on the beach again, this
-time bottom up.
-
-Tom and Bob started down to the shore at this, but, before either they or
-Harvey had spoken, they had seen plainly that which, perhaps, Harvey had
-looked for, a long broad scratch upon the bottom of the canoe, near the
-middle, where the fresh paint had been scraped off.
-
-"Hulloa, there," said Harvey, as they approached. "That's a fine canoe
-you've got there. Guess I'll have to get the governor to buy me one. I
-saw your tent yesterday, but didn't have a chance to come around. You
-fellows got ahead of me, by coming over last night--with the crowd."
-
-"Yes," answered Bob. "We expected to find you all blown into the sea.
-What was the matter over at your camp?"
-
-"Why, between you and me," replied Harvey, eying them cautiously as he
-spoke, "I think some one of the crew did it, as a joke. They're up to
-that sort of thing, you know. They'd just as lieve do it as not, any one
-of them. Like as not that young Tim Reardon did it, because I make him
-lug water, and don't let up on him when he has lazy spells. To tell you
-the truth, we had a little powder stored away in a hole under a tree, and
-I guess one of them touched it off."
-
-Harvey tried to speak carelessly; but there was an angry light in his
-eyes and an expression around his mouth which would not be concealed, and
-which boded no good for somebody, and this was not lost on Tom and Bob.
-
-"Come up to the camp, won't you?" asked Tom. Harvey first declined, as
-though it had not been his intention to stop, and then accepted, and the
-three went toward the tent. On the way there Tom found a chance to say to
-Bob, "I guess Henry Burns was right, wasn't he, Bob?" And Bob answered,
-"Yes."
-
-"Snug quarters you have here," said Harvey, as they entered the tent.
-"Tight and dry,--and bunks, too. We can't beat these accommodations
-aboard the _Surprise_. And here's camp-chairs, like a steam-yacht or a
-cottage. You'll be having pictures on the walls next, and a carpet on the
-floor,--and then you won't allow each other to have mud on your boots."
-
-Harvey was still watching them sharply as he spoke, and may have made the
-last remark with a purpose, inasmuch as the boots of both Tom and Bob
-were begrimed and smeared with the clay from the bank near Harvey's camp,
-and their clothes, for that matter, were muddy in spots.
-
-"Sure enough," answered Tom, "we have things as shipshape as we can.
-We've got a camp-kit here that can't be beaten on the island. Maybe you
-would be interested to have a look at it." So saying, Tom deliberately
-unlocked the big packing-case and threw back the cover.
-
-"There," cried Tom, pointing to the box that had been stolen, "what do
-you think of that?"
-
-Harvey drew back quickly, and looked as though he were about to strike
-Tom a blow, while his face flushed angrily. Bob sprang quickly from his
-seat on one of the bunks, and he and Tom stood confronting Harvey. If the
-latter had intended to strike a blow, he changed his mind and did not do
-it. Instead, he gave a half-laugh and said:
-
-"That's what I came up to see you about. The fact is, I have known you
-fellows blew up our cave ever since I saw your face"--looking at Tom--"at
-the door of our tent last night. Then I found, too, where your canoe had
-landed on the edge of the shore, and just where that big scratch was
-made. The paint is on the rocks yet. Now I don't think you fellows used
-me square, though I know you did it because you thought we stole your
-box--"
-
-"Which you did," interrupted Tom.
-
-Again the quick flush in Harvey's face, and again the gesture as though
-he would strike Tom a blow; but he did not do it, as he had refrained
-before.
-
-"No, there's where you are wrong," he said; "though I don't deny that one
-of the crew took it,--not knowing it was yours. They wouldn't one of them
-take anything from you."
-
-"Which is not true," said Tom, quietly.
-
-This was more than Harvey could stand. With clenched fist, he rushed at
-Tom, aiming a heavy blow at his face, and crying, as he did so: "I lie,
-do I? Then take that!"
-
-Tom partially avoided the blow by stepping back and guarding his face
-with one arm. The blow fell short, striking him near the shoulder. At the
-same time, however, he tripped over the packing-case, and that, with the
-force of the blow, sent him over backwards, so that he fell all in a heap
-in one corner of the tent.
-
-Harvey darted for the door, to make his escape; but Bob sprang at him and
-the two clinched. Harvey was larger and more than a match for either one
-of them, and, with a quick twist, threw Bob violently to the floor. But
-the latter clung to him and brought him down, too. Then, before Harvey
-could break Bob's hold, Tom had recovered himself and thrown himself upon
-him. He rolled Harvey over, and the next moment he and Bob had him
-securely pinned to the floor.
-
-"Now," said Tom, as they held him fast, "we are not going to hurt you,
-Jack Harvey, because we are no such cowards; but I've got something to
-say to you which it will be for your advantage to listen to.
-
-"In the first place, let me tell you that you are a coward and as good as
-a thief. You didn't steal our box because one of your crew did it for you
-and saved you the trouble; but you knew it was stolen from us, and would
-have taken it yourself if you had had the chance. You need not tell us
-that your crew would not steal from us, for we know better, and so do
-you. In the second place, I want to tell you that we blew up your cave
-without intending to do more than burn some of the things in it. The rest
-we took out,--though it doesn't make much difference now what our
-intentions were.
-
-"And, last of all, let me tell you that neither you nor your crew are
-going to try to be revenged on us. Why? Because you don't dare to. It
-wouldn't be healthy for any of you, if it became known in the village
-what was in that cave, and nobody knows that better than you. Not that
-Bob and I intend to tell, ever, unless you give us cause to. But let me
-tell you that it won't do for you to play any tricks on us.
-
-"Please don't forget that neither you nor a single one of your crew dares
-to disturb so much as a rope around this camp. Now you can get up."
-
-Harvey rose, white with rage, and stood for a moment, as though undecided
-whether or not to continue the unequal combat; but his better judgment
-prevailed, and he walked slowly out of the tent, pausing at the door long
-enough to say:
-
-"You need not have any fear of our troubling you or your camp. You have
-been too smart for us, and we shall steer clear of you after this.
-
-"In fact," he added, sneeringly, "any little thing we can do for you at
-any time, just let us know. We shall think a great deal of two such smart
-fellows as you, I assure you." And so saying, he left them.
-
-"Sorry we can't say as much for you," Bob called out after him, and was
-half-sorry for the words the next moment; for it was foolish to increase
-an enmity which could only lead to trouble.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
- SQUIRE BRACKETT'S DOG
-
-
-The island got a respite of at least a week, after the explosion, from
-excitement of any sort. A calm like that of the primeval days before the
-"boom" pervaded all the settlement. But it was not to endure. One morning
-a little fishing-schooner, which had fallen into the hands of Squire
-Brackett, through a mortgage which he had foreclosed upon a poor skipper
-across the bay, and which was now lying at anchor in the harbour, was
-found painted with broad stripes of blood red, and flying the skull and
-cross-bones at the masthead, a veritable pirate craft.
-
-The squire was never able to discover whether the authors of this piece
-of mischief were the boys or some of his own townsmen, who, indignant at
-his seizure of the only means of livelihood belonging to the unfortunate
-skipper, had roundly denounced Squire Brackett for his meanness. However,
-the incident resulted in the squire leaving on the boat one day for the
-city of Benton to make a purchase.
-
-What the squire purchased he brought back with him the next day. And, as
-it is a matter of passing interest how his purchase arrived at the island
-and how brief a time it remained there, it shall be here recorded. By the
-same boat there came to the village an individual whose arrival made no
-stir, but who remained long enough to create the greatest excitement the
-village had ever known.
-
-The arrival of the steamer from Benton was an event of great interest
-daily, for it brought not only mysterious packages, bundles, and messages
-from fathers whose business kept them in the city, but now and then a new
-face, which was duly scrutinized and commented upon by the summer
-colonists before its possessor had crossed the gangplank.
-
-So that on this day when Squire Brackett returned to his native isle
-there were many gathered upon the wharf, though, it is hardly necessary
-to say, not for the purpose of welcoming his return. Yet one might
-readily believe the squire thought otherwise; since, as the steamer
-neared the wharf, this self-important individual, arrayed in a suit of
-shining black, with a great deal of staring shirt-front, and with an
-enormous slouch-hat surmounting his ponderous head, seemed the most
-conspicuous person aboard.
-
-The squire stood nearest the gangway, and, indeed, it looked from a
-distance as though the other passengers, in recognition of the greatness
-of this island magnate, had drawn respectfully back a little distance, to
-wait till he should have gone ashore ere they approached the railing.
-
-As the steamer came nearer, however, the reason for this seeming
-deference on their part became apparent. It was plainly not due so much
-to any awe inspired by the squire as it was to fear,--fear of the
-squire's purchase. The squire's purchase was as ugly and vicious looking
-a bulldog as ever walked on four legs. The squire held the dog by a stout
-piece of cord, which was wound several times about his wrist.
-
-The dog and the squire, being each in equally ill-humour, may have found
-their companionship agreeable. Certain it was that the squire was the
-only person whom the dog did not snarl and snap at. It growled and
-snapped at every one, and even snarled and showed its teeth at the
-good-natured cook aboard the steamer, who had offered it a scrap of meat.
-
-This surliness on the part of his new acquisition had particularly
-pleased the squire, who argued from it that here was an incorruptible
-beast, that would meet in the same spirit any such advances upon the part
-of strangers when it should be duly installed as guardian of his
-farmhouse.
-
-The squire would be magnanimous on this occasion, however, and, despite
-the fact that the crowd on the wharf looked to him, as it always did in
-his eyes, like invaders of his domain, he gave a bow accompanied by a
-sweeping gesture of his hand, presumably intended to be a patronizing
-greeting, which should include everybody, and nobody in particular, at
-once.
-
-Then the steamer made its landing. It was not always an easy matter here,
-for the tide at certain times ran swift, and seemed to strive fiercely to
-drive the boat away from the wharf. Therefore, when the steamer was as
-yet at some distance from the wharf, a deck-hand at the bow skilfully let
-fly a coil of small rope, which unwound in the air and was caught by a
-man standing on the wharf. To an end of this rope was attached the usual
-heavy hawser, which was then drawn on to the wharf by means of the small
-rope, and the bight thrown over a spiling. In like manner the other big
-hawser was drawn up astern on to the wharf.
-
-When things were done shipshape, it was the rule of the steamer that the
-small rope should be coiled again and at once thrown back to the boat
-while one end was still fast to the wharf, so that when the hawser was
-cast off from the spiling it could be drawn aboard by the small rope,
-without its splashing down into the water and getting wet.
-
-But things were more often done hurriedly than shipshape at the Southport
-landing. The steamer's crew had all they could do usually to land freight
-and get it out quickly enough, so that the boat could go on down the bay
-without losing time. The line thrown to the wharf was usually caught by
-the village storekeeper, who had little time to spare, or by whatever man
-or boy happened to be standing near at hand. The boat's rule was seldom
-obeyed. Scarcely any one ever took the trouble to coil up the small rope
-and throw it back. When the hawsers were cast off they fell into the
-water, regardless of the fact that they thereby got wet and became
-heavier, dragging the small ropes after them, and were hauled aboard as
-the boat steamed away.
-
-The steamer having, on this occasion, been made fast to the wharf and the
-gangplank put out, Squire Brackett crossed it, dragging his purchase
-behind him,--the purchase skulking very unwillingly across the plank and
-showing its teeth at the crowd upon the wharf.
-
-The squire hated and despised boys, and made it a point to ignore them
-whenever it was possible. For this very reason they delighted to annoy
-him by hailing him whenever they met him. Young Joe Warren had a way of
-driving the squire nearly into fits by pretending to mistake him for one
-Captain Kendrick, who was the bitterest enemy the squire had, and then
-always apologizing for his mistake by explaining to the squire that he
-could not tell them apart.
-
-"Good morning, Squire Brackett, glad to see you back again!" cried Henry
-Burns, in the heartiest fashion imaginable, as the squire stepped on to
-the wharf.
-
-"Humph! Morning--morning," grunted the squire, as he eyed Henry Burns
-suspiciously.
-
-Henry Burns smiled most affably, as though the squire had been his
-dearest friend and adviser.
-
-"Why, how do you do, squire?" said George Warren, cordially.
-
-Squire Brackett scowled angrily at him, but answered, "How d'ye do?" as
-short as he could.
-
-Just then young Joe made his appearance.
-
-"How are you, Captain Kendrick?" he bawled, loud enough to be heard all
-over the wharf.
-
-The crowd began to smile, and young Joe added, hastily:
-
-"Oh, I beg pardon, Squire Brackett--always take you for Cap'n
-Kendrick--strange how you do look so much alike."
-
-"You little idiot," yelled the choleric squire, "I'd Cap'n Kendrick you
-with a rawhide, if I had the say of you,--insulting an honest man with a
-name like that,--every one of you ought to be in State prison. And you,
-you're the worst one of all, Jack Harvey," pointing to the latter, who
-had just come upon the wharf. "And you, too!" shaking his fist at Tom and
-Bob. "You're sly, but you'll get caught yet. You're a pack of young
-rascals, every one of you. Don't any of you come around my house, if you
-don't want to be chewed up. Here, you brute! Quit that!"
-
-The dog had snapped viciously at a child that ran past, causing her to
-scream with fear.
-
-Just then the freight-agent called out to the squire:
-
-"You'll have to come in here and see about this freight of yours," he
-said. "It's all mixed up. And don't bring that dog in here, or the crew
-may take him for a piece of freight and run a truck against him."
-
-At one corner of the freight-house on the wharf was a big iron ring, to
-which the squire tied the dog.
-
-"I wouldn't advise anybody to meddle with him," he said; but the advice
-seemed hardly necessary, for the dog showed its teeth and sprang savagely
-at any one who ventured to come near.
-
-There were some expressions of indignation that such a dangerous brute
-should be brought to the island.
-
-Every one did keep as far out of the dog's way as possible, excepting Tim
-Reardon, who, after a whispered consultation with Jack Harvey, after
-which the latter disappeared behind the freight-house, seated himself
-just out of the dog's reach, and caused that animal to froth at the mouth
-and nearly strangle itself in trying to get loose, by pointing a finger
-at the dog and making a loud hissing noise between his teeth.
-
-Not content with this form of annoyance, Tim Reardon varied it now and
-again by darting a hand out at the dog, as though in an attempt to seize
-him by the throat. To which the maddened animal, with true bulldog
-ferocity, responded with savage rushes as far as the rope would permit,
-his wide-open jaws fairly dripping with rage and disappointment.
-
-If there was any design on the boy's part to distract the dog's attention
-from what Jack Harvey was doing at the corner of the freight-house, to
-which the dog was tied, it succeeded admirably. Moreover, it is certain
-that, when Harvey reappeared, Tim stopped teasing the brute, and he and
-Harvey walked around to the rear of the freight-house.
-
-The freight-house was situated almost at the end of the wharf on its
-seaward side, so near to the edge of the wharf that there was only room
-for a single person to walk along on the outside, and that at the risk of
-losing one's balance and falling off the wharf. The ring to which the dog
-was tied was on the side near the end, and was not visible to those
-standing on the front of the wharf. Any one going around to the further
-side of the freight-house at this moment might have seen Harvey and Tim
-standing there,--Harvey nearest the ring and holding a knife in his hand.
-
-The steamer in landing had made a complete circuit in the harbour, and
-had come alongside the wharf with her head pointing out into the bay, so
-that now, as Captain Chase called out "All aboard," and gave orders to
-cast off bow and stern lines, the boat was ready to steam directly away
-from the wharf. The gangplanks were drawn in. There was a tinkling of
-bells; a great commotion as the steamer's wheels began to revolve
-rapidly; a general waving of handkerchiefs from the wharf to those who
-were bound farther down the bay; the steamer began to glide away from the
-wharf, when suddenly somebody shrieked:
-
-"The dog! The dog! Run! Run! He's broken loose."
-
-And before the crowd had time to scatter, the dog, infuriated with the
-tormenting it had received at the hands of Tim Reardon, dashed toward it.
-Men, women, and children fled in terror. Squire Brackett, who came
-running out of the freight-house, did not dare face the dog, but dodged
-back into the freight-house and slammed the door shut, in a cold sweat of
-fear.
-
-The boys, most of them, rushed for points of safety, clambering up the
-ends of the spiling that jutted above the floor of the wharf, and young
-Joe and Tom Harris, being at the very edge of the wharf, and having no
-other means of escape, and nothing to defend themselves with, dropped off
-the wharf into the water and swam to shore. Several of the other boys and
-some men scrambled about for clubs to ward off the brute's fierce rush.
-
-Among these latter was Henry Burns. Realizing on the instant that to
-attempt to flee was worse than hopeless, he had glanced about for
-something to defend himself with, and had seized upon a broken piece of
-oar. Grasping it with both hands, he stood, calmly awaiting the attack.
-The dog, seeing him right in his path, rushed at him, and when within a
-yard of the boy suddenly gave a spring, as though to seize him by the
-throat.
-
-Henry Burns, summoning all his strength, aimed a terrific sweeping blow
-at the dog, but it missed its mark. Meeting no obstruction, the force of
-the blow swung the boy completely around, so that he lost his balance and
-fell sprawling upon the wharf, while the piece of oar flew from his hands
-and landed far out in the water.
-
-A strange thing had happened. The crowd, pausing breathlessly in the
-midst of flight, had seen with horror the dog spring at Henry Burns; but
-the animal's leap had a most extraordinary termination. All at once the
-dog was jerked violently backward through the air, and fell heavily on
-the wharf, yelping with surprise and fright. Then it was dragged rapidly
-across the wharf, and the crowd yelled with derision as they saw that the
-rope by which the dog had been tied to the ring had been unfastened or
-cut from the ring, and had been fastened to the rope which had been
-thrown from the steamer, and the other end of which was made fast to the
-steamer's hawser.
-
-As the boat steamed away it drew the rope after it. There was no possible
-escape for the dog. Struggling as best it could, barking and yelping, and
-snapping madly at the rope, it braced itself for one instant on the edge
-of the wharf, and then was dragged over and fell, still struggling, to
-the water below. The steamer kept on its way a short distance, and then
-stopped. The rope was drawn in by a deck-hand and the dog hauled to the
-railing of the steamer, but it was not taken aboard, for nobody on board
-wanted a dead dog. The deck-hand cut the rope, and the body splashed into
-the water.
-
-Thus perished the squire's bulldog, unmourned, save for the squire
-himself, who raged about the wharf, looking for some boy whom he might
-accuse of the trick, and vowing untold vengeance upon the perpetrators of
-it. But, one and all, they had wisely dispersed, the guilty and the
-innocent alike, and the squire was soon left alone in his wrath.
-
-Who had done the thing? The crowd did not know, for it had been too
-excited to notice that Jack Harvey and Tim Reardon had emerged from
-behind the freight-house just at the critical moment when the dog had
-sprung at Henry Burns.
-
-As for Henry Burns, he was the hero of the hour.
-
-There had been on the whole so much excitement attending the squire's
-arrival that few had noticed a stranger who had come ashore soon after
-Squire Brackett. He had not waited on the wharf, but had gone directly to
-the hotel. There Henry Burns met him later; for the man sat at Colonel
-Witham's table, as that was the only one then available.
-
-The new arrival was the sort of guest to please the colonel, for he was
-extremely quiet. He walked only with the aid of a cane, and then,
-apparently, with great effort, stopping frequently to rest. He told them
-he had been very ill; that his health had broken down with overwork, and
-he had accordingly tried cruising along the coast. His friends had left
-him up the river some days before, and would call for him.
-
-He was a man a little under middle age, of medium height and thick-set,
-with black hair and a pale, smooth-shaven face. He was evidently somewhat
-a man of the world and had travelled abroad, for, seated before the
-fireplace in the office that evening, he talked for some time of his
-travels.
-
-But there were other things of more interest to the boarders than this
-quiet, reserved stranger, who did not play cards and who hobbled about
-with a cane. There was, above all, a morning paper from town, which
-bristled with startling head-lines, descriptive of a robbery of the
-residence of one of the richest men in the town. It told how the thieves,
-three in number, had entered the house where Mr. Curtis, the owner, was
-sleeping alone, in the absence of his family; how they had put a pistol
-to his head and made him get up and open a safe, from which they had
-taken several hundred dollars in money and a jewel-case containing a
-diamond necklace and other gems to the value of several thousand dollars.
-
-The jewels, it said, were the property of Mrs. Curtis, and most of them
-had been bridal presents. A reward of $500 was offered for their return
-or for information leading to the arrest of any one of the robbers.
-
-The article stated further that Mr. Curtis was positive he could identify
-the man who subsequently bound and gagged him, his mask having but
-partially concealed his face. He was, he said, a man of about medium
-height, with black hair, black moustache, and heavy black beard,
-broad-shouldered, thick-set, and unusually active and powerful.
-
-All this, as it was read aloud, threw the guests into the greatest
-possible excitement, as a great part of them were from the very town and
-knew the Curtis family, by reputation if not personally.
-
-It did not, of course, interest the stranger guest, for he nodded in his
-chair and nearly dozed off several times during the reading. Still, when
-the guests had dispersed, he picked up the paper from a chair and took it
-with him to his room.
-
-It was the very next night following that of his arrival that Henry Burns
-met with a surprise.
-
-On the night in question there was a full moon about half-past ten
-o'clock, and, as Henry had agreed with Tom and Bob to meet them at their
-tent, he opened his window, stepped out on to the ledge and started to
-climb to the roof.
-
-Mackerel had struck in at the western bay, and the boys had planned to
-paddle down the island that night, carry their canoe across the short
-strip of land that saved the island from being cut into almost equal
-halves by the sea, launch it again in the western bay, and paddle around
-to where the Warren boys' sloop lay anchored in Fish Hawk's Cove. Then
-they were all to try for mackerel early in the morning.
-
-Henry Burns stepped softly out, grasped the lightning-rod, and, with a
-quickness that would have amazed the worthy Mrs. Carlin, scrambled to the
-ledge over the top of his window. There he paused a moment for breath,
-and then climbed up the lightning-rod, hand over hand, and gained the
-roof.
-
-He had proceeded then across the roof but a little ways, when he heard
-suddenly, almost directly beneath him, the sound of footsteps. Some one
-was coming up the stairs that led to the roof.
-
-Henry Burns had barely time to conceal himself behind a chimney when the
-trap-door in the roof was softly opened, and he saw the head and
-shoulders of a man emerge through the opening. Henry Burns lay flat on
-the roof, in the dark shadow cast by the chimney. The moon shone full in
-the man's face, and Henry Burns saw, to his amazement, that it was the
-stranger guest. The sickly, weak expression in the man's face was gone,
-and in its stead there was a sinister, bold look, which seemed far more
-natural to his powerful physique.
-
-Suddenly the man, with the strength and ease of an athlete, sprang
-lightly out on to the roof. He still carried his cane, but he had no use
-for it, save to clutch it in one hand more after the manner of a cudgel
-than a cane.
-
-Henry Burns, for once in his life, was afraid. It was all so strange and
-incomprehensible.
-
-Once upon the roof, the man straightened himself up, threw out his chest
-and squared back his broad shoulders. He was erect in stature, without
-the suggestion of a stoop. He seemed to exult in the freedom of the
-place, like one who had been kept in some confinement. When he walked
-across the roof to the edge facing the sea, there was no suggestion of
-any limp in his gait. It was quick and firm, but noiseless and almost
-catlike.
-
-What did it mean? Henry Burns thought of the robbery. Could the man have
-had anything to do with that? Why had he pretended to be weak and ill?
-Why had he come to this out-of-the-way place, pretending that he was an
-invalid? Surely he could have no designs upon any one on the island.
-There was no house there that offered inducement to a robber, if the man
-were one.
-
-It must be that his coming was an attempt to hide himself away--to
-secrete himself. But why? The description of the robber that had bound
-Mr. Curtis--did that tally with the appearance of this man? Broad
-shoulders, medium height, active, powerful,--all these agreed. But the
-black moustache and heavy beard. The stranger's face was smoothly shaven.
-That transformation, however, could have been quickly effected.
-
-One thing was certain. It would not be well that this man, a pretended
-invalid, but strong, and armed with a heavy cane, that had suddenly
-become transformed from a cripple's staff to a cudgel, who could but have
-some dark motive in thus disguising and secreting himself, should find
-himself watched and his secret discovered. Henry Burns crouched closer in
-the shadow of the chimney, and hardly dared to breathe. The evil that he
-had so accidentally uncovered in the man, his own helplessness compared
-with the other's strength, and the dangerous situation, there upon the
-house-top, made him afraid. If they had been upon the ground he would
-have feared less.
-
-The man scanned the moonlit waters of the bay long and earnestly. His
-survey done, he paced a few times back and forth, swinging the cane, and
-then, stealing noiselessly to the doorway, disappeared down the stairs,
-closing the trap-door after him.
-
-Henry Burns lost little time in descending to the ground. On the way to
-the boys' camp that night he made two resolves: first, that he would keep
-to himself, for the present, at least, the stranger's secret; second,
-that, whatever that secret was, he would find it out if any clue was to
-be had upon that island. The second resolution, he thought, rather
-included the first, since, the greater the number of those who knew of
-the stranger's secret, the greater the chances of his suspicions being
-aroused.
-
-Another thing that disturbed Henry Burns not a little was the knowledge
-that his excursions over the roof were now attended with greater risk
-than ever. It would not do to encounter the stranger there unexpectedly.
-What might not the man, suddenly aroused, and desperate, as Henry Burns
-believed him to be, do to him, if he found himself discovered? A fall
-from such a height must mean instant death, and who was there to suspect
-that he had not fallen, if he should be found next day lying upon the
-ground?
-
-In the future he must know whether the roof were occupied or not before
-he ventured upon it, and especially must he be careful when returning
-late at night.
-
-Henry Burns resolved to keep the man's secret for a time, for the reason
-that he was firmly convinced he had not come to the island to commit any
-wrong there, but to hide away. The island offered every advantage for the
-latter, and no inducement for the former. The man's design certainly was
-to secrete himself. Still, Henry Burns had no intention of letting the
-man escape from the island. He would watch also for those friends that
-the man had said were to come for him with their yacht, and he would make
-sure that they did not sail away again. Though but a boy, the stranger's
-secret was in dangerous hands, if he had but known it. And yet luck was
-to effect more than Henry Burns's scheming.
-
-Tom and Bob were waiting impatiently when Henry Burns arrived at the
-tent. They launched the canoe, the three embarked, and soon left the tent
-and then the village behind. They glided swiftly along the picturesque
-shore till they came at length to the narrows; here they carried the
-canoe across and launched it again in the western bay. In an hour from
-the time they had left the tent, they had come alongside the sloop
-_Spray_ in Fish Hawk's Cove, and the Warren boys had sleepily made room
-for them in the cabin.
-
-It was crowded for them all there, and it may have been for that reason
-that Henry Burns did not sleep soundly,--either that, or because of the
-figure of a man that he could not drive from his mind, and that appeared
-to him, half-dreaming and half-awake, as a figure that hobbled along,
-stooping and bent, but which suddenly sprang up before him, lithe and
-threatening, and brandishing in his hand a cudgel that looked like a
-cane.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
- THE HAUNTED HOUSE
-
-
-At four o'clock next morning, when Arthur Warren tried to rouse the other
-boys, they were loath to turn out. It was warm inside, under the
-blankets, and the sea air outside was cool and damp. Out in the cockpit
-Arthur lighted an oil-stove, which they always carried aboard, made the
-coffee in a big pot, and set it on to boil. Then he called the sleepers
-in the cabin again.
-
-"Come you, Art, shut up out there! How do you expect any one can sleep,
-with you bawling out in that fashion?"
-
-This was from George Warren, whose voice denoted that he was only about
-half-awake.
-
-"Don't want you to sleep any more," answered Arthur. "Want you to get up
-and fish."
-
-"Don't care to fish," said George, still only half-awake.
-
-"Well," persisted Arthur, "may I inquire what you did come over here
-for?"
-
-"Certainly you may. I came over here to sleep. I like the air over here.
-Now, please don't disturb us any more, Arthur. You can be decent, you
-know, when you've a mind to be." And with this request, drowsily mumbled,
-George pulled the blanket comfortably about him and settled back for
-another nap.
-
-At this juncture, however, his brother poked his head in at the
-companionway and yelled at the top of his lungs:
-
-"Hulloa, there! Hulloa, I say! There's a school of mackerel breaking off
-the point. Wake up, every lazy lubber aboard!"
-
-"Say, Art, you're a mean scoundrel," said George Warren, emerging once
-more from the blankets. "You know there isn't a mackerel in sight. I'll
-be just fool enough to look out of the window, though, so you can laugh,
-so get ready." And George looked sleepily out of the little cabin window.
-
-He had no sooner done so, however, than he sprang up, exclaiming,
-excitedly:
-
-"There they are, sure enough. Boys, get up! Get up! There's a school of
-mackerel breaking off the point, as sure as we're alive."
-
-The boys needed no further urging. They dressed and scrambled out on
-deck. Not far away from the sloop could be seen plainly that tiny
-chop-sea which is caused by the breaking of a school of mackerel. The
-calm surface of the water was broken there by a series of miniature
-ripples which could not be mistaken. The fish were there, but would they
-bite?
-
-"They are coming this way," said Arthur. "We can soon reach them with the
-throw-bait. We shall not have to leave the sloop."
-
-Hastily they got the bait out. It was a bucket filled with scraps of fish
-and clams, chopped fine and mixed with salt water. Taking a long-handled
-dipper, Arthur half-filled it with the bait and threw it as far as he
-could out toward the school of fish.
-
-The mackerel seized upon it greedily. From the sloop the boys could see
-them dart through the water after it as it slowly sank. The water was
-fairly alive with fish, ravenously hungry.
-
-"Hurrah!" cried Arthur. "They're hungry as sharks. Get the lines out,
-quick."
-
-In a twinkling every boy had a line overboard; but, to their
-disappointment, not a fish would bite. They still seized the throw-bait
-that was cast out, but not one of them would take a baited hook.
-
-"If that isn't a regular mackerel trick, I'll eat my bait," said George
-Warren. "Cap'n Sam said mackerel would often act that way, though I never
-saw them when they wouldn't bite before. He says they will play around a
-boat for hours and not touch a hook, and, all of a sudden, they'll
-commence and bite as though they were starving."
-
-The boy's words were unexpectedly verified at this moment by a sudden
-twitch at his line and by corresponding twitches at all the other lines.
-The fish had begun biting in earnest. The next moment the boys had three
-or four aboard, handsome fellows, striped green and black, changing to a
-bluish shade, and soon the cockpit seemed alive with them.
-
-It was new sport for Tom and Bob, but they soon learned to tend two
-lines, one in each hand; to drop one and haul the other in at a bite, and
-to slat the mackerel off the hook with a quick snap, instead of stopping
-to take them off by hand.
-
-The mackerel bit fiercely, sometimes at the bare hook even, like fish
-gone crazy. It seemed as though they might go on catching them all day
-long, for the water was alive with them; but all at once the fish stopped
-biting as abruptly as they had begun. They still played around the boat,
-but not a fish would touch a hook.
-
-"We may as well put up our lines, boys. They are through biting for this
-morning," said Arthur Warren. "Besides, we have more fish now than we
-know what to do with."
-
-There was no doubt of that. They had caught several hundred of the
-fish--enough to supply the village.
-
-"We'll make friends with every one in town," said George Warren. "These
-are the first mackerel of the season, and we will give away all we cannot
-use."
-
-"I feel as though I could eat about four now," said young Joe.
-
-"I can eat at least six," said Henry Burns.
-
-"We'll try you and see," said Arthur, producing an enormous frying-pan
-from a locker and a junk of pork from another. "Tom, you're the boss cook
-of the crowd. You fry the fish while the rest of us clean up the boat,
-make things shipshape, and get ready to sail."
-
-"Ay, ay, sir," said Tom, rolling up his sleeves. "Let's see, four apiece
-is how many?"
-
-And soon the appetizing odour of the frying fish, mingled with that of
-the steaming coffee, saluted most temptingly the nostrils of the six
-hungry boys.
-
-It was several hours after this, when the yacht was bowling along in the
-western bay, near the head of the island, before a fresh southerly
-breeze, that young Joe said:
-
-"I know how we can play a stupendous joke on everybody in the village."
-
-Joe being the youngest of the brothers, and of the party, and it being
-therefore necessary that he should be occasionally squelched, George
-merely said:
-
-"You don't think of anything, Joe, but playing jokes."
-
-"All right," retorted Joe, "seeing you are all so wildly enthusiastic,
-I'll just keep it to myself."
-
-"Nonsense, Joe, don't be huffy," said Arthur, whose curiosity was
-aroused. "Tell us what it is, and if it is any good we'll try it, won't
-we, boys?"
-
-There being an unanimously affirmative reply, young Joe proceeded.
-
-"Well," said he, "there's no risk at all about this. You know the old
-farmhouse on the bluff across the cove? Everybody in the village believes
-it is haunted. I found that out yesterday, when I was in Cap'n Sam's
-store. The house hasn't been lived in for two years, and not a soul in
-the village has dared to go near it at night in all that time. If any of
-them had to stay over there all night, they would sleep out in the woods
-rather than go into the house.
-
-"You see, the house belonged to a man by the name of Randall, Captain
-Randall, who lived there with his wife. This was a little more than two
-years ago. He owned a little fishing-smack, in which he went short trips
-down the coast. One night in a storm he drove in on to the bluff; the
-smack was pounded to pieces, and he was drowned. His wife died not long
-after.
-
-"Since then, the villagers have thought the house haunted. They hear
-shrieks from there during the night, and think they see strange lights in
-the windows. They were discussing it in the store yesterday. Cap'n Sam
-declared that, only a few nights ago, when he was coming across the cove
-from Billy Cook's, he saw the ghost of Captain Randall pass out of the
-back door of the old house and disappear in the woods.
-
-"Billy Cook, who lives up the cove, was in the store, too. He said he and
-his wife hear screams come from there often in the night, especially when
-it is storming; and two other villagers said they had seen lights in the
-windows long after midnight.
-
-"That new boarder at Colonel Witham's was in there, too, Henry. He said
-he knew houses were haunted, and told several stories about ghosts, which
-he said were true. But I believe he knew they were lies, and he was only
-amusing himself; but that's nothing to do with the matter. The villagers
-seemed to believe all that he said.
-
-"Now, what I propose is, that we manufacture some brand-new ghosts for
-them, some they have never seen before. There are some red and green
-lights up at the cottage, that were left over from the Fourth of July,
-which we can burn inside the house, after letting out a few screeches
-that will arouse the village. Then we'll wrap sheets around us and run
-past the windows, while the lights are burning. We'll have something
-wrapped in white to fling off the cliff, too, in a flare of light.
-
-"Then we'll run down through the woods and take everything with us. And
-if we don't have some fun the next day listening to the ghost-stories
-about the village, why, my name isn't Joe, that's all."
-
-"That's not such a bad scheme, Joe," said George.
-
-"It's a daisy," said Henry Burns, "and easily done. What's to hinder our
-going up there to-night and taking up the lights and the sheets and
-looking the place over? I never was inside the old house myself, though I
-have been close to it at night, and never saw or heard of any ghosts. We
-can carry a lantern up with us and light it after we get inside. If any
-one sees the light from the village he will think it's the ghosts walking
-again."
-
-"I don't like so much of this running around in the night," said Tom,
-flexing his biceps. "A fellow must have sleep to keep in condition, but I
-guess they can count on us in this case, can't they, Bob? It's too good
-to be missed."
-
-"You bet!" replied Bob. "We can turn in and sleep this afternoon. Count
-me in, for one."
-
-"Then," said George, "suppose we all start from our cottage at ten
-o'clock to-night. We'll launch the rowboat from the beach and slip across
-and look things over."
-
-So it was agreed.
-
-The yacht had long turned the head of the island and was beating down
-alongshore in the eastern bay. Presently they rounded the bluff and came
-into the cove. It was nearly noon.
-
-High up on the bluff, and several rods back from the edge of the cliffs,
-was the old farmhouse; it stood out conspicuously, though at some
-distance from the water-front, for the land rose quite sharply and the
-house occupied the top of the eminence. Around it, on all sides except
-that facing the village, was a dark, heavy growth of hemlocks and pines.
-It was a mysterious, shadowy place, even by day; but when darkness set in
-about it, standing off solitary and alone, as it did, from the rest of
-the village, with the waters lying between, it is little wonder that
-superstition inhabited it with ghosts and that it was a spot to be
-shunned.
-
-At the outermost end of the cliffs that protruded into the bay, a ravine,
-where the ledge at some time had been rent apart, led from the water up
-toward the cottage, affording a precarious pathway. There was a natural
-stairway of rock for some distance from the water's edge, and at the end
-nearest the old house a series of clumsy wooden stairs led up from the
-ravine to the surface of the bluff. These were now old and rather
-rickety; but a light person, at some risk, could still use them.
-
-The villagers, as a rule, avoided the house and this pathway to the
-bluff. If they had occasion to go ashore there, they usually landed
-farther up the cove at a beach, and walked through the woods at a
-distance from the house. No one cared to go very near it.
-
-When the sloop had come to anchor in the cove opposite the Warren
-cottage, the boys took a boatload of mackerel ashore, besides a basketful
-in the canoe. They carried them around to every cottage in the village,
-and even to the hotel, though, as George Warren remarked, they would have
-to get Colonel Witham out of bed some night in a hurry to make up for it.
-
-Certainly the village, supping that night on their catch, was inclined to
-forget and forgive them many a prank that had been stored up for future
-punishment.
-
-When Henry Burns made his exit across the roof that night, he made a
-careful survey before climbing out on it to see that the stranger was not
-there. There were no signs of him, and Henry got away safely. Tom and Bob
-were at the Warren cottage when he arrived. Everything was in readiness,
-and they all set out for the shore.
-
-"These clouds in the sky are favourable," said Tom. "If it was as bright
-as it was last night, we might have to postpone our trip. This mackerel
-sky, through which the moon shines dimly, is just the thing."
-
-"Everything seems to be favourable," added George, as they hurried down
-the bank to the beach.
-
-And yet not quite everything, for, when they had reached the shore and
-came to look for the boat, it was not there.
-
-"That's too bad," cried young Joe. "And we left it here at five o'clock,
-too, after washing it out thoroughly, because we had brought the mackerel
-ashore in it."
-
-"Who could have stolen it?" asked Tom.
-
-"No one," replied Joe. "Nobody ever has a boat stolen in this harbour.
-Some one who wanted to cross the cove has borrowed it. We shall find it
-all right in the morning,--but that don't help us out now. It's provoking
-enough, and strange, too, after all, that the one who took it didn't step
-up to the cottage and let us know, as the cottage is so near. But boats
-are almost common property here; any man in the harbour would lend us his
-boat in a minute."
-
-"We must do the next best thing," said Arthur, "and take one from the
-slip at the wharf. No one will want his boat at this hour."
-
-"Though some one does seem to want ours," broke in Joe. "Curious, isn't
-it, that whoever it is should come around into the cove and get our boat,
-when there are any number at the slip?"
-
-It certainly was rather strange.
-
-Following Arthur's suggestion, the boys proceeded to the slip and
-embarked in a big dory, the property of Captain Sam. Then they rowed
-quickly across the cove.
-
-It took them but a few minutes to reach the other shore, for the cove was
-smooth as glass. They headed for the bluff, and pointed directly into the
-black, shadowy hole which they knew to be the natural landing-place. It
-was a peculiar, narrow little dock, completely rock-bound, except for the
-passage leading into it. It lay entirely in the shadow, but they had
-landed there before, and knew just where to steer for a shelf, or ledge,
-of rock that made a natural slip.
-
-Still, their familiarity with the place did not prevent them from bumping
-suddenly into a rowboat that lay moored there. They pushed it aside to
-make a landing, and found to their amazement that it was their own.
-
-"Hulloa!" cried George, springing out on to the broad, shelving ledge;
-"that is queerer still. Here's the old _Anna_, and what in the world is
-she doing here? Who can have brought her? And what for? There's something
-strange about it. Why, there isn't a man in the village that would dare
-go near the haunted house at night, and yet somebody is over here now,
-for some reason."
-
-If it were possible for Henry Burns to be excited ever, he was so now.
-
-"Get in here, quick, George," he said, "and don't make any noise. I think
-I know what it means, and I'll tell you just as soon as we get out of
-here. We can't get away any too soon, either."
-
-"Why not take the _Anna_ out with us?" said young Joe, "and pay somebody
-off for running away with it? He would only have to walk a few miles
-around the cove to get back again--"
-
-"No, no, leave the boat where it is," said Henry Burns. "And let's get
-out of here quick."
-
-"Why, what's the matter with you, Henry?" asked George, jumping back into
-the boat and giving it a vigorous shove off. "Any one would think to see
-you that some one was being murdered up there."
-
-Henry Burns's earnestness was sufficient to convince them, however, that
-something serious was involved in their actions, and they made haste to
-get out into the cove again.
-
-"Row for the beach above, boys," continued Henry Burns, "and we will go
-up to the old house through the woods. I think I know who is up there in
-the house, and if I am right it means that we may make an important
-discovery. The man who I think is up there is Mr. Kemble."
-
-"What! The cripple?" asked Tom.
-
-"This is another one of Henry Burns's jokes," said George. "You're having
-lots of fun with us, aren't you, Henry?"
-
-"I tell you I am in earnest," said Henry Burns. "We won't burn any lights
-to-night, and you better make up your mind to that, right off. There's
-more serious business ahead of us."
-
-And then, when they had landed on the beach and had drawn the boat
-noiselessly up on the shore, Henry Burns told them of the adventure he
-had had on the roof of the hotel. How he had seen the stranger throw off
-his disguise of weakness, and become, suddenly, a man of strength and
-action; how he believed the man to be somehow connected with the thieves
-who had committed the robbery, and how he believed that the man was now
-up there in the haunted house, though for what purpose he could not tell.
-It might be he had something to conceal there.
-
-"Cracky!" exclaimed Tom, when Henry Burns had finished his story. "This
-beats ghost hunting all hollow; but we are by no means certain that it is
-this stranger who is up there."
-
-"No, but I believe as Henry does, that it is he," said George Warren.
-"Who else would have any object in being up there this hour of the night?
-We know from what Henry saw that the man is dangerous, that he seems to
-be in hiding--"
-
-"And that if he should catch one of us spying on him up there in the old
-house, he wouldn't hesitate to shoot," interrupted young Joe, who would
-rather have risked the meeting with a legion of ghosts than with one real
-live thief, armed and desperate.
-
-"That's true enough," answered Henry Burns; "but we must not give him
-that opportunity, if it is he, which, of course, we're by no means sure
-of. At any rate, we want to see and not be seen by whoever is there, and
-we cannot go any too quietly."
-
-Then, as the tide was rising, and they might be gone some time, they
-lifted the dory and carried it up out of the reach of high water, after
-which they began the ascent of the hill. There was not a breath of wind
-stirring, and there was not a sound of life in the woods. The tide crept
-in softly, and not even a wave could be heard on the shore.
-
-Out through the trees they could see, as they climbed, glimpses of the
-water, calm and placid as a mill-pond, lit up dimly by the moonlight
-shining through a patchwork of clouds that covered all the sky. Beyond
-this the darkness of the village was accentuated by a light here and
-there, glimmering from the window of some cottage.
-
-Then they came to the brow of the hill, and could see the haunted house
-through the trees. They approached cautiously. It looked gloomier than
-ever, with its sagging, moss-grown roof, its shattered window-panes, and
-the door in the side hanging awry from a single hinge.
-
-In what once had been the dooryard there were a few straggling clumps of
-bushes, and thistles and burdocks grew in rank profusion.
-
-It was a sight to dampen the ardour of stouter hunters than this band of
-boys. But when, added to all this, there suddenly flashed across one of
-the windows a ray of light, faint and flickering, but discernible to them
-all, and which the next instant disappeared, they halted irresolutely and
-debated what they should do.
-
-It was finally determined that Henry Burns and Bob White should go on
-ahead to the old house, while the rest waited at a little distance till
-they should reconnoitre. The two set off at once, while the others waited
-behind a clump of trees. They did not have to wait long, for the two
-returned shortly, telling them to come on softly. When within a few rods
-of the house they dropped on their hands and knees and crept along.
-
-All at once the two ahead stopped and whispered to the others to listen.
-They heard noises that seemed to come from the cellar, which sounded as
-though some one was digging in the earth. Then, as they came within range
-of a long, shallow cellar window, they saw the rays of a lantern.
-
-They crept up closely and peered in through the pane. There, in the damp,
-dingy, cobwebbed cellar of the haunted house, dimly lighted by the rays
-of a lantern, which stood on an old wooden bench, a man was working. He
-had his coat off and was digging in the ground with a spade, throwing up
-shovelfuls of the hard clay.
-
-The rays of light from the lantern were not diffused evenly throughout
-the cellar, but shot out in one direction, toward the spot where the man
-was at work; and this because it was neither the ordinary ship's lantern,
-nor yet a house lantern, but a small dark lantern, such as a burglar
-might carry on his person, with a sliding shutter in front.
-
-The man's sleeves were rolled up, displaying arms that were corded with
-muscle, and on which the veins stood out as he worked. He handled the
-spade awkwardly enough, but made up in strength for his lack of skill.
-Presently he paused and looked up, and they saw that it was, as Henry
-Burns had prophesied, the stranger guest.
-
-A curious occupation for one who was cruising for his health! Indeed, he
-looked so little like a man that was weak and ill, and so much like one
-that was powerful and reckless and devoid of fear, as the light of the
-lantern caused his figure to stand out in relief against the darkness,
-that, though they were six and he but one, had he seen them and sprung
-up, they would have fled in terror.
-
-Then, as he stooped down to grasp the lantern, they drew quickly back
-from the window. It was well they did so, for, taking up the lantern, the
-man flashed it upon the window-panes, and then, turning it in all
-directions, threw the rays of light in all parts of the cellar and out
-through a window opposite. Then he set it down again; and it was evident
-his suspicions had not been aroused, for he resumed his digging.
-
-After a few minutes he threw down the spade and produced from the
-darkness a small tin box, which they had not seen before, which he
-deposited in the hole he had dug. Then he shovelled the earth back upon
-it, stamping it in with his feet, and so refilled the hole. The remaining
-loose earth he scattered about the cellar.
-
-The boys waited no longer, but crept back to the edge of the woods. In a
-few minutes they saw a faint flash of light through one of the windows in
-the floor above, and presently they saw the man come out of the door in
-the front of the house. He had extinguished the lantern and was still
-carrying the spade. As he walked quickly down the path to the
-landing-place, he left the path and hid the spade beneath some
-underbrush, after which he disappeared over the edge of the cliff.
-Finally they saw him out in the middle of the cove, pulling vigorously
-for the other shore.
-
-"Well," said Henry Burns, as they watched him out of sight, "there are
-lots of sick men whom I would rather meet over here in the night-time
-than that same Mr. Kemble."
-
-"He's as strong as a lion," said young Joe. "Did you see the veins stand
-out on his arms as he worked? I felt like making for the woods every time
-he straightened himself up, with that spade in his hand."
-
-"I don't believe any of us felt any too comfortable," said Tom, "though
-I'm sure I shouldn't be afraid to meet him in the daytime, with Bob and
-one of the rest of us. It's the influence of the night-time that
-frightened us. And he seemed to be right in his element in it."
-
-"Let's dig that box up and get away from here and discuss the matter
-afterward," said George. "It's getting late, and we don't want mother to
-worry. I'll get the spade." And he ran and brought it.
-
-They went into the haunted house then, groping their way in the darkness,
-for they had left their own lantern in the dory. They made their way to
-the kitchen and found the cellar door, with some difficulty. Then, lest
-the old stairs should be unsafe, they went down one at a time.
-
-It was an easy matter to unearth the box, though they worked in utter
-darkness. When they had secured it, they refilled the hole and then
-stamped the earth down as they had found it. This being done, they were
-glad enough to get away from the house, to replace the spade beneath the
-underbrush, where the man had hidden it, and hurry down to the shore.
-Launching the dory, they embarked, Henry Burns carrying the box, and,
-with George and Arthur Warren at the oars, they had soon crossed the cove
-and landed on the beach.
-
-There, too, was the _Anna_, drawn high up on shore, where the stranger
-had left it. It was a large and heavy boat, and it must have required
-enormous strength in one man to drag it there.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
- SETTING A TRAP
-
-
-When the boys had at length gathered around the table in the
-old-fashioned kitchen of the Warren cottage and had drawn the
-window-shades, they proceeded to examine the box. It was an ordinary
-shallow tin box, such as a business man might keep odds and ends of
-papers and cash in. It was fastened with a small padlock. After trying to
-unlock this with every key they could find in the house, and without
-success, young Joe produced a file, and with this filed through the small
-staple in the box.
-
-When the cover was thrown back there was disclosed a layer of fine
-cotton, like jewellers' cotton, and when this was lifted out there came
-from the box a myriad of tiny flashes of light. The inside of the box was
-fairly ablaze. Countless little flashes of light danced and twinkled
-there.
-
-"Hooray!" cried George Warren. "We have the stolen jewels, and no
-mistake. Just see how these sparkle." And he lifted up a necklace of
-diamonds, that blazed in the light of the lamp like a ring of fire. They
-sparkled and gleamed like little stars, as the boys passed them from hand
-to hand.
-
-"Mercy on us!" cried a pleasant voice, all of a sudden; and Mrs. Warren,
-who had been awakened by the sound of their voices and had hastily
-dressed, entered the kitchen. "Is this den the cave of the forty
-thieves?" she asked, smiling, and then, as she caught sight of the
-glittering gems, she exclaimed, anxiously: "Why, boys, what on earth does
-all this mean?"
-
-"It means, mother," answered George, "that Henry Burns has done what the
-detectives have been trying to do ever since the robbery at Benton. Here
-are the stolen diamonds, and Henry will take them to town to-morrow and
-claim the reward."
-
-"Only on one condition," interrupted Henry Burns. "I don't stir one step
-to secure the reward until it is agreed that it shall be evenly divided
-between us all. You fellows have just as much claim upon it as I, and,
-unless every one of you solemnly swears to take his share, I shall never
-take one cent of it."
-
-And every one of them knew that he meant exactly what he said.
-
-Early next morning Henry Burns and George Warren stood upon the wharf,
-awaiting the arrival of the boat for Mayville. The boat connected there
-with a train that would arrive in Benton during the forenoon. Henry Burns
-carried in one hand a small satchel.
-
-"I had hard work to persuade old Witham to let me go," said Henry Burns.
-"He didn't see what I wanted to go poking off to Benton for. Said I
-better stay here and save my money. As it is, I've got to go and call on
-an aged aunt of Mrs. Carlin and spend the night there. Well, I guess I
-can manage to amuse myself, even there. I'm likely to see a few other
-people before I get back, eh, George?"
-
-"I know one man who won't turn you out-of-doors, when you produce those
-diamonds," answered George.
-
-"Well, George," returned the other, "you mustn't lose sight of this
-stranger, although I almost know he won't attempt to leave the island for
-several days. I remember that yesterday he got a letter, and I have no
-doubt it was from his confederates, saying when they would arrive. They
-are coming in a sailboat, for he has said so. Now, if they were coming
-to-night or to-morrow, he would not have hidden that box over there in
-the old house. You may be sure he did not expect them for a day or
-two,--but still you boys must keep him in sight, for one never knows what
-is going to happen.
-
-"If he goes over to the bluff, you know what to do. You must get Captain
-Sam, the constable, to have him arrested at once. By to-morrow night I'll
-be back with everything arranged to capture the whole three. I think you
-and I will see lively times around this harbour before many days are
-over."
-
-"Speak of the evil one and he appears," said George Warren. "And, as true
-as I live, here comes Mr. Kemble. You do the talking, Henry, for I feel
-as though I should give him cause for suspicion if I said a single word
-to him."
-
-"Leave him to me," replied Henry Burns. "He's playing a bold game, and so
-must we;" and, as the stranger guest hobbled down to the wharf, groaning
-and wincing, as though racked with pain, Henry Burns gave him a cheery
-greeting.
-
-"Good morning, Mr. Kemble," said he. "I see you're out bright and early.
-I declare, you have begun to look better already than you did the night
-you arrived."
-
-"Oh, I'm very miserable--very miserable," answered Mr. Kemble, most
-dejectedly. "My rheumatism is something awful. I'd give everything I
-possess in the world if I could run around and be as active as you young
-men."
-
-"You will, I'm sure, in a few days," answered Henry Burns.
-
-"How's that?" asked the man, turning upon Henry Bums sharply, while a
-strange look, that he could not conceal, stole over his face.
-
-George Warren turned away precipitately, and, taking a fishing-reel from
-his pocket, dropped a line over the side of the wharf.
-
-"There's something peculiar in this island air," continued Henry Burns,
-looking Mr. Kemble full in the eye, with the most innocent expression on
-his face. "No matter how bad a person feels when he first comes here, it
-puts new life into him. The first thing he knows he begins to feel like
-rowing boats, and going fishing, and all that sort of thing. I come here
-sick every summer, and I go away feeling strong."
-
-"Well," replied Mr. Kemble, uneasily, but looking relieved, "I hope it
-may do as much for me. If it does, I'll buy a cottage here."
-
-"You won't find any cottages to sell, I'm afraid," said Henry Burns. "But
-there are several old farmhouses that could be bought cheap, and they
-make over as good as new."
-
-"Humph! I'm not looking for old farmhouses," said Mr. Kemble, gruffly;
-and then, as the whistle of the boat sounded suddenly from behind the
-bluff, he added, "But I must be getting back to the hotel. I'm not
-feeling well to-day, at all."
-
-"Any errand I can do for you in the city?" Henry Burns called after him.
-
-But Mr. Kemble was hobbling away as fast as he could, and did not heed.
-
-"I fancy he would feel worse if he could see what I've got in this
-satchel," chuckled Henry Burns, as Mr. Kemble went on toward the hotel,
-somewhat faster than he had come down. "Did you notice how suddenly he
-had to leave when he heard the boat's whistle?"
-
-"Yes,--but what on earth were you thinking of, Henry, talking as you did
-to him?" said George. "It scared him in an instant when you told him he
-would be running around in a few days as lively as any of us. I almost
-believe he half-suspects something."
-
-"How can he?" replied the other. "Perhaps my remark about his running
-around in a few days may have startled him at first. That was a sudden
-jolt to his guilty conscience. But, upon reflection, he decided it was
-only a coincidence. Then he did look a little queer when I spoke of
-farmhouses, didn't he?"
-
-"He certainly did," said George. "What possessed you to do it? You might
-upset everything."
-
-"No," answered Henry Burns. "He don't suspect us. By the way, do you
-remember how we got into this thing in the beginning?"
-
-"Why, what do you mean?"
-
-"If I remember rightly," said Henry Burns, speaking with a slight drawl,
-"we started out last evening to have some fun. My little chat with our
-friend is the nearest approach to fun that this scrape has afforded me so
-far."
-
-"That may have been fun for you," said George. "To my mind it was very
-much like playing with fire; but here's the steamer. You've got my note
-of introduction to father?"
-
-"Yes, I've got everything all right. Now keep your eyes open and expect
-me to-morrow night." And Henry Burns crossed the gangplank to the
-steamer.
-
-The train from Mayville to Benton reached its destination at eleven
-o'clock, and at that hour in the forenoon Henry Burns walked briskly out
-of the station. Half an hour later he stood in the waiting-room at the
-wealthy banking-house of Curtis & Earle.
-
-"Well, what do you want, young man?" asked an important and decidedly
-officious attendant, bustling up to him.
-
-"This is Mr. Curtis, I presume," answered Henry Burns, blandly, but with
-the faintest suspicion of a twinkle in his eye.
-
-"No, it isn't," said the man, abruptly, and looking a little foolish as
-several other attendants tittered audibly. "And, what's more, you cannot
-see Mr. Curtis, for he is just preparing to leave for the day."
-
-"But I must see him," insisted Henry Burns. "I've got some very important
-information for him. Have the kindness to take this in to him," and he
-handed the surprised attendant a card upon which he had written in a
-clear but boyish hand:
-
- _Henry Allen Burns
- Private Detective_
-
-The attendant took the card, read it with a grin, looked at the boy, as
-if puzzled what to make of him, shrugged his shoulders and left the room.
-Presently he returned.
-
-"Mr. Curtis would be greatly obliged if you would call to-morrow," he
-said. "He is going out of town to-day."
-
-"I must see him at once," said Henry Burns, firmly.
-
-"Impossible--" but at this moment the door of the banker's private office
-opened, and a voice said: "Show Mr. Burns in."
-
-Henry Burns entered. He saw before him a tall, well-built man, smooth
-shaven, with black, piercing eyes, and a firm, decisive mouth. He had on
-his hat and gloves, and carried a light coat on his arm, as though about
-to leave his office.
-
-"You will oblige me by stating your business as quickly as possible,
-young man," he said, "as I am about to take a train out of the city.
-
-"I see by your card," he continued, gravely, "that you are a private
-detective. I suppose you are aware that I am a busy man, engaged in
-important affairs, and have no time in office hours for pleasantries."
-
-"If I had said an amateur detective I should have been more correct, sir,
-since this is my first case," answered Henry Burns, calmly. "It is so
-very curious, however, that I feel certain it cannot fail to interest
-you."
-
-"But will you tell me why it should interest me, and not keep me
-waiting?" exclaimed the banker, in a tone of impatience. Evidently he did
-not for a moment connect the boyish figure before him with any possible
-recovery of his lost jewels.
-
-"I will," replied Henry Burns, speaking deliberately. "Last night some
-other boys and I watched a man bury a small tin box in the cellar of a
-deserted house. When the man went away we dug it up. I have the box here;
-would you like to see it?"
-
-Henry Burns calmly opened the satchel.
-
-But the banker sprang up from the chair in which he had seated himself,
-and exclaimed, excitedly:
-
-"What do you mean--let me see it--quick!"
-
-Henry Burns passed him the box, and with nervous fingers the banker broke
-the twine with which the boys had secured it. The next instant he had
-drawn the necklace from the box and held it up, while his hands trembled.
-
-"They're Alice's diamonds, as I hope to live," he cried, unmindful of
-Henry Burns's presence for the moment. "And the rings and the
-brooch--everything--everything is here."
-
-"Why," he exclaimed, "the best detectives in this country are working on
-the case, but I had already begun to despair of ever seeing the jewels
-again. They are exceedingly valuable, but, besides that, as they were
-wedding presents to my wife from me, we both prize them far beyond their
-real worth.
-
-"But be seated. I shall postpone my trip out of town, you may be sure.
-And now let me hear the story of your discovery."
-
-In the calm, graphic manner characteristic of him, Henry Burns told the
-story of the night's adventure.
-
-"Splendid!" exclaimed the banker, as the boy concluded. "You have indeed
-acted as efficiently as the best detective could have done. We are bound
-to capture the robbers. Burton must know of this at once."
-
-He rang for an attendant, and, after writing a note, dispatched him with
-it. At the expiration of about half an hour the attendant returned, and
-ushered into the room a man of medium height, of light complexion, with
-steel-blue eyes, and a face that impressed Henry Burns at once as
-denoting great daring and coolness. The banker introduced him as Mr.
-Miles Burton, of a secret detective bureau.
-
-"Here's a young man, Burton," said the banker, smiling, "who, I take it,
-has some inclinations for your line of work. In fact, here is pretty
-convincing proof of it." And the banker pointed to the box of jewels.
-
-Mr. Miles Burton looked nonplussed. He stared at the box in amazement for
-a minute, and gave a low whistle. Then he laughed and said: "I have
-always maintained that luck is a great factor in detective service,
-though I am ready to give a man his due for a good piece of work. In
-either case, you have my congratulations, young man, for a half a
-thousand dollars is just as good whether it comes by luck or shrewdness,
-or both."
-
-The detective listened with the keenest attention as Henry Burns repeated
-the story he had told the banker. He made him give the minutest details
-of Mr. Kemble's personality, at the same time suggesting features which
-Henry Burns corroborated.
-
-"It's just as I thought from the start, and just as I told you, Mr.
-Curtis," he said. "The man is undoubtedly George Craigie, who is known
-among his class as the 'Actor,' because of his cleverness in
-impersonating one character, and then utterly dropping out of sight and
-appearing as some other person. We want him on a score of charges, two
-bank robberies, attempted murder, several house burglaries, and other
-things. His picture is in the Rogues' Gallery, but he has the art of
-changing his expression and appearance so completely that, although I
-have seen him twice since that was taken, at neither of those times did
-his countenance resemble his photograph. However, I feel positive from
-what this young man tells me that it is none other than he. And as for
-his confederates, I can readily guess who they are. They are two Boston
-men, and are, no doubt, on their way to the island now in the yacht. In
-this case, we cannot act any too soon; and I shall ask Detective Burns,
-who is familiar with the ground, to be my right-hand man in the
-expedition."
-
-"You can count on me," replied Henry Burns, with a smile at the title
-conferred upon him, and who was, truth to tell, vastly flattered. "I can
-answer, moreover, for several good assistants, if you need them."
-
-"Well," said Mr. Miles Burton, rising to go, "I will meet you at the
-train that leaves here to-morrow afternoon. By to-morrow night I hope to
-have some men on Grand Island who will give a pleasant little surprise to
-Messrs. Craigie & Co.;" and, bowing courteously, he took his leave.
-
-"There's a surprising lack of jealousy in that man Burton," remarked the
-banker, when he had gone. "He is disappointed to have the robbers slip
-through his hands, and a little chagrined, I know, to have them caught
-through the aid of a party of boys; but he took pains not to show it,
-and, what's more, he will always give you the credit for it when he
-speaks of it. That's the kind of a man he is. He is as smart as a steel
-trap, too, is Burton, and has done me good service twice before.
-
-"But let us not wait longer. I am going to take you home with me to
-dinner, and have you spend the night at my house. We shall feel more
-secure, I assure you," he continued, smiling, "with a detective under our
-roof."
-
-Henry Burns declined, saying he was not dressed for such hospitality, but
-the keen eye of the banker had long before taken note of his neat and
-gentlemanly appearance, and, moreover, liked the looks of the boy's
-clear-cut features, and the way he had of looking one fair in the eye,
-with a calm but manly and courageous glance. So he waived the boy's
-objections, and they entered the banker's carriage and were driven to the
-finest home Henry Burns had ever visited.
-
-Perhaps they didn't make him at home there when Mr. Curtis had told the
-story of the finding of the jewels hidden in the cellar; and perhaps
-Henry Burns, to his confusion, wasn't embraced by the banker's wife, and
-perhaps he wasn't made a hero of by the banker's two pretty daughters,
-who shuddered at the story of the man in the cellar, and who made Henry
-Burns tell it over and over again.
-
-In short, he was treated with such wholesome and charming hospitality as
-to set him to wondering, after it was all over and he had gone to bed,
-whether he had not missed something in his solitary life, brought up
-without the love of father, mother, sister or brother, in a home where
-noise and cheerfulness were outlawed.
-
-He was up bright and early the next day, and he and the banker went to
-see Mr. Warren, who was let into the secret, and the reward of five
-hundred dollars was, through him, placed to the credit of the boys. Then
-there was the aged aunt of Mrs. Carlin to call upon, and the time passed
-quickly till it was time for the afternoon train.
-
-It was about two o'clock in the afternoon when Henry Burns boarded the
-train in the company of Miles Burton.
-
-"Now," said the detective, as the train rattled noisily on its way, "I
-have been in Mayville and know several parties there, but the island is
-new to me. However, you can explain it to me from this map," and Mr.
-Burton unrolled a map of the bay and island from his pocket. "I shall
-pick up three of my men, whom I have ordered to meet us, in Mayville. One
-of them came all the way down from New York with me to help me work up
-this case. It is my opinion he traced this man Craigie to Mayville and
-lost track of him there. The man must have vanished, as he has done so
-often before.
-
-"We will go over to the island to-night in a launch. Then we shall need
-some one to guide us to what you call the haunted house."
-
-"I will meet you in the road by Captain Hervey's house, right at the very
-head of the island," said Henry Burns. "It is the first house you come to
-on landing at the outermost point. You cannot miss it."
-
-"But how will you get there? It is a long trip up the island."
-
-"I will come on my bicycle."
-
-"Capital! You will go direct to the island, then, by the night boat,
-arriving there, you say, at six o'clock. You will see just how the land
-lies, so you can tell us, when we meet again. And you will instruct your
-friends to keep close to Craigie, so he won't be over there at the house
-to meet us on our arrival. We want to do the welcoming for him, and not
-have him do it for us. Two of the men I shall bring are somewhat familiar
-with the island and know one or two parties there; though I am not sure
-they know where the haunted house is.
-
-"One of you boys must have a boat always in readiness somewhere up the
-cove, on which you say this house fronts, so that, the minute this man
-meets his confederates aboard the yacht, one of you can slip across the
-cove and let us know of it, in case we have missed them.
-
-"Act carefully, and everything will be well; but once give them cause for
-suspicion and they are dangerous men to deal with. I have a little score
-of my own to pay them,--but that's a long story, and I'll save it for
-another time. Now let's go over this map, so I'll be sure of my ground."
-
-When the train left Mayville, Miles Burton, with a hurried handshake,
-left Henry Burns. It was a little after six o'clock when the latter
-stepped ashore at Southport, where the boys were waiting for him, upon
-the wharf.
-
-"Everything is all right," said George Warren, in answer to Henry Burns's
-question. "He was not on the roof at all during last night, for we
-divided up into watches and kept a lookout from Tom's tent. He evidently
-knows about what time his friends are to arrive."
-
-"How is Colonel Witham?" asked Henry Burns. "Has he pined away any during
-my absence?"
-
-"Not any to notice," replied Tom Harris, "but he has gone away, down the
-island, to be gone two days. You must stop with us to-night at the tent,
-and the boys are all coming over to the tent now to eat one of Bob's
-prime lobster stews."
-
-So the crowd marched on Bob, and found him down on the beach to the right
-of the tent, presiding over an enormous kettle, which was hung over the
-glowing coals of a fire of driftwood, and from which there arose such a
-savoury odour of stew that, in a burst of enthusiasm, they seized upon
-the stalwart young cook, and, raising him on their shoulders, bore him
-with hilarious shouts three times around the fire, much to the apparent
-discomfiture of the quiet Bob.
-
-Then they sat about the fire while Tom brought some tin plates and spoons
-from the tent and acted as waiter, and Bob produced a pot of hot coffee
-and some bread. It seemed as though nothing had ever tasted so good. They
-called for stew till Bob's stout right arm almost ached with wielding the
-long-handled tin dipper that served them for a ladle.
-
-The sun sank while they sat about the glow of coals, and, by and by, the
-moon rose slowly over the distant cape and poured a flood of soft light
-over the waters of the bay. They remembered that night long afterward,
-for its soft lights and its silent, mystical beauty. The moon was at its
-full, and the tide crept up on the beach almost to the bed of coals that
-remained from the fire and still showed red. The islands far off across
-the bay seemed to have drifted nearer in to shore, and showed clear and
-distinct.
-
-Henry Burns's story of the day's adventures lost nothing of its interest,
-told down there on the shore by the firelight and under the stars. His
-account of his visit to the banker's, and how he had gained admittance to
-Mr. Curtis's private office, filled them with glee.
-
-"I should have liked to see him when he opened that box," said young Joe.
-"Didn't he look surprised, though, Henry?"
-
-"Rather," said Henry Burns.
-
-"And the banker's daughters,--were they pretty, Henry?" asked Tom.
-
-"I didn't notice particularly," said Henry Burns.
-
-"Henry never does notice those things," said Arthur, dryly.
-
-"Oh, no, never!" said young Joe.
-
-"You fellows will notice something, if you don't let up," said Henry
-Burns, getting a little red in spite of himself.
-
-Then he told them all that he had learned from Mr. Miles Burton about the
-man Kemble, who was not Kemble at all, but one Craigie, and a desperate
-man; and all about the plans that were now to be put into operation to
-capture Craigie and whosoever should come to meet him.
-
-The money, too, that had come to each one of them, as his share of the
-reward, seemed like a fortune, while no expedition that they had ever
-heard or read of seemed half so full of mystery and danger as that upon
-which they were now entering.
-
-Sometime between ten and eleven o'clock Henry Burns left them, and,
-proceeding to the hotel, unlocked a door in the basement, got out his
-bicycle, and rode away. In a little more than half an hour afterward he
-had dismounted from his wheel at Captain Hervey's house, four miles from
-the hotel, on the western side of the island, near the head. The house
-was closed, as the captain and his family were away at sea. Down at the
-shore was an old boat-house, where Henry Burns left his bicycle. He sat
-on the edge of a bluff overhanging a landing-place for boats, and waited
-for the launch. He could see her lights already, out on the bay, and it
-was not long before the little craft had come to shore. Four men
-disembarked, and the launch steamed away again.
-
-"Hello, Private Detective Burns," said Miles Burton, laughing, as he came
-up the ladder from the landing. Then he added, as he introduced the
-others to the boy, "This is a rival to Inspector Byrnes of New York.
-
-"We owe him a good turn, Mason," continued Miles Burton, "for finding
-Craigie for us."
-
-The man addressed as Mason was the detective that had followed Craigie as
-far as Mayville.
-
-"Yes," he replied, shaking hands with Henry Burns, "we've been after him
-a long time."
-
-The other two men, whose names were Stapleton and Watkins, also shook
-hands with the boy. They were sharp-eyed, athletic-looking men, whose
-appearance on the island boded no good to one Craigie, alias Kemble.
-
-Under the guidance of Henry Burns they all set off down the road for a
-distance, then turned from it and made their way through the fields and
-patches of woods toward the bluff. It was hard walking there in the
-darkness, through thickets and over little knolls, with which some of the
-pastures were dotted, and it was nearly one o'clock in the morning when
-they reached the old haunted house.
-
-The house looked even less inviting than ever in the waning moonlight,
-with its sagging roof, dull and broken window-panes, and doors unhinged.
-Still, to those free from superstition and not fearful of ghosts, it
-offered a sufficient shelter on a summer night, and they entered at a
-rear doorway, after making a cautious reconnoisance to make certain that
-there was no one within.
-
-Then, having shown them where the jewels had been buried, and pointing
-out the location of a spring of good water near the house, Henry Burns
-left the four detectives to accommodate themselves to their lodgings and
-went down to the shore. There in the shadow of a bluff he found Tom and
-Bob waiting for him in the canoe, as they had agreed.
-
-When the canoe grated on the sand in front of the tent, Henry Burns, worn
-out with his travels, was fast asleep. So Tom and Bob, by way of a joke,
-lifted up the canoe with its sleeping occupant and carried it to the door
-of their tent. They thrust it inside as far as it would go, laid Henry
-Burns out flat in the bottom of it, made him comfortable with blankets,
-without waking him from his heavy sleep, and let him slumber on.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
- A MIDNIGHT ADVENTURE
-
-
-The inhabitants of the peaceful town of Southport would have viewed the
-old haunted house with more concern than ever if they had known of the
-four ghosts that haunted it now, by day and night. They were stalwart,
-able-bodied looking ghosts, and their habits were strangely like what
-might have been expected of four live men. Sometimes, as they sat in one
-of the front garret rooms, by a window that overlooked the town and the
-whole expanse of the cove lying between it and the bluff, as well as the
-bay beyond, a well-worn pack of cards was produced by one of the spirits,
-and the four joined in a game. Or, again, a bag was brought forth, and
-the spirits ate heartily of the contents thereof.
-
-It might have been noticed, too, that through it all a certain careful
-vigilance on the part of the ghosts was observed, as though they feared
-that if surprised by a chance visitor they would have some trouble in
-vanishing.
-
-Every few minutes throughout the day they made by turns a careful survey
-of the cove and also of the bay, sweeping it with a powerful field-glass.
-No more than two of the ghosts ever took their sleep at the same time,
-and that, too, during the day. When night came they all redoubled their
-vigilance and remained awake and alert. As darkness shut down they left
-the house, one of them going out on the bluff and hiding in a cleft of
-the rock, where he could overlook the cove and the bay, the others hiding
-in the woods near the house, and keeping watch on all its approaches.
-
-They were very patient and very careful; for two of them, who would have
-answered to the names of Burton and Mason, knew that the men for whom
-they watched, and who they knew would surely come within a brief time
-now, were the men for whom they had hunted for years, and by whose
-capture they should win other rewards and settle scores of long standing.
-
-Curiously enough, for the next two days and nights a perfect contagion of
-watching seemed to have spread through the village. Mr. Kemble, as he was
-known to all, was a most annoyed man, and concealed his annoyance only
-with difficulty. If, by chance, he hobbled up the road of an afternoon,
-and wandered off into the woods or fields, he was sure to come upon some
-one of the boys, who seemed surprised enough to see him, and was sure to
-remain with him till he returned to the hotel.
-
-If he hired a horse and went up the island for a drive, he was sure to
-fall in most unexpectedly with Henry Burns, spinning along on his wheel,
-and could not shake him off. If he felt strong enough to get into a
-rowboat and start out, weakly, across the cove, groaning at the effort it
-cost him, he invariably fell in with Tom and Bob, gliding along quietly
-in their canoe, and they would insist on accompanying him, and pointing
-out to him the beauties of the scenery along the shores.
-
-He would have considered far more seriously the attention they paid to
-his movements by night, if he had but known of them. If he could have
-seen six pairs of eyes, striving to discern him as he appeared on the
-hotel roof, or have known of the youths who watched lest he cross the
-cove under cover of night, to say nothing of those who awaited his coming
-on the bluff itself, he might have worried more than he did, and perhaps
-have played a shrewder game.
-
-But neither did he nor any one else, other than they who watched, know of
-it. And so it was that when, a little before sunset on the third day
-after the arrival of the ghosts in the haunted house, and while Mr.
-Kemble sat on the front piazza of the hotel, looking through a
-field-glass off on to the bay, admiring its beauties with Mrs. Carlin,
-who thought him such an unfortunate man,--and while, as he looked, he saw
-the very yacht for which he had waited anxiously for days, he surely
-believed that there was no one in the village who would regard it with
-other than the usual curiosity that fishermen and yachtsmen have for a
-strange craft.
-
-In this, unfortunately for him, he was mistaken. There were others
-besides him who, on seeing the sail emerge from between the islands,
-regarded it with equal interest and even more excitement. Henry Burns,
-being deeply interested in it, came and sat down beside Mrs. Carlin long
-enough to hear Mr. Kemble remark that he believed the yacht was the
-_Eagle_, with his friends; in which case he should spend the night aboard
-with them, and leave the harbour early in the morning, if the wind
-availed.
-
-Henry Burns then quietly took his departure, sauntering along until some
-cottages shut him out from the view of the hotel, and then starting off
-on a run as hard as ever he could toward the Warren cottage. He paused
-long enough at the cottage to communicate the news to young Joe, who was
-the first one he met, and then, calling out that he would return as
-quickly as he could, he ran through the woods down to the shore.
-
-Going up the cove some distance, Henry Burns launched a rowboat and
-pulled rapidly across, landing some ways above the bluff. Then he struck
-down through the woods for the haunted house.
-
-When Henry Burns returned a few minutes later, two of the detectives were
-with him. The three rowed across the cove and proceeded to the Warren
-cottage. There the plan of operation, as it had been mapped out by Miles
-Burton, was told by Henry Burns. Burton and Mason were to make the arrest
-at the haunted house. It was extremely unlikely that more than two of the
-robbers would come for the box of jewels,--perhaps Craigie alone. At all
-events, the detectives would take chances against more than two coming,
-and, if the three came, it would make no difference to them. They would
-take them all by surprise, and could arrest a dozen if necessary. If two
-of the boys chose to go over to the bluff, they could do so, but Miles
-Burton would not advise them to take the risk.
-
-The other two detectives were to wait in boats for the man who should be
-left in the yacht, and arrest him at the proper time. If any of the boys
-chose to accompany these men, they could do so at their risk, but Miles
-Burton had sent warning for them to take no chances. Needless to say, his
-advice on this score was thrown away. He might as well have advised the
-boys not to breathe till it was all over. Their blood was up, and they
-were one and all determined to take part in the capture.
-
-So it was decided that Bob and Henry Burns and George should go over to
-the bluff; that Tom and one of the detectives should take the canoe and
-lie in the shadow of the shore, in wait near the tent; while Arthur and
-Joe, with the other detective, should go around the bluff in a rowboat,
-on a pretence of fishing, and lie in concealment there behind the rocks.
-
-During all this time the yacht, a white-hulled, sloop-rigged, trim
-vessel, was rapidly nearing the village. It came in fast, with a
-southeasterly breeze astern, which blew fresh and which bade fair not to
-die down with the setting of the sun. The yacht attracted some attention
-among the people of the town, where fishing-boats were more commonly seen
-than elegant pleasure-craft. Its topmast was uncommonly tall, and the
-club topsail, which was still set, was somewhat larger than usual in a
-craft of its burden. In fact, it was apparent to the experienced eye
-that, with all its light sails set, the yacht would be enveloped in a
-perfect cloud of canvas. It carried two jibs, besides the forestaysail,
-but these were now furled.
-
-"That craft carries sail enough to beat the _Flying Dutchman_," said
-Captain Sam, who had joined the group on the veranda that was watching
-the graceful yacht coming in, with a tiny froth of foam at its bows.
-"Looks as though she could stand up under it, though. Seems to be pretty
-stiff."
-
-"Yes, she is considered pretty fast," assented Mr. Kemble. "She has taken
-a few races around Boston and Marblehead way, against some yachts that
-carried even more sail. She belongs to a friend of mine, a Mr. Brooks of
-Boston. He's a broker there, and can afford to have as fast a craft as
-there is made."
-
-"Fast!" returned Captain Sam. "Any one can see that with half an eye.
-Give her five minutes start, and nothing in this bay could ever come
-within hailing-distance of her again."
-
-Captain Sam little knew the relief and satisfaction that his remark
-afforded Mr. Kemble.
-
-"She won't want all that sail to-morrow, though," continued Captain Sam.
-"The wind is coming around to the eastward for a storm of some kind.
-Looks more like rain than wind, but there will be wind, too,--enough to
-do all the sailing any one wants. You say you'll sail to-morrow, do you,
-Mr. Kemble, rain or shine? Well, that boat will stand it all right. She
-looks as though she would just like a good blow, and nothing better."
-
-If Mr. Kemble knew of any instances where the yacht _Eagle_, alias _The
-Cloud_, alias _Fortune_, had proved her marvellous speed to the chagrin
-of certain officers of the law, and had demonstrated her ability to run
-away from pursuers in both light and heavy weather, he refrained, for
-reasons best known to himself, from mentioning them. He gave, instead, a
-quiet assent to the truth of Captain Sam's praise.
-
-While tea was being served at the hotel, the yacht entered the cove, and,
-rounding to gracefully with a little shower of spray, dropped anchor
-about midway between the wharf and the bluff opposite. The sails were
-furled, with, strangely enough, the exception of the mainsail, which was
-not even lowered. She would doubtless drop this sail later, unless, by
-any chance, she should decide to put out again during the night.
-
-The men who had brought the yacht across the bay did not come ashore. A
-thin column of smoke that presently wreathed out of a funnel in the cabin
-indicated that the yachtsmen were cooking a meal in the galley aboard.
-
-They were thorough yachtsmen, Mr. Kemble explained, as he paid his bill
-and said good-bye to Colonel Witham and Mrs. Carlin. They hardly ever
-left the yacht, he said, except to buy provisions, or some other errand
-of necessity. Mr. Kemble did not specify what other errands of necessity
-he had in mind.
-
-The colonel saw just how it was, he said. He was sorry, moreover, to lose
-Mr. Kemble as a guest. In fact, he was the kind of guest that just suited
-the colonel, as he went early to bed, minded his own business, and was
-quiet. Good qualities in a summer boarder, in the colonel's estimation.
-
-There was no one to bid Mr. Kemble good-bye, save the colonel and Mrs.
-Carlin, as he had made few acquaintances. Henry Burns would have bid him
-a pleasant voyage if he had been there, but Henry Burns was not to be
-found.
-
-"He will be sorry not to have been here to say good-bye to you," Mrs.
-Carlin explained, politely. "He often expressed the greatest sympathy for
-your lameness. I cannot imagine where he is, and he has had no supper,
-either."
-
-"Bright boy, bright boy, that," responded Mr. Kemble. "Lives just out of
-Boston, does he? Must look him and his aunt up this fall, and see if I
-can't get my friend, Brooks, the broker, interested in him. Well,
-good-bye," and, hobbling away, quite briskly for him, Mr. Kemble followed
-a boy who carried his satchel down to the wharf, and was rowed out to the
-yacht. A voice from the cabin bade him welcome, and he disappeared down
-the companionway.
-
-Early that evening, and shortly after Mr. Kemble had gone aboard the
-_Eagle_, for such was the name painted freshly in gilt on the yacht's
-stern, Miles Burton and the three boys, Bob, Henry Burns, and George,
-held a consultation in the shadow of the woods near the haunted house.
-Mason, in the meantime, was hidden near the head of the rickety old
-stairs at the landing on the bluff, watching for any movement aboard the
-_Eagle_.
-
-Miles Burton's commands were brief and explicit. "There is an old closet
-in the cellar," he said, "just about opposite where the box was buried.
-Mason and I will hide there. We have oiled the hinges of the door so that
-it moves noiselessly. You boys better keep close here in the woods till
-you hear from us. Then you can make as much noise as you want to and come
-in at the capture. There ought not to be so very much excitement about
-it, for we shall have them before they know what's the matter."
-
-It certainly seemed as though the detective could not be mistaken, but
-the sequel would show.
-
-Mason remained at his post, and Miles Burton and the boys sat together in
-the shadow of the woods. It was wearisome waiting, and there was a
-chilliness in the night air which had crept into it with the east wind.
-When eleven o'clock had come and the moon should have shone over the
-cape, a bank of clouds drifted up just ahead of it and half-obscured its
-light. As the moon arose these clouds drifted higher in the sky, still
-just preceding it, and the heavens grew but little brighter. Still it was
-not absolutely dark, for most of the stars were as yet unhidden.
-
-Twelve o'clock came, and then one, and then a half-hour went by. At just
-half-past one o'clock by the detective's watch they saw the figure of
-Mason stealing swiftly up the path.
-
-"It's time to make ready now," he said to Burton, as he joined the party.
-"They'll be at the landing soon. As near as I can make out, there's
-Chambers and French, besides Craigie. It's the men we want all right.
-Chambers is rowing, and he will probably stay in the boat while the other
-two come ashore."
-
-Then, bidding the boys to preserve the utmost silence, the two detectives
-left them, and a moment later the boys saw them disappear through the
-doorway of the haunted house.
-
-There was little need of warning the boys to make no noise. From what the
-detectives had said, they knew that the men they had to deal with were
-desperate adventurers, who would not balk at any means to escape capture.
-
-So they lay close in the underbrush and peered through the trees down
-toward the landing. The night was still, save for the rustling of a light
-wind through the trees. The breeze had held through, as Captain Sam had
-prophesied, though it had abated somewhat, ready, however, to increase
-with the next turn of the tide a few hours later.
-
-They could hear noises across in the village: a solitary cart rattling
-along the country road, the tinkle of a distant cow-bell in a pasture,
-and here and there a dog barking. Presently the sound of oars grinding in
-the rowlocks came to their ears, and a few moments later the sound of a
-boat gently grating on the edge of the stone landing. There was as yet no
-sound of voices.
-
-"Whew!" muttered Bob White. "This waiting here for something to happen
-gives me a creepy feeling. I only wish we knew that they weren't armed to
-the teeth and could only pitch in and run the risk of a good fight. I'd
-like to try a good football tackle, just to keep my nerves from going to
-pieces."
-
-"I wouldn't care much to be waiting for them down in that cellar," said
-Henry Burns. "They're likely to prove ugly customers when they find
-themselves trapped,--but I'll risk Miles Burton to keep his head. He's
-the kind of man for this sort of thing--"
-
-"Sh-h-h," interrupted George Warren, softly. "I hear their voices.
-There's two of them, I think, talking. Yes, here they come. Lie low,
-now."
-
-A head appeared at the top of the ladder, and then a man sprang up on to
-the brow of the bluff. It was the man whom they had known as Mr. Kemble,
-but whom they now knew as Craigie. He was followed by another man,
-somewhat taller than he.
-
-The two came up the path together, talking earnestly. At a certain point
-in the path they paused, and Craigie stepped aside and found the spade
-where he had hidden it in the brush. Then they went on toward the haunted
-house. The boys' hearts beat fast and hard as the men passed close by
-where they lay hidden. Surely two men who would lie in wait in the old
-house for these two must possess good nerve and courage. For the boys'
-part, they were glad to be outside.
-
-"Listen," whispered Henry Burns, softly; "the tall one is downright angry
-with our friend Kemble. He's pitching into him for something."
-
-It was evident that Craigie's newly arrived friend was in a bad humour.
-He spoke angrily, and no longer in a low tone, but gruff and loud enough
-to be heard some distance away.
-
-"What a fool you must have been, Craigie," they heard him say, "to hide
-the jewels away in this tumble-down old place, when you could have hidden
-them well enough on your own person. It's all well enough to say they're
-safer here, but such an act might have attracted attention."
-
-"It might," whispered Henry Burns.
-
-"And here we are," continued the tall man, "fooling away our time in this
-outlandish hole, climbing ledges and stumbling through woods, when we
-ought to be out in the middle of the bay by this time, clear of this
-place. There was the wind, holding on through the night, just opportune
-for us, and all you needed to do was to step aboard, if you had been
-ready, and off we should have gone, without dropping a sail."
-
-"Well, well, French," answered Craigie, impatiently, but trying to
-mollify his companion, "we've got time enough. Don't worry about that.
-You would have blamed me bad enough if the jewels had been found on me.
-Supposing I had had to tell you they'd been stolen, what would you have
-done? Would you have believed it, or would you say I had stolen them from
-you myself?"
-
-"Believe it!" cried the other. "Why, you know I wouldn't believe it. I
-know you too well for that. What would I do? What would Ed Chambers do? I
-tell you what we would do. After that job,--after coming way down here
-for you,--why, man, we'd hunt you to the end of the earth, if you got
-away with those jewels, but we'd have you and the jewels, too."
-
-With this angry utterance, the tall man laid a heavy hand on the other's
-shoulder.
-
-"Nonsense, man," returned the other, impatiently, shaking off his grasp.
-"What a way to talk about nothing. You're in a precious bad humour, seems
-to me. You know right well I wouldn't go back on you and Ed."
-
-"I know nothing of the sort," snarled the other "I know you, I tell you.
-I know you left us when things got hot, and took the jewels that we
-risked our necks for. Don't I know that we shouldn't have seen or heard
-of you again till we had hunted for you--which we would have done--if
-that man Mason hadn't got so close up on to you that you didn't dare try
-to get out of here alone."
-
-"Well, have it so, have it so, then, since you are bound to quarrel,"
-said Craigie, sullenly; and the boys heard no more. The two men passed
-beyond hearing and entered the haunted house.
-
-"I don't intend to miss this," whispered Henry Burns, for once thoroughly
-excited. "There's going to be the worst kind of trouble when that big
-black-looking fellow finds the box gone. Burton's going to let them dig
-for it--he told me so. Said he was curious to see what they would do."
-
-"Rather he would have that sort of fun than I," said Bob. "It's a good
-deal like watching a keg of powder blow up. I say we'd better stay right
-here, as Burton advised, till we hear from them. We might upset the whole
-thing."
-
-"I don't mind saying I'm scared clear down to my boots," said George,
-"but I'm going to see the thing through. I'll go if you will, Henry."
-
-So the two left Bob in the woods, close by the path to the shore, and
-crept up on their hands and knees to that same cellar window through
-which they had before witnessed the hiding of the box.
-
-By the light of a lantern placed on the cellar floor they saw the two
-men. Craigie had removed his coat, and was digging in the earth where he
-had hidden the box. He worked vigorously, throwing up spadefuls of the
-soil with quick, nervous jerks. His tall companion looked on with an
-expression of mingled anger and contempt on his face.
-
-As the box failed to come to light after some minutes of hard work, the
-drops of perspiration stood out in great beads on Craigie's face, and he
-redoubled his efforts with the spade.
-
-"It's down deeper than I thought I buried it," he muttered, with a sort
-of nervous laugh.
-
-"You're a fool!" was all the other said.
-
-"Have it so," said Craigie, and resumed his work.
-
-The man was troubled, although he scarcely dared admit it, even to
-himself. He had already dug far deeper than he had before, and yet no
-signs of the box. The spade trembled slightly in his hands. He widened
-the hole and dug furiously.
-
-"Going to dig over the whole cellar, I suppose," sneered the other, and
-clenched his fists nervously.
-
-Craigie did not reply. Perhaps the truth was beginning to dawn on his
-mind, for he half-paused and cast a quick, anxious glance at his
-companion. His face was ghastly white in the dim lantern light. He
-continued his digging.
-
-All at once he uttered a cry. The boys, staring in with faces close to
-the window-pane, saw the tall man leap forward and deal him a heavy blow.
-
-"Do you think I am tricked by you?" he cried. "You know it isn't there.
-You knew it all the time. But you don't fool me. You don't escape to
-enjoy it."
-
-Craigie reeled under the blow and staggered back against the wall. If the
-other had followed up his advantage instantly, the fight must have been
-his; but one moment was enough for his companion. Still grasping the
-spade, he struck out with it as the man French rushed upon him again, and
-the other, receiving the full force of the blow, fell to the floor.
-
-The next instant, without waiting to see whether his companion were dead
-or alive, Craigie shattered the lantern with a single blow and darted for
-the cellar stairs. At the same moment the detectives threw open the door
-and rushed out into the cellar. They were just too late. One man, indeed,
-lay unconscious at their feet, but the other had already reached the
-cellar stairs, and was at the outer door in a moment more.
-
-Down in the woods, by the path to the landing, Bob saw a sight that sent
-the hot blood to his cheeks. He had heard shots from the cellar, fired by
-the detectives after the fleeing Craigie, and wondered what they meant.
-Now, to his dismay, he saw Craigie at full speed flying along the path
-toward him.
-
-He scrambled to his feet, though his heart beat furiously, and he
-trembled so that for a moment he clung to a tree for support. Then he
-thought of Tom, and it gave him courage. Standing as he had stood often
-before on the football field at home, when, as right tackle, he had saved
-many a goal, he waited breathlessly. Then as Craigie dashed up, he sprang
-out, tackled him about the legs, and the two fell heavily to the ground.
-
-He was half-stunned by the fall, but he had breath enough to cry for
-help, and clung like a drowning man to his antagonist. Well for him then
-that, in his flight, Craigie had dropped the weapon he carried. They
-rolled over and over for a moment, and then the man had Bob in his grasp.
-
-"Let me go!" he cried, fiercely. "Let me go, I say!" Bob felt his
-strength going, as the powerful arms tightened about him.
-
-All at once, however, the other's grasp loosened. Craigie felt himself
-borne backward, as two boyish figures rushed out of the darkness and
-threw themselves upon him. Then a weapon gleamed at his head, and Miles
-Burton stood over him.
-
-"Hold on," cried Craigie. "You've got me this time, though you had to get
-a boy to do it for you."
-
-"It's all the same to me," replied Miles Burton, coolly. "We've got you,
-that's the main thing. Here, Mason, here's our man."
-
-Mason, running up, stooped over the prostrate form for a moment, there
-was the sharp snap of steel, and Craigie lay helpless with a pair of
-handcuffs fastened to his wrists.
-
-"Where's French?" he asked, sullenly.
-
-"Where you left him," said Mason. "It was a bad cut you gave him. He
-won't run away. That's certain."
-
-"Serve him right," said the other.
-
-"Hark! What's that?" cried Miles Burton, as the sound of two pistol-shots
-came up from the water. "They seem to be having trouble down there, too.
-You wait here, Mason, and I'll get down to the shore."
-
-He ran to the steps, followed by the three boys. Down the rickety stairs
-they scrambled, and quickly stood on the ledge of the little landing,
-looking off on to the water.
-
-What they saw was the yacht _Eagle_, not far from the bluff, under full
-mainsail, standing out of the cove. At some distance astern was the
-rowboat, in which were Arthur and Joe at the oars. The detective stood at
-the bow with a smoking revolver in his hand. Not far distant, across the
-cove, was the canoe containing the other detective and Tom. The detective
-also had just fired. Miles Burton and the boys could see no one aboard
-the sloop, but still it sailed steadily on its course. The canoe vainly
-tried to head it off, but the yacht, obedient to an unseen hand at the
-wheel, quickly came about and went off on the other tack, soon putting a
-hopeless distance between it and its pursuers.
-
-They could not see the man aboard, for the reason that he lay flat in the
-cockpit, and, with one arm upraised, directed the course of the yacht.
-
-"What a pity! What a pity!" said Miles Burton, talking softly to himself.
-"How could it have happened? I would rather have lost the other two than
-that man Chambers. He's the most dangerous man of the three, and the man
-I wanted most."
-
-His face showed the keenest disappointment, but he had learned
-self-control in his business, and refrained from speaking above his
-ordinary tone of voice.
-
-"How did it happen, Watkins?" he asked, as the rowboat came in to the
-landing for them.
-
-"It's all our fault, Burton," said the other, bitterly. "Stapleton and I
-should have closed in the moment we heard the first shots; and we should
-have got aboard the yacht and waited. But I was not sure but what
-Chambers would land and go up the bluff to the rescue of his comrades,
-and so I waited to see what he would do. I might have known him better.
-These fellows are always looking out for number one, and that's a safe
-rule to go by.
-
-"All at once we saw him come out from the shadow of the bluff, rowing as
-hard as ever he could for the yacht. We were after him then, both
-Stapleton and I. And I'm certain of one thing. No one could have got us
-out to that yacht faster than these boys. They rowed like men. But, you
-see, he had but a few strokes of the oars to pull, compared with us. And
-he got to the yacht when we were still some rods away.
-
-"I never dreamed but what we had him then, for his anchor was down. But
-what did he do but spring aboard, not stopping to see what became of his
-rowboat, rush forward as quick as a cat, whisk out a knife, and cut his
-hawser before you could say 'Scat.' Then he jumped aft mighty quick,
-grabbed the wheel as cool as anything you ever saw, and had her under
-headway in no time.
-
-"He took long chances, standing up when he went about, and dodging down
-again, at first. Then when we came close he got down in the bottom of the
-boat, just as you saw him, and the best we could do was to fire where we
-thought he ought to be. He dodged back and forth between our boats,
-tacking right and left as quick as anything I ever saw, and just slipped
-by us. He couldn't have done it in any ordinary boat, but that yacht just
-spun around like a weather-vane, and seemed to gain headway as she went
-about, instead of losing anything.
-
-"I never saw anything so beautiful, if I do say it. Look at her now, just
-eating away there to windward and leaving this harbour out of sight."
-
-The yacht was, indeed, flying along like the wind. Chambers had got more
-sail on her now, and they could see him, coolly sitting at the wheel and
-waving a hand in derision back at them.
-
-"Confound it!" said Burton. "Here we are on an island, with no way of
-getting a telegram started till the morning boat lands over at Mayville.
-That will be many hours yet, and I fear he'll give us the slip for good
-and all. What luck, that it should have been he, the only seaman of the
-three, who was left with the boat. Neither of the others could have done
-what he did. He's probably studied these waters some, enough to find his
-way down here, and it will be a hard task ever picking him up again."
-
-"Yes, but a man can't conceal a yacht," said George Warren. "I'd know her
-anywhere. You can telegraph a description, and the whole coast will be on
-the watch. You can describe exactly how she looks."
-
-"Can I?" laughed Miles Burton. "Yes, I can, but that's all the good it's
-likely to do. He'll have her so changed over, if he gets a day to himself
-down among those islands, that the man who built her wouldn't recognize
-her. It won't be the first time he has done it. He carries a full
-equipment aboard, a different set of sails, different fitting spars,
-different gear of all kinds, and paint to change her colour. Once let him
-get in near a sheer bluff, where he can lay alongside, with some trees
-growing close to the water's edge, so he can rig a tackle and heel her
-way over, and he will have a yacht of a different colour before she's
-many hours older. He did the thing up in Long Island Sound for several
-years, and changed her name a half a dozen times into the bargain. He's
-done some smuggling up along the Canadian border, too, I'm told, and
-there isn't a better nor a more daring seaman anywhere in this world.
-However, we'll do the best we can. Lend a hand, now, all of you; we've
-got to get that wounded man down over the bluff, or down through the
-woods, and row him across the cove, where we can get a doctor to dress
-that wound of his. He's not dangerously hurt, I believe, but he's faint
-and sick, and we must work spry."
-
-A half-hour later, at the wharf across the cove, before the eyes of an
-excited crowd, composed of villagers, cottagers, and hotel guests, who
-had gathered hurriedly at the sound of the firing, there was landed a
-strange boat-load,--the strangest that had ever come ashore at the
-harbour. Imagine the amazement of Colonel Witham upon beholding his
-favourite guest, Mr. Kemble, bundled unceremoniously out of the rowboat,
-with manacles upon his wrists. Imagine the concern of the villagers when
-the man French, his wound clumsily swathed in bandages and his face pale
-and distressed, was lifted ashore and carried bodily up the slip to the
-nearest shelter. Nothing like it had ever happened before, not in all the
-island's history.
-
-"And you say you knew that man was a burglar for two or three days, and
-let him stay in the house and didn't tell us?" demanded Mrs. Carlin,
-wrathfully, of Henry Burns.
-
-"Yes'm," said Henry Burns.
-
-"Well, if you're not the worst boy I ever had the care of. Here we might
-all have been murdered and robbed, and you'd be as guilty as he. And to
-think I sat and talked with him there, and shook hands with him when he
-went away. Henry Burns, you'll go to bed an hour earlier for a week for
-this. And you deserve worse punishment than that."
-
-Henry Burns assumed his most penitent expression.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
- AN UNPLEASANT DISCOVERY
-
-
-Two weeks had passed by. Craigie and French were in jail awaiting trial,
-and the sensational arrest had run its course in the papers. Messages had
-sped here and there, and the police of many cities and towns were
-watching day and night for the missing Chambers. But watchers' efforts
-were futile. If the sea had opened and swallowed him up, the man could
-not have disappeared more completely. Not one of the harbours along the
-coast sighted him, nor did he run to any for shelter. It had come on
-stormy the morning he sailed away, and something like a gale had set in
-the next night. So that there were some who believed it more than likely
-that the yacht _Eagle_ had foundered, with only one man to handle her.
-
-Be this as it may, yacht and man had utterly disappeared. Several times
-it was thought she was sighted by some pursuer, but it always turned out
-to be some other craft. Chambers had made good his escape. And he alone
-knew to what use he intended to put that freedom.
-
-The bright August sun glared in through the canvas tent on a hot
-afternoon. It fell warm upon Tom, who, divested of his jersey and bared
-to the waist, stood in the centre of the tent, performing a series of
-movements with a pair of light wooden dumb-bells. A fine specimen of
-sturdy young manhood was Tom, lithe and quick in action. A skin clear and
-soft, bright eyes, muscles that knotted into relief when flexed and
-rounded into nice proportion when relaxed, quick, decisive movements, all
-told of athletics and an abstinence from pipes and tobacco.
-
-"It's your turn," he said, presently, to Bob, after he had counted off
-several hundred numbers. Tossing his chum the dumb-bells, he slipped on
-his jersey again, and, reclining at ease on one of the bunks, watched Bob
-go through the same drill.
-
-"Bob, I'm envious of you," he said. "You are blacker by several shades
-than I am. I'll have to take it out of you with the gloves."
-
-"It's pretty hot," said Bob, "but come on."
-
-"Heat doesn't bother a man when he is in training," said Tom. "It's the
-flabby fellows that get sun-strokes. Sun does one good when he's hardened
-to it."
-
-He fished out a pair of old boxing-gloves, that looked as though they had
-seen hard service, from the chest, and then he and Bob went at it, as
-though they had been the most bitter enemies, instead of the most
-inseparable of friends. They led and countered and pummelled each other
-till the perspiration poured down their faces and they had begun to
-breathe hard.
-
-"Time!" cried Tom. "That's enough for to-day. I think you had just a
-shade the better of it, old chap. Now let's cool off in the canoe. You
-know what's on the programme this afternoon."
-
-"I should say I did," answered Bob; "and I'll be hungry enough for it by
-the time things are ready."
-
-They carried their canoe down to the shore, and in a moment were paddling
-down the island toward the narrows. But they were not destined to go
-alone. Turning a point of ledge some little distance below Harvey's camp,
-they came all at once upon Arthur and Joe Warren, walking along the
-beach.
-
-"Take us in there, Tom," cried Joe.
-
-"I can take one of you," answered Tom, pointing the canoe inshore with a
-turn of his paddle.
-
-Arthur caught the end of the canoe as it came up alongside a ledge on
-which the boys stood, and steadied the frail craft.
-
-"Might as well let us both in," he said. "The more the merrier."
-
-"The more the riskier, too," said Tom; "but if you fellows will take the
-chance of a ducking, I'm willing. Water won't spoil anything I've got on.
-Climb in easy, now, and sit cross-legged, so if we tip over you'll slide
-out head-first, clear of the thwarts."
-
-The canoe was brought to within nearly an inch of the water's edge by the
-addition of the two to its burden. Tom gave a strong push with his
-paddle, and the heavily laden craft glided away from the shore.
-
-There was an extra paddle, which Arthur wielded after a fashion, and it
-did not take long to come within sight of the narrows. There upon the
-shore were gathered some fifty or sixty persons. Over against a ledge a
-fire of driftwood blazed. When they had gotten in nearer they could see a
-smaller fire at a little distance from the other. Over this was hung a
-monster iron kettle, and bending over it and superintending the cooking
-of its contents was a familiar figure. It was Colonel Witham, and he was
-making one of his famous chowders.
-
-At the same time that the occupants of the canoe discerned the colonel,
-he in turn espied them, and also noted a circumstance which they did not.
-A half-mile or more distant from them a big, ocean-going tugboat was
-passing down the bay, without a tow and under full steam.
-
-"There come those mischief-makers," said the colonel, muttering to
-himself. "I'm blessed if the canoe isn't filled with them. If there's an
-inch of that canoe out of water, there's no more." Then, as he noted the
-tug steaming past, an idea came to him that made him chuckle.
-
-"Kicks up a big sea, that craft does,--as much as a steamboat," he said.
-"Perhaps they'll see it and perhaps not. If they don't just let one of
-those waves catch them unawares. There'll be a spill." The colonel,
-chuckling with great satisfaction, went on stirring the chowder.
-
-The possibility of a wave from a chance steamer had, indeed, not been
-thought of by Tom or any of the others. The water was motionless all
-about them, but rolling in rapidly toward them were a series of waves big
-enough to cause trouble, if they did but know it.
-
-The colonel watched the unequal race between the waves and the
-heavily-laden canoe with interest. He looked out at them every other
-minute from the corner of his eye. He was afraid lest others on shore
-should see their danger and warn them.
-
-"Let them spill over," he said. "They can all swim like fish, and a
-ducking will do them good." So he stirred vigorously, watching them all
-the while.
-
-"That stuff won't need any pepper if he cooks it," remarked young Joe,
-looking ahead at the colonel.
-
-"Lucky for us it's not his own private picnic," said Tom, "or we
-shouldn't get much of it. Even as it is, it sort of takes my appetite
-away to see him stirring that chowder."
-
-"I'll risk your appetite--" The words were hardly out of Arthur's mouth
-when precisely what Colonel Witham had been hoping for came to pass. All
-at once Tom, seated in the stern, saw the water suddenly appear to drop
-down and away from the canoe. The canoe was for an instant drawn back,
-then lifted high on the ridge of a wave and thrown forward, with a sharp
-twist to one side. Tom gave one frantic sweep with his paddle, in an
-effort to swing the canoe straight before the wave, but it was too late.
-The canoe was overloaded, and as the weight of the four boys was thrown
-suddenly to one side the sensitive thing lost its equilibrium and
-capsized.
-
-In a moment the four boys were struggling in the water. Thanks to Tom's
-precaution, they all went out headforemost, and came to the surface clear
-of the canoe, blowing and sputtering. A cry went up from the shore, and
-for a moment Colonel Witham was seized with a sudden fear. What if any of
-them should be drowned, and he, to vent a petty spite, had given no
-warning? In his excitement he failed to notice that he had spilled some
-pepper into the ladle which he held in one hand.
-
-Two rowboats were hastily started out from the beach, and, impelled by
-strong arms, surged toward the canoe.
-
-Tom was prompt to act. He and Bob had had many a drill at this sort of
-thing. Each of the boys was a good swimmer, and soon they were all
-clinging to the canoe, which had completely overturned. The boys were in
-about the same positions as they had occupied in the canoe, Tom at one
-end, Bob at the other, and the other two clinging each to one side.
-
-"Quick, boys, let's right her before the boats get here," cried Tom.
-
-Under his directions the two Warren boys now took their positions both on
-the same side of the canoe, with himself and Bob at the ends. Then all
-four took long breaths, treaded water vigorously, and lifted. The canoe
-rose a little and rolled over sluggishly, two-thirds full of water.
-
-While the others supported it, Tom bailed the canoe nearly dry with a
-bailing-dish, which he always kept tied to a thwart for just such an
-emergency. Then he climbed in over one end, and Bob followed over the
-other. The Warren boys clung to the gunwales until one of the boats from
-the shore picked them up. The paddles were recovered for Tom and Bob, and
-the three craft proceeded to shore.
-
-There, stretching themselves out on the hot sands before the blaze, they
-waited for their clothing to dry on them. They were much liked by the
-boys and girls of the village, and were at once a part of a jolly group,
-each of which party had a separate detail to recount in the capsizing of
-the canoe as they had seen it.
-
-All at once the picnickers were startled by a howl of rage from Colonel
-Witham. All eyes were turned upon him. He was executing the most
-extraordinary contortions and dance-steps that could be imagined. An
-Indian chief, excelling all his tribe at a war-dance, could not have
-outdone the grotesque movements of the colonel.
-
-"What ails the man?" cried Captain Sam. "He must have gone clean crazy."
-And he started for the colonel on the run.
-
-But before he could reach him another accident happened. In his dancing
-about, the colonel trod most unexpectedly on a small log of wood, his
-heels flew out from under him, and down he came with a mighty splash in a
-little pool of sea-water that had been left in a hollow of rock by the
-last receding tide.
-
-There the colonel lay, like an enormous turtle, helpless for a moment
-with rage and astonishment, and all the while sputtering fiercely and
-crying out.
-
-"What on earth ails you, colonel?" asked Captain Sam, hurrying to his
-assistance. "You haven't gone crazy, have you?" And he helped the colonel
-to his feet with a great effort.
-
-"Pepper!" roared the purple-faced colonel. "Pepper!"
-
-"Pepper!" cried Captain Sam. "What about pepper?"
-
-"Everything about it!" sputtered the colonel. "It's in the chowder! Taste
-it and see."
-
-"What's that?" cried Captain Sam. "If those young scamps have peppered
-the chowder I'll thrash every one of them myself. Here, let me see," and,
-picking up the ladle which the colonel had dropped, he cautiously tasted
-the chowder.
-
-"Why, there's no pepper in it," he said. "It's just right. I don't taste
-any pepper."
-
-As, indeed, he did not, the colonel having got it all.
-
-"You must have a strong imagination, colonel," he said.
-
-"Imagination!" bellowed the colonel. "Imagination! I just wish your
-tongue was stuck full of a million red-hot needles and your mouth was
-filled with hornets, that's all I wish. Where's the boy that put that
-pepper into that spoon? Where is he? Show him to me and I'll make an
-example of him right here. I'll put him head first into the chowder by
-the heels."
-
-As no one had put the pepper into the ladle, no culprit could be found to
-show to the colonel; and as the colonel could not select a victim out of
-a score or more of boys who were present, he could only vent his rage to
-no purpose, while the villagers, who had laughed themselves nearly sick
-over the colonel's antics, gave him what sympathy they could feign.
-
-It ended in the colonel's taking himself off in a great fury, declaring
-that any one who pleased could make the chowder, and he hoped it would
-choke them all, and that fish-bones innumerable would stick in the
-throats of whoever ate it.
-
-The colonel's departure, however, far from putting any damper on the
-occasion, seemed rather to afford the party a relief; and his mishap made
-no small part of their amusement, as they went on with the preparations
-for the feasting.
-
-Captain Sam, who could turn his hand to anything, took the position left
-vacant by the colonel, and declared he could bring the chowder to
-completion in a way vastly superior to the colonel's. And indeed it was a
-decided improvement in the appearance of things to see the good-natured
-captain standing over the steaming kettle and cracking jokes with every
-pretty girl that went by.
-
-The preparations for the clambake went merrily on. A huge pile of
-driftwood was brought up from the shore and heaped on the fire by the
-ledge. There were pieces of the spars of vessels, great junks of
-shapeless timber that had once been ship-knees and pieces of keels,
-timbers that had drifted down from the mills away up the river, now
-thrown up on shore after miles and miles of aimless tossings, and crates
-and boxes that had gone adrift from passing steamers and come in with
-weeks of tides. The flames consumed them all with a fine roaring and
-crackling, and, dying down at length after an hour or two, left at a
-white heat beneath the ashes a bed of large flat rocks that had been
-carefully arranged.
-
-Several of the boys, with brooms made of tree branches, swept the hot
-stones clean of ashes; clean as an oven they made it. Then they brought
-barrels of clams, big fat fellows, with the blue yet unfaded from their
-shells, and poured them out on the hot stones, whence there arose a
-tremendous steaming and sizzling.
-
-Quickly they pitched damp seaweed over the clams, from a stack heaped
-near, covering them completely to the depth of nearly a foot. Then on
-this, wherever they saw the steam escaping, they shovelled the clean
-coarse gravel of the beach, so that the great broad seaweed oven was
-nearly air-tight.
-
-Then they heaped the hot ashes in a mound and buried therein potatoes and
-corn with the thick green husks left on it.
-
-The women, meantime, had not been idle, for in a grove that skirted the
-beach they had spread table-cloths on the long tables that always stood
-there, winter and summer, fastened into the ground with stakes driven
-firm. If all that great steaming bed of clams and the chowder in the
-mammoth kettle had suddenly vanished or burned up, or had some other
-catastrophe destroyed it, there would still have been left a feast for an
-army in what was spread on the snowy tables from no end of fat-looking
-baskets.
-
-There were roast chickens and ducks, sliced cold meats, and country
-sausages. There were pies enough to make a boy's head swim,--apple,
-mince, pumpkin, squash, berry, custard, and lemon,--in and out of season;
-chocolate cakes and raisin cakes and cakes of all sizes and forms. There
-were preserves and pickles and a dozen and one other messes from country
-cupboards, for the good housewives of Grand Island were generous souls,
-and used to providing for a hearty lot of seafaring husbands and sons and
-brothers, and, moreover, this picnic at the Narrows was a yearly event,
-for which they made preparation long ahead, and looked forward to almost
-as much as they did to Christmas and New Year.
-
-Never were tables more temptingly spread, and when, late in the
-afternoon, the benches around these tables were filled with expectant and
-hungry picnickers, it was a sight worth going miles to see.
-
-Captain Sam pronounced the chowder done, and the great kettle, hung from
-a stout pole, was borne in triumph by him and Arthur Warren to the grove
-near the tables. Somebody else pronounced the clams done, and the gravel
-was carefully scraped off from the seaweed, and the seaweed lifted from
-the clams, and the great stone oven with its steaming contents laid bare.
-The very fragrance from it was a tonic.
-
-Bowls of the chowder and big plates of the clams were carried to the
-tables. There were dishes of the hot corn piled high; potatoes that came
-to table black as coals, and which, being opened, revealed themselves
-white as newly popped corn. There was a mingled odour of foods, piping
-hot, and over all the grateful aroma from half a dozen coffee-pots.
-
-"Cracky! do they expect us to eat all this?" exclaimed young Joe, as he
-surveyed the prospect. "I wonder where it is best to begin--and what to
-leave out."
-
-"Don't try to eat it all, Joe," said Arthur. "Give somebody else a
-chance, too. You know the night you went to Henry Burns's party you ate
-so many nuts and raisins you woke up dreaming that somebody was trying to
-tie you into a square knot, and when you got fully awake you wished
-somebody would, and I had to get up and pour Jamaica ginger into you.
-Don't try to eat more than enough for three ordinary persons this time,
-Joe, and you'll be all right."
-
-Young Joe tried to smile, with a slice of chicken in one hand and a
-spoonful of preserves in the other, and a mouthful of both. His
-reputation at the table had been made long before that day, and had gone
-abroad, and here was the opportunity of a lifetime, for every
-good-hearted motherly-looking housewife within reaching distance was
-passing him food.
-
-"I hope there's a seat for me," said Henry Burns, who came hurrying up.
-He and George Warren had made the run down the island on bicycles.
-
-"Come on, both of you," cried the crowd. "There's always room for you,"
-and made places for them at once.
-
-"It seems too bad not to invite those other campers up on the shore,"
-said one of the women. "I'm sure they haven't had anything as good as
-this for all summer."
-
-"What! Harvey's crew?" queried a chorus of voices, in astonishment.
-"Well, you don't live near enough to where they are camping to be
-bothered by them. If you did, you wouldn't want them."
-
-"We don't mind some kind of jokes so much," continued one of the
-villagers, at which Tom and Bob and Henry Burns and the Warren boys tried
-to look unconscious, "but when it comes to taking things that don't
-belong to them and continually creating a disturbance, we think it is
-going a little too far. Perhaps it might do them good to get them over
-here and repay them with kindness, but some of us are not just in the
-mood for trying it."
-
-"Besides," said another, "it's too late now, if we wanted to, for I saw
-them starting out about half an hour ago in their yacht, and wondered
-where they could be trying to go, with wind enough to barely stir them.
-Some mischief, like as not, they're up to. No good errand, I'll be
-bound."
-
-Which was quite true.
-
-However, in most surprising contradiction to the speaker's assertion,
-there suddenly appeared along the shore Harvey and all his crew, walking
-close to the water's edge, but plainly to be seen.
-
-"Well, those boys must have changed their minds quickly," said the man
-who had spoken before. "It is not more than half an hour, surely, since I
-saw them all starting out in the yacht. I guess they found there was not
-enough wind."
-
-Perhaps, however, there had been wind enough for the purpose of Harvey
-and his crew. There was enough, at all events, to carry them up past the
-village and back again to their mooring-place. If they had had any object
-in doing that, there had been wind enough to satisfy them. They seemed,
-moreover, in high spirits when they returned from this brief voyage, and
-laughed heartily as they made the yacht snug for the night.
-
-Now they went whistling past the picnic party, all of them in line, and
-went down along the shore till they were lost to view in the woods.
-
-"Hope they're not going down my way," said some one. "They're up to
-altogether too much mischief around here; that is, I know well enough
-it's them, but I can't ever succeed in catching them at it. I'd make it
-hot for them if I could."
-
-But Harvey and his crew had surely no designs on the property of any one
-down the island, for they had not gone far in the grove of woods before
-Harvey called a halt, and they all sat down and waited. It was rapidly
-growing dusk, and they waited until it had grown quite dark. Then they
-arose, cut across through the grove toward the Narrows again, but keeping
-out of sight all the while, both of chance villagers who might be passing
-along the road, and of the crowd about the picnic fire.
-
-When they had come to the Narrows, Harvey again called a halt, and stole
-ahead to see if the coast was clear. The island was a narrow strip of
-land here, with the bay on either hand coming in close to the roadway,
-but by keeping close to the water's edge, and dodging behind some low
-cedars, provided the campers were all about the fire, they might pass
-unobserved. This they managed successfully, for, the driftwood fire
-having been renewed, the picnic party were seated about it, singing and
-telling stories.
-
-Harvey and his crew went on up through the woods to their own camp, where
-two of them remained, while Harvey and George Baker and Allan Harding
-took their yacht's tender and rowed rapidly on up toward the town. After
-they had started, Joe Hinman and Tim Reardon stole down through the woods
-again, and kept watch for a long time on the group about the fire. They
-did not return to their camp till the sound of a horn, some hour and a
-half later, signified to them that Harvey and the others had returned
-from their mission, whatever it was.
-
-The driftwood fire began to blaze low as the evening wore on, and by nine
-o'clock the greater number of the picnickers had said "Good night" and
-started on their journey home. Some of them had come from away down at
-the foot of the island, and still others from the little settlement at
-the head. These now harnessed in their horses, which had been allowed to
-feed near the grove, and drove away, their flimsy old wagons rattling
-along the road like so many wrecks of vehicles.
-
-Around the fire, however, there still lingered a group of fishermen and
-village folk, telling stories and gossiping over their pipes.
-
-"I wonder whatever became of that fellow Chambers," said one. "He was the
-slickest one of the lot, so that Detective Burton said. Do you recall how
-he sailed away that morning, as cool as you please, with the pistols
-popping all around his head?"
-
-The subject had never ceased to be the one great topic of interest in the
-village of Southport.
-
-"I reckon he'll never be seen around these parts again," remarked
-another. "Like as not he's up in Long Island Sound long before this. Or
-maybe the yacht's hauled up somewhere, and he's got clear out of the
-country. There's no telling where those fellows will travel to, if
-they're put to it, according to what I read in the papers."
-
-"It's mighty mysterious," said Captain Sam. "For my part, I think it's
-queer nobody's sighted him somewhere along the coast. A man don't sail
-for days without somebody seeing him. He ought to be heard from along
-Portland way, that is, if he ever left this bay, which I ain't so sure
-of, after all."
-
-This remark seemed to amuse most of the group.
-
-"Seems as though you expected you might see him and that crack yacht some
-night sailing around here like the _Flying Dutchman_," said one, at which
-the others took their pipes out and chuckled. "You'll have to get out
-your old _Nancy Jane_ and go scouring the bay after him, Cap'n Sam. If he
-ever saw her coming after him, he'd haul down his sail pretty quick and
-invite you to come aboard."
-
-"Well," replied Captain Sam, good-naturedly, "there's no accounting for
-the strange things of the sea, as you ought to know, Bill Lewis, with the
-deep-water voyages you've been on. Still, I'm free to say I don't see how
-that 'ere craft can have got out of here and gone clear up Boston way or
-New York, without so much as a sail being sighted by all them as has been
-watching for her. I don't try to explain where he may be, but I stick to
-my idea that there's something mighty queer about it."
-
-"He may be at the bottom of this 'ere bay," said the man addressed as
-Bill Lewis. "Stranger things than that have happened, and he was but one
-man in a big boat on a coast he couldn't have known but little of.
-There's many a reef for him to hit in the night, and the day he escaped
-was stormy. For that matter, I give it up, too. He was a slick one,
-that's all I can say."
-
-And so they rolled this strange and mysterious bit of gossip over, while
-the fire burned to coals and the coals died away to ashes.
-
-"Tom," said Bob, as they launched the canoe from the shelving beach some
-time after ten o'clock, "it's too glorious a night to go right home to
-bed. What do you say to a short paddle, just a mile or so out in the bay,
-to settle that terrible mixture of pie and clams that we've eaten? We'll
-sleep all the sounder for it."
-
-"Perhaps 'twill save our lives," replied Tom. "I ate more than I've eaten
-in the last week. Let's take it easy, though. I don't feel like hard
-work."
-
-So they paddled leisurely out for about a mile, enjoying the brilliant
-starlight and watching the dark waters of the bay flash into gleams of
-phosphoric fire at every stroke of the paddle. It was like an enchanted
-journey, gliding along through the still night, amid pools of sparkling
-gems.
-
-It was nearing eleven when they drove the bow of their canoe in gently
-upon the sand at their landing-place and stepped out upon the shore.
-
-"One, two, three--pick her up," said Tom, as each grasped a thwart of the
-canoe, ready to swing it up on to their shoulders. Up it came, fairly on
-to the shoulders of Bob, who had the bow end, but Tom, who never fumbled
-at things, seemed somehow to have made a bad mess of it. His end of the
-canoe dropped clumsily to the ground, twisting Bob's head uncomfortably
-and surprising that young gentleman decidedly.
-
-"What's the matter, Tom?" he asked, laughing good-naturedly, as he turned
-to his companion. But Tom for a moment answered never a word. He stood
-staring ahead like one in a dream. Bob, amazed, looked in the same
-direction.
-
-"Bob," whispered Tom, huskily, "do you see--it's gone--it isn't there. Do
-you see--the camp--the old tent--it's gone, as sure as we're standing
-here."
-
-They rushed forward to where the tent had been but a few hours before
-that afternoon, and stood there dismayed. There in the open air were
-their bunks, their camp-stools, their camp-kit, and the great chest; but
-the tent that had sheltered them had disappeared. Around about the spot
-were holes where the stakes that had held it had been hastily wrenched
-out, but not a scrap of canvas nor a piece of rope that had guyed it were
-to be seen. Only the poles that had been its frame lay upon the ground.
-Their tent had utterly vanished.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII.
- A CRUISE AROUND THE ISLAND
-
-
-"Well, Bob," said Tom, as they seated themselves on the bunks to collect
-their wits and think the situation over, "we know who did it, of course.
-The next thing is to prove it."
-
-"It won't be so easy," responded Bob. "Jack Harvey hasn't done this thing
-without first planning out how he could dispose of the tent without
-attracting the slightest attention. He planned it in a good time, too,
-when half the village was away at the clambake."
-
-"Yes," said Tom, "and that's what he sailed out on that short trip for,
-to look in at our tent without exciting any suspicion. He found out that
-there wasn't anybody around it, and then he and the others came down past
-our fire on purpose for us to see them and to prove by every one there
-that they were in another part of the island when our camp was stolen. He
-did it, though, and he's covered it up well. We'll have hard work to
-prove it against him."
-
-"I'll be madder to-morrow, when I'm not so sleepy." said Bob. "Let's go
-on up to the Warren cottage now, and wait till to-morrow before doing
-anything. It isn't going to rain to-night, and the stuff will not be
-harmed out here without a covering."
-
-So they travelled up to the Warren cottage, greatly to the surprise of
-the Warren boys, who had gone to bed and were sound asleep when they got
-there, and greatly to the concern of good Mrs. Warren, whose indignation
-did more to comfort them than anything else in the world could have.
-There was always room for more in the spacious old cottage, and they were
-soon stowed away in bed, quickly forgetting their troubles in sleep.
-
-"You'll stay right here for the rest of the summer," said Mrs. Warren the
-next morning at breakfast. "You can bring your camp stuff up and store it
-in the shed, and I guess it will be safe there from Jack Harvey or
-anybody else. It's a crying shame, but you're welcome here, so don't feel
-too bad about it. I don't think the boys will be sorry to have you here."
-
-"I guess we won't," cried the Warren boys, in chorus. "But we'll get that
-tent yet, I think," said George Warren. "I don't believe Jack Harvey
-would dare destroy it. He's got it hidden somewhere, depend upon it. And
-we must find out where that place is."
-
-"I wish I could believe it," said Tom, "but I'm afraid his experience
-with our box taught him a lesson. It is my belief that he has taken the
-tent and sunk it out in the bay, weighted with stones, so it will never
-come to light. However, we will start out after breakfast to see if any
-one in the village saw him or his crew anywhere near the tent while we
-were away."
-
-The search through the village for a clue proved, unfortunately, as
-fruitless as Tom had feared. Not a soul had seen Harvey or any one of his
-crew about the camp during the evening, nor, for that matter, anybody
-else. The disappearance remained as mysterious as though the wind had
-borne the tent away out to sea.
-
-"Say the word," said Captain Sam, when he heard of it, "and I'll go over
-to Mayville and get warrants for the whole crew. We'll have them up and
-examine every one of them. We can't have things of that sort going on
-around this village."
-
-"I don't want to do it," said Tom. "At least, not yet awhile. I don't
-like to suspect Harvey or any of his crew of actually stealing the tent.
-It may be they have taken it just to annoy us for a night or two, and we
-shall get it back again. I'd rather take it as a practical joke for a few
-days, at any rate, than to have any boy arrested. I can't believe they
-would steal it for good, intending to keep it. Let's wait and see."
-
-"You'll never see your tent, then, I'm thinking," said Captain Sam, "for
-I don't believe Harvey has the least idea of bringing it back. And the
-longer we wait the harder it will be catching him. However, do as you
-think best. I'll go down to-morrow and look their camp over, anyway, on
-my own hook. I have the right to do that. I'm a constable, and I'll look
-their camp over on general principles."
-
-"You'll not find anything, I fear," said Tom.
-
-"Fellows," said George Warren, as they all sat around the open fire that
-evening, "we haven't been on a cruise for a long time. What do you say to
-starting out in the _Spray_ to-morrow for a trip around the island? It
-will take one, two, or three days, according to the wind, and Henry Burns
-says he can go. We'll take along a fly-tent and some blankets, and part
-of us can sleep on shore, so we won't be crowded."
-
-"Great!" cried Bob. "It comes in a good time for us, when we're without a
-home--oh, I didn't mean that," he added, hastily, as Mrs. Warren looked
-reproachfully at him. "This is a better home than our camp was, to be
-sure. I mean, while our affairs are so upset, while we don't know whether
-we shall be camping to-morrow or living here. It may help to straighten
-matters out, and, if by chance Harvey and his crew feel like putting the
-tent back, this will give them the opportunity."
-
-"Then we'll get the lines ready," said George. "There's lots of small cod
-at the foot of the island,--and we might take a run across to the islands
-below, where there's lots of bigger ones. We'll plan to be gone two days
-or a week, just as it happens, and put in plenty of flour and biscuit and
-some canned stuff, in case we can't get fish."
-
-"How happens it that Henry Burns can get off so easily?" asked Tom.
-
-"Oh, they've let up on him a good deal since the capture of Craigie,"
-answered George. "Now that the papers have said so much about him and the
-rest of us, and the people at the hotel have made so much of him, Mrs.
-Carlin has come to the conclusion that he isn't so much of a helpless
-child as she thought he was. She lets him do pretty much as he likes now,
-and so Colonel Witham don't bother him, either. He will be over by and
-by, and we'll make sure he can go."
-
-Henry Burns put in an appearance soon after, and the subject of the
-voyage was duly discussed in all its phases, and settled. The next
-forenoon found them all aboard the little yacht _Spray_, getting
-everything shipshape and storing away some provisions and water.
-
-"Looks as though we were going on a long voyage," said young Joe, as his
-eyes rested fondly on several cans of lunch-tongue and two large mince
-pies which Mrs. Warren had generously provided, besides several tins of
-beef and a small keg of water.
-
-"Well, Joe," said Arthur, "you know, having you with us to help eat up
-stuff is equivalent to going on a long voyage. And then, one never knows
-on a trip of this kind when he is going to get back."
-
-Which was certainly true, if anything ever was.
-
-They made a great point aboard the _Spray_, these Warren boys, of having
-every rope and sail and cleat in perfect condition; no snarled ropes, no
-torn canvas, and no loose bolts nor cleats to give way in a strain; and
-they began now, as usual, to see that everything was in shipshape
-condition before they cast off from their moorings and headed out of the
-harbour.
-
-The little yacht was, therefore, as trim as any craft could be when they
-set sail on their voyage, with Mrs. Warren waving good-bye to them from
-the front piazza.
-
-"I never feel as free anywhere in the world as I do out aboard the
-_Spray_ on a trip like this," said George Warren, stretching himself out
-comfortably on the house of the cabin, while Arthur held the tiller.
-"It's the best fun there is down here, after all."
-
-"Well, I don't know, a canoe isn't so bad," said Bob. "You can't take so
-many, to be sure, but when Tom and I get off on that and go down among
-the islands for a day or two, sleeping underneath it on the beaches at
-night and cooking on the shore as we go along, we feel pretty much like
-Crusoes ourselves, eh, Tom?"
-
-"Indeed we do," answered Tom. "It's the next best thing, surely, to
-sailing a boat."
-
-"By the way, Tom," asked Arthur, "where did you leave the canoe? Not
-where any one could get that, I hope."
-
-"No, that's safe and snug," replied Tom. "It's locked up in your shed,
-and your mother has the key. That's one thing we shall find all right
-when we get back."
-
-The wind was blowing lightly from the northwest, and, as they were
-starting out to make the circuit of the island by way of the northern end
-first, they had to beat their way up along the coast against a head wind.
-
-"This little boat isn't such a bad sailer," said George Warren,
-admiringly, gazing aloft at a snug setting topsail. "For a boat of its
-size, I guess she goes to windward as well as any. There's only one thing
-the matter with her. She's small, and when she's reefed down under three
-reefs, with the choppy seas we have in this bay, she don't work well to
-windward, and that's a fault that might be dangerous, if there were not
-so many harbours around this coast to run to in a storm."
-
-"I suppose some day we'll have a bigger one, don't you?" queried Joe.
-
-"Yes, when we can earn it, father says," replied George. "That don't look
-so easy, though. A fellow can't earn much when he's studying."
-
-"What's that up there on the ledges?" interrupted young Joe, pointing
-ahead to some long reefs that barely projected above the surface of the
-water.
-
-"They are seals--can't you see?" replied Arthur. "The wind is right, and
-we'll sail close up on to them before they know it. We can't shoot,
-because we haven't any gun aboard, but we'll just take them by surprise."
-
-The little _Spray_, running its nose quietly past the point of the first
-ledge and sailing through a channel sown with the rocks on either hand,
-came as a surprise to a colony of the sleek creatures, sunning themselves
-on the dry part of the ledges. They floundered clumsily off the rocks and
-splashed into the water, like a lot of schoolboys caught playing hookey,
-and only when the whole pack had slipped off into the sea did they utter
-a sound, a series of short, sharp barks, as here and there a curious head
-bobbed up for a moment, and then dived quickly below again.
-
-"They have as much curiosity as a human being," said George Warren. "Just
-watch them steal those quick glances at us, and then bob under water
-again. The fishermen around here shoot them whenever they get a chance,
-because they eat the salmon out of the nets, but I never could bear to
-take a shot at one. They seem so intelligent, like a lot of tame dogs. I
-don't believe in shooting creatures much, anyway, unless you want them
-for food, or unless they are wild, savage animals."
-
-"That don't apply to ducks, I hope," said Tom. "We want to take you up
-into the woods with us some fall, and have you do some shooting of that
-kind,--ducks and partridges and perhaps a deer or two."
-
-"No, I'd like that first rate," answered George. "It's this senseless
-shooting of creatures that you don't want after they are shot that I
-don't believe in. I don't believe in shooting things just for the sake of
-killing them. Actual hunting in the woods for game that you live on is
-another thing. It's a healthful, vigorous sport that takes one into clean
-surroundings and does one good."
-
-They chatted on, discussing this and that, till the yacht at length
-turned the head of the island and ran along past Bryant's Cove.
-
-"We won't forget that harbour in a hurry," they said, as they sailed by.
-
-The wind was gradually dying down with the sun, and would not carry them
-much farther that night, though they were soon running before it, as they
-rounded the uppermost point and headed away for the foot of the island,
-some thirteen miles away.
-
-"We'll have just about wind enough to run along to Dave Benson's place,"
-said George. "It's two miles down, but the wind and tide are both in our
-favour,--what there is of them. We can buy some green corn of Dave, and
-he will let us pull his lobster-pots and charge us only five cents for
-each lobster. Things are cheap down here, if you buy them of the
-fishermen. A little money means a good deal to them. A little flour and
-tea and sugar at the village store, and they live mighty comfortably on
-what they catch and what they raise on their farms. They don't know what
-it means to be poor, as the poor in our city do."
-
-"Yes, and they live a happy life, for the most part," said Henry Burns.
-"They get a good share of their living out of the sea, and I've always
-noticed that seafaring people are generally very well contented with
-their lot. You never hear them grumbling, as men do that work hard on
-farms. The sea seems to inspire them more; at least, it seems so to me."
-
-"What does 'inspire' mean, please, Henry?" queried young Joe, winking at
-Bob. "It sounds like a very nice word."
-
-"Inspiration means a strong desire and ambition to do something, and a
-conviction that one cannot fail," answered Henry Burns. "For instance, I
-might feel myself inspired to knock an idea into your head, just like
-this." And Henry Burns administered a sound cuff on that young
-gentleman's head. "That's a very crude example," added Henry Burns.
-"Perhaps I can give you a better one, if you would like."
-
-"No, I thank you," said young Joe. "That will do very well for the
-present. I think I understand."
-
-Dave Benson's place was a weather-beaten old house set in the midst of a
-corn and bean patch, close by a little creek that ran in from the western
-bay. It had an air of dilapidation, but, withal, of comfort about it.
-There was a little garden, some hake were drying on flakes beyond the
-house, a rowboat and a dory were pulled up on the beach a little way up
-the creek, and the indispensable sailboat, built by Dave himself in the
-winter months, was lying a little offshore in the shelter of a projecting
-hook of land.
-
-"Hulloa, Dave," shouted George Warren, as a tall, sunburned figure, gaunt
-but powerful, emerged from the door of the house and peered out across
-the water at them.
-
-"Hulloa," he said, laconically. "You all ain't been over much to see us
-lately."
-
-"No, but we thought we would make a call to-day," said George. "Will you
-come out and get us? We left the tender behind. We're going around the
-island."
-
-For answer the man shoved his dory off the beach, stepped in, and sculled
-out to them with one oar out over the stern.
-
-"Climb in here sort of easy like, now," said he, "and I guess I can take
-the whole of you ashore at one load. If you two ain't used to this
-craft," he added, addressing Tom and Bob, "you want to look out some, for
-its tippery and no mistake, though there ain't no better boat when you
-know how to behave in it."
-
-"I guess it's something like our canoe," said Tom. "We're used to that,
-so I think we'll manage. Perhaps you never saw a canoe."
-
-"Not as I know of," returned the other. "Though I do recall seeing what I
-thought must be one, from what I've heard, going along the shore down
-below here about an hour ago."
-
-"It couldn't have been a canoe," said Bob, "for ours is the only one on
-the island, and that is locked up safe at home in the Warren's shed."
-
-"Mebbe not," replied Dave Benson. "I ain't sure at all. I just noticed
-there was two boys in it, and they were on their knees and pushing it
-along with what you call paddles, I think."
-
-Tom and Bob looked at each other blankly.
-
-"It can't be possible," said Tom, at length. "I left ours locked up safe
-enough. Dave's made a mistake."
-
-"Got any corn?" asked Arthur.
-
-"Yes, there's some growing out there, I reckon. You can go out and pick
-what you want and gimme what you like for it. It's good and sweet, I
-reckon."
-
-"And lobsters, how about them?" asked young Joe.
-
-"Well, I haven't pulled the pots to-day," said Dave. "You can go and do
-that, too, I reckon. There ought to be some there. I baited them all
-fresh with cunners and sculpins last night."
-
-"Let me go and pull them," said Bob. "I never caught a lobster. Come on,
-Joe, you can show me how and I'll do the work."
-
-"Did you ever handle a dory?" asked Dave.
-
-"No," answered Bob, "but I'm used to a canoe."
-
-"And did you ever pull a lobster-pot?"
-
-"No, never saw one."
-
-"Then you want to look out," said Dave, and took himself off into his
-house, leaving the boys to themselves.
-
-Bob got another oar, and, with young Joe in the stern, rowed out a few
-rods toward some ledges, where Dave had indicated that the lobster-pots
-were set.
-
-"Did you ever pull a lobster-pot, Joe?" asked Bob, as they came in sight
-of half a dozen small wooden buoys, about as big as ten-pins, floating at
-a short distance from one another, with ropes attached.
-
-"No, I never did," replied Joe; "but I've seen it done and it looks easy.
-You just lift the pot aboard the boat and open a trap-door and take out
-the lobsters. Only you want to look out how you take hold of one of them,
-that's all. It's all right if you take him by the back."
-
-On shore, seated on a huge stick of timber, washed ashore long ago and
-half-imbedded in the sand, the other boys watched the proceedings with
-interest.
-
-"Bob will do it all right, of course," said George, winking slyly at
-Arthur. "It's a simple enough trick, only it is harder in a dory than in
-a boat with a keel to it, for a dory slides off so."
-
-"Just like a canoe," said Tom.
-
-"By the way," he added, "is a lobster-pot heavy?"
-
-"That's the deceptive part of it," replied George. "It's a great big cage
-made of laths with a bottom of boards, and it comes to the surface easy
-because the water buoys it up. It's the lifting it out that fools one.
-It's got three or four big stones in it to weigh it down, and you have
-got to bring it out of water with a sudden lift or it will stick
-half-way."
-
-In the meantime, Bob, having grasped one of the floating buoys, proceeded
-to haul in the slack of the rope, which was quite long, to allow for the
-tide, which was now low.
-
-"It comes up easy," he said to Joe, as he drew it up slowly to the
-surface, hand over hand. "Here she comes now. Wait till it lands on the
-gunwale and then lean over on the other side, so we won't capsize." Bob
-grasped the slats of the big cage and lifted manfully.
-
-The lobster-pot came up all right, as George had explained, till, just at
-the point where it should have left the water, it stopped suddenly and
-stuck like a bar of lead. Unluckily, Bob had not counted on that extra
-weight of stone inside, nor on the loss of the buoyancy of the water. At
-the same instant, moreover, young Joe, seeing the cage strike the
-gunwale, shifted over to the other side of the dory. This settled the
-matter. The pot lodged half-way over one gunwale, hung there for a
-moment, long enough to careen the crank thing down on its side; Bob and
-Joe both lost their balance and slid the same way, the dory filled with
-water, and boys and lobster-pot slumped into the sea.
-
-The boys on shore set up a roar at the mishap of their comrades, while
-long Dave Benson, emerging once more from his cabin door, was heard to
-chuckle as he strode down to the shore and shoved off his rowboat.
-
-"It's just like a canoe, exactly," he muttered, "just like it--only it's
-so different." And he doubled up at the oars and laughed silently.
-
-Bob and Joe, coming to the surface, puffing and blowing water, were
-pleased to note the sympathy displayed for them in four boyish forms,
-rolling off the log and holding on to their sides with laughter. Nor did
-the keenness of this sympathy abate the whole evening long, for every now
-and then one of them might be heard to repeat the language of Dave
-Benson, as he glanced significantly at the others, "It's just like a
-canoe--only it's so different."
-
-However, Bob and Joe, being duly scrubbed down and invested in a change
-of duck clothing from the locker of the _Spray_, did not relish any the
-less the supper that awaited them, of broiled live lobster, cooked over a
-glowing bed of coals on the beach, and corn that was as sweet as Dave
-Benson had promised. They took their chaffing as good fellows and
-comrades are bound to do, only vowing inwardly to bide their time for
-revenge.
-
-Then, as night was coming on, they set up their fly-tent on a clean, dry
-part of the beach, well beyond the reach of the tide, spread down their
-blankets, and Tom and Bob and Henry Burns turned in to sleep there,
-leaving the little cabin of the _Spray_ for the Warren boys.
-
-"Bob," said Tom, "did you hear what Dave Benson said as he brought in the
-capsized dory, with the lobsters, too?"
-
-"He said it was 'just like a canoe, only--'"
-
-"Oh, you dry up, Tom," exclaimed Bob. "Your turn will come next, so don't
-rub it in."
-
-And they went off soundly to sleep.
-
-The next morning, when they awoke, they found that the wind had altered
-and was beginning to blow up from the southward. They must, therefore,
-beat their way down to the foot of the island, some ten miles distant,
-against a head wind and sea, for a southerly always rolled in more or
-less of a sea after it had blown for an hour or so.
-
-"Come again," called out Dave Benson, as they left his cabin astern, and
-he stood waving them farewell with his weather-beaten hat.
-
-"I'd just like to know what he meant when he said he saw a canoe out
-here," said Tom. "I know ours is all right, but he certainly did describe
-a canoe, when he spoke about its being paddled, and ours is the only one
-I know of around here."
-
-"Yes, and he saw it last night, or, rather, yesterday afternoon," said
-Bob, "and nobody would have disturbed ours in broad daylight, at any
-rate."
-
-But about an hour later, they came suddenly to the conclusion that Dave
-Benson knew what he was talking about, when Henry Burns exclaimed all at
-once: "Why, there it is now. Dave Benson was right, after all. That's a
-canoe, down about a mile ahead, just off that white line of beach, and
-there are two paddling it."
-
-The boys looked in amazement. There could be no mistaking it. Henry Burns
-had surely spied a canoe. They could make it out quite plainly, pitching
-slightly in the sea, with apparently some one at either end.
-
-"Quick, get the glass, Joe," cried George Warren, who had the tiller.
-"It's in the locker in the cabin, you know. That will show us just who it
-is."
-
-Young Joe dived below and reappeared the next instant, bringing a small
-telescope.
-
-"Here," he said, handing it to Tom, "take a look at them."
-
-Tom adjusted the focus of the glass and sighted the craft ahead, then
-exclaimed, excitedly: "Yes, it's them, sure enough. It's Harvey and Joe
-Hinman and it's the canoe. We've got them, too, if the _Spray_ can only
-catch them. We're sure to get the canoe, at any rate, for they can't run
-far or fast with that on their shoulders, if they see us and take to the
-shore. We know what it is to try to hurry with that."
-
-"That we do," returned Bob. "Let me have a look, Tom."
-
-"Cracky!" he exclaimed, as he put the glass down almost as soon as he had
-sighted it. "Who'd have thought they would have had the nerve to get that
-in broad daylight? They must know they are sure to be seen in it, too.
-What on earth can Harvey be thinking of?"
-
-"We'll set the club topsail and the other jib in a hurry," said George,
-"and perhaps we can overhaul them before they see us."
-
-They got the extra sail on in a twinkling and laid the course of the
-_Spray_ a little closer into the wind. Fifteen minutes went by, and they
-had made rapid progress in overhauling the canoe. They made short tacks,
-so as not to be seen by the paddlers, if possible, by keeping so far as
-they could in a line with the stern of the canoe.
-
-Presently, however, the boy who was wielding the stern paddle turned and
-looked back, and they could see plainly that it was Harvey.
-
-He must have seen them, too, and been vastly surprised, for, carrying
-across the strip of land at the Narrows, he had surely expected to meet
-no familiar yacht in the western bay. The occupants of the canoe turned
-their craft more in toward shore, though not directly, and, at least so
-it seemed to the boys, began paddling desperately, as though they hoped
-to escape.
-
-If they had thought they could run away from the _Spray_ in this way,
-they soon found out their mistake, for the Spray continued rapidly to
-overhaul them.
-
-Turning squarely in toward the shore, Harvey and Joe Hinman soon reached
-it, jumped out, and drew the canoe far up on the beach. Their next move
-surprised the crew of the Spray. Leaving the canoe in full sight on the
-beach, Harvey and Joe Hinman walked deliberately away, without so much as
-looking back at their pursuers.
-
-"That's a mighty strange performance," exclaimed George Warren. "I don't
-understand that at all."
-
-There was no place to run the _Spray_ in close to shore, so they rounded
-to some thirty feet out, and Tom and Bob, hastily throwing off their
-clothes, dived overboard and swam to the beach.
-
-Tom was the first to reach the canoe; but, as he came upon it and turned
-it over, he uttered a cry of astonishment.
-
-"They've fooled us this time, sure enough," he said to Bob, who came
-panting up. "It isn't our canoe."
-
-The canoe, in fact, was new.
-
-It was enough like theirs to be its mate, both as to size and colour, but
-there was not a scratch upon it nor upon the paddles. The canoe could not
-have been used more than once or twice since it had left the maker's
-hands.
-
-"The joke is on us," cried Bob to the boys in the _Spray_. "It's another
-canoe. Harvey's 'governor,' as he calls him, must have bought it for him
-and sent it down on the boat yesterday. He doesn't seem to be afraid to
-trust us with his property, which is more than we would do with him."
-
-"Perhaps he would rather trust the canoe with us than to trust himself
-with all of us just at this time," replied Tom. "I feel like taking it
-along with us, to make him give up our tent, but I'm afraid that wouldn't
-do. We can't prove that he has it, either."
-
-Harvey and Joe Hinman had clearly left the canoe to its fate, so there
-was nothing to do but to swim aboard the _Spray_ again, and the voyage
-down the island was resumed.
-
-"There's one thing about it," said Tom, as he scrambled into his clothing
-once more, "if Jack Harvey is as reckless and as careless in that canoe
-as he is in his yacht it will be washed up on shore some day without him.
-Not that I hope it will happen, but I look to see it."
-
-"I don't think he was born to be drowned," said Henry Burns.
-
-Toward noon they came in sight of the southern extremity of the island,
-or the extremities, to speak more accurately, for the end of the island
-here was divided into a succession of thin points of land of various
-shapes, affording a number of small, rockbound harbours, snug and
-secluded, and each making good shelter for small vessels.
-
-They selected one of these, and, as they knew the waters to be filled
-with a species of small cod, they determined to lay up here for the
-afternoon and night, starting out again the next morning. They brought
-the _Spray_ well in to the head of the harbour which they selected, so
-that it was almost wholly land-locked when they dropped anchor and furled
-their sails.
-
-Toward evening the wind decreased, dying out almost entirely. Big banks
-of clouds piling up in the northwest told them that they might expect the
-breeze from that quarter in the morning.
-
-It was getting dusk and they were cooking their supper in the little
-cabin of the _Spray_, when young Joe, looking out of the companionway,
-exclaimed: "Why, here comes company; another yacht's going to lie in here
-for the night, too."
-
-Looking out, they saw a big black sloop coming slowly into the harbour.
-She had come up from the southward before the wind, and had only her
-mainsail set. There was hardly breeze enough to bring her in. She drifted
-in slowly, with one man at her wheel, and, as she came within hailing
-distance, young Joe, going forward, swung his cap and shouted, "Ahoy."
-
-The man at the wheel did not respond, but, strangely enough, at the sound
-of young Joe's voice the yacht slowly turned again, heading completely
-about, and stood out of the harbour again.
-
-"Doesn't seem to like our company," said Henry Burns.
-
-"Guess he'll have to have it, whether he wants it or not," said George
-Warren. "There's not wind enough to take him out again, as he will find
-when he gets the set of the tide at the entrance."
-
-If the helmsman aboard the strange yacht had really intended to quit the
-harbour again, he found the tide to be as George Warren had said. After
-vainly trying to make out for a few moments, he left the wheel, ran
-forward, and the next moment they heard the splash of his anchor. Then
-the sail dropped and the man went below.
-
-"Whoever they are aboard there, they don't seem inclined to be sociable,"
-said Henry Burns. "Well, they don't have to be, if they don't want to."
-
-"Guess they're afraid we'll keep them awake," said George Warren. "They
-are fishermen, by the looks. See, she carries no topmast, so she is not a
-pleasure yacht, though she looks from here like a fast boat. They make
-them good models now, since Burgess began it."
-
-"I guess that's so," said Arthur Warren. "Those fishermen like to sleep
-nights, after a hard day's work, without being disturbed. I remember one
-night we laid up in a harbour and began singing college songs, and a crew
-of them rowed over to us and threatened to lick us if we didn't keep
-quiet. This fellow doesn't want to be disturbed."
-
-"I'll hail him, anyway, if he comes on deck again," said Henry Burns,
-"and find out where he is from. I like to know my neighbours."
-
-But the man aboard the strange yacht was not inclined to be neighbourly.
-He did not appear on deck again. A thin wreath of smoke curled out of the
-funnel in his cabin, and they knew he was getting a meal. That was the
-only sign of life aboard.
-
-Sometime that night--he did not know the hour--Henry Burns awoke,
-conscious of some sound that had disturbed his light slumbers. Presently
-he became aware that it was the sound of a sail being hoisted. Getting up
-softly without disturbing his companions, he crept out of the cabin and
-looked across the water. The moon was shining, and he could see a lone
-figure aboard the strange yacht, getting the boat under way.
-
-Henry Burns saw him go forward and labour for awhile at the anchor rope.
-Then, for a wind had arisen, the man ran aft to the wheel, and Henry
-Burns saw the strange yacht go sailing out of the harbour.
-
-"That's a queer thing to do," muttered Henry Burns. "There's something
-strange about it. He tried to get out before, the minute he saw us.
-Cracky! You don't suppose---- No, that's nonsense. I'm getting altogether
-too suspicious ever since I came across that man Craigie upon the roof of
-the hotel."
-
-And Henry Burns went back to his bunk again.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
- STORM DRIVEN
-
-
-When they awoke next morning the wind was blowing heavily from the
-northwest, and, while the sun was as yet shining brightly, the sky was
-darkened here and there with banks of clouds, which moved with great
-rapidity, driven by violent currents. Inside the snug harbour the water
-was calm, but, looking out beyond on the bay, they could see its surface
-broken already into big waves.
-
-"Looks like a nasty day outside," remarked George Warren. "I wonder
-whether we ought to lie in here to-day, or take the chance of clearing
-the foot of the island before it gets heavier."
-
-"I'd hate to stay here another whole day," said Joe.
-
-"Do you think it's going to blow much harder, George?" inquired Tom.
-
-"I can't say for certain," replied the other, "but it looks as though the
-wind was going to increase right along."
-
-"But don't you think we could get around the foot of the island before it
-got much worse?" asked Arthur. "There is only about a mile to run before
-we get under the lee of the islands in the other bay."
-
-"Of course, if we can reach the eastern bay all right, we shall be in
-smooth water then," said George, "for the island will shut off the wind
-to a great extent, and there won't be much sea. Well, if you fellows are
-willing to take the chance, I am. I guess it won't get any worse than the
-night we ran to Bryant's Cove. The _Spray_ stood that all right."
-
-Breakfast being finished, they double-reefed the mainsail of the little
-yacht, and did not set the jib, as they would be running with the wind
-about on their quarter and would not need it. Then they stood out of the
-harbour into the bay.
-
-They were almost immediately in rough water, and the very first plunge of
-the yacht into the heavy sea sent the spray flying over them. Young Joe
-and Arthur went scurrying into the cabin for the oilskins, of which they
-had a good supply, and the boys prepared themselves for wet weather.
-
-"We'll get it right along now," said George, "until we can clear that
-point about a mile ahead there. The _Spray_ does the best she can, but
-she does throw the water bad in a heavy sea. It isn't her fault. And
-there's one good thing about her; you can't tip her over. She will stand
-up till the mast and sail are blown out of her."
-
-The boys now realized how deceptive wind and water viewed from a distance
-always are. Gusts of wind that were seen from shore to blacken the water
-and send the spray flying from the crests of waves, were found now to be
-of far greater violence than they had supposed. Viewed from the harbour,
-the waves had not seemed to be of unusual size, but, now that they threw
-the little yacht about like a toy, they assumed a more terrific aspect.
-
-The wind increased, and the _Spray_ rolled dangerously in the seas.
-
-"She won't stand this," said George, at length. "We have got to put the
-third reef in and do it quick."
-
-They got the yacht into the wind for a moment, lowered the sail, and tied
-in a few reef-points; but the yacht would not hold in the wind, and they
-had to be content with a few knots tied at twice or three times the usual
-distance.
-
-"We're blowing offshore at a great rate," exclaimed George, "but I can't
-help it. I can't hold her up any higher. She won't stand it."
-
-"Then we cannot make the point," said Arthur.
-
-"I am afraid not," returned George. "I don't like the prospect of getting
-out into that bay, either, but I'm afraid we are in for it. I had no idea
-there was any such a sea running, nor anything like this wind."
-
-The prospect was, indeed, not encouraging. Across the wide stretch of bay
-for some eighteen miles the sea was one mass of whitecaps, a tumbling
-confusion of waves, which already broke aboard the yacht, covering the
-boys with spray and necessitating the use of bailing-dish and boat-sponge
-to keep the water from standing in the cockpit.
-
-"We've got to get that topping-lift up higher, Arthur," said George
-Warren, as the yacht rolled heavily, bringing the boom down dangerously
-near the waves.
-
-His brother sprang to the halyards at the warning, but it was a moment
-too late. At that instant a wave, rolling higher than any they had yet
-encountered, raised the _Spray_ on its crest and hurled it forward, at
-the same time causing the little craft to yaw so that the boom was buried
-for a moment deep in the seas. That moment was enough. There was a sharp
-snap as the boom, splintered in two in the middle, emerged from the
-waves, a useless thing. The yacht nearly broached to, while the next
-oncoming wave broke fairly aboard, filling the cockpit half-full of
-water.
-
-They thought it was all over with them then, but they kept their heads
-and saved themselves. Henry Burns and Arthur Warren, at the risk of going
-overboard, managed to get the broken boom aboard, after they had let the
-halyards run, and lashed it astern, so that the yacht was utterly without
-sail. At the same time Tom and Bob, who knew little about handling a
-yacht, but were ready for any emergency, bailed furiously with pails to
-clear the boat of water.
-
-Fortunately, the hatch had been shut, and the deluge of water had not
-gone into the cabin, or the boat must have foundered. As it was, she
-rolled heavily till they had bailed the cockpit dry again.
-
-"That does settle it, with a vengeance," said George Warren, when they
-had recovered a little from the shock. "We have got to run for it now,
-clear across this bay. I think we can do it all right, but you fellows
-will have to bail lively. That won't be the only sea we take aboard."
-
-"Where do we run to?" asked Henry Burns.
-
-"That's the worst of it," replied George Warren. "I'm not sure, by any
-means, whether we get blown out to the shoals, or whether we can head
-over to the eastward any, ever so slightly, and strike the Gull Island
-Thoroughfare. If we can land under the lee of Gull Island, we may be able
-to do something. The first thing, though, is to get there."
-
-It was no easy thing to hold the yacht on its course, even with no sail
-to drive it up to windward. Every wave threatened to throw it broadside
-on, and it required now and again the united efforts of George and Arthur
-Warren to steady it. Then a wave would come aboard astern, rolling in and
-nearly filling the cockpit. Several times it did this, and at each and
-every time it seemed as though the little yacht was going down. They
-bailed desperately then, every one of them falling to except George
-Warren.
-
-To their credit, though, not one of them lost his courage. Their faces
-were drawn and set, but they had confidence that the little _Spray_ would
-somehow bring them through.
-
-Toward the middle of the afternoon they had got the Thoroughfare well in
-sight, big Gull Island lying nearly dead ahead and the smaller Gull
-Islands lying away to the eastward.
-
-"If we can manage to get a scrap of sail on her just as we pass the end
-of Gull Island," said George Warren, "I think we can swing her in and not
-capsize. We've got to keep headway on, though, or one of these big
-rollers will get under us and tip us over. We shall have a few rods to
-run broadside on, for, as we are running now, and the best we can head,
-we cannot come nearer than that to the island."
-
-"I'll give her a scrap of sail that she can carry," exclaimed Arthur, and
-dived into the companionway, shutting the door quickly to keep the seas
-out. He returned in a moment, bringing a hand-saw. With this he severed
-clean the broken half of the boom, tying the ends of the rigging to the
-short stub that was left. This left the sail a huge, clumsy bag, that
-would evidently not hoist up but a foot or so on the mast, but might
-possibly be of some service in the emergency.
-
-A torrent of rain now began to pour, falling so dense as almost to shut
-out the islands ahead. Their outlines became obscured, making the effort
-to run into the Thoroughfare a more difficult and dangerous one.
-Moreover, the wind continued to increase.
-
-"Now, fellows," said George Warren, as they came abreast of the end of
-Big Gull Island, "everybody up to windward and hold on hard. She's going
-to lay over when she gets these seas broadside. Hoist the sail, Arthur,
-just as we begin to head in."
-
-Arthur sprang to the halyards, but they were tangled and did not pull
-true. Try as best he could, the sail would hoist but a little ways on the
-mast. It bagged out like a huge balloon, holding the wind and nearly
-capsizing them. Henry Burns, handling the main-sheet, let it run just in
-time to save them. Still the sail gave them headway, and, carefully
-managed, would answer to fetch them in.
-
-Twice they had to head off fairly before the wind again, at the onrush of
-some enormous wave, but they got quickly on their course again, and,
-rolling frightfully, with the boys clinging far out to windward, the
-little yacht all at once felt the relief which the sheltering extremity
-of Gull Island afforded from the awful strain. Almost before they knew
-it, they were in smooth water once more, riding easily at the entrance to
-the Thoroughfare.
-
-"Whew!" cried George Warren, as he dropped the tiller and shook his
-hands, which were numb and aching from the strain and the cold rain.
-"That was a ride for life that I don't care to repeat again in a hurry.
-Didn't the little _Spray_ do well, though, eh, Arthur? She had a good
-excuse to founder if she hadn't been staunch. If she was only a little
-larger she wouldn't have minded this at all."
-
-"We did come flying across that bay and no mistake," said Tom. "I thought
-we were going to founder twice or three times, though."
-
-"Looks as though we were stranded here for some days, that's the worst of
-it," said George Warren. "This storm has just begun, by the looks of it.
-It's a lonesome hole, too, down in this reach. Nobody ever comes here,
-except a few fishermen in the fall and spring. The Thoroughfare is all
-right, but it doesn't lead to any particular place in the course of
-vessels, so it isn't a regular thoroughfare really, like those over to
-the eastward more. Now and then a yacht goes through, just for the sail,
-but one has got to know the channel very well, for it isn't charted
-accurately,--at least, so Cap'n Sam says."
-
-"Well," returned Arthur, "we are not making a race against time, so I
-don't see as it matters much whether we stay here or some other part of
-the bay. We'll just lie snug aboard here to-night, and then to-morrow
-we'll get out and explore. There are some fishermen's shanties around on
-the other side of some of those smaller islands, and we ought to be able
-to build up a fire in one of them and live there till the storm is over,
-so we won't have to stay in this little cabin all the time."
-
-"I'll be glad enough to go down there for awhile now," said Henry Burns,
-"and get dry and warm. Come on, Bob, let's you and me start some coffee
-and biscuit going. You do the cooking, because you know how, and I'll
-look on. I'll get the dishes out, anyway."
-
-There was scarcely room in the cabin of the _Spray_ for more than four of
-them to sit and eat, so they threw the mainsail over the stub of the boom
-and made a shelter out of it against the rain. There, just outside the
-cabin, Tom and Bob sat as they all ate supper, with the rain pouring down
-all around and spattering in under the edges of the canvas. It was
-uncomfortable and dreary at best, and they were all glad when time came
-to turn in, which they did by all crowding into the cabin, where they
-could at least keep dry, although stowed away like sardines.
-
-"Ouch!" exclaimed Henry Burns, as he awoke next morning, feeling stiff
-and sore. "I feel as though I was creased and starched and ironed, and
-every time I move I take out a crease. It will take me half a day to
-straighten out again, I've got so many kinks in my neck and back."
-
-They were all cramped and lame from the uncomfortable positions in which
-they had lain, for on fair nights they had been accustomed to make up two
-bunks just outside the cabin, in the cockpit. It was still raining hard,
-but as soon as they had had breakfast they set out to seek for new
-quarters.
-
-With the scrap of a sail set, and with the use of the sweeps with which
-the yacht was provided, they worked their way about a quarter of a mile
-along into the Thoroughfare, till they got abreast of one of the smaller
-of the Gull Islands. The shores of this were very bold, the rocks going
-down sheer, without any outlying reefs or ledges, so that they were able
-to run the yacht close alongside, making her fast at bow and stern with
-ropes carried out on land.
-
-"It seems good to stretch one's legs again," said Bob, as they all sprang
-out on to the rocks. They were indeed glad to be on land once more.
-
-The island on which they now were was about three-quarters of a mile long
-and about half a mile wide, quite densely wooded with a growth of spruce
-and young birches. From a little elevation they could look out to sea
-toward the southward.
-
-"The shanties are on the other side, if I remember rightly," said George
-Warren. "I was down here once in the fishing season. We may as well
-strike directly across to the south shore. That's where the fishermen
-build their weirs for the salmon that run in along the islands."
-
-They tramped across through the woods in the pouring rain. It was a
-relief to get even the shelter that the trees afforded from the driving
-storm. Presently they came in sight of the fishermen's cabins, a cluster
-of four standing in a clearing at the edge of the woods, facing the sea.
-One of the huts was somewhat larger than the other three, and toward this
-they directed their steps.
-
-"I don't just like to break into other people's property," said George
-Warren, advancing toward the door, hatchet in hand, "but it only means
-forcing a staple, and we can replace that without any harm being done.
-It's the only--hulloa! Why, somebody's been here before us. The door is
-ajar."
-
-Somebody had, indeed, forced the door, and had not taken pains to
-refasten it. The staple, which had been drawn, lay on the ground by the
-door, just where it had been dropped. The boys threw open the door and
-stepped inside.
-
-The one room, for a shanty of the kind, was fairly commodious. Along the
-two ends were ranged tiers of bunks, three at either end, making just
-enough for them.
-
-"Looks as though they were built expressly for us," remarked Henry Burns.
-
-The bunks were rough, clumsily made affairs, a few boards knocked
-together, with a thin layer of hay thrown in at the bottom of each; but
-with the blankets from the yacht they would be comfortable.
-
-In the centre of the room was a large sheet-iron stove, with a funnel
-running up through the roof. In one corner of the room--there was only
-one room in the cabin--was a sort of cupboard, on the shelves of which
-were piled a few tin dishes. A rusty axe was apparently the only tool
-left on the premises.
-
-There was a scrap of kindling and one or two dry sticks of wood beside
-the stove, and with this they started a fire. Driftwood lined the shore,
-and a number of dead spruces, which had not yet rotted, furnished them
-with an ample supply of fuel. They piled the stove full, and soon had a
-fire roaring that turned the stove red-hot and which sent out a grateful
-warmth throughout the cabin.
-
-"That will dry us out in good shape," exclaimed Arthur, as the steam came
-from his wet clothing. "We'll have this old shanty as comfortable as a
-parlour. This is a better house than Crusoe ever had."
-
-It was, in fact, a comfortable shelter against the storm. The roof and
-sides were shingled, so that it kept out the rain, and though the wind,
-which by this time was blowing a gale, shook it till it rattled, it stood
-firm.
-
-After the boys had brought in a supply of firewood, enough to last them
-through the evening, and had stowed it near the stove to dry, they set
-out again for the yacht, and brought back each a blanket, the yacht's two
-lanterns, and a supply of food.
-
-"It's lucky we put a good supply aboard," said young Joe, as they stowed
-the stuff away on the cabin shelves. "Looks as though we were in for a
-couple of days here, at least. It wouldn't have been any fun to have to
-fish for our suppers in this storm."
-
-"You would never have survived it, Joe," returned Arthur, "though you did
-eat enough at that picnic to last you several days."
-
-"Well, here's a funny thing," cried Henry Burns, who had been rummaging
-about in the cupboard. "The parties who were here before us didn't
-believe in starving. And they didn't believe in living on fishermen's
-fare, either." And Henry Burns brought forth three empty wine-bottles and
-a half-emptied jar of imported preserves. "Here are some tins that
-contained turkey and some kinds of game," he added. "The fishermen don't
-buy that sort of canned stuff. It must have been a party of yachtsmen
-that used this place last."
-
-"They might have had the fairness to fasten the door after them, whoever
-they were," said George Warren.
-
-"Perhaps the wine accounts for that," said Henry Burns.
-
-"I'm glad they left us some preserves," said young Joe.
-
-They slept soundly in the shanty that night, with the wind howling about
-their ears and the rain dashing against the single window and beating
-like mad upon the roof. Nor did the storm abate the following day, nor
-the next night. Not till the third morning did the sunlight welcome them
-as they awoke, but then it poured through every chink and crack in the
-shanty, as though to make amends for the length of its absence.
-
-When the woods had dried sufficiently so they could venture abroad, they
-set out to hunt for a young spruce that would do for a boom for the
-_Spray_. After cutting several and finding they had been deceived in
-their length, they finally secured one which would do. Then they brought
-up the stub of the boom from the yacht and got the exact measure of the
-old one from the sail, which they disentangled from the snarl of rigging,
-and spread out.
-
-"I am afraid Captain Sam would laugh at this spar-making effort of mine,"
-said George Warren, as he trimmed away at the slender trunk of spruce,
-from which he had peeled the bark; "but it will do to take us on our
-cruise again. And what's the use of going on a cruise if you don't have
-adventures?"
-
-When he had fashioned the stick as well as his one tool--a hatchet from
-the locker of the _Spray_--would admit of, he unscrewed the jaws from the
-old boom, fastened them upon the new, and the boom was done.
-
-Then they set about mending several tears in the mainsail, with a needle
-and twine, also from the yacht's locker, and by noon everything was in
-readiness for rigging the sail once more. This proved the most difficult
-task of all, for they found that it is one thing to know the running
-rigging of a sailboat, and another thing to reeve it when it has been
-displaced. It was not until the middle of the afternoon that they had the
-job completed, and then, as the wind was dying out, they decided it was
-useless to attempt to set sail till the following morning.
-
-In the meantime, Henry Burns, finding that he was of no service in the
-work of rigging the yacht, had volunteered to get a mess of fish for
-supper. Accordingly he set out, equipped with a short alder pole and line
-and a basket, to try for some cunners and small cod off the ledges on the
-seaward side of the island. He succeeded in getting a fairly good catch,
-and then continued along the shore in search of mussels, as the tide was
-several hours ebbed.
-
-His search brought him at length to the northernmost extremity of the
-island, where he sat down on the beach to rest. Then, as he started to
-resume his walk, he noticed that the receding tide had left bare a narrow
-sand-bar, that connected the island on which the cabins stood and the
-adjacent island, so that he could now pass from one to the other almost
-dry-shod.
-
-Fondness for exploring was ever Henry Burns's ruling passion, so he set
-out across the sand-bar to the neighbouring island, and was pleased to
-find that the mussel-beds were far more plenty there than he had found
-them before. This island was not so large as the other Gull Island. It
-was not more than a half-mile long and about a quarter of a mile across
-in its widest part. It had, however, the same characteristic of the
-other, in that its shores were abrupt, and deep water lay all around it.
-
-There was but one small strip of beach, extending out into mud-flats,
-where Henry Burns could gather mussels; but he soon filled his basket
-here, and, setting it down in the shade of an overhanging rock, climbed
-the ledge that now barred his way, and started to make a circuit of the
-island along the edge of its steep banks.
-
-Henry Burns had a habit of day-dreaming as he walked, unless he happened
-to be in search of some particular thing, when he was the most alert of
-youths. So, as he walked, his mind was far away just then, back in the
-town of Medford, where he pictured to himself familiar objects, and
-wondered what was happening there.
-
-So it happened that he passed a certain tree close by the shore, only
-half-noticing that the end of a stout hawser was tied to it, and not
-paying any attention to it. When he had gone on a rod or two, it suddenly
-struck him that this was an odd thing, as the hawser was new, and so he
-went back to look at it. There was a short length of the rope dangling
-from where it had been made fast about the tree-trunk, and he noticed
-upon examination that the free end had been severed cleanly by the stroke
-of a knife.
-
-"That's odd," said Henry Burns. "Fishermen don't usually waste a good
-piece of hawser like that. Some one was extravagant and in a hurry, or
-impatient--By Jove! You don't suppose--"
-
-Henry Burns had lost his preoccupied air in a moment. Following the line
-from the rope to the edge of the bank, he scrambled carefully down over
-the face of the ledge to the water's edge.
-
-Henry Burns was not surprised to discover that the rock was smeared all
-over with spots of black paint. Moreover, if further evidence were needed
-that some one had been at work there, there lay in a niche of the ledge
-an empty keg in which paint had been mixed.
-
-But what elated Henry Burns still more was a discovery he made by a
-closer examination of the ledge just under water. There at a depth of
-from one to two feet under water were rough, jagged edges of the rock
-which had been in contact with some object--an object that had left upon
-their surface unmistakable smearings or scrapings of paint which was
-white.
-
-"Hooray!" cried Henry Burns, excitedly, for him. "There it is--the old
-and the new. There's where he rubbed against the ledge as he made fast,
-and here's the evidence all about on these rocks of his new disguise. And
-there, right close to the bank, are the trees to which he fastened his
-tackle. If it isn't just as Miles Burton said, to the letter, then
-there's no trusting one's eyes."
-
-Henry Burns lay flat on a shelving bit of rock, with his face close to
-the water, and peered down to the bed below. The water was not very
-clear, but he could discern distinctly a deep, narrow trench in the hard
-sand, which might have been made by the keel of a boat, if the boat had
-touched bottom at low water.
-
-Any one observing Henry Burns at this moment would have been puzzled
-indeed. He suddenly sprang up, tore off his jacket and trousers, bared
-himself in the quickest possible time, and, poising for one brief moment
-on the brink of the water, dived in. He swam to the bottom with two
-strokes, clutched at something that lay on the bottom, grasped it in his
-right hand, came to the surface, and, drawing himself out on land once
-more, stuffed the object into his trousers pocket and scrambled into his
-clothing again, as though his life depended on his haste. Then he started
-on a run for the sand-bar, crossed it, paused never a moment for his
-basket of fish and clams, and dashed back to the shanty as fast as his
-legs could carry him.
-
-It was not constitutional with Henry Burns, however, to continue long in
-a state of excitement, and by the time he had regained his companions his
-composure had returned. Still, they were familiar enough with him to
-perceive that something unusual had happened.
-
-"What's the matter, Henry?" exclaimed George Warren. "We saw you running
-along the beach up there as if somebody was after you. We didn't know but
-what you had found another burglar."
-
-"No," replied Henry Burns, "it was the same one."
-
-It was their turn now to become excited.
-
-"You don't mean really----" began George Warren.
-
-"Yes, I do," interrupted Henry Burns. "Say, do you remember the strange
-black yacht that came into the harbour at the foot of Grand Island the
-other night, and that was in such a hurry to get out again when it saw
-us? Well, that was Chambers, and the yacht was the _Eagle_."
-
-"Well, but she was black," said George Warren, "and she had no topmast.
-The _Eagle_ was white."
-
-"Yes, but don't you recall what Burton said about Chambers, what a hand
-he was for changing a yacht over so she'd look like a different craft?
-Well, that's what he has done, and I've found the place where he did it.
-There's the white paint back there on the edges of the rocks where the
-yacht rubbed alongside, and the rock is all covered with spots of black
-paint."
-
-Henry Burns rapidly recounted what he had discovered, including the end
-of hawser made fast to the tree.
-
-"But that isn't all," exclaimed Henry Burns, triumphantly, as he fished a
-hand into his right trousers pocket. "See here, what do you make of this?
-I saw it shining down in the water just where the stern of the yacht must
-have laid."
-
-Henry Burns drew forth a glittering object from his pocket and held it up
-to their gaze.
-
-It was a gilt letter "E."
-
-"'E' for '_Eagle_,'" cried Henry Burns. "This letter got away from him.
-It's clear as daylight now. Say, fellows, let's start for Southport early
-in the morning. That man Chambers is in the bay. He's up to something,
-and we want to get them after him quick."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
- THE MAN IN THE BOAT
-
-
-"Fellows," said Jack Harvey, one afternoon, a few days following the
-return of the _Spray_ from its cruise, "I have decided to enter that
-free-for-all race over at Bellport. I've just heard that Ed Perkins isn't
-going to race the _Ella_, after all; and, with her out of the race, we
-stand a good show. Let's get the stuff aboard and start while there's a
-wind."
-
-"Who'll stay here and watch the camp?" asked Allan Harding.
-
-"Well, I guess you'd better, now you speak of it," responded Harvey,
-quickly. "There ought to be somebody here, sure. Camps have a way of
-disappearing around here, you know, Allan," giving a huge wink as he
-spoke.
-
-"I'd just as lieve stay, all right," returned Allan, a little out of
-humour, in spite of his assurance. "But you can't win the race without
-me, you know. You always said I was lucky--and there's a good deal of
-luck in racing, after all."
-
-"Well, we'll try to win without luck, that's all," said Harvey. "And,
-mind, we depend on you to have the camp still standing here when we get
-back. I shouldn't think it would be nice to get back and find one's camp
-gone, eh, Allan?"
-
-"No," replied the other, shortly.
-
-The crew lost no time in stowing their blankets and camp-kit aboard the
-_Surprise_, and, leaving Allan Harding sullenly on guard, they sailed
-away for Bellport.
-
-"Looks as though something was missing thereabouts," chuckled Harvey, as
-they sailed past the spot where Tom's and Bob's camp had stood. "Doesn't
-it strike you there used to be something there that's gone now?"
-
-This piece of humour on Harvey's part seemed to tickle the crew vastly,
-for they shouted with derision as they sailed by.
-
-"Guess they must have got tired of camping there," roared Harvey, at
-which the others roared the louder.
-
-Bellport, whither they were bound, lay about four miles down the coast of
-the mainland below Mayville. It was not so large a place as Southport,
-but was a favourite resort for yachtsmen, as the bay there was free of
-islands, and for ten or more miles there was a good sailing course.
-
-The yacht _Surprise_ did not reach Bellport till late that night, but
-Harvey and his crew were up bright and early the next morning, as the
-race was to come off at ten o'clock, and they wished to have everything
-ready for it.
-
-"Hulloa, Harvey!" called a voice from a sloop a few rods away, as the
-captain of the _Surprise_ came on deck.
-
-"Hulloa, Jeff!" answered Harvey.
-
-The speaker was Jeff Hackett, who ran a small sloop from the foot of
-Grand Island over to the mainland once a day to carry the mails.
-
-"Are you in this race, too?" queried Jeff.
-
-"Rather think I am," responded Harvey. "Think I've got any chance?"
-
-"Looks to me as though you had," answered the other. "There are only
-eight yachts going to start. The others backed out because they didn't
-think the handicapping was fair. It's all right, though. You will have to
-give us fellows a trifle allowance, by just a rough measurement on the
-water-line; but you'll get the same from the _Bertha_ and the _Anna
-Maud_. They are the only boats that are bigger than yours. You want to
-get measured right away, too, or it will be too late."
-
-Harvey had soon complied with the requirements of the regatta committee,
-as the committee of summer guests chosen to act as judges were pleased to
-style themselves, and shortly before the hour for the race the yacht
-_Surprise_ sailed out of the harbour at Bellport, and stood off and on
-before the starting-line with the others.
-
-Harvey was in high feather, for, by his own estimate of the situation, he
-had a fair chance of winning. He knew most of the boats, either by
-reputation, or from having seen them sail, and the others he was able to
-judge of in a great measure by their general appearance.
-
-The prize to be sailed for was a handsome silver cup, for which a
-subscription had been taken up among the summer residents of Bellport.
-
-The _Bertha_, which conceded the greatest time allowance to Harvey's
-boat, was a handsome sloop, about four feet longer than the _Surprise_,
-and carrying heavy sail. She had never been considered a fast boat of her
-size, but, owing to the discrepancy in lengths, had to allow the
-_Surprise_ several minutes over the complete course of ten miles. This,
-as the _Surprise_ was really fast for her size and rig, would make it
-quite an even race.
-
-The _Bertha_ was under charter by a party of young men from Benton, who
-had engaged a sailing-master to pilot her for them during the summer.
-This made them an object of contempt in Harvey's eyes, and he wished all
-the more to "take the conceit out of them," as he expressed it.
-
-The _Anna Maud_ was a big catboat, thirty-three feet long, carrying an
-enormous mainsail, and reputed to be one of the fastest boats of her size
-in the bay. She was owned and sailed by Captain Silas Tucker, a native of
-one of the islands at the foot of the western bay, that formed part of
-the main thoroughfare leading out to sea. He was generally accorded the
-distinction of being the best skipper on this part of the coast.
-
-All the other boats, except one, were smaller than the _Surprise_. That
-one was the Sally, a sloop of exactly the same length as the _Surprise_,
-and apparently able to sail about on equal terms with her.
-
-The starting-signal was to be a gunshot, the gun to be fired five minutes
-after a first warning shot. In the interval after the first shot the
-yachts could manoeuvre about the starting-line, ready to cross when the
-second shot was fired. As soon as the second shot was fired, it was
-allowable for a yacht to cross the line, and all yachts were to be timed
-one minute after the second gun, whether they had actually crossed the
-line or not. So that it was to the advantage of all nine craft to be as
-near the starting-line as possible at the signal, and under headway and
-also up to windward as far as possible.
-
-Harvey's boldness stood him in good stead here. And, moreover, he
-certainly did know the working of his yacht to a nicety. After the
-warning gun had been fired, he made his calculations carefully, allowing
-for the tide which was running out to sea. The race was to be five miles
-straight out to windward, and a run home, off the wind. The ebb-tide, and
-the southerly breeze rolling a sea in to meet it, made an ugly chop, and
-the boats thrashed around, throwing the spray clear aboard.
-
-Just before the second gun the relative positions of the four largest
-yachts were as follows: farthest up to windward was the _Surprise_; abeam
-of her, and a short distance to leeward, was the _Bertha_; then the _Anna
-Maud_, and then the _Sally_. The _Sally_, like the Surprise, had an
-amateur skipper, a youth of about Harvey's age.
-
-The _Sally_ was a new boat, not long out of the shipyard, in fact. She
-was perhaps the prettiest craft there. Her hull was beautifully modelled,
-with a graceful overhang, bow and stern; her sails snow-white, and mast
-and spars were glistening. She steered with a wheel of ornamental
-mahogany and brass, and here and there about her cabin and furnishings
-brass and mahogany had been used, regardless of expense.
-
-"Willie Grimes has us all beat for beauty," remarked Harvey, as they
-neared the line, "but that boat is too new for racing; that is, he's too
-scared for fear something will happen to her. Most everybody is that way.
-I used to be scared of the _Surprise_ all the time for fear something
-would knock a bit of paint off somewhere. It takes about a year to get
-over that. He handles her as though he was afraid something was going to
-break. Just watch me take advantage of that."
-
-Harvey had seen that the _Anna Maud_ and the _Bertha_ would cross the
-line a moment ahead of him, but he did not mind that so much, thinking
-his time allowance would give him more than a good chance for the race,
-anyway. He had selected the _Sally_ for his particular antagonist, and
-now prepared to get what advantage he could from the start.
-
-Easing his sheet a trifle, he headed off the wind somewhat, allowing the
-two larger yachts to sail almost directly across his bows. Rushing out
-just astern of them, and heading diagonally for the starting-line, under
-full headway, Harvey bore down on the _Sally_, as though he meant
-deliberately to run her down.
-
-If young Willie Grimes had not been so taken by surprise and so alarmed
-at this move of Harvey's, he would have perceived that the manoeuvre was
-only done to try his nerve; he would have realized that as good a sailor
-as Harvey would not deliberately foul another yacht, when that must lose
-him the race, as well as the boat he fouled.
-
-But Harvey had reckoned on the other's apprehension for his new boat, and
-the move was successful. Just at the point where a moment more would have
-sent his boom crashing aboard the other yacht as he headed up into the
-wind, Harvey threw his yacht quickly about, Joe Hinman hauled in rapidly
-on the main-sheet, Tim Reardon trimmed in the jibs, and away went the
-_Surprise_ over the line, footing after the two other boats as fast as
-full sail would carry her.
-
-At that same moment Willie Grimes, fearful of a collision, threw the
-_Sally_ completely off the wind, so that when he had recovered his nerve
-and realized that he had been imposed upon, he was so far below the boat
-that marked the limit of the starting-line that he had to make another
-tack to reach it. Before this, the last gun had been fired to mark the
-taking of the time, and the luckless _Sally_ crossed the line with one
-full minute counting against her.
-
-The youth's face burned with indignation, and he had hard work to keep
-the tears from springing to his eyes.
-
-"Bye-bye, Willie," sang out Harvey, looking back and waving his cap
-derisively. "Better courage next time. You don't want to mind a little
-paint, you know."
-
-But the other had regained his spirits and paid no heed. "That's what
-yachtsmen call 'jockeying,' I guess," he said, quietly, to his two
-companions in the boat. "It's within the rules, so I suppose we cannot
-complain. That's like Harvey, from all I hear. He might have given us a
-fair show, though, as he knows this is my first summer running a boat by
-myself. Perhaps we won't be far astern of him at the finish, at that."
-
-"You did that slick, Jack," said Joe Hinman, admiringly. "We stand a good
-chance of winning this race, I think, with the allowance we get."
-
-"Didn't he scoot, though, when he saw us coming?" laughed Harvey.
-"Thought his new boat was wrecked that time, sure. I've seen that trick
-played in big yacht races, but I never saw it work better than it did
-to-day, if I do say it."
-
-The yachts were now strung out in line along the course, tacking back and
-forth, and making for a small naphtha launch anchored down the bay at the
-five-mile mark. They made a picturesque sight, laying well over under all
-their canvas and throwing the water high over their bows.
-
-It was soon evident that the _Bertha_, take it all in all, was the best
-boat for working up to windward in rough water and a good breeze. The
-_Anna Maud_ was a very broad, beamy boat, and had a marvellous reputation
-for running free, but now she seemed to feel the waves more than the
-_Bertha_, pounding heavily and drenching every one aboard.
-
-The _Bertha_ took the seas cleaner and headed up higher. She was
-evidently gaining slowly but steadily. Moreover, although she carried an
-enormous club-topsail and a mainsail of big area, she heeled over the
-least of any of the boats. She had been built for heavy weather, and this
-was exactly the breeze she sailed best in.
-
-The _Surprise_ and _Sally_ were, however, holding their own remarkably
-well, and it would not be clear for some time which would come out the
-winner.
-
-"Hello!" exclaimed Jack Harvey, suddenly, in a tone of evident surprise.
-"What on earth--or, rather, on water--is Cap'n Silas doing? Look where he
-is standing. I've been looking for the last few minutes to see him tack,
-but there he keeps on away off toward shore."
-
-The _Anna Maud_ had, strange to say, gone way off the course, apparently
-heading well over to the westward.
-
-"Why, Jack, don't you know," said Joe Hinman, "how we've noticed the tide
-over along that shore? It makes a swing in there and runs like a
-mill-sluice. Don't you remember one night how we tried to row against it,
-and what a time we had?"
-
-"That's true," responded Jack Harvey, "and Cap'n Sile Tucker is clever
-enough to take advantage of it. He knows more about sailing in one minute
-than that captain of the _Bertha_ does in a week. But there must be
-something more in it than the tide alone. I'll tell you, the wind is
-changing. It's heading more and more from the westward, and Captain Sile
-will get the full benefit of the slant when he gets down about a mile
-further. He knows what he's doing. We'll just head over and follow him."
-
-"Seems to me it's taking long chances to go so much off the course,"
-remarked George Baker.
-
-"Of course it is taking chances," responded Harvey, quickly. "You have
-got to take chances in a contest of this kind. The fellows that take the
-chances are the ones that win. But it isn't taking any great chances,
-following Cap'n Tucker. I tell you he knows these waters better than any
-man in the bay. He wouldn't go over there unless he knew he was going to
-make something by it. Why, he has sailed that big catboat of his up and
-down along this coast for the last twenty years and more, that and other
-boats. The skipper in the _Bertha_ comes from away up beyond Millville.
-He can sail his boat all right, but he don't know this coast like Captain
-Sile."
-
-Harvey, accordingly, stood over to the westward, in the wake of the _Anna
-Maud_.
-
-Only one other boat followed him. That was the _Sally_.
-
-"I don't know what they are standing away over there for," said Willie
-Grimes to his companions. "I don't know whether it is the best thing to
-do or not. It may be that they know something about the tide over there.
-But I know one thing, and that is, wherever Jack Harvey goes I'm going to
-follow. I wouldn't care if every other yacht here beat me if I could only
-beat him. You never can tell, you know. Something may happen to him yet."
-
-The wisdom of Captain Silas Tucker's departure from the straight course
-soon became apparent. The tide, indeed, at this point made a sweep
-inshore, for some reason, flowing far swifter in near the land than it
-did offshore. Again, too, the wind had slanted a little, and the yachts
-that had taken this course were soon in a better position relative to the
-stake-boat than the others.
-
-Slowly the _Anna Maud_ drew ahead of the _Bertha_, the captain of the
-latter boat realizing the advantage which the others were gaining too
-late to change his own course. As they neared the mark, even the
-_Surprise_ and the _Sally_ were leading the _Bertha_, which now seemed to
-be hopelessly out of the race.
-
-The race, indeed, seemed narrowed down to these three yachts, with a
-slight advantage in the _Anna Maud's_ favour.
-
-"Hooray!" cried Harvey, "we are holding the _Anna Maud_ in fine style.
-She's gaining ever so little, not enough thus far to cover our time
-allowance. They say she is fast off the wind, but so are we. That's the
-best point of the _Surprise_. She sails better running free than any boat
-of her size I ever saw."
-
-"Cracky!" cried young Tim, "I hope we take that silver cup back to camp
-with us. We'll march through the streets with it, if we get it."
-
-"Yes, if we get it," replied Harvey. "It don't do to be too sure,
-though."
-
-Now the _Anna Maud_ was rounding the stake-boat and coming back over the
-course, not quite before the wind, owing to the slant to the westward
-that it had taken, but with her sheet well out.
-
-"The wind is in our favour," said Harvey, gleefully. "There's just enough
-slant to it so our jibs will help us some. They will draw a little, and
-that gives us an advantage over that catboat. Let that sheet go, now,
-Joe, the minute we turn the mark."
-
-A moment later the _Surprise_ rounded the stake-boat, with a good lead
-over the _Sally_, and still near enough astern of the _Anna Maud_ to give
-her a good race.
-
-"Up with that centreboard, now, George--lively," cried Harvey. "It's a
-big board, and we don't want to drag it a minute longer than we have to.
-It counts a whole lot with this tide running against it. What's the
-matter? What are you waiting for? Up with it!"
-
-"Why, hang the thing!" exclaimed George Baker, "I'm trying to get it up
-as hard as ever I can. It won't come. It's stuck."
-
-"What's that?" cried Harvey. "Stuck? Nonsense! Here, you, Joe, hold this
-wheel a moment. I'll have it up in a hurry."
-
-He sprang forward, brushing George Baker out of the way impatiently.
-
-"Let me get hold there," he said.
-
-Harvey seized the iron rod, which was fastened to the centreboard, and
-gave a strong pull. But the centreboard did not budge. He took a firmer
-hold and pulled with all his strength. It was of no avail. The board had
-stuck fast in its box.
-
-"I'll have it up or break something," cried Harvey, beside himself with
-anger, and again he grasped the rod with both hands and gave a furious
-wrench. There was a most unexpected and baffling verification of his
-threat, for the rod, broken off short at its connection with the
-centreboard, did come up, so suddenly that Harvey sprawled over
-backwards, still grasping the rod with both hands clenched, and rolled
-over on the floor of the cockpit.
-
-There was no such thing as getting the centreboard up now. It was down to
-stay.
-
-Harvey, white with rage, sprang to his feet and hurled the rod into the
-sea. Then he took his seat sullenly at the wheel again.
-
-"That settles it," he said, as soon as he could speak for anger. "We
-haven't a ghost of a chance now. I shouldn't wonder, even, if the _Sally_
-overhauled us." And he looked back helplessly at the yacht astern.
-
-Slowly but surely the _Anna Maud_ forged ahead. The distance between her
-and the _Surprise_ grew ever farther and farther.
-
-"That's queer," said Captain Silas Tucker, looking back at Harvey's
-yacht. "I thought she was going to give us a harder run home than that.
-I've heard the boat was good off the wind, but she doesn't seem to be
-doing well. It's first prize for us this trip, and easily won. Well, your
-Uncle Silas hasn't sailed around these parts all his life for nothing."
-
-Slowly but surely, too, the _Sally_ was creeping up close astern of the
-_Surprise_, to the wild delight of Willie Grimes and his comrades.
-
-"If I can only beat Jack Harvey," he kept saying, "I don't care about the
-other yacht's beating us."
-
-"If Willie Grimes beats us, I'll run him down and sink him some day,"
-muttered Harvey, grinding his teeth.
-
-It was still a close race between these two as the finish-line was
-neared. The _Sally_ had crept up until she was almost abeam of the
-_Surprise_, and was gaining, ever so slowly, but surely. Harvey, dogged
-to the last, waited until the _Sally_ was nearly abreast of him, and
-then, as a last resort, tried once more to bully the race from his less
-experienced rival.
-
-Throwing his wheel over slightly, he tried the tactic of crowding the
-other off the course.
-
-But Willie Grimes was bound to win or sink this time. He kept his own
-boat off just enough to avoid the possibility of Harvey's fouling him,
-maintaining the same relative distance between them, and all the while
-drawing ahead.
-
-The judges, watching the close finish through their glasses, perceived
-this trick of Harvey's, and were ready to disqualify him in case of any
-accident. But their determination was unnecessary. Less than a dozen rods
-from the finish-line the _Sally_ had sailed clear of the _Surprise_, and
-now cut in on to the course, leaving Harvey astern, and crossed the line
-a rod to the good.
-
-Then, as a storm of cheers rang out from the assembled boats, as a
-fluttering of handkerchiefs and waving of parasols, a tossing of hats and
-shrieking of whistles, saluted the victory of Willie Grimes over him,
-Harvey did not deign to cross the line. Angrily he swung out of the
-course, and stood over, without a word, for the town of Bellport.
-
-"Takes his licking hard, doesn't he, Willie?" called out a voice, and a
-chorus of laughter mocked at Harvey's wrath as he sailed away.
-
-The _Anna Maud_ had won the race, but the honours were as much for the
-_Sally_ as for the winner. They took substantial form, moreover, for, one
-of the committee, vowing the _Sally_ should have a second prize, if he
-had to buy one himself, as there had not been any offered, the suggestion
-met with a ready response; and the owner and crew of the _Sally_ rejoiced
-that night in the unexpected award of a handsome compass for their cabin.
-
-"Now," said Harvey, as the _Surprise_ neared the landing at Bellport, "I
-want to get out of this town just as quick as I step foot in it. I don't
-intend to stay here and have those chaps and those girls laugh at me.
-They've got altogether too good a chance. You fellows have got to stay
-here and take the _Surprise_ up to Billy Coombs's marine railway. She'll
-have to be hauled out for a day and the ballast come out of her around
-that centreboard box. Tell him to put a new iron in, and you can pay for
-it, Joe, and I'll pay you when you come back to camp."
-
-"But where are you going?" asked the others.
-
-"I am going to foot it down the road for seven miles to Hackett's Cove,
-and wait for Jeff Hackett to come down," answered Harvey. "Then I'll go
-across to the foot of the island with him in his sloop. I'd walk farther
-than that to get clear of the crowd that will be ashore here soon; but,
-for that matter, I want to get back to the island to-night, anyway.
-There's a dance in the old town hall at Carter's Harbour, and I'll get
-there in time for that."
-
-"He's all cut up over Willie Grimes's beating him," said Joe Hinman, as
-Harvey sprang out on the landing and walked rapidly away. "He won't get
-over it for a week. Well, we shall have to catch it for him when the
-boats come in. However, we didn't sail the boat. That's one comfort."
-
-Late that afternoon, Jack Harvey, hot and dusty with his long walk,
-waited impatiently, seated on a pile of timber by the shore, for the
-arrival of Jeff Hackett's sloop. Five o'clock came, and then six, and no
-sloop in sight. Harvey strolled up to the village store and bought some
-crackers and cheese for his supper.
-
-"So you're waiting for Jeff Hackett's sloop to take you across to the
-island, are you?" said the storekeeper. "Well, you'll wait till morning
-now, I reckon. Wish I'd known you wanted to go over sooner. You see, Jeff
-engaged Tom Crosby to make his trip this afternoon for him, and he's been
-gone an hour now. You must have seen Tom's boat off there."
-
-"I did," replied Harvey, shortly, "but I had no idea he was going across.
-What can I do, now?"
-
-"Nothing that I see," said the storekeeper, "except to take it
-comfortable here to-night, and go over with Jeff in the morning."
-
-Harvey strode angrily out and walked down to the shore again.
-
-A rod or two out a fisherman was rowing in a small boat.
-
-"Here, you, where are you going?" sang out Harvey.
-
-The man looked up, surprised, but did not answer.
-
-"I say, there, where are you going? Can't you hear?" cried Harvey,
-roughly.
-
-The man stopped rowing. "What's that to you?" he answered.
-
-Harvey laughed. "You've got me there," he said. "I didn't mean to be
-rude--but I've been disappointed. I didn't know but you might be going to
-row across to the island, and I thought perhaps you might like to earn a
-dollar. I'll help row, too, if you like. I want to go, the worst way."
-
-The man hesitated for a moment, started as though he were going to row
-away, and then paused again.
-
-"Where do you belong?" he asked.
-
-"Over on the island," said Harvey. "I'm camping there."
-
-"What's that?" said the man, putting his hand to his ear. "Say it again."
-
-"I'm camping out over on the island," repeated Harvey.
-
-The man looked stealthily in at him from under his eyebrows. "Camping
-there!" he muttered to himself, and began backing water slowly with his
-oars.
-
-"I'll take you across for--for a dollar," he said.
-
-"Good!" cried Harvey. "Come on, lively, then. It's a good five miles, and
-I'm in a hurry to get across."
-
-The man, however, was in no hurry. He came in slowly, as though perhaps
-he might still be considering the matter, whether he should take this
-passenger aboard or not. He worked the boat inshore, finally, and Harvey
-sprang aboard.
-
-"You are going to help row," said the man.
-
-"Yes," answered Harvey. "Didn't I say I would?" He took his seat toward
-the stern of the boat, where there were rowlocks for an extra pair of
-oars.
-
-The man at the bow oars was a thick, heavy-set, middle-aged man, burned
-dark by sun and wind. He was roughly dressed in ill-fitting clothes, that
-looked as though they might have come from the dunnage-bag of a fisherman
-who had been long at sea. They were patched in one or two places with
-cloth that did not match the original garments. He wore a red,
-cheap-looking handkerchief tied loosely about his neck, and a rough beard
-of several weeks' growth heightened the effect of his swarthy complexion.
-
-They rowed for some time in silence, making good headway, for the wind
-had gone down with the sun, and the man in the bow pulled a powerful
-stroke, making even the sturdy efforts of Jack Harvey seem like child's
-play.
-
-The sun sank behind the hills and the shadows deepened across the water,
-fading out at length into the darkness that settled over all the bay. A
-few lights glimmered out from the shore of the island, some three miles
-distant, and the stars appeared in the sky.
-
-"Lucky I fell in with you, just as I did," said Harvey, as he slowed up
-his stroke. "Lucky for both of us, I take it. I should have been stuck
-there all night if I hadn't met you; and I don't suppose you mind picking
-up a dollar, as long as you were going this way."
-
-"No," said the man, though there was a queer expression on his face. "I
-don't mind,--and the fishing isn't any too good these days."
-
-"Got a smack, have you?" inquired Harvey.
-
-"No," answered the other. "I don't own any boat myself. But I sail with a
-man as owns his own boat, and I come in for a fair share of the fish."
-
-"Where does she lie?" asked Harvey.
-
-The man waited a moment before answering. "She's down among the islands
-somewhere," he said, finally. "She'll be in for me to-night or to-morrow.
-I've been visiting some relations of mine back of Bellport a few miles.
-So you're a summer visitor at the island, are you?"
-
-"Yes," replied Harvey, "I spend my summers there."
-
-"Pretty quiet place, isn't it?" said the man.
-
-"Mostly," returned Harvey, "but not so quiet this year. We've had some
-exciting times there."
-
-"Yes?" said the man. "How's that?"
-
-He had slowed up, himself, in his rowing now. And if by chance the
-conversation had turned whither he had intended it should, there was no
-way that Harvey should know of that, for his back was toward the man and
-he could not see his face.
-
-"Why," continued Harvey, "they caught the men that stole the Curtis
-diamonds over there; that is, they got two of them. A third one escaped.
-He was the worst of the three, they say."
-
-The man in the bow had paused in his rowing.
-
-"The worst one got away, did he?" said he.
-
-"He did," said Harvey. "It seemed one of them had the diamonds hidden in
-a house that every one thought was haunted. He was stopping at the hotel
-as a regular guest. And no one suspected him but Henry Burns. Then, when
-his confederates came, the detectives were lying in wait for them in the
-cellar. They nearly beat the detectives, though, at that. For they
-smashed the lanterns out--that is, one of them did, and made a run for
-it. The other one was hurt."
-
-"Did he die?" asked the man, quickly.
-
-"No," replied Harvey. "He's all right, waiting trial along with the other
-one. We got him, too, just as he was nearly down to shore, where the
-other man was waiting to take him off in a boat. The third man escaped in
-his yacht. We only captured two."
-
-The man in the bow had drawn his oars in, now, so that they rested along
-the side of the boat. His hands worked nervously together, and he
-half-rose in his seat.
-
-"Who's 'we'?" he asked, huskily. "Who did it--did you have a hand in it?"
-
-If, by chance, this moment was a crisis in the life of Jack Harvey, and
-if, by chance, he was in greater danger at this moment than he had ever
-been before in all his life, there was no shadow of it across his mind.
-He answered with a laugh:
-
-"No, not I. No such luck. If there's anything like that going on, I'm
-sure to miss it. No, 'twas the other camp and a crowd I have no liking
-for that did it all, that got all the glory and all the fun and the
-money, too. The reward, I mean. I'd rather have been there at the
-capture, though, than get the money for it. And I don't know why, but I
-felt rather sorry for the two chaps that got caught, bad as they were."
-
-A good speech for you, Jack Harvey, if you did but know it!
-
-"So you missed all the fun, did you?" said the man, quietly. "That was
-too bad; too bad."
-
-He had put his oars into the water once more now, and resumed his rowing.
-He did not pause to rest again, but pulled long and steadily. Evidently
-he did not care to row and talk too, for he lapsed into silence now, and
-Harvey could not draw him into conversation again. At the end of another
-hour they had come close to the Grand Island shore, and shortly they had
-pulled alongside a ledge, where Harvey could jump out. The man started to
-row away.
-
-"Here, hold on, there," cried Harvey. "Don't you want your dollar? You've
-earned it, fair enough."
-
-The man came slowly back to shore.
-
-"Indeed," he said, as he stretched out his hand, "I ought not to forget
-that, with the fishing as bad as it is." And then he added, quietly, as
-he started to row away again, "And it's worth a dollar to you to get
-here, isn't it?"
-
-"Indeed it is," replied Harvey.
-
-"Indeed it is," said the man to himself.
-
-Then he rowed down the shore for about a mile farther, turned into a
-sheltered cove, rowed his boat alongside a black sloop that lay moored
-there, climbed aboard, dragged the boat aboard, and waited for an hour or
-so, till a faint breeze stole across the water. Then he hoisted sail on
-the sloop and drifted slowly out of the cove; drifted slowly away from
-the island, and was swallowed up in the night.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV.
- GOOD FOR EVIL
-
-
-The yacht _Spray_, arriving home again in the harbour of Southport, two
-days following the discovery made by Henry Burns, had created somewhat of
-a sensation: first, because, on account of the storm, there had been felt
-considerable alarm for the little boat, and, second, because of the story
-that the boys had to tell.
-
-The finding of the letter "E" confirmed their story, so that there could
-be no room for doubt that the yacht _Eagle_ had been secreted there in
-the Thoroughfare and refitted. The question now was, had the man who had
-done this left the bay and gone on his voyage, or had he chosen, for some
-purpose or other, to linger in some part of the great bay till a later
-time.
-
-Henry Burns now told the story of the man they had seen at the foot of
-Grand Island, how he had sailed in and out of the harbour so
-mysteriously, how he seemed to avoid them, and how there had apparently
-been none other than he aboard the black yacht.
-
-Most of the people of the village were inclined to the belief that the
-man Chambers had gone out to sea as soon as he had altered his yacht so
-that it would escape detection in such harbours as he would be obliged to
-make. There was no possible reason why he should return, they said, and
-every reason in the world why he should get away from that part of the
-coast as soon as he could.
-
-There were plenty of black yachts, they argued, that would answer the
-general description of the yacht seen by the boys at the foot of the
-island; and, as for sailing out and away in the night, that was a thing
-commonly done among fishermen, to take advantage of wind and tide when it
-was important that they should reach a certain port on time.
-
-Still, there were one or two yachts that set out cruising about the bay,
-on the chance of running into the mysterious craft, and they cruised
-about for a week or more. Every strange sail that looked as though it
-might belong to a yacht of the size of the _Eagle_ was pursued, until it
-had either outsailed the pursuers and disappeared, or until a nearer view
-had proven that it was not the hunted craft.
-
-By the end of two weeks the village was well satisfied that Chambers and
-the yacht _Eagle_ were far away, and had ceased to think of him, except
-as a group gathered of an evening about the village grocery-store and
-talked of that for lack of something better.
-
-In the meantime, when the excitement was at its height, the Warren boys
-in their yacht, and Tom and Bob in their canoe, took a hand in the
-search. Even Henry Burns took an occasional spin on his bicycle down to
-the foot of the island of an evening, and wandered along the shore in the
-hope of catching a glimpse once more of the sail he had seen that night
-in the harbour. Just what he expected to do in case he should see it, he
-did not know, himself; still, it might be that he could spread the alarm
-and start some of the boats out after any suspicious craft that he saw.
-
-For the time being it was in all the air. Nobody talked of anything else.
-It was really more because people dearly love a mystery than that they
-actually believed the _Eagle_ was still in the bay; but the talk sufficed
-to keep the boys at fever-heat, and Henry Burns firmly believed that he
-had seen the _Eagle_ that night.
-
-Tom and Bob were indefatigable for ten days in searching on their own
-account. They would take their canoe in the afternoon, paddle down five
-or six miles along the shore of the island, land in some lonely spot,
-haul the canoe on shore, and then continue along on foot for a mile or
-two, coming up cautiously to some cove with which they had become
-familiar in their trips through the summer, only to find it empty of
-sails, or some fishing-boat lying snug for the night, and which could by
-no means be mistaken for the craft of which they were in search.
-
-Again, they would paddle down to the Narrows, carry the canoe over into
-the western bay, leave it hidden until sundown, and then go down along
-the shore on that side of the island, repeating their walk along the
-shore. Some days they left the canoe hidden for the night away down the
-island, and came back to the village afoot along the road, going after it
-afoot the next night, and retracing their search of the night before,
-thus varying the search in a dozen different ways.
-
-But the result was always the same. It seemed this time as though the
-_Eagle_, if it had, indeed, ever lingered in the bay, had gone for good.
-What might have been the result if those who sailed in search of the
-mysterious craft had known that the description they now had of her was
-at fault, can never be known. Be that as it might, the exact yacht that
-Henry Burns and his friends had seen down at the foot of the island no
-longer existed. In its place there sailed--somewhere, on some waters--a
-handsome, black yacht, with a tall, slender, glistening topmast, white
-sails, and gleaming brass, in place of the dingy, dirty fisherman. She
-was as fine and handsome, and as polished as to deck and fittings, as the
-_Eagle_ had been of yore, only her colour remained as it had been
-changed--black.
-
-Was this boat the _Eagle_? Those who sailed the bay in quest of her had
-no means of knowing, for if they ever did get sight of her it was but a
-far, fleeting, shadowy glance. They never came within miles of her, this
-fleet, beautiful, and disappearing yacht. Across her stern in letters of
-gold was the name _Sprite_. It may have been most appropriate, for now
-and then a distant view of her tempted some bay craft to follow; but it
-was like a dog pursuing a bird on the wing. She always drifted on and on,
-out of reach, and disappeared.
-
-Since the night when the man that rowed Jack Harvey across the bay had
-climbed aboard this yacht and sailed southward, the yacht had never
-ventured near Grand Island, nor within miles and miles of it. If the man
-Chambers had any plan which he meant to execute, it did not suit his
-purpose to attempt it at this time. He had, perhaps, achieved all he
-desired now, in familiarizing himself with the waters of this coast.
-
-Of all those who joined in the search for the strange yacht, there was
-none more enthusiastic nor persistent than Jack Harvey. No sooner had his
-own yacht been brought back from Bellport by the crew, than he stocked up
-with a week's provisions and began cruising day and night. To be sure, it
-was a most uncertain chase, but Harvey was willing to take chances that
-others would not; and if he should by mistake intercept some respectable
-craft for a few brief moments, he would rely on his assurance to carry
-him through and explain matters.
-
-Harvey had, moreover, a critical eye for a good boat, and had noted the
-_Eagle_, when it had been in the harbour, with more than passing
-interest, and was certain now that he should know her again, even with a
-change of rig. Besides, he had the description furnished by Henry Burns
-and the other boys of the yacht they had seen, which corresponded in size
-with the _Eagle_.
-
-He had never been so aroused about anything before in all his life. The
-adventure that Henry Burns and the others had had with the two men that
-had been caught was an experience after his own heart. He would have
-given his whole summer's fun to take part in that capture. But all the
-glory of that had been denied him; now he made a resolve that if any one
-succeeded in finding the vanished yacht it should be he.
-
-His activity was not destined to go all for naught, either, for on at
-least one occasion he was satisfied in his own mind that he had met with
-the yacht,--yes, and nearly come to close quarters with the man that
-sailed it.
-
-It was miles below Grand Island, for Harvey had for some days made up his
-mind that the man he sought had left the bay, since he had scoured it
-east and west and north and south in vain. It was down among some islands
-that lay out of the much travelled part of the bay, and not far from the
-Gull Island Thoroughfare. It was, in fact, just at the outer rim of the
-bay, where several channels through a chain of islands led out to sea.
-There were three of the crew aboard besides Harvey, only little Tim being
-left ashore to guard the camp.
-
-They had been cruising all evening among these islands, for it was a part
-of the coast with which Harvey was very familiar. They were carrying no
-lights, for the chances of being run down here were small, and, besides,
-it was a part of Harvey's plan to be able to approach any chance craft
-unobserved.
-
-It had come on rainy, and the crew were for putting in at some harbour
-and lying snug, but Harvey would not hear of it. He had sailed until near
-midnight for about a week, and did not like to give it up.
-
-However, as a concession to his crew, and as it bade fair to blow up a
-nasty sea before many hours, Harvey had consented to beat back and forth
-under the lee of a small unnamed island, keeping a lookout down the bay
-for the little distance they could see through the rain.
-
-It seemed that some other craft was also willing to take the risk of
-sailing without lights, for, along about ten o'clock, a yacht, that might
-or might not be the one for which they sought, was beating up toward the
-island, with all dark on board. All at once the man that sat at the wheel
-left his boat for a moment to itself, so that it headed up into the wind
-with sails flapping, while he darted down into the cabin.
-
-He was gone only for a moment, but in that brief moment that he was below
-a light flashed in the cabin,--only a fleeting gleam of light, and then
-all was dark again.
-
-This gleam of light, transient as it was, had sufficed, however, for the
-sharp lookout aboard the _Surprise_.
-
-Harvey seized Joe Hinman by the shoulder and whispered, as he steered the
-_Surprise_ out from behind the end of the island: "Did you see that, Joe?
-Did you see it? There's something coming up. Everybody keep quiet now!"
-
-There was an excited group that crouched silently in the cockpit of the
-_Surprise_ as she swung out from under the lee of the island and headed
-straight for the spot where they had seen the flash of light, running
-almost before the wind.
-
-Whatever the craft was, it seemed as if they must surely catch it,
-leaping out as they had from the darkness. All at once they saw the dark
-outline of a yacht almost dead ahead, and saw for a moment the shadow of
-its sails, a faint blur through the rain.
-
-Then the yacht veered about suddenly, and they saw the white crush of
-water as it heeled over, and, running with the wind on its quarter, was
-gone, like a boat that had vanished. So sudden and so silent was the
-manoeuvre that they could hardly realize that the yacht had, indeed,
-turned like a flash and run away. They followed for a moment, but, seeing
-how useless it was, Harvey soon gave up the chase and went back to
-harbour, beaten but not discouraged.
-
-"That was the man we want," he said, as they came to in the nearest
-harbour that night. "No other craft would have gone off its course that
-way. And to think we were almost upon him."
-
-"Yes, but I don't see what good it would have done us to have come up
-with him, if it was the man," replied Allan Harding. "We could only have
-taken a look aboard. What else could we have done?"
-
-"I'll tell you what," answered Harvey, emphatically. "It would have done
-a lot of good. I tell you that wherever and whenever I meet that yacht,
-whether it's night or day, I'm going to run alongside, and you fellows
-and I are going aboard. I've been doing things to be ashamed of long
-enough,--not that I'm ashamed of them, either, as I know of. Only they
-have been things that I didn't dare tell of afterward, and I'm sort of
-tired of it. I tell you, I want to do something for once that I can boast
-of and that people won't hate me for. That's why I'm so anxious about
-this, if you must know it."
-
-"Whew!" cried Joe Hinman. "That's something new for you, Jack. I didn't
-suppose your conscience ever troubled you."
-
-"It don't," said Harvey, angrily.
-
-But perhaps it did.
-
-By the end of a few days more, Harvey had given up the search, convinced
-that they had seen the last of the black yacht, if, indeed, they had seen
-it at all.
-
-"I give up," he said. "I'm beaten, and that's all there is to it."
-
-And so the idea of ever seeing the strange yacht again was given up by
-all. The yachts came back to harbour, and the impression became general
-that they had all been fooled; that what they had sought was a delusion.
-
-Tom and Bob were the last to give up. Partly because they liked these
-long paddles together and the long walks along the island roads, and
-partly because they had helped start the renewed hunt for the yacht
-_Eagle_, and did not like to admit that they had made a mistake.
-
-So they did not wholly discontinue their evening paddles nor their lonely
-rambles along the shore. It was good exercise, at all events, they
-argued.
-
-One evening they started right after supper, while it was yet light,
-paddled down along the shore to the Narrows, carried across, and paddled
-down the island for some three miles. Then they landed and hid their
-canoe, as was their custom, and stretched themselves out on the beach to
-rest and enjoy the lights far out on the water.
-
-It was a clear starlight night, with the bay still and restful, save for
-a quick gust of wind that came now and then, only to blur its surface for
-a moment and leave it smooth again.
-
-"I guess we have tried this thing about often enough, haven't we, Bob?"
-asked Tom, finally. "We don't seem to be a success as man-hunters."
-
-"I'm about ready to quit," answered Bob, yawning and stretching. "The
-fact is, we really get enough exercise through the day. Here we've been
-swimming, bicycling, helping the Warrens get up driftwood, paddled over
-to the cape, all in one day,--and here we are at it again at night. Yes,
-I think it's time we gave this up."
-
-"Then supposing we do call it off," said Tom. "I've had paddling enough
-for one day. What do you say to going up along the beach for a mile or
-two, and then taking the shortest cut home and coming down for the canoe
-to-morrow? I think I'm kind of tired, myself, though I didn't notice it
-when we started out."
-
-"All right, that suits me," replied Bob. "I don't mind saying that I'm a
-bit tired, too. That last mile came hard, and no mistake."
-
-So they rose and sauntered along the beach toward the Narrows, till they
-had come to within about half a mile of it, and then sat down once more
-for a brief rest before going home.
-
-"It seems almost too bad to go home to bed such a beautiful night as
-this," said Bob. "These are the kind of nights that make me wish we had
-the old tent back again, so we could lie on our bunks and look out on the
-water, as we used to do before we went to sleep."
-
-The night was indeed singularly calm and peaceful. The bay was still, and
-the water as it came up the beach with the tide made only a small
-rustling, creeping sound, as it covered the sand inch by inch. As for the
-island, it always seemed asleep after nightfall, and to-night there was
-scarcely a sound of life anywhere to break the stillness.
-
-But then, all at once, as they sat there looking out upon the water, out
-of the silence there arose a cry, faint and smothered, but a cry for
-help.
-
-Then all was still again.
-
-They sprang to their feet, startled, almost frightened for a brief moment
-at the strange cry, coming from they knew not where.
-
-Again the cry came, this time more distinctly, from somewhere out on the
-water. They heard the words, "Help! Help!" uttered in a choking voice, as
-of a man drowning.
-
-The boys rushed down to the water's edge and peered out over the bay,
-straining their eyes to see whence the sound came.
-
-"Hulloa! Hulloa! Where are you? What's the matter? Call again!" cried
-Tom.
-
-They listened, and in a moment the voice came again weirdly over the
-water, though they could not distinguish this time the words.
-
-"Why, there it is," cried Bob, all at once, pointing as he spoke. "Don't
-you see it, Tom? I declare, but it's queer we didn't see it before. Look,
-there's something floating only about an eighth of a mile out,--and
-there's something moving a little distance from it. Why, Tom, I'll tell
-you what it is. It's a canoe--it's Jack Harvey--and he's upset--he's
-drowning. Just look, where I am pointing."
-
-"Yes, I see," exclaimed Tom, excitedly. "I just saw a splash. He's upset,
-sure enough, and struggling. I say, Bob, we've got to swim out. Our canoe
-is too far. Keep up! We're coming!" he called, and began hurriedly to
-strip off his clothing.
-
-In a moment the two boys were in the water, striking out wildly toward
-the object that seemed to be a canoe floating in the water.
-
-"Hold on there, Bob," cried Tom, presently. "We mustn't try to be too
-fast. We'll only waste our strength. We'll need it all when we get there.
-Let's calm down, now, and not get excited. We've got to keep our heads."
-
-Then, as they surged ahead, with long, powerful strokes, the voice again
-came, calling chokingly for help. There could be no mistaking it now. It
-was Jack Harvey.
-
-"Quick!" he cried, "quick! I can't hold on long. I'm hurt."
-
-They quickened their strokes, and in a moment more came in plain sight of
-Harvey, struggling feebly to keep above water.
-
-"Hold on for a moment, Jack," said Tom, as they came up to him. "Don't
-grab us, now. Let us do the work. You just keep on paddling, what you
-can, and we'll save you."
-
-"I won't grab you," gasped Harvey. "Just get on each side of me and let
-me put my hands on your shoulders for a moment, till I get my strength
-back. I've swallowed a lot of water."
-
-The two swam up close, and Harvey reached up and rested a hand on each
-shoulder.
-
-"Swim for the canoe now," said Tom. "We'll let him get hold of the end of
-that and cling on for a few moments till he gets his breath. He'll be all
-right, I think."
-
-Reaching the overturned canoe, they helped him to clasp one end of it,
-and then supported him there, as they began to push it toward shore by
-swimming with their feet and with a single hand each.
-
-For a few moments Harvey managed to hold on, but then his strength seemed
-to fail him and his hands slipped their hold.
-
-"I can't hold on," he gasped. "Something's hurting me."
-
-"Then lie over on your back and float," said Tom. "Just lie still and
-we'll swim you in."
-
-Harvey groaned at the effort it cost him, but did as he was told, and
-they left the canoe and struck out with him for the shore.
-
-It was not such a long swim that they had before them, but they had
-exhausted their strength more than they knew in their excitement, and
-Harvey was well-nigh helpless.
-
-Before they had swum a rod farther, their breath began to come hard and
-their shoulders ached until it seemed as though they would crack.
-
-Still they kept on.
-
-"We'll make it all right, Tom?" said Bob, finally, panting the words out.
-
-"We've got to," said Tom. "We're bound to do it. Let's swim on our backs
-for a spell. Jack, we're going to change the stroke. Don't get scared.
-We're going to stick by you."
-
-The words seemed to rouse Harvey, who had apparently almost lost
-consciousness.
-
-"Let me go," he gasped, faintly. "Let me go, I say. I don't want you
-fellows to drown, too. Let me----"
-
-And then he seemed suddenly to lose control of himself, and clutched
-frantically at them, with the frenzy of a drowning man.
-
-They struck themselves loose from him, and he sank under water, but came
-to the surface again, exhausted and helpless. Tom seized him then by the
-hair. He lay motionless, as though dead, and they took hold once more and
-struck out again for the shore.
-
-When they had reached it--they scarcely knew how--and felt the sand again
-under their feet, they had barely strength enough to drag Harvey a little
-ways out of the water, and lay by his side on the beach, groaning with
-every breath they drew.
-
-This was from sheer exhaustion, caused by exerting themselves far beyond
-their natural strength. They were not strangled with swallowing water, so
-that after they had lain there flat on the beach for some five minutes
-they had regained their strength sufficiently to be able to arise and
-lift the half-unconscious Harvey completely out of the water and carry
-him up on the bank. Then they sat down and rested once more, sitting by
-Harvey's side and chafing his hands. They lifted him up, although the
-effort cost them all their strength, held him head downwards for a moment
-to get the water out of him, then doubled his arms upon his breast and
-extended them, over and over again, alternately, as they had learned was
-the way to restore a man rescued from drowning.
-
-Harvey, who had never fully lost consciousness, revived under their
-treatment, till at length they perceived that he was out of danger, and
-needed now as quickly as possible warmth and shelter.
-
-There was no house near by, and it was clear that whatever was done for
-Harvey must be done by them.
-
-"We can't carry him, that's certain," said Bob, finally. "We've got to
-get our canoe and paddle him up as far as the Narrows in that. Then we
-can get his crew over, and we can all carry him up to their camp."
-
-So Bob set out on a weary trot down along the shore to where they had
-hidden their canoe. Tom waited by Harvey, trying to keep him warm, or,
-rather, to restore warmth to him, by rubbing; but Harvey was chilled
-through and through and shivered pitifully. It was fully an hour, and
-seemed ten to Tom, before Bob appeared in sight again.
-
-They lifted Harvey into the canoe and set out for the Narrows. Poor Bob
-was well-nigh exhausted, and it was Tom who did about all the paddling.
-They reached the Narrows, however, after what seemed an endless journey,
-driving their paddles through the water with arms that almost refused to
-obey the wills that forced them to work.
-
-When they had reached the Narrows, Tom set out for Harvey's camp, leaving
-Bob to wait with Harvey. Tom had not gone more than half a mile, however,
-when he ran into the entire crew, who had become alarmed at Harvey's long
-absence, knowing that he had gone out in the canoe, and had started out
-in search of him.
-
-Tom's white face, pallid with weariness, filled them with terror, as he
-rushed up to them and sank down on a knoll, breathless.
-
-"Why, it's Tom Harris," exclaimed Joe Hinman. "For Heaven's sake, what is
-it? Did you see Jack? Is he drowned?"
-
-He rattled off the questions excitedly, before Tom could find breath to
-answer.
-
-"He's all right, I guess," Tom said, in a moment. "He isn't drowned. He's
-over there the other side of the Narrows; Bob's with him. He is most dead
-with cold, though. You better get him over to camp quick or he will die."
-
-They were off like mad, on the run for the Narrows, before he had
-finished.
-
-Tom waited to rest a few moments more, and then set off slowly for
-Harvey's camp. "There's enough of them to bring him," he said. "I guess
-Bob and I have done about all we can to-night."
-
-When he had reached Harvey's camp, however, he waited only to rest and
-warm himself by the brands of a fire which the campers had left, before
-he began to make what preparations he could to receive the boys when they
-should return with Harvey.
-
-There was a big pile of wood at hand, and he started the fire up afresh,
-after having first pushed the brands nearer the tent, so that the fire
-would send a comforting warmth inside. Then he brought out a pair of
-blankets and put them near the fire to warm through. He hung a kettle of
-water on the stick provided for it, and rummaged through the campers'
-stock for the coffee.
-
-Presently the sound of voices told him that the crew were at hand.
-Stepping to the door of the tent, he saw the strange group approaching.
-They had not taken Harvey from the canoe, but had let him lie there,
-while they lifted the canoe and carried it along, two boys at either end,
-bearing the weight with a stick stretched underneath to support it.
-Alongside plodded Bob, holding to the gunwale, to assist in steadying it.
-They approached and set the canoe down, just outside the tent door.
-
-"Get his clothes off quick, now," cried Tom. "I have the hot blankets
-ready to wrap him in, and some coffee when he is able to take it."
-
-In a twinkling Harvey was stripped and rolled snugly in the blankets,
-while Tom busied himself in rushing up with cloths heated hot, and
-applying them to the soles of his feet. After a time he lifted Harvey up
-and poured a few spoonfuls of the coffee down his throat. This seemed to
-revive Harvey, for he opened his eyes, muttered something that was
-unintelligible, and sank back to sleep.
-
-"He's all right now," said Tom, passing his hand over Harvey. "He is
-getting warm again. He'll be all right now when he gets his sleep out."
-
-Tom and Bob were thoroughly tired. They lay stretched out before the fire
-on blankets for a time, too weary to more than barely reply to the
-questions of the crew as to the mishap that had befallen Harvey.
-
-Presently Tom rose up and said: "Well, Bob, it's late, and we've got to
-be getting started or we'll never get back to the cottage."
-
-"We shall be down again to-morrow to see how Harvey is," he added,
-turning to the crew, who sat a little apart, somewhat abashed by the turn
-of affairs and the consciousness of the debt of gratitude they now owed
-to the boys whom they had wronged. "We'll send a doctor down if you want
-us to, but I don't think there's any need of it. He'll be all right by
-morning. Good night."
-
-They were about taking their departure when Harvey struggled for a moment
-with the clothing that enveloped him, lifted his head slightly from the
-ground, and said, weakly, "Hold on."
-
-"What is it?" asked Tom, as they stepped inside the tent again and sat
-down beside him.
-
-"Don't go," said Harvey, huskily. "Please don't go. I want you to stay
-here to-night,--that is, if you will. I've--I've got something--something
-to say to you in the morning. I can't say it now. I'm too weak. But I
-want the crew to hear it in the morning."
-
-Tom and Bob looked at each other in astonishment. Then they nodded, and
-Tom replied to Harvey:
-
-"All right, Jack. We'll stay. Go to sleep now. You're all right."
-
-The crew quickly spread some boughs for them, and brought more blankets
-from the yacht.
-
-"Tom," said Bob, as they stood alone for a moment, while the crew were
-busily engaged, "it looks like our revenge."
-
-And then, before they had the blankets half-wrapped about them, they were
-sinking off to sleep,--to sleep in Harvey's camp, alongside Harvey's
-crew.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
- A TREATY OF FRIENDSHIP
-
-
-It was late the following morning when Tom and Bob awoke. The sun was
-well up, and the light was streaming into the tent. Their eyes opened on
-unfamiliar objects and on strange surroundings.
-
-"It gave me the strangest feeling," said Tom, telling Henry Burns about
-it some time later. "At first, before I was fully awake, I had forgotten
-where I was, and I thought I was back in our own tent upon the point.
-Then it flashed over me that that was gone, and the next moment I
-remembered that I was down there in Harvey's camp, and you can't imagine
-what a queer feeling it gave me."
-
-Harvey and the crew had already arisen, and Tom and Bob could hear the
-crackling of a fire outside, where they were preparing breakfast. Harvey
-had awakened apparently as strong as ever, unharmed by his terrible
-experience of the night before.
-
-"Hello, Bob," said Tom, as they looked across the tent at each other. "Do
-you know where you are? Isn't this a queer scrape? I wonder what will
-come of it."
-
-"Hello," answered Bob, yawning and stretching. "Oh, but how I did sleep.
-I feel as though I had slept about a week. I never was so tired in my
-life. Say, this is queer, isn't it? Who'd ever have thought we would be
-sleeping here, of all places."
-
-They arose and stepped outside.
-
-The crew paused in their work and looked up, while Harvey advanced to
-meet his guests.
-
-"Hello," he said. "We thought we'd let you have your sleep out. You must
-have been played out."
-
-"Hello," answered Tom and Bob. "We thought you were far worse off than
-we," continued Bob, "but you seem to have come out of it all right."
-
-Harvey had by this time come up to them. He paused, hesitatingly, for a
-moment, while his face flushed. Then he put out his hand.
-
-"Will you shake hands with me?" he asked.
-
-Tom and Bob, for answer, extended each his right hand and grasped that of
-Harvey.
-
-"Thank you," said Harvey, simply. "I don't deserve it, I know."
-
-There may have been the faintest suspicion of moisture about his eyes.
-
-"Come over here," he said, and led the way to a big log that lay near the
-fire, close by where the crew now stood. "I want to say something to you,
-and so do the fellows, too."
-
-There was an embarrassing moment as Tom and Bob seated themselves on the
-log, while the crew stood awkwardly by. They seemed uncertain what to do
-or say to these brave young fellows, whom they now knew had risked their
-lives to save their leader. With boy-like reticence, they were too
-ashamed to speak. Harvey broke the silence.
-
-"The fellows and I don't know hardly what to say to you," he said. "The
-crew want to tell you how ashamed we all are for the way we have treated
-you, and they want to thank you for what you did for me; but they can't
-begin to tell what they feel,--and no more can I,--but they want me to
-speak for them, too, as I've been their captain in all we've done, as
-well as aboard the yacht.
-
-"They know what you did for me," continued Harvey. "I told them the whole
-story this morning. There never was anything braver than what you did,
-and they all know it now as well as I do. They know you were as near
-drowning as I was, at the last, and you wouldn't give up and let me go,
-but stuck to me till the end, and couldn't have saved your own lives if
-there had been another rod to go.
-
-"I wouldn't be here now, if it wasn't for you--"
-
-"Well, you would have done the same for us, and so would the crew," said
-Tom, eager to spare the other's mortification as much as possible, and
-feeling his heart kindling toward his late enemy.
-
-"I don't know whether I should or not," replied Harvey. "I don't think
-I'm so much of a coward, even if I _have_ been doing things that look
-that way. But that doesn't make our position any the better. It isn't
-what we would have done for you in the same danger that counts. It's what
-we have been doing to you ever since you landed on the island that makes
-our case so bad."
-
-"I tell you," Harvey exclaimed, vehemently, as he arose from the log,
-"we've been a lot of fools and we've been thinking all the time that we
-were smart. It just came to me like a flash, as I thought I was going
-down out there, all the mean things I've been doing and what a fool I've
-been. I knew it all the time, too, I guess, only I didn't care. But you
-fellows have just brought it home to us hard, and we are going to try to
-square things up all that we can.
-
-"Now, first," continued Harvey, taking a long breath and speaking
-earnestly, "we're sorry we stole that box of yours from off the wharf. We
-knew it was yours all the time, too, though I said we didn't. Of course
-we couldn't help knowing. We don't blame you, either, for blowing up the
-cave--"
-
-"We didn't intend really to blow it up," interrupted Tom. "That was my
-idea, to burn up some of the stuff, just to get even, and we were nearly
-scared to death when the explosion came off. We thought you were all
-killed."
-
-"Well, I believe you now," said Harvey, "although I didn't before. I can
-see just how it happened, too. The fact is, we had some powder and
-kerosene there, hidden away. That's what caused it. Well, anyway, we
-don't blame you for setting the fire, and we shouldn't blame you now, if
-you had meant to blow up the cave, too. We deserved it."
-
-"We're sorry it happened, anyway," said Bob.
-
-"Now," added Harvey, "there's another thing, and that's the tent. Of
-course you knew we took it, although you couldn't prove it. You hadn't
-any doubt about it, had you?"
-
-"Well," replied Tom, "we did kind of think so, although we couldn't be
-sure."
-
-"Of course you thought so," said Harvey, "because nobody else would have
-done it. However, you are going to get the tent back all right."
-
-"Hooray!" cried Bob.
-
-"You're not half so glad as I am," exclaimed Harvey. "You bet I'm glad we
-didn't harm it. It's safe and sound, and you wouldn't guess where it is
-in a hundred years. It's up in the old haunted house, stuffed away in the
-garret, under the eaves. We didn't dare keep it and we didn't want to
-destroy it. In fact, we had decided to put it back on the point some day,
-after we had kept it as long as we wanted to."
-
-"We'll set it up again this afternoon," cried Tom.
-
-"No, you won't," answered Harvey, quickly. "We're going to do that for
-you, that is, if you will let us. We want to put it up in as good shape
-as it was before. We'll feel better about it then, eh, fellows?"
-
-"That's right," responded Joe Hinman. And the others nodded assent.
-
-"Now, one thing more," said Harvey. "You saw what we had in the cave.
-There were some things that belonged to Spencer, and one of the first
-things I do to-day will be to go up there and settle up with him. Then
-I'll feel as though I was ready to start fair again.
-
-"And now if you fellows will sit down and have some breakfast with us,
-then we'll sail up right after it and get the tent and have it up for you
-just as quick as we can. We can't do it any too quick to suit us."
-
-So Tom and Bob seated themselves with their new-found friends. George
-Baker, who had the fry-pan all heated and a big dish of batter mixed,
-proceeded to fry a mess of flapjacks, while Joe Hinman poured the coffee.
-All the old enmity had vanished in a night, and they laughed and joked as
-they sat about the campfire like friends of long standing.
-
-Then, when they had finished, and had shaken hands once more all around,
-and Tom and Bob had departed for the Warren cottage to explain their
-strange absence, and to acquaint the Warrens with the new turn of
-affairs, Harvey and his crew got sail on the _Surprise_ and headed up
-alongshore for the haunted house.
-
-"There," cried George Warren, as the boys appeared in sight a little
-later, "didn't I tell you, mother, not to worry about Tom and Bob? You
-ought to know them by this time. They know how to take care of
-themselves."
-
-"Well, the next time you go off for all night," exclaimed Mrs. Warren, a
-little impatiently for her, "I wish you would let me know about it
-beforehand. I don't like to have to worry about you, and I can't help it
-if you start off in that canoe and don't come back."
-
-"I don't blame you for not liking it," replied Tom, "and we'll try not do
-it again. But we really couldn't help this. We met with an adventure."
-
-"What, you didn't see the _Eagle_, did you?" cried George Warren.
-
-"No, you're wide of the mark," laughed Tom. "We've given up that hunt for
-good. No, we had a different sort of an adventure altogether. Where do
-you suppose we slept last night?"
-
-"With Henry Burns," said young Joe.
-
-"No."
-
-"Down on the beach?" said Arthur.
-
-"No."
-
-"Give it up," said George.
-
-"Well, you wouldn't guess in a hundred times trying," said Tom, "so I'll
-tell you. It was in Jack Harvey's camp."
-
-"Harvey's camp!" exclaimed the three brothers, in chorus.
-
-"Yes, sir, Harvey's camp."
-
-"I didn't know they were off on a cruise," said George. "Oh, I see,
-you've been getting even, have you? And how about the camp? Is it still
-there? What have you done with that?"
-
-"It's still down there," laughed Tom. "We didn't do anything to it at
-all. In fact, the crew were all there, and Harvey, too. We stayed there
-because they invited us. And, what's more, we have just had breakfast
-with them all."
-
-The Warrens stared at Tom in amazement.
-
-"Had breakfast with Harvey and his crew! Oh, say, you fellows, quit
-fooling now, and tell us where you have been."
-
-"Well," said Tom, "listen and we'll tell you the whole story. We've been
-having our revenge."
-
-And Tom related the story of the night's adventures.
-
-Good Mrs. Warren fairly hugged them with delight when they had concluded.
-
-"That's just splendid," she cried. "That's a splendid revenge. That's the
-kind that counts for most. But I want to hear Jack Harvey tell the story
-now. I know you haven't told half about the rescue. I want to hear him
-tell how brave you were."
-
-"He'll exaggerate it," said Bob. "He's our friend, you know, now."
-
-"Well, I'm glad enough you are all friends," exclaimed Mrs. Warren. "You
-must go and tell Henry Burns."
-
-When Jack Harvey and his crew had returned from the haunted house, and
-had anchored off the point and had brought the tent ashore, they found
-assembled there to greet them the entire group of comrades, the Warren
-boys, Henry Burns, and Tom and Bob.
-
-There was a general hand-shaking all around, and then they all set to
-work to pitch the tent. It didn't take long to do it, either, for Tom and
-Bob had saved the poles that had supported the canvas, and there were
-hands enough to jump at every rope and bring it taut into place. And
-everybody went at it in such good spirit, and everybody was so pleased
-and so willing to lend a hand, that the tent was up in its old place
-again almost as quick as it had come down.
-
-Then they rushed off in high spirits to the Warren cottage for the
-camp-kit and the boxes and the blankets and all the camp equipment, and
-packed it down on their shoulders as fast as they had ever done anything
-in all their lives.
-
-And Mrs. Warren did hear the story of the rescue from Jack Harvey's own
-lips, and was prouder than ever of her boys' friends, Tom and Bob.
-
-Then, when everything was shipshape, and Harvey and his crew were about
-to take their departure, he said: "We want all you fellows to come down
-to-morrow evening and take supper with us, the whole of you. You see,
-I've just got my allowance from the governor, and he's mighty generous to
-me, more than I deserve. It comes in just at the right time. You'll be
-sure and come, all of you?"
-
-"We'll be there," answered Henry Burns.
-
-"Indeed we will," said young Joe.
-
-"And remember Joe counts for two when it comes to the supper-table," said
-George.
-
-"We'll have enough," said Harvey.
-
-"We'll go along with you to your camp," said Tom, "and get our canoe.
-That is, unless you'd like to use it awhile," he added, slyly.
-
-"Not much," replied Harvey, with a laugh. "I've had enough canoeing to
-last me for a few days. But I'm glad I took that paddle, though, for all
-the narrow escape I had. It was the best accident I ever had in all my
-life."
-
-"Canoeing isn't always as easy as it looks," said Bob, as they walked
-along. "By the way, we haven't even asked you how you came to upset. It's
-because we have had so much else to talk about and think about."
-
-"Why," said Harvey, "there isn't much to tell. I don't hardly know how it
-happened, myself. I went to change my position in the canoe, as I was
-cramped with kneeling in one position so long. I suppose I lost my
-balance a little, but I was overboard so quick I don't know, myself, just
-how it did happen. I must have wrenched myself as I went over, for the
-minute I tried to swim I felt a pain in my side."
-
-"That's the way with a canoe," said Tom. "It doesn't always tip over.
-Moreover it just slides out from under one, without even capsizing at
-all. That's usually when one is kneeling or sitting up on a thwart, and
-the centre of gravity is high in it. When one is low down in a canoe it
-is rare an accident ever happens. We never have had a bad spill in
-several years of canoeing, except when we got caught in the storm this
-summer, and that was because a paddle broke."
-
-They had now reached the camp, and Tom and Bob launched their canoe and
-paddled away. They did not return to their own camp, however, but headed
-down the island. When they had reached the Narrows they carried across
-into the other bay, and then started down along the shore at a good clip.
-They were in search of Harvey's canoe.
-
-Several miles down they found it, lodged gently on a projecting ledge. It
-was uninjured, beyond a little scraping of paint from the canvas, and
-they took it in tow and returned to the Narrows. They carried both canoes
-across, and then, when they had paddled up toward Harvey's camp a way,
-they took his canoe up on shore and left it.
-
-That night, when Harvey's camp was asleep, they paddled down quietly, got
-the canoe, and towed it out to the yacht _Surprise_. They lifted it
-aboard and left it there, for Harvey to find in the morning.
-
-"There's just as much fun in that kind of a joke, after all, if one only
-looks at it that way," said Tom, as they paddled home to bed.
-
-"My! but it seems good to be back in the old tent once more, eh, Tom?"
-exclaimed Bob, as they turned in.
-
-"Good? Good's no name for it," returned his chum. "The Warren cottage is
-fine, but I like to hear those waves creeping up on the beach as though
-they were coming clear into the tent. It just puts me to sleep."
-
-The next moment bore truth to this assertion.
-
-The next afternoon, as the sun was just sinking down through the trees
-beyond Harvey's camp, a band of six boys marched along the shore and
-through the woods, singing as they went. If they had not known every inch
-of the way as they did know it, a beacon-light on the shore would have
-guided them.
-
-All afternoon Harvey and his crew had worked, making preparations to
-receive them. They had gathered wood, lugged water, brought stuff down
-from the village, brought in the lantern from the yacht to aid in the
-illumination, and had, indeed, laid themselves out to do honour to their
-guests.
-
-Harvey extended a hand to welcome them, one by one, as they came up.
-
-"That was a fine joke you played on us last night," he said, warmly, as
-Tom and Bob appeared. "If you fellows keep piling it on, you'll have me
-buried under a debt of gratitude that I never can attempt to pay."
-
-"Looks as though you had made a good start at it," said Bob, pointing to
-one of the benches, where a huge supply of food lay heaped.
-
-"Well," replied Harvey, "just watch Joe now. He's going to give us a
-treat. If any one knows how to broil a chicken over the coals, it's Joe."
-
-Joe, thus distinguished, had raked over a bed of glowing coals, the
-product of a heap of ship's timbers, nearly consumed, and was preparing
-to lay out the aforesaid chickens, split for broiling, upon a big wire
-broiler.
-
-"There's half a dozen of them," said Harvey, "and they're the best that
-the island affords. You needn't be afraid--we didn't confiscate them,
-either. We're all done with that sort of thing."
-
-"Don't they smell good!" said young Joe, gleefully.
-
-Soon they had a great dish of the chickens on the table, flanked by a
-heaping plate of potatoes, baked in ashes, a pot or two of jelly, several
-loaves of bread, and coffee that filled the woods with fragrance.
-
-Then they fell to and ate like wolves. If young Joe had any the best of
-it, it was hard to see,--and nobody cared, anyway, for every one did his
-level best.
-
-And then, when they had eaten, they sat and sang, roaring away at the top
-of their lungs, for it was a fair place for noise and no one to be
-disturbed; only the fish-hawks high in their nests and the seals away out
-on the ledges to wonder at the unusual disturbance. Then, as the fire
-blazed, they told stories of fishing, of hunting, of the search for the
-strange yacht, and a hundred other things, more than ever fascinating,
-heard under the stars, in the shadow of the woods, in the sight and sound
-of the sea, by the firelight.
-
-It was a night long to be remembered, although as yet they did not dream
-of those events soon to happen, which would be far more memorable, and of
-which this evening by the camp-fire was but the beginning.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII.
- THE FIRE
-
-
-It was nearly midnight when the boys came over the hill, and the
-half-moon was just sinking out of sight. They strolled down past the
-hotel, whistling a college tune in chorus. The hotel stood out, a big,
-black, indefinite object in the enveloping darkness, for the lights had
-been out for nearly two hours, and the guests were supposed to be all
-abed.
-
-"Hulloa!" exclaimed Henry Burns, pointing to a faint gleam that shone
-from a basement window. "John Carr has forgotten to put out his lamps in
-the billiard-room. Old Witham will give him fits when he finds them
-burning in the morning. Wait a moment, and I'll just slip in through this
-window and put them out for him. If the colonel should find them, just as
-likely as not he would discharge John for wasting five cents' worth of
-oil."
-
-So saying, Henry Burns, with the best of intentions, shoved up the sash
-and crawled into the billiard-room in the basement.
-
-The boys stood around the window, waiting for him to return, but one and
-all thrust their heads into the open window as Henry Burns suddenly gave
-a whistle of surprise.
-
-"Say, fellows," he called, turning the lights up stronger instead of
-extinguishing them. "Look what John Carr's done. He's left all the balls
-and cues out, instead of locking them up. Wouldn't the colonel be
-furious? I'll tell you what we'll do. Old Witham always drives us out of
-the billiard-room, so we'll just stop and play one game now and I'll make
-it all right with John Carr. He wouldn't care, and he will be glad enough
-to have things put to rights, so Witham won't find them out in the
-morning."
-
-George Warren, as the eldest of the brothers, demurred at first. "We've
-been up to enough pranks this summer," he said, "and we don't want to get
-into any more trouble."
-
-"But we're not going to do any harm," persisted Henry Burns. "We'll only
-play one game, just for the lark of playing at this time of night, and to
-get ahead of old Witham; and then we'll put everything away shipshape and
-put out the lights, and no harm done."
-
-It did not take much argument to influence them; and in a moment they
-were all inside, each equipped with a cue, and engaged in the forbidden
-game. The time passed faster than they knew, and one o'clock found them
-there still.
-
-But, late as it was, a most unusual hour for any Southport dweller to be
-astir and abroad, there were at least three individuals who were not abed
-and asleep; and with these three we shall have to do in turn.
-
-It so happened on this morning that Squire Brackett had important
-business that took him across to Cape Revere, on the mainland; and, as no
-steamer was due to run across till afternoon, and he must be there in the
-morning, he had arranged to sail over, taking advantage of the ebb-tide,
-which served strongest shortly after midnight. He was sleepy and surly as
-he came down the road, but paused a moment in his haste as he caught the
-gleam of light and heard the sound of subdued voices from the half-opened
-basement window.
-
-Squire Brackett stole up softly and peered inside.
-
-"Aha!" he exclaimed, under his breath. "So that's the way the young
-rascals treat Colonel Witham, is it? I'll just see about that in the
-morning. I fancy Colonel Witham will have something to say about this
-breaking and entering. I'd call him down now and trap them at their game,
-if it wasn't that I'd lose a tide and a twenty-dollar bargain by it."
-
-And the squire tiptoed craftily away, chuckling maliciously to himself at
-the thought of how he would aid in punishing the boys on the morrow.
-
-The second man of the three who were to figure in the night's adventure
-had set out some two hours ago from afar down the island on the obscure
-western side. If any of the boys had seen him rowing in from a yacht
-anchored just off shore, had seen him land on the beach and drag his boat
-well up on it with supreme strength, and had seen him set off through the
-fields and along the strips of beaches of the coves, if any of the boys
-had seen all this and had looked carefully into his forbidding face, with
-its malign, evil expression, it is probable that that boy might and would
-have seen a striking resemblance to that same individual whom he had seen
-in flight on a certain evening, and have wondered and feared what
-business could bring him back to the scene of former danger at this hour.
-
-Not being seen by them, nor by anybody else, the man slunk along, now
-running, as a clear stretch of field opened up before him, now thrusting
-his way through clumps of alders, now skirting the shore of some little
-inlet.
-
-At length he struck fairly across the island, directly toward the very
-town from which, a few weeks ago, he had made so hurried an exit. Coming
-finally in view of the hotel, he squatted down in the grass and surveyed
-the prospect long and carefully before approaching nearer.
-
-Squire Brackett, going on down to the hotel, would not have been so much
-at ease had he felt the presence of this evil figure, crouching within a
-few feet of him as he went by, and following stealthily in his footsteps,
-pausing as he paused, and watching him wonderingly as he peered into the
-window at the boys.
-
-Now, as the squire went on his way, the man, himself, crawled up to the
-window and cast a quick glance within.
-
-What he saw clearly startled him, for he had expected to find the hotel
-in utter darkness. He seemed to hesitate for a moment, then quickly drew
-away from the window.
-
-"So much the better," he muttered. "They won't stop me, and if only some
-one has seen them there they'll get the blame."
-
-Stealing around to the second window distant from where the light came,
-the man took a short piece of iron from a coat pocket and proceeded to
-pry the window open. Its flimsy lock broke easily under the pressure, and
-he sprang inside. He may have known where he should find himself, for in
-the darkness he appeared at home. It was the hotel's storeroom, and was
-crowded with a litter of boxes and barrels; loose straw lay in profusion,
-and a barrel or two of oil stood in one corner.
-
-It was scarce a moment from the time the man had entered till he sprang
-out again. But now his manner was altered. No longer proceeding with
-caution, he started on a run for the fields whence he had come, holding
-his arms hard to his sides as he ran.
-
-Up the long slope of the hill he dashed, breathing hard, rather, it would
-seem, from some deep excitement than from the exertion. So he went on
-without interruption for nearly a mile. Had he seemed less beset by some
-fear that drove him recklessly on, and been more mindful of his road, he
-might have avoided the third person who was abroad this night, and who
-now suddenly loomed large in it.
-
-Plunging desperately along through the rough pasture, following an
-uncertain path as it wound in and among clumps of cedars and alders, the
-man all at once ran full tilt into another man, or, rather, a large,
-heavy-set youth, and, clutching at each other, they both fell sprawling
-upon the ground.
-
-"Hulloa!" exclaimed Jack Harvey, for he it was, "you seem in a confounded
-hurry, my friend, and that's something new on this island, I'll be bound.
-Why don't you--" but, as they scrambled up together, Jack Harvey
-grumbling, but inclined to treat the incident as a rough joke, the man
-lunged out heavily at him with his fist and struck him full in the face.
-
-Jack Harvey was no coward. He clinched with the man, and they reeled for
-a moment in a fierce embrace. But the man had muscles of iron, and,
-nerved to desperation, more than matched Harvey. Presently he threw the
-youth to the ground, and as Harvey struggled to his feet again he dealt
-him a blow between the eyes that stretched him flat, and for a moment
-stunned him.
-
-Before Harvey had regained his feet and collected his senses, the man was
-off, running harder now than ever.
-
-When Harvey finally stood upright, his first impulse was to set out in
-pursuit of his mysterious adversary. On second thought he paused a moment
-to consider the matter.
-
-Who could the stranger be, and where could he be going? There was one
-thing Jack Harvey did know. He knew every living soul on all the island,
-man and boy, and this man was not of them. There was not a fisherman
-along this part of the coast with whom Harvey had not cast a line or
-raced with his yacht, the _Surprise_. He had looked the man fair in the
-face twice in their struggle, and thought for the moment that he had
-never seen him before.
-
-He had come from some other island, or the mainland, then, and, as was
-evident, he was in desperate haste to return. He must, then, have a boat,
-presumably a sailboat, waiting for him, and that boat must be moored
-somewhere along the western shore of the island. The man's haste and fear
-of being delayed argued that he had been up to some bad business,
-"Thieving at the hotel, perhaps," said Harvey.
-
-And then Harvey, knowing every bush and tree and nook and corner, and
-every rock and cove on all the shores of the island, ran over quickly in
-his mind the inlets along the coast, to pick out the most likely spot he
-knew of where a man might choose to moor his yacht and steal ashore; and
-the proof of his accurate knowledge was that the mental picture he drew
-of the place was that very cove toward which the stranger was now
-travelling, and where there lay snugly at anchor the strange yacht.
-
-With this clearly in mind, Jack Harvey resolved to follow in pursuit,
-although the man had now some ten minutes the start. Harvey had the
-advantage, however, that, whereas the man knew only the general direction
-he must take, to Harvey every inch of the way was as familiar as the
-ground around his own camp. For instance, he knew, when the way led
-through Captain Coombs's grove of woods, that through the centre, the
-most direct way, it was boggy and hard travelling, and that one could
-save from one to three minutes by skirting along the end nearest the
-town, and going through there in a smoothly travelled path.
-
-Again, and most profitable of all, there was full five minutes to be
-gained by swimming the narrow opening of Gull Cove, instead of following
-the line of the shore in the way it spread out in the shape of a huge
-pear. At the point which the stem of the pear would represent, the
-passage from the bay into the cove, it was only a matter of two rods
-wide.
-
-Jack Harvey did not even stop to remove his trousers, blue blouse, and
-tennis shoes, but plunged in and swam across.
-
-What he had gained by this was soon apparent, for, as he ascended the top
-of a low bank on the farther shore, he saw running along the beach, not
-many rods distant, the man whom he was pursuing.
-
-Now the chase had become simplified and was easy for the rest of the way.
-There could be no doubt of the man's destination. Jack Harvey, covering
-himself with rock and tree, made no effort to come up with him, but took
-his time in following, knowing where he should ultimately find him.
-
-Presently Harvey left the shore, ascended the bank to a roadway which led
-down the island, followed it for a few rods, cut across a narrow strip of
-field, seated himself deliberately upon a gnarled tree-trunk, and looked
-out upon a tiny inlet that was just discernible through the bushes.
-
-There, of a certainty, lay a pretty sloop at anchor, and presently there
-came to Harvey's ears the creaking of the halyards and of the ropes in
-the blocks as the mainsail fluttered up.
-
-"He's in a tearing rush to get away, sure enough," muttered Harvey. "Now
-he is getting up the anchor, and slatting it up in lively style, too. But
-he is a stronger man than I am, there's no mistake about that," and
-Harvey felt of two lumps on his head that bore witness to the man's
-violence.
-
-"If I only had Joe Hinman and Allan Harding here now he wouldn't sail
-away so easily. But that's neither here nor there. I'll know that elegant
-hull, however, and I'll know that slick-setting suit of sails anywhere in
-all this bay, and I'll get even with him yet. The _Surprise_ couldn't
-catch that boat in a race in a hundred years, but I'll catch him napping
-somewhere between here and Portland, or I have sailed this bay for
-nothing."
-
-The yacht, its sails filling to the light morning airs, sailed slowly out
-from its place of hiding and faded away into the darkness.
-
-Jack Harvey, waiting a moment longer to rest, started off on an easy
-jog-trot back to camp. "For," said he to himself, "the _Surprise_ must up
-anchor and after that fellow before daylight. We'll catch him first, and
-then find out what he has been up to. Perhaps he is another--
-
-"Why, by Jove!" exclaimed Harvey, suddenly, "what a fool I am! How could
-I ever have forgotten for a moment where I saw that face once before? The
-man in the rowboat! Whoop! And that yacht is the _Eagle_, as sure as my
-name is Harvey. And that man is Chambers. And to think I came across the
-bay with him, alone at night!"
-
-The cold drops of perspiration stood out on Harvey's forehead at the very
-thought of it.
-
-Over hills and through woods ran Harvey, his arms pressed close to his
-sides and his head down. He had gone about a mile in this way when, upon
-emerging from a dense clump of bushes and ascending at the same time a
-little hill, he paused to survey the prospect ahead.
-
-The sight that met his eyes astounded him. Up against the black morning
-sky there streamed a broad flaring of red, irregular and uncertain. Now
-it streamed up in a widely diffused glare. Again it darted up in a series
-of sharp streaks of red.
-
-"Heavens!" cried Harvey. "It's the hotel and it's all on fire! Now I know
-it's Chambers, for certain. Now I know why he struck me down. Now I know
-what we'll hunt him for and what we'll catch him for."
-
-Harvey, redoubling his speed, raced for his camp.
-
-While this strange chase of Harvey after the man had been going on, even
-more exciting things had been happening at the hotel.
-
-Shortly before the time the man had run into Harvey in the pasture and
-knocked him down, the boys had finished an absorbing game of billiards,
-had put cues and balls carefully away, extinguished the lights, and left
-the hotel.
-
-They were in high spirits at their harmless adventure, as they walked a
-short distance together, and then separated.
-
-"I think I'll go along with you," said Henry Burns to Tom and Bob, "if
-you'll give me that spare blanket to put down on the floor." And the boys
-locked arms with him in answer, as they said good night to the Warrens.
-They were soon inside the tent, and, too weary to undress, threw
-themselves down with their clothes on to sleep.
-
-But scarcely had they closed their eyes when the sound of persons running
-hard roused them, and they recognized the voices of the Warren boys,
-calling to them in excited tones.
-
-The next moment the tent was burst open, and George and Joe Warren thrust
-their heads inside.
-
-"Get up! Get up, boys, quick!" they cried, and Arthur, appearing the next
-instant, added his voice to the others. "Hurry!" they screamed. "The
-hotel's afire and the flames are pouring out of the basement windows.
-We've got to give the alarm, and there's no time to be lost."
-
-Tom and Bob and Henry Burns groaned in anguish; but the three sprang up
-and darted out of the door.
-
-"Could we have done it? Oh, how could it have happened?" moaned Bob, as
-his teeth fairly chattered with excitement.
-
-"I don't see how," answered Arthur Warren. "I put the lights out myself,
-and we didn't light a match in all the time we were there."
-
-"Never mind," said Henry Burns. "We've got to give the alarm. We've got
-to see that everybody gets out, and let the rest take care of itself."
-
-And they started on the run for the hotel. The fire was already plain to
-be seen, for the flames were gaining the most rapid headway, and a dense
-cloud of smoke mixed with flame poured out of the basement windows.
-
-They rushed madly up the hotel steps, found the doors locked, smashed in
-one of the big front windows opening into the parlour, and one and all
-crawled inside, screaming "Fire!" at the top of their lungs.
-
-Almost the first person they encountered was Colonel Witham, rushing down
-the front stairs to the office, his red face looking apoplectic with
-excitement.
-
-"What's this?" he yelled, as he came down-stairs two steps at a time.
-"Some more of your practical joking, I'll be bound." But then, as he
-breathed a choking cloud of smoke that by this time had begun to pour in
-from the direction of the parlour, he changed his tone.
-
-"Good for you, boys!" he cried. "I guess you've saved us this time.
-Scatter through the halls now, quick. You can do it quicker than I can.
-We mustn't let any one burn to death."
-
-The colonel was, indeed, out of breath and nearly helpless, and could be
-of little assistance.
-
-The boys needed no urging. They ran from one end of the long halls to the
-other, up-stairs and down, pounding on every door and startling the
-inmates of the rooms from sleep.
-
-The guests, rushing out on each floor into darkened halls, and smelling
-the all-pervading smoke, were ready to jump from windows in panic; but
-the boys ran quickly among them, explained just where the fire was, just
-what the particular danger was, and guided them all to escape.
-
-Thanks to them, not a life was lost, although there were several narrow
-escapes. Once when the guests had assembled and a count was taken to see
-that no one was missing, some one exclaimed: "Well, where's Mrs. Newcome?
-Has any one seen her?"
-
-Then there was a rush and a scurrying for the second floor, but the
-guests were met on the stairs by Joe Warren and Tom Harris, carrying the
-little old lady in their arms. They had knocked at her door and had
-received no response, and so, hurling themselves at the flimsy door, had
-burst it in, and found her on the floor in a dead faint.
-
-"Perhaps this will kind of square accounts with the poor old lady," said
-Joe Warren, as they laid her gently down at a safe distance from the
-fire. "She used to complain that we made more noise than a band of wild
-Indians, and were always disturbing her afternoon naps, but I guess she
-won't complain of our disturbing this nap." Then the boys left her in the
-care of the guests, and hurried back to the fire.
-
-The fire had gained rapid headway, and there was no hope of saving the
-new part of the hotel, at least. The old-fashioned town fire-engine came
-rattling up in charge of Captain Sam, but, though the guests and
-villagers and the boys all took turns at the pumps, the machine could do
-little more than throw a feeble stream up as high as the base of the
-second-story windows. The water-supply of the hotel, which was pumped by
-a windmill at a distance, was of more avail, but it was helpless against
-the headway that the flames had gained.
-
-Soon the whole front end of the hotel collapsed, sending up a fierce
-cloud of smoke, ashes, and sparks.
-
-"Lucky we're not in there now," exclaimed one of the guests. "By the way,
-has anybody stopped to think that we should all probably have been burned
-to death if it hadn't been for these boys that we've been complaining of
-all summer? Guess we'll owe them a vote of thanks, at least, when this is
-over."
-
-"We can't be too thankful that everybody's saved," said another.
-
-"That all may be," growled Colonel Witham, "but I can't see so much to be
-thankful for in watching a twenty-five thousand dollar hotel burn to
-pieces, and I've got the lease of it--" But his sentence was interrupted
-by a piercing wail that came from the scene of the fire, and, following
-the sound of the noise, one and all looked up in time to see a large,
-handsome tiger cat leap from a window from which smoke was pouring to a
-narrow ledge which was as yet untouched by the flames. There it crouched,
-crying with fear.
-
-"Oh, it's poor Jerry! It's my poor Jerry!" cried a thin, piping voice,
-and old Mrs. Newcome, roused from her faint, came forward, trembling and
-waving her hands helplessly. "Oh, can't somebody save him?" she cried.
-"He knows more than lots of these boys. Why don't somebody do something?"
-
-"Can't erzactly see as anybody's goin' ter risk his life for a fool cat,"
-muttered one of the villagers. "There ain't no ladder'll reach up there.
-Guess Jerry's a goner, and lucky it ain't a baby."
-
-Waving her hands wildly and moaning, Jerry's old mistress was a pathetic
-sight, as Henry Burns went up and spoke to her.
-
-"I'm afraid I can't do much," he said, "but I'll try. You just wait here,
-and don't take on so. I know some things about climbing around this hotel
-that the others don't." And he gave a quiet smile. Then he suddenly
-darted across to the old hotel, and, before any one could stop him,
-disappeared up the stairs. Wholly unmindful of the fact that a human
-being was risking his life for that of a dumb animal, old Mrs. Newcome
-took fresh hope and screamed shrilly, in words intended to encourage the
-terrified Jerry.
-
-All at once the crowd of guests and villagers saw a boy's slight figure
-at the edge of the hotel roof in relief against the sky.
-
-"Who's that?" they screamed. "I thought every one was safely out," cried
-one to another.
-
-"It's that Burns boy, and he's going to save Jerry," piped old Mrs.
-Newcome. "He's--"
-
-A howl of indignation drowned her voice, and a chorus of voices rose up
-to Henry Burns, demanding that he return.
-
-But, helpless now to prevent, they saw him coolly divest himself of his
-coat, seize hold of a lightning-rod, and go hand over hand quickly to the
-top. Then he stood for a moment on the only remaining wall of the hotel,
-for the rest of the roof, though not yet aflame, had caved in and broken
-partly away from the end wall.
-
-Along this narrow strip of wall crept Henry Burns; but when he had come
-to the end of it there was a sheer drop of ten feet down to the ledge
-where the cat crouched, wailing and lashing its tail.
-
-"Go back! Go back!" screamed those below. "You can't do anything."
-
-But Henry Burns, paying not the least attention, reached one hand into
-his pocket, drew from it a piece of rope, which he proceeded to lower
-till it dangled within reach of the unfortunate Jerry.
-
-"Grab it, Jerry! Grab it!" piped old Mrs. Newcome; and, whether in answer
-to the familiar voice or from an appreciation of the situation, Jerry
-fastened his claws into the rope, clawed at it furiously till all four
-feet were fast, and so, miaowing shrilly, was drawn up to safety by Henry
-Burns.
-
-Back along the wall he crawled, and, sliding down the lightning-rod, was
-once more on the roof of the old hotel. Then, with Mrs. Newcome's cat
-perched on his shoulder, he shortly reappeared below, amid the cheering
-of the crowd.
-
-"I'll never say you boys are bad again and ought to be horsewhipped,"
-sobbed old Mrs. Newcome, as she fondled her pet.
-
-But she got no farther, for a moment later the end wall, on which Henry
-Burns had stood shortly before, was seen to sway violently. Then, with a
-wrenching and tearing, as of beams split apart, and with grinding of
-timbers, it collapsed upon the roof of the old hotel, and a few minutes
-later that, too, was all ablaze, and there was nought to be done by any
-one but to stand helplessly and see the flames devour everything.
-
-When morning lighted up the spot where on the previous day the hotel had
-stood, the pride of the village and the boast of Colonel Witham, the sun
-shone only on a charred and blackened heap of ruins.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII.
- THE FLIGHT
-
-
-Southport, rudely awakened from sleep as it had been, and awake all the
-rest of the night by so unusual and stirring an event as a fire, was too
-much excited to go back to its slumbers, but stayed awake through the
-morning hours to discuss it. A group of villagers hung around the
-grocery-store all day long, adjourning only now and then to journey to
-the spot where the hotel had been, where they stood solemnly
-contemplating the ruins, with all-absorbing interest in the twisted and
-distorted fragments that still bore some resemblance to whatever part
-they had constituted in the structure of the building.
-
-There were dozens of theories advanced as to how the fire had started.
-The oil had exploded from spontaneous combustion; rats had set the blaze
-by gnawing at matches, and so on through the list of ordinary causes of
-fires; but as for Colonel Witham, with his customary suspicion of all
-human nature, he was sure of one theory, because it was his own, and that
-was, that the hotel had been set on fire. This he doggedly asserted and
-as stubbornly maintained. The hotel could not have set itself afire;
-therefore, some one must have done it. This was as plain as daylight to
-the colonel.
-
-He fiercely questioned John Carr as to whether any lights had been left
-burning, but John Carr was loud and persistent in his assurances that the
-hotel had been as dark as Egypt when he had retired for the night.
-
-But throughout all the discussion, that ranged through cottages, along
-the streets, and that spread throughout the length and breadth of the
-island, there were six boys who were silent, who took no part in it, but
-who kept away from wherever a group was gathered.
-
-They were a serious-looking lot of boys as they assembled on the shore in
-front of the tent; so much of anxiety and apprehension showing
-unconcealed in their faces that one happening upon their council might
-have read therein a key to the mystery. It would have been a mistaken
-clue, of course, but it would have sufficed for the village and for
-Colonel Witham.
-
-For a few moments not one of them spoke, though each boyish brain was
-turning the one awful subject over and over, vainly seeking the answer
-for a problem that defied all attempts at solution.
-
-Finally Bob broke the awful silence.
-
-"How could it have happened?" he exclaimed. At which there was a
-universal whistle and a shaking of heads.
-
-"You see," continued Bob, "it's absolutely necessary for us to decide in
-our own minds, the first thing, whether it was our fault or not. Because,
-if it was, I suppose we've got to own up to it sometime or other, and we
-may as well do it first as last."
-
-"Better now, if at all, than later," said Tom. "They might have some
-mercy on us now, being grateful that they didn't burn up."
-
-"All but Colonel Witham," said young Joe. "Catch him being grateful for
-anything, with his hotel in ashes."
-
-"Keep quiet, Joe!" exclaimed George Warren, sharply.
-
-The very mention of Colonel Witham's name was irritating. It was only too
-certain that no mercy could be expected from the colonel.
-
-"But," said Arthur Warren, "we're not to blame, so why should we consider
-that at all? You remember," he continued, turning to Henry Burns, "how we
-waited after I had blown the last lamp out and the room was absolutely
-dark, and we had to stand still a moment till our eyes got accustomed to
-the darkness before we could find our way to the window?"
-
-"I remember that," answered Henry Burns; "and not one of us lighted any
-matches all the time we were there, because the lamps were all burning
-dimly when we went in; but," he added, somewhat desperately for him,
-"that is not going to save us the moment an investigation begins, if they
-have one. The first time they begin to question one of us we're done for.
-The moment they know we were in there last night, that will settle
-everything in their minds."
-
-"And what then?" asked young Joe.
-
-"Well," said Henry Burns, more calmly, "it means that we've got a
-twenty-five thousand dollar hotel to pay for."
-
-The proposition was so absurd that they burst out laughing; but it was a
-short-lived and bitter merriment, and they could just as easily have
-cried.
-
-"What would our fathers say?" said Arthur Warren. "Ours told us we'd have
-to make our pocket-money go a long way this summer, because he rigged the
-boat all over for us. There couldn't any of us pay for the hotel in all
-our lives."
-
-"Perhaps they'd send us to jail," suggested young Joe.
-
-This happy remark was received with howls of indignation, and the
-originator of it was invited to clear out if he couldn't keep quiet.
-
-"They couldn't send us to jail," said Arthur, gravely, "for, at the
-worst, we could convince them that it was accidental. We may be
-nuisances, but we're not criminals. Wouldn't it be better, on the whole,"
-he concluded, "to make a clean breast of it to father, and do whatever he
-says is best?"
-
-"I'd do it in a minute," said George Warren, "but when I know we didn't
-set the fire, even accidentally, I hate to put all that trouble and worry
-on father; because, you see, we might not be able to convince him
-absolutely that we may not, in some way that we don't know of, have been
-responsible. Of course, if it comes to it, we'll tell him all,--and he'll
-believe it, too. That is, he'll believe that we are telling what we think
-is right, for we've always done that way, because he puts confidence in
-us."
-
-"Then," said Bob, "we've got to keep out of the way for awhile till this
-thing blows over some. Everybody that sees us now will stop and ask us
-how we first saw the fire and all about it."
-
-"They've done that already to us," said George Warren. "And, luckily, we
-could say truthfully that we first saw the fire from our cottage piazza.
-And we said we ran down to your camp and roused you boys. Now that is all
-right for a touch-and-go conversation, but suppose they see fit to follow
-it up, we'll soon find ourselves either obliged to lie or to confess."
-
-"Then what are we going to do?" asked Tom.
-
-"Take a fishing-trip," suggested young Joe.
-
-They looked at young Joe savagely, for each knew in his own heart that it
-was running away from danger,--but it was significant that not a boy
-objected.
-
-"We've been planning one for a week or more," urged Joe, in extenuation
-of his plan. "And we needn't stay long. We can come back in a day or two
-and then start right out again, so as not to attract attention by being
-gone too long."
-
-"I suppose a little trip down among the islands wouldn't be so bad for
-our health," said Henry Burns, dryly; but it was clear he had no great
-liking for the plan.
-
-And so, in a vain endeavour to escape from what seemed to them a most
-unfair and cruel predicament, and without realizing that it was the worst
-thing they could do, the boys agreed to start early on the following
-morning in the _Spray_ for a cruise.
-
-Much surprised was Mrs. Warren when informed of their plan.
-
-"And just as everybody is telling what brave boys you were," she said.
-"They all say that half the guests would have lost their lives if it
-hadn't been for you."
-
-This was worse than punishment, and the boys groaned inwardly, for Mrs.
-Warren had taught her boys to respect her, and they valued her good
-opinion more than anything else in the world. They went off to bed soon
-after supper, "so as to get an early start in the morning," they said.
-
-It was early that same evening, while the boys were at tea, that Squire
-Brackett stepped ashore from his sailboat in a perfect fever of
-excitement.
-
-"I knew it and I said it," he muttered to himself, slapping one hard fist
-into the palm of the other hand. "When I saw that blaze across the water
-this morning, and knew that it couldn't be anything else than the hotel,
-I says to myself, 'Those boys have done it, with some of their
-monkey-shines,' and that's just the way of it. By Jingo! but won't
-Colonel Witham jump out of his skin when I tell him what I saw through
-that window.
-
-"P'r'aps them 'ere boys won't be' so much inclined to tying other
-people's dogs to ropes and drowning them when they get caught for setting
-fire to a fine hotel!"
-
-And so, nearly bursting with the magnitude of his secret, and bristling
-with more than his usual importance, Squire Brackett hurried up from the
-landing and lost no time in finding Colonel Witham and escorting him in
-great haste to his own home.
-
-There on the veranda of Squire Brackett's house sat the two worthies,
-while the squire poured out his news into the eager colonel's ear.
-
-"Whew!" exclaimed Colonel Witham, when he had heard it all. "We've got
-them at last and no mistake. What's more," he added, jumping from his
-chair and stamping vigorously on the piazza floor, "I'll prosecute them,
-every mother's son, to the extent of the law. It's breaking and entering,
-too,--forcing their way into my hotel at night,--and the fire was caused
-by their criminal act. That's serious business, as they'll find before I
-get through with them. Blow me if I don't take the boat for Mayville this
-very night, and see Judge Ellis and get the warrants for Captain Sam to
-serve first thing in the morning!"
-
-"I'll go with you, colonel," cried Squire Brackett. "We'll be back here
-before midnight, and be all ready at daylight to arrest them. Reckon
-we'll surprise folks a little."
-
-And so, chuckling maliciously together, the squire and the colonel waited
-eagerly for the whistle of the little bay steamer, upon hearing which
-they walked arm and arm down to the wharf and went aboard, with their
-heads together, in great satisfaction.
-
-Their trip must have been greatly to their liking, for some hours later
-found them coming ashore again, evidently in a most agreeable state of
-mind; and as they bade each other good night on the veranda of the
-squire's cottage, the colonel might have been heard once more to exclaim,
-exultantly: "We've got 'em this time, squire! They can't get away." And
-so strode away, caressing in one hand some crisp, official-looking
-papers, which boded no good in their contents to six boys whose names the
-colonel had given with evil delight to the judge at Mayville.
-
-Very early next morning good-hearted Captain Sam might have been seen at
-the door of his home, his fist clenched and his face burning with
-indignation. Colonel Witham and Squire Brackett stood by the stoop.
-
-"Now look here, colonel," exclaimed Captain Sam, hotly, "you surely ain't
-going to ask me to serve these papers on them innocent young lads?
-There's some mistake, somehow, and the way for us to do is to get them up
-here and just give them a talking to; ask them all the questions you
-want. I've watched them boys for a good many summers now, ever since they
-was little shavers no bigger'n mackerel, and I tell you they wouldn't do
-no wicked thing like setting fire to a hotel full of people, and there
-ain't nobody on this island mean enough to believe it."
-
-"We didn't come here asking you for advice," sneered the squire. "You're
-a constable of this village, sworn to do your duty, and your duty is to
-serve these warrants, the same being legally drawn and signed by the
-judge. That's all your part, and all we ask of you to do. We take all the
-consequences."
-
-"Well, it's a shame. It ain't the right thing to do, squire, as you ought
-to know, having a boy of your own. But, as you say, it's my duty if you
-insist, and I'll do it,--but it's the hardest job I ever done in all my
-life."
-
-"Let's go down to the tent first," said Colonel Witham. "There's always
-two of them down there, and sometimes more. If Henry Burns is there, I
-just want to get my hands on him. I suspect he's been fooling me all
-along and playing his tricks on me, when I thought him in his room
-asleep."
-
-The dew was still heavy on the grass and the sun had not lifted its face
-above the distant cape when the three men walked down to the tent upon
-the point. Not a sound broke the early morning quiet, save the cawing of
-some crows in a group of pines, and the lazy swash of the sluggish
-rollers breaking on the shore.
-
-"They're fast asleep," whispered Squire Brackett. "We'll give them a
-little surprise--just a little surprise." And he gave a hard chuckle.
-
-Captain Sam, at this same instant, casting his eyes offshore and hastily
-surveying the bay with the quick, comprehensive glance of an old sailor,
-gave a sudden start, and, for a moment, an exclamation of surprise
-escaped him.
-
-"What is it?" asked Colonel Witham. "Did you remark anything, Captain
-Sam?"
-
-"Nothing," answered Captain Sam. "I was just a-muttering to myself."
-
-And at this moment the squire threw open the flap of the tent, saying, as
-he did so, "If you boys will--"
-
-But as he and Colonel Witham poked their heads through the opening, the
-sentence was abruptly cut short.
-
-"Empty!" gasped the colonel.
-
-"Gone!" cried the squire.
-
-The tent was, indeed, deserted.
-
-"Where can they be?" asked Colonel Witham.
-
-"I know," answered the squire. "Up at the Warrens, of course. They are
-there half the time. It simply means we capture them all at once and save
-trouble. Come on, Captain Sam, you don't seem to be in much of a hurry to
-do your duty, as you're sworn to do."
-
-Captain Sam was, indeed, in no hurry. He loitered behind, stopped to tie
-his shoes, dragged one foot along after the other slower than he had ever
-done before, while every now and then, as he followed in the footsteps of
-the colonel and the squire, he cast a hasty glance over his shoulder out
-on the bay. What he saw must have pleased him, for on each occasion a
-broad smile spread over his face and a mischievous twinkle kindled in his
-eyes.
-
-The colonel and the squire strode along impatiently, pausing now and then
-for Captain Sam to catch up with them; but as they drew near to the
-Warren cottage Captain Sam quickened his steps and halted them.
-
-"You two will have to stay here," he said, with an authority he had not
-shown before. "I'm commissioned with the serving of these warrants, and
-I'm going to do it; but Mrs. Warren is a nice, motherly little woman, and
-I don't propose to have three of us bursting in on them like a press-gang
-and frightening her to death. I'm just going to break the news to her as
-best I know how, and I don't want no interfering."
-
-So saying, and with face set into a reluctant resolve, the captain walked
-on alone, leaving the colonel and the squire much taken aback, and too
-much astonished by the sudden declaration of authority to attempt to
-dispute it.
-
-What Captain Sam said to Mrs. Warren only she and he knew. There were no
-boys called in to listen to what was said. There were no boys there to
-see how Mrs. Warren's face paled and how the tears rolled down her
-cheeks, nor to hear Captain Sam's words of burning indignation as he
-tried to comfort her. No boys came to gather about her chair, to assure
-her it was all a dreadful mistake. There were no boys to face the colonel
-and the squire and declare their own innocence.
-
-But out on the bay, with all her white sails set to catch the morning
-breeze, the yacht _Spray_ was beating down toward a distant goal among
-the islands. And aboard her were six boys, whose hearts were heavy and
-whose faces were drawn with an ever present anxiety. For a time they cast
-apprehensive looks back at the disappearing village, but as the morning
-wore on and no pursuing sail appeared, they became more cheerful; and to
-forget so far as they could the real cause of their flight, they talked
-hopefully of the fish they expected to catch and the swimming and other
-sport along the white sands of the island beaches.
-
-But although no familiar craft as yet followed where they sailed, there
-was, far in the lead of them and some miles down along the island, a
-yacht they all knew, and in whose mission, had they but known it, their
-deepest interests, their very fate, in fact, lay.
-
-Jack Harvey had lost little time in reaching his camp. While he ran the
-fire blazed brighter and brighter, sending an angry glare over the waters
-of the bay and lighting up the country around. Looking back now and then,
-he could see men and women running about in the light of the fire, and
-the frantic, though unavailing, efforts of the village fire department to
-stay the flames.
-
-"Seems funny," he muttered to himself, "to be running away from a fire,
-and the greatest fire we ever had on this island at that. I never did
-such a thing before, but I guess there'll be something more exciting
-ahead than a fire before we get through."
-
-Harvey found his camp deserted, as he had expected. Not a sign of life
-showed about the place.
-
-"They're all up to the fire," said Harvey; "but I'll bring them soon
-enough, though I reckon they'll be mad at first to have to leave when the
-fire is just at its best."
-
-And he began ransacking the camp, rolling up blankets, tying them into
-compact bundles and hurrying down to the shore with them, where he
-deposited them in a rowboat.
-
-He made a pile of the rude dishes that the camp afforded, a saucepan, a
-fry-pan, tin dippers, and a few tin plates, tying them all together in a
-bundle and rattling them all down to the shore in great haste.
-
-Finally he got a boatload of the stuff, and, jumping in, sculled the
-little craft out to the _Surprise_. Leaping aboard, he rushed down into
-the cabin, threw open a locker, drew forth a big tin horn, which he
-raised to his lips, and blew four loud, long blasts in succession.
-
-"The hurry signal will surprise them, I reckon," he exclaimed; "but
-they've always answered it before, and I guess they'll come,--even from a
-fire." And Harvey began stowing the stuff away aboard the yacht. Then he
-proceeded to untie the stops in the mainsail, and was thus engaged when a
-voice hailed him from the shore.
-
-"Halloo, Jack!" came the call. "What's the matter? Why aren't you up to
-the fire? What's up?"
-
-"Wait a minute," answered Harvey. "I'm coming ashore. Are the others on
-the way?"
-
-"Yes," answered the boy on shore, who proved to be Joe Hinman; "but they
-don't like it a bit. It's a shame to lose this fire, Jack. Why, you ought
-to see Colonel Witham. He's the craziest man I ever saw, running around
-and begging everybody he sees to rush into the blaze and save his old
-office furniture."
-
-"Well, Joe," said Harvey, as he stepped out of the small boat on to the
-beach, beside the other, "we've got some work cut out for us that beats
-watching a fire all to pieces. I'll tell you all about it, but there
-isn't one half-minute to lose now. Believe me, you fellows won't regret
-it,--hello, here are the others!"
-
-The three other members of the crew, George Baker, Allan Harding, and Tim
-Reardon, burst out of the woods into the clearing, gasping from running,
-and amazed beyond expression that Harvey should have called them from the
-fire.
-
-"Fellows," said Harvey, "I'll tell you the whole story just as soon as we
-get aboard and up sail. This is the greatest thing we ever did in all our
-lives; but it's the minutes that count now, and we have got to get under
-way the quickest we ever did yet."
-
-And then, as the boys hesitated, and Joe Hinman ventured the question,
-with something of suspicion in his tone that he could not all conceal,
-"Why, Jack, there's no trouble, is there--no trouble--about the fire?" it
-suddenly dawned on Harvey that this sudden departure did have a queer
-look to it, and that he was, indeed, open to their suspicion.
-
-"Yes," he cried, "there is trouble, and it's about this fire; but it
-isn't our trouble. The trouble is for the man that set it,--and we are
-going to make it for him. We're going to catch him. Now will you hurry?"
-
-"Will we?" exclaimed George Baker. "Just watch us!"
-
-And every boy made a dash for the camp to secure anything he might need
-on a cruise down the bay.
-
-Harvey and Joe Hinman seized two big jugs and made off for the spring,
-whence they returned quickly. Then the entire crew piling into the small
-boat, they were soon aboard the _Surprise_.
-
-The anchor was up in a twinkling. The sails were never spread in such
-time. Almost as quickly as it takes to tell it, the yacht _Surprise_ was
-under way, and with Harvey at the wheel was standing out of the little
-harbour.
-
-Then, as they left the glare of the fire upon the waters astern, but
-still flaming like a giant beacon against the sky, Harvey, with his crew
-about him, narrated his extraordinary adventure with the strange man, and
-asserted his conviction that the man was none other than the same
-Chambers who had fled from the island not long before.
-
-"That is a fast boat, and we can never catch her in plain sailing," said
-Allan Harding. "She is full half again as big as we, and she would sail
-around us a dozen times and then walk away from us without half-trying."
-
-"I know that," said Harvey, "and that is just why I am so anxious to
-catch up with him before he gets out of the western bay into the open
-sea. If we don't get him in the bay we shall lose him. Now let's overhaul
-everything, and be sure that something doesn't break just as we come to
-the pinch."
-
-There was little to be done, however, on that score; for, however
-carelessly they lived ashore, they had the true yachtsman's spirit aboard
-the _Surprise_, and kept her shipshape. Then they set the club and jib
-topsails, for there was not much air stirring, and they drew the tender
-up close astern, so it would drag as little as possible.
-
-"We have one advantage," said Harvey. "We can depend upon it, he knows
-enough not to try the open bay and sail down toward the Gull Islands. The
-first part of the way is clear sailing enough, but when you get down just
-off the islands you come to the shallows, and a man has to follow the
-marks to get clear and safely out to sea. And then, too, the alarm is
-going to be sent out just as soon as a boat from the village can get over
-to the mainland. They won't lose any time about that,--and Chambers is
-sharp enough to know it. He knows the whole bay down below there will be
-alive with boats, just as soon as they get the news wired down to them.
-
-"Depend upon it, Chambers will try to fool them. I think he will come
-through the Thoroughfare at this eastern end of Grand Island, which he
-must have studied out on the charts. He will not dare to try the
-Thoroughfare to-night, however, and if we can only beat down to somewhere
-below the Thoroughfare to-night we shall be well to windward of him in
-the morning, and he will think we are a boat coming in from outside,
-while he will still be beating into the wind, if it holds from the
-south'ard, the way it is blowing now."
-
-"That's right," said Joe Hinman. "He cannot make the passage out through
-the Thoroughfare in the night, unless he knows the way better than I
-think he does. It is a bad run in the dark, even for a man that was born
-around here. We have done it only once or twice ourselves."
-
-"You fellows turn in now, all but Tim," said Harvey, "and get some sleep.
-We two can run her for awhile. I'll call you, Joe, in about an hour or
-two, to handle her while I get forty winks, but, mind, everybody will be
-called sharp the minute we clear Tom's Island, for no knowing what we
-shall see then at any minute. Chambers will lie up in Seal Cove for an
-hour or two, I reckon, if he has got down that far. I only wish I was
-sure of it. We'd go ashore and take a run across the island and catch him
-napping--
-
-"By the way, George," exclaimed Harvey, "how do you feel? It's mighty
-lucky you happened to be taken with that colic in the night, just at the
-right time, and that I started out to rouse up old Sanborn to get some
-ginger for you. All this would never have happened if it hadn't been for
-you."
-
-"Why, I'm all right," answered George Baker. "I could hardly walk when we
-first saw the fire, but I just made up my mind I wasn't going to miss it,
-and so I started out. When the sparks began to fly I forgot all about the
-pain, and I hadn't thought of it since. It's all gone now, anyway."
-
-Two hours later they were nearing the southern end of Grand Island and
-coming in sight of a chain, or cluster, of smaller islands, through which
-an obscure and little used passage ran from the western bay to the outer
-sea. Jack Harvey had sent young Tim into the cabin to snatch a wink of
-sleep, and Joe had come up, heavy and dull.
-
-"I'll go without my sleep this once," said Harvey. "Here, Joe, hold her a
-minute. I'll get a bit of rest right here on deck, with one eye open."
-
-It was growing light fast now, and they strained their eyes for a sail.
-
-"I guess we are in time," said Harvey, as they came abreast of Tom's
-Island. "He is not in sight. We'll head out to sea a bit more, and cut
-into the Thoroughfare farther down, for the tide will be high in an hour,
-and we can cross Pine Island Bar. Then, if he has taken the channel on
-the other side of Tom's Island, we can still head him off,--unless he
-went through in the night."
-
-And Harvey, having relinquished the tiller to Joe, stretched himself out
-at full length on the seat to rest.
-
-Thus they sailed for a short cut into the Thoroughfare at a point where
-they could command the farther of the two channels.
-
-And, as they sailed, so sailed another and a larger sloop, beating its
-way out to sea through the farther channel. A man, powerfully built, and
-with a hard, desperate look in his eyes, sat at the wheel,--and he was
-all alone. The yacht cut a clean path through the smooth waters of the
-Thoroughfare, and, as the man looked at the coast-line along which he was
-passing rapidly, he muttered: "It's a clear passage; a safe run to sea.
-And, once there, who's to say I was ever in these waters? I said I'd have
-revenge on this town for what I've lost, if it took all summer, and I've
-done it. The blaze did me good as it lit the sky. Twenty minutes more and
-I'll be clear of this, and good-bye to this coast for ever."
-
-But even as he said it a smaller sloop turned the head of an island half
-a mile ahead, and came down the Thoroughfare, running off the wind.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX.
- THE PURSUIT
-
-
-Great was the rage of Colonel Witham and Squire Brackett when they
-discovered that the boys had escaped.
-
-"But it will be only so much the worse for them in the end," said the
-squire. "The fact of their running away is a confession of guilt, and
-will count hard against them when we once get them into court.
-
-"Colonel," he continued, gazing off on to the bay, "I believe that's them
-now, about two miles down along the shore. Cap'n Sam, you're a sure judge
-of a sail. Isn't that the _Spray_ beating down along the island, just off
-Billy Jones's beach?"
-
-Captain Sam took a most deliberate observation, turned a chew of tobacco
-twice in his cheek, and then remarked, laconically:
-
-"That's the _Spray_, sure's a gun. There is no mistaking the queer set of
-that gaff-topsail. It always was a bad fit, and it sticks out just as
-crooked like, two miles away, as it does close on. Y-a-a-s, there's the
-youngsters, and no mistake."
-
-Captain Sam did not see fit, however, though a constable, sworn to do his
-duty, as the others had suggested, to explain that he had seen the
-_Spray_ for the last hour or more, and that he had been conscious all
-along of the precious time they were losing. But a sharp observer might
-have detected him chuckling down deep in his throat as the colonel and
-the squire stormed and raged.
-
-"Well, what are we going to do?" cried Squire Brackett. "We're losing
-valuable time here. That little boat eats fast into the wind, they say,
-and we have got to get started pretty quick if we expect to overhaul her
-between now and dark.
-
-"Come! What do you say, Cap'n Sam? You know the boats in the harbour
-better than I do. Whose is the best one to go after them with?"
-
-"Wa-al," drawled Cap'n Sam, "if I do say it, I suppose the _Nancy Jane_
-is about as good as any in a long thrash to windward,--if she does belong
-to me. She's big and she's roomy, and there's a comfortable cabin in her
-for you and the colonel--for I suppose you'll want to go along."
-
-"Go along!" exclaimed Colonel Witham. "I should say we did--eh, squire?
-When these 'ere warrants are served I want to be there to see it done,
-and so does the squire, I reckon."
-
-"That's what I do," responded Squire Brackett. "We'll go along with you,
-sure enough."
-
-"Then you want to be getting some grub aboard right away," said Captain
-Sam, with a fine show of energy and haste, "while I break the news to my
-wife. She'll put me up a bite to last a day or two. You can't tell, you
-know, when you start off on one of these 'ere cruises, where you'll end
-up nor how long you'll be out,--so you want to come prepared to stay."
-
-And then, as the colonel and the squire hurried off down the road, he
-turned back for a moment to Mrs. Warren, who stood weeping, and said,
-with rough good-heartedness:
-
-"Now, don't you go to taking on, Mrs. Warren. There's some mistake here.
-Depend upon it. I've known them youngsters ever since they was no
-bigger'n short lobsters, and I know they ain't got nothing bad enough in
-'em to go to setting a hotel afire.
-
-"P'r'aps there might have been some little accident," he added, more
-conservatively. "Accidents always is happening, you know, and we're all
-of us liable to 'em. I've got to do my duty, Mrs. Warren, bein' as I am a
-constable of this town, sworn to obey my orders as I get 'em, signed and
-sealed from the court; but I'm goin' to stand by them boys, all the same.
-
-"So you just go and get your husband down here, quick as ever you
-can,--and we'll settle this 'ere difficulty pretty soon, I reckon.
-
-"And see here," he said, in conclusion, "if Mr. Warren gets here by
-to-morrow noon, that'll be time enough. And that gives you a chance to
-take the boat up to-day if you hurry, and bring Mr. Warren back with you.
-I'll sorter guarantee we don't fetch up here again till to-morrow
-afternoon, so don't you worry." And with a sly twinkle in his gray eyes
-the captain took his leave, and rolled along lazily toward his home.
-
-He was still eating a hearty breakfast when the colonel and the squire
-burst in upon him, hot with impatience. But the captain was provokingly
-deliberate, and finished a few more huge slices of bread and a biscuit or
-two, and two cups of coffee and a few of his wife's doughnuts, before he
-would budge an inch.
-
-"The boys can't escape," he said, by way of assurance to the impatient
-pair. "They can't go across the Atlantic in a little sardine-box like
-that, if it has got a mast and a bowsprit and a cabin to it. We're bound
-to fetch up with them quick enough. Have a cup of coffee, colonel!
-Squire, sit down and drink a cup of coffee! Mrs. Curtis knows how to make
-it, if anybody does."
-
-But the colonel and the squire refused impatiently, and by dint of
-nagging and voluble persuasion they got Captain Sam started, and the
-three went down to the shore.
-
-The news had spread abroad by this time,--thanks to the colonel and the
-squire,--and quite a number of villagers and cottagers had gathered to
-see them off.
-
-What they said was not complimentary to the worthy two, for the boys, in
-spite of their pranks, were universally liked, and the whole village had
-not done with praising them for their bravery at the fire.
-
-"Why don't you go and arrest Jack Harvey and his crew?" cried one of the
-villagers. "Looks mighty queer to have them clear out, every one of them,
-the morning of the blaze. Dan French, he saw them standing out by his
-point early that morning while the fire was blazing its hardest. Reckon
-that looks a sight queerer than it does to wait a whole day."
-
-"Well! Well! I guess they had a hand in it," cried Colonel Witham, as he
-stepped into the yacht's tender. "We'll hunt them up, too, later on. They
-are all mixed up in it, I've no doubt. Wait till we get the boys we are
-after now, and we'll make them confess the whole thing."
-
-It certainly did look suspicious, this flight from both camps and from
-the Warren cottage, just after the fire; and the villagers, however well
-disposed they might be in the boys' favour, or however much inclined to
-show leniency, could not explain it away.
-
-"They must have been up to some of their pranks," they said to one
-another, "and somehow got the hotel on fire. Colonel Witham must be
-right,--and, besides, Squire Brackett says he's got the proof. He must
-know something bad, or he would not be so certain."
-
-And to this conclusion, reluctant as they might be to come to it, there
-fitted, in startling corroboration, the coincidence of their being the
-first to discover the fire,--the first to give the alarm.
-
-And the villagers sympathized all the more, for this conclusion, with
-Mrs. Warren, as she took the boat for home that morning, bravely keeping
-back her tears, and receiving courageously their kindly assurances,
-though her heart was breaking.
-
-The _Nancy Jane_ was a heavy fishing-boat, of the centreboard type, big
-and beamy and shallow of build, able to "carry sail" in the worst of
-weather, but not so marvellously fast as one might have been led to
-believe by the recommendation of her owner. However, it was quite true
-that she could overhaul the _Spray_--only give her time enough, and
-provided no accident should happen.
-
-"She's got a bit of water in her," said Captain Sam. "So make yourselves
-comfortable, gentlemen, make yourselves comfortable, while I pump her
-out. She'll sail faster and point up better with the water out of her,
-and we'll all be more comfortable."
-
-And the colonel and the squire made themselves anything but comfortable,
-fretting and fuming at the delay.
-
-The captain took it leisurely, however, yanked the pump for ten minutes
-or more, to the accompaniment of short puffs of his pipe, and then
-pronounced her dry as "Dry Ledge at low tide."
-
-The colonel and the squire were neither of them sailors; so they could
-only wait on Captain Sam's pleasure. He finally made sail on the _Nancy
-Jane_, got up anchor, brought her "full and by," and they began the long
-zigzag chase down the bay in the teeth of the wind.
-
-The breeze freshened as they drew out of the shelter of the island shore,
-and down between the nearer islands Captain Sam could see the line of
-breeze show black upon the water.
-
-"Looks like a right smart blow by afternoon," he said.
-
-Colonel Witham looked up apprehensively.
-
-"It doesn't get dangerous, does it?" he asked.
-
-Captain Sam laughed dryly.
-
-"Guess you're not much on sailing, colonel, are you?" he asked, by way of
-reply. "Bless you! We don't get a dangerous blow in the bay once in a
-summer. No, you need not worry about that. There's no danger; but I
-wouldn't wonder if we had a bit of a chop-sea when the wind freshens."
-
-The colonel looked more at ease.
-
-"No," he said, "I'm no sailor. I manage to make the voyage down the river
-to the island, but that is as much seagoing as I have ever wanted, and
-this will be my first real ocean experience."
-
-"Not what you'd hardly call an ocean experience, either," said Captain
-Sam, grinning from ear to ear. "No," and he said the words over to
-himself as though they afforded him no end of amusement, "a slat to
-windward from the point to Gull Island ain't just what one would call an
-ocean experience, though it does shake a body up now and then in a blow."
-
-Dinner-hour came, and they had the _Spray_ well in sight, some miles
-ahead and pitching hard.
-
-"We'll eat a snack," said Captain Sam, who was never so happy and hearty
-as when he had his hand on the wheel of the _Nancy Jane_. "Colonel, have
-one of Mrs. Curtis's fresh doughnuts, just fried this morning, make you
-feel like a schoolboy."
-
-But the colonel, pale of face, declined.
-
-"I--I don't seem to feel very hungry just this moment," he stammered.
-"Late breakfast, you know. Er--by the way, is it going to blow much
-harder, do you think?"
-
-"No great shakes," responded the captain. "Guess there may be another
-capful or two of wind in them 'ere light clouds out yonder. It may
-freshen a bit, but that's all right. That's just what we want. The harder
-it blows the more the _Spray_ will pitch and get knocked back. It's the
-kind of a breeze that the _Nancy Jane_ likes, plenty of wind and a rough
-sea. The wind is bound to go down by sunset. It's the way these
-southerlies act."
-
-"By sundown!" groaned the colonel. "That's hours yet, and I'm sure we'll
-tip clear over if this boat leans much more."
-
-"Built to sail on her beam," explained Captain Sam. But at this moment
-the _Nancy Jane's_ bow snipped off the whitecap of a roller somewhat
-larger than its predecessor, and the spray flew in, drenching the colonel
-from head to foot.
-
-He yelled with terror. "We're upsetting, sure!" he cried. "Let's turn her
-about, Captain Sam, while there is time, and start again when it's
-lighter."
-
-"Nonsense!" said Captain Sam, with a grin. "You're a bit shaken up, but
-you'll feel better by and by. Just go into the cabin and lie down a
-little while. That may make you feel better."
-
-Perhaps it had been so many years since Captain Sam had experienced the
-awful misery of seasickness that he did not realize that the worst thing
-the colonel could do was to go down into the dark, damp, musty-smelling
-cabin of the old fishing-sloop. Perhaps he really did think that the
-colonel would feel better for it. But whatever his motive was, it had a
-sudden and deadly effect on Colonel Witham. Indeed, he had scarcely stuck
-his head into the stuffy cabin, had certainly no more than gotten fully
-within, before he staggered out again, with an agonized expression on his
-face, and sank, limp and shivering, to a seat, with his head over the
-rail.
-
-"Oh! Oh!" he groaned. "I think I'm going to die. I'm awfully sick; never
-felt so bad in all my life. Can't you put me ashore, Captain
-Sam--anywhere, anywhere? I don't care where, even if it is a deserted
-island. I'd wait there a week if I could only get on shore." And the
-colonel groaned and shivered.
-
-It was obvious there was no way of going ashore, however, as they were
-some miles distant from it. There was nothing for the unhappy colonel to
-do but to make the best--or the worst--of it.
-
-"Cheer up, colonel," said Captain Sam, pulling out the stub of a black
-clay pipe, lighting it, and puffing away enjoyably. "I've seen 'em just
-as sick as you are one hour, and chipper enough to eat raw pork and climb
-the mast the next. You will be feeling fine before long,--won't he,
-squire?"
-
-But as the squire evidently had his doubts in the matter, owing
-particularly to the fact that he was not too much at ease himself, his
-response was rather faint; and the captain was left to the entertainment
-of his own society. He enjoyed himself for the next hour or two with a
-sort of monologue, in which he proceeded to analyze audibly the relative
-chances of the little yacht ahead and the _Nancy Jane_.
-
-"They are doing surprisingly well for a small craft in windward work," he
-muttered. "They handle her well. Still, the _Nancy Jane_ is eating up on
-them. I say about sundown we shall be able to run alongside--Hulloa! If
-they are not changing their course to run down the Little Reach! Thought
-they knew better than that. Why, it's what they call a 'blind alley' in
-the cities. Well, I'm surprised. They know the bay pretty well, too; and,
-only to think, they go to running in to a thoroughfare which really is
-nothing more than a long cove. They'll fetch up at the end of it in an
-hour or two, and there's no way out."
-
-The captain's voice almost seemed to express disappointment that the
-chase should end so tamely.
-
-"Colonel," he cried. "Squire. It will be all over in a few hours now.
-They're running into a trap."
-
-But the colonel and the squire were beyond interest in the pursuit.
-
-The yacht _Spray_ had, indeed, started its sheets, and now, with the wind
-on its beam, was running off toward a group of small islands, or ledges,
-on a course nearly at right angles with that which it had been taking.
-
-The boys had watched the _Nancy Jane_ anxiously for the last few hours.
-
-"They are steadily coming up on us," George Warren had said. "Too bad we
-could not have got a few hours more start. We might have given them the
-slip then when night shut down."
-
-"But we are not sure that they are after us, are we?" asked young Joe.
-
-"No, but it looks pretty certain," replied his brother George. "There's
-nothing particular to start the _Nancy Jane_ down here, and she is
-Captain Sam's boat and he is the town constable."
-
-"Then what had we better do?" queried Tom. "There is not much use running
-away, if we are sure to be caught inside of a few hours. We'd a sight
-better turn about and start back, as though we had finished our sail.
-That would look less like running away."
-
-It was noticeable that, having once set out to escape, they accepted the
-situation now fully, without more pretence.
-
-"We have got to decide before long," said Henry Burns. "The _Nancy Jane_
-is overhauling us fast."
-
-"George," said Arthur Warren, "I know one chance, if you want to try it,
-and if you are willing to risk the _Spray_,--and I think it would save
-us."
-
-"What is it, Arthur?" asked George. "If it is any good, I'm for trying
-it. I can't see as we have anything great to risk, with a twenty-five
-thousand dollar fire charged to us."
-
-"What is it, Arthur?" exclaimed the others, excitedly. It did not seem
-possible there could be any chance of escape open, but they jumped
-eagerly at anything that offered a faint hope.
-
-"Well," said Arthur, in his deliberate manner, "you know the small
-opening between Spring and Heron Islands at the foot of Little Reach?
-Nobody ever ran a sailboat through there because it's choked up with
-ledges. But you remember when the mackerel struck in to the Reach there
-last August, we all went down in the _Spray_ for a week's fishing. Well,
-one day Joe and I took the tender and worked our way clear through
-between Spring and Heron Islands to the bay outside. Now the _Spray_,
-with the centreboard up, does not draw very much more water than the
-tender, and by dropping the sails and all poling through, I think we can
-work her in clear to the other side."
-
-"We'll try it," said George Warren. "It is the only chance we have, so
-we've really no choice."
-
-And he put the tiller up and threw the _Spray_ off the wind, while Arthur
-and Joe started the sheets. It was this sudden manoeuvre which had
-startled Captain Sam.
-
-They soon passed the entrance to Little Reach, two barren ledges shelving
-down into the water, and were well down the Reach when Captain Sam and
-the _Nancy Jane_ headed into it.
-
-"There they go," cried Captain Sam, "like an ostrich sticking its head
-into the sand. Well, what can you expect of boys, anyway? We'll overhaul
-them faster than ever now, because this big mainsail draws two to their
-one this way of the wind, and the jibs aren't doing anything to speak of,
-the wind varies so in here."
-
-It was smooth water inside Little Reach, and, as there was now scarcely
-any motion to the _Nancy Jane_ as she skimmed along by the quiet shores,
-the colonel and the squire began to revive a little, sufficient at least
-to regain their interest in the pursuit.
-
-They were about a mile and a half down the Reach, and the _Spray_, not
-quite half a mile ahead, was apparently at the end of her cruise.
-
-"They are at the end now," cried Captain Sam, whose blood was up when it
-came to a race between the _Nancy Jane_ and another, though smaller,
-craft. "We've got 'em like mice in a box."
-
-"By George! look there, colonel--look, squire!" he exclaimed, excitedly.
-"They have given it up. There go the sails. It's all over. They may scoot
-ashore, but the island on either side is nothing more than a rock. Well,
-I vow! But I didn't think they would quit so tamely after a game race."
-
-"We'll make 'em smart for what we have suffered to-day, eh, colonel?"
-growled the squire.
-
-The colonel grunted assent. He was not yet sufficiently himself to be
-very aggressive.
-
-"What on earth are they doing?" said Captain Sam, a few moments later.
-"Looks as though they were trying to hide away among the rocks, like a
-mink in a hole. They'll have the _Spray_ aground if they jam her in among
-those ledges."
-
-The _Spray_, however, slipped in among the rocks, and was shut out from
-the view of the pursuers.
-
-"Let 'em hide," said Captain Sam, contemptuously. "That is a boyish
-trick. We'll be up with them now in fifteen minutes."
-
-But the _Spray_, hidden from view of Captain Sam and the colonel and the
-squire, was not running itself upon the rocks nor poking its nose,
-ostrich-like, among the ledges.
-
-The instant the sails were dropped young Joe sprang out on the bowsprit
-and lay flat, holding a pole, with which he took soundings as the others
-pushed and poled with the sweeps of the yacht.
-
-They ran the bow gently on to rocks a dozen times, but a warning yell
-from Joe stopped them, and they turned and twisted and wormed and worried
-their way in among the ledges, turning about where a larger craft would
-have had no room to turn, and slipping over reefs that just grazed the
-bottom of the little _Spray_, and which with two inches lower tide would
-have held them fast.
-
-"It's just the right depth of water," said Arthur, exultantly. "Luck is
-with us this time, for certain. An hour later and we could not have done
-it. But we're going through. There is only the bar ahead now. If we clear
-that we are free of everything."
-
-Just ahead, where two thin spits of sand ran off on either end of the two
-islands into shoal water, was a narrow, shallow passage, where the water
-was so clear that it looked scarcely more than a few inches in depth, as
-it rippled over the bar.
-
-"All out!" cried Arthur, as the _Spray_ grated gently on the bottom, "We
-will lighten her all we can," and they sprang overboard into water
-scarcely above their knees.
-
-"Now, Joe," said Arthur, "you and Henry take the head-line out over the
-bows and go ahead and pull for all you are worth. George and I will get
-alongside and push, and keep her in the channel, and Tom and Bob can get
-aft and push. We have got to rush her over that shallow place, and we
-must not let her stop, for if she once hangs in the centre we cannot
-budge her. The _Spray_ is not a ninety-footer, but she's got enough pig
-iron in her for ballast to hold her high and dry if she once sticks."
-
-The boys seized hold quickly, and the _Spray_, lightened of her load,
-slid along, at first sluggishly, and then gathering speed, as the twelve
-strong, brown, boyish arms pulled and tugged and pushed.
-
-"Jump her, now, boys! Jump her!" cried Arthur, as they neared the shoal.
-"We're doing it. Don't let her stop, now! Oh, she mustn't stop! We've got
-to put her over or die."
-
-And the little _Spray_ seemed to feel the thrill and joy of freedom
-throughout its timbers; for at the words it surged forward with a rush,
-as though it would take the bar at a flying leap. The white sands reached
-up from the bottom, and the whole bar seemed to be rising up to hold the
-boat prisoner, as the water shoaled. But the little _Spray_ kept on.
-
-It hung for one brief, breathless moment almost balanced on the middle of
-the bar, and the white sands thought they had it fast; but the next
-moment it slid gently from their grasp, gave a sort of spring as it felt
-itself slipping free, and the next moment rode easily in clear water,
-just over the bar.
-
-The next instant six exultant boys, their faces blazing with excitement
-and exertion, had scrambled aboard, falling over one another in their
-eagerness to seize the halyards.
-
-They hoisted the sails on the _Spray_ again in a way that would have made
-Captain Sam himself sing their praises, and now, with evening coming on,
-there was just enough breeze left in among the rocks to waft them gently
-along out of the inlet.
-
-They watched breathlessly, as they neared the entrance to the outer bay,
-for a glimpse of the _Nancy Jane_; but the _Nancy Jane_, good boat though
-she was, was just a moment too late. Scarcely had they turned the little
-bluff and were hidden behind it, on their way whither they might choose,
-when the _Nancy Jane_ rounded to at the entrance to the channel.
-
-"It's all done," Captain Sam had exclaimed, as he threw the wheel of the
-_Nancy Jane_ over and came up into the wind, but when he looked to see
-the _Spray_, she was not there. Not so much as a scrap of a sail nor the
-merest fragment of a hull, absolutely nothing.
-
-Captain Sam was so dumfounded he could only gasp and stare vacantly at
-the place where, by all rights, the _Spray_ ought to be.
-
-The colonel and the squire, who had no preconceived ideas about the
-passage between the islands, solved the problem at once; but not so the
-captain.
-
-"They've gone through there, you idiot," exclaimed the squire, growing
-red in the face. "Where else can they be? They can't fly, can they?"
-
-The captain groaned, as one whose pride had been cruelly smitten.
-
-"To think," he muttered, "that I've sailed these waters, man and boy, for
-forty years, only to be fooled by a parcel of schoolboys from the city.
-Why, every boy in Southport knows you can't run a sailboat through
-between Heron and Spring Islands. There ain't enough water there at high
-tide to drown a sheep."
-
-"Well, it seems they got through easy enough," answered the colonel.
-
-"That's it! That's it!" responded the captain, warmly. "They do say as
-how fools rush in where angels don't durst to go, and sometimes the fools
-blunder through all right. And here's these boys gone and done what I'd a
-sworn a million times couldn't be done."
-
-"Yes, and we probably can get through, too, if we only go ahead and try,
-instead of lying here like jellyfish," exclaimed the squire. "Cap'n Sam,
-seems as though you weren't so dreadful anxious to catch up with them
-youngsters as you might be. P'r'aps you might have told Mrs. Warren back
-there a few things that might explain this 'ere delay."
-
-"Yes, and if them boys can go through there, I, for one, don't see what's
-to hinder us," chimed in the colonel. "Cap'n Sam, I don't see what we're
-a-hanging back for."
-
-And so, his pride humbled, and too mortified to stand by his own better
-judgment, Captain Sam reluctantly yielded to their importunities, and
-pointed the nose of the _Nancy Jane_ in toward the opening amid the
-rocks.
-
-"It can't be done," he said, doggedly, "but if you say that I am not
-trying to do my duty as a sworn officer of the town, I'll just show you.
-Only don't blame me if we're hung up here hard and fast for twelve
-hours."
-
-The _Nancy Jane_, like a horse that is being driven into danger that it
-somehow apprehends, seemed almost intelligent in its reluctance to enter
-the stretch of reef-strewn water. It bumped and scraped its way from one
-rock to another, balked at this ledge and that, and, finally, after an
-extra amount of pushing and pulling by the three men, jammed itself fast
-on a reef studded with barnacles and snail-shells, and refused to budge
-one way or another. In vain they tried to bulldoze and cajole, to push
-and to pull, to plead with and to denounce the obstinate _Nancy Jane_.
-Stolid and deaf alike to entreaty and expostulation, the boat squatted
-down upon the reef like an ugly fat duck, comfortably disposed for the
-night and refusing to be disturbed.
-
-"I told you so!" roared the captain, now aroused to his rights as
-skipper, and finding himself thus exasperatingly vindicated as to the
-impassability of the channel. "We're hung up fast for the night, for the
-next twelve hours, till next flood. Then, if Lem Cobb is living in his
-fishing-shack on Spring Island, and will lend us a hand and a few pieces
-of joist to pry with, mebbe we'll get off, and mebbe we won't."
-
-The colonel and the squire boiled inwardly; but as it was apparent they
-had only themselves to blame, they felt it useless to engage in
-discussion with the indignant captain. So they wisely remained silent,
-and left him to consume his wrath alone.
-
-"Well," he said, finally, "I for one am curious to see just where those
-young rascals are; and if you're of the same mind you can satisfy your
-curiosity by coming ashore with me." And the captain waded off to the
-rocks of Spring Island and clambered up the bank, closely followed by the
-colonel and the squire.
-
-"There they go, slipping along as slick as eels," exclaimed the captain,
-as he and his panting companions achieved the ascent of the highest bit
-of rock on Spring Island and looked down the bay. "They're off down among
-the islands," he continued, "and here we stand like natural-born idiots
-and bite our fingers. If ever I get into a mess like this again, I'll
-resign my office of constable and hire out to Noddy Perkins for a
-clam-digger." But the colonel and the squire, too angry and chagrined for
-words, stayed not to listen to the captain's denunciation.
-
-They turned and walked rapidly in the direction of the fishing-shack, the
-only shelter the island afforded; while the captain, standing out in
-relief upon the rock, like some disappointed Napoleon, was the last
-solitary object that the boys saw as, looking astern from the _Spray_,
-the little island faded from their view into the twilight.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX.
- AMONG THE ISLANDS
-
-
-The yacht _Spray_, with six jubilant boys aboard, sailed slowly away from
-Heron and Spring Islands, shaping its course for a group of outer islands
-of some considerable size, about two miles away. It was nearly seven
-o'clock, but the southerly breeze had not wholly died with the going down
-of the sun, and the tide, which had just begun to ebb, was favourable.
-
-"I think we can get across to-night," said George Warren. "This wind is
-going to hold for some hours yet and maybe all night; and we know our way
-into Cold Harbour at any hour of the twenty-four. I don't think Captain
-Sam will start to run out of the Little Reach at all to-night, for when
-the tide drops there are some bad ledges all along that thoroughfare,
-and, besides, he won't want to run the risk of drifting out here in the
-bay, in case the wind should drop. We shall have twelve hours start of
-him, anyway, and once among the islands we can keep out of sight for
-days."
-
-"I'd have given something to see the colonel and the squire when they
-found we had slipped away from them at the very moment they thought they
-had us," said young Joe. "Didn't they look funny, standing up there on
-the rock, watching us sail away?"
-
-"Captain Sam has my sympathy," said Henry Burns, dryly, and the very
-thought of the disappointed trio arguing it out together sent the boys
-into fits of laughter. They fairly rolled over on the seats and hugged
-one another.
-
-"It's the richest joke of the season," said young Joe.
-
-And so, for the time being, in their elation, the consciousness that they
-were runaways, fleeing from possible arrest, was forgotten. The stars
-came out, and a lighthouse far and near gave them their course. The water
-gleamed with phosphorescence, and the yacht _Spray_ left a wake of
-gleaming silver and gold and flashing jewels. By and by the moon came up
-out of the sea and threw a radiant path across the waters, and the
-islands ahead stood out in huge black shadow.
-
-It was glorious sailing, with the soft summer night air blowing in their
-faces; and they sang as they sailed, and yo-hoed all the sea choruses
-they knew, and felt so free and irresponsible that the yacht _Spray_, as
-though it absorbed some of their spirit, rolled along in a merry,
-swinging fashion, rocking gently from billow to billow, dipping and
-tossing in time to the music.
-
-The still shores of Eagle Island rang with their songs as they rounded to
-in Cold Harbour somewhere near midnight, and came to anchor close to
-shore in the deep water, within the shadow of the hemlocks that rose up,
-tall and black, almost from the water's edge, where the tide swashed
-gently against the rocks. High up in the thick branches of the great
-trees some fish-hawks, startled by the unwonted noise, rose up from their
-nests and uttered shrill, piercing screams of fright. And this was their
-only welcome, for on all the island there was no other sign of life.
-
-"It's fairly certain they won't pursue us to-night," said George. "But it
-won't do to be caught napping. We've got to set watch regularly every
-night now, and we might as well begin to-night. Somebody's got to walk
-out on the point of rocks yonder and look out for sails. Two will be
-enough till morning. We will split the time from now till six into two
-three-hour watches."
-
-"I'll begin it," said Bob.
-
-"My next," said Tom, not to be outdone by his chum.
-
-Bob rowed ashore in the little tender, and set off at once for a point of
-rocks some half-mile distant, which commanded a view of the bay. The
-others were sound asleep by the time he was half-way there.
-
-When Tom awoke, about seven hours later, it was broad daylight and the
-sun was streaming into the hatchway. He scrambled out in a hurry as Bob's
-voice hailed him from the deck.
-
-"Hulloa! Hulloa!" came the voice. "Are you fellows going to sleep all
-day?"
-
-"Why didn't you come back and rouse me to take my turn?" asked Tom,
-reproachfully.
-
-"Well, I wasn't sleepy," answered Bob, "and it grew light soon, and I got
-to watching a mink fishing for his family, and carrying cunners to them
-along the rocks, and I thought I'd let you sleep. It's tough to wake up,
-you know, when one has just dropped off. Come on, we'll take a swim now.
-The water is fine."
-
-Tom bared a muscular young form, and he and Bob dived off the rail of the
-_Spray_, making such a splashing and commotion in the water and bellowing
-so like young sea-lions, that the others gave up trying to turn over for
-another nap, and came sprawling out of the cabin, diving overboard, one
-after another, to join them. Then they had a race ashore, which was won
-by Tom, with Bob and Henry Burns a close second; after which they lay on
-the beach sunning themselves, and then swam back to the yacht for
-breakfast.
-
-"There's not a sail in sight, and the whole bay is as smooth as glass,"
-Bob had announced on his arrival; and, as not a breath of wind was yet
-stirring, there was no need of setting watch for the present. So they all
-sat down to hot coffee and griddle-cakes, and ate like wolves.
-
-After breakfast they went ashore to explore the island, roaming about
-like young savages, leaving their clothing piled in a heap in the tender.
-Every now and then, as the humour seized them, they raced down to the
-shore, wherever they were, ran along on the fine white beaches, and
-cooled themselves in the clear, still water.
-
-They had it all to themselves, for nobody lived on this small island, the
-fishermen on the mainland or neighbouring larger islands coming over in
-the late summer only, to cut the grass and make the hay.
-
-Then they went back to the tender and dressed, and Henry Burns, daunted
-at nothing, tried to climb one of the giant hemlocks to a fish-hawk's
-nest, but gave it up when the birds screamed in his ears and beat at him
-with their powerful wings.
-
-They had dug some clams at the low tide in the forenoon and put them
-away, covered with wet seaweed. Now, shortly after their noon luncheon,
-as the tide flooded, they got out the lines from a locker in the _Spray_
-and tried the fishing in Cold Harbour. There were plenty of small harbour
-fish, flounders out in the middle where the water was muddy, and cunners
-and small rock-cod in among the ledges. They soon caught a basket of
-these, cleaned them, and put them away, covered with seaweed, like the
-clams.
-
-Then, toward the end of the afternoon, as the bay was still calm, they
-set out along the shore and gathered driftwood, which they threw in a
-great pile on a flat, clean ledge. As supper-time came, they set this
-heap afire and let it burn for an hour or two, until the great flat ledge
-was at a white heat. Then they made a broom of some branches of hemlock,
-and swept the ledge clean of ashes, and brought the clams and poured them
-out on the ledge, covering them all with clean, damp seaweed till there
-rose clouds of steam, and, after a time, an appetizing odour.
-
-The fish they cooked in much the same way, wrapping them in big green
-leaves and setting them upon the hot stones to bake.
-
-Then, as evening came on, they built the fire anew close by, for a fire
-is the cheeriest of companions in a strange place, and sat feasting on
-steamed clams and fish, with a great pot of coffee filling all the air
-with a most delicious fragrance. They lolled about the fire and ate, till
-even slim Henry Burns said he felt like an alderman. They told stories by
-the firelight, and stretched out at ease till sleep nearly overtook them
-as they lay there; for the day had been brimful of exertion. By and by,
-long after the stars were out, and a gentle breeze from the south, coming
-up softly from among the islands, just rippled the water, they rowed out
-to the _Spray_, Tom returning ashore again to begin the night's watch.
-
-Then, later in the night, came George Warren's turn to watch, and he
-stayed it out till morning, for, with all the fun of the day, there was
-something that would keep turning over and over in his brain, and which
-took away the sleepy feeling and left in its stead a feeling of
-unhappiness; a sense of something wrong. His father would have said it
-was conscience, but George wrestled long and hard through the morning
-hours to avoid recognizing it as that, for conscience would say, if
-recognized, that it was all wrong, what they were doing,--and George
-Warren wanted to think he was having a good time.
-
-These moody thoughts began to dissipate, however, with the coming of the
-warm golden glow in the east; and when the sun was at length up, and the
-boys had had their morning swim, and sat about a fire awaiting breakfast,
-George Warren seemed himself again.
-
-But the breakfast was rudely interrupted by a series of whoops from young
-Joe, who had taken his brother's place on guard at the end of the point
-of rocks, and who now came running down alongshore, crying out that there
-was a sail that looked like the _Nancy Jane_ coming out from around the
-islands across the bay, and they all raced back to have a look at it.
-
-"It's the _Nancy Jane_, sure enough," said Henry Burns. "It's her big
-mainsail, with the high peak. She's making slow headway, though, with
-this breath of wind. However, we shall have to be off at once, if we are
-going to try to escape."
-
-It was noticeable that Henry Burns said "if."
-
-However, as no one felt like proposing to give up, they lost no time in
-getting aboard the _Spray_, and had sail on and the anchor up in what
-Captain Sam would have called a jiffy. Heading out into the open bay that
-lay between them and the outer islands, they bade good-bye to Cold
-Harbour and began a long, slow beat to windward, in the light breeze.
-
-"There's more wind coming, down between the islands," said Bob. "There's
-a line of breeze about two miles to the southward, and we shall catch it
-a good half-hour before the _Nancy Jane_."
-
-"That's so; it will give us a fine start," said Arthur.
-
-But, somehow, no one seemed wildly enthusiastic over their prospects.
-However, as they caught the fresher breeze, and the little _Spray_ stood
-stiffly up into it and ate away to windward, their spirits rose. Then, as
-the islands came plainly into view and they drew nearer and nearer to the
-first, big Saddle Island, with its low range of little hills dropping
-down in the centre in the shape of a horse's back, the excitement became
-intense; for the _Nancy Jane_ had not rounded the point of Eagle Island,
-and it seemed as though they might be out of sight behind Saddle Island
-before they could be seen by those aboard the pursuing yacht.
-
-"Go it, old _Spray_! Good little boat!" cried young Joe, as the yacht
-glided swiftly up into the shadow of the island. "We're going to make it,
-and, once behind old Saddle, who's to know which way we have gone?"
-
-"Five minutes more of this sailing, and we shall fool Captain Sam once
-more," said Bob.
-
-The five minutes were nearly up. They had but another leg to run to round
-the head of Saddle Island. They stood out till they had one and all
-declared that they could clear it on the next tack; they were all ready
-to go about. George Warren stood with one hand on the tiller and the
-other ready to grasp the main-sheet. Joe and Arthur Warren were waiting
-impatiently to trim the jib-sheets, and then--and then George Warren took
-their breaths away.
-
-All at once he jammed the tiller over, threw the _Spray_ clear off the
-wind, let the main-sheet run, and before they scarcely knew what had
-happened, instead of standing in to round the head of Saddle Island, the
-little _Spray_ was running dead before the wind and heading squarely back
-for the point around which the _Nancy Jane_ must soon come in sight.
-
-It was so quickly done that at first they thought there was some mistake,
-and Arthur and Joe and Bob rushed to the stern to help bring her around
-again; but George Warren, with a firm, set look on his face, stood them
-off.
-
-"Oh, I say, George, you're not going to give it up now, are you?" cried
-young Joe, who had been in high spirits not a moment before.
-
-"That's what," responded his brother, quietly. "I've thought it all out
-at last, and I've come to the conclusion we are doing the cowardly thing
-to run away. We have got to face the thing, and we may as well do it
-first as last. Besides, we didn't set out to run away when we started."
-
-"That's a fact," said Tom. "We have sort of drifted into this running
-away business without realizing what we were doing. Now the best thing we
-can do is to go back and have it out with Colonel Witham."
-
-"It's not Colonel Witham that I hate to face," said George. "It's father
-and mother. And the part they'll feel worst about is that we did not stay
-and talk it over with them."
-
-"That's so," added Arthur. "What a lot of loons we were to come down
-here."
-
-"Shall I pull the centreboard up?" asked Henry Burns.
-
-"You bet!" answered George Warren. "And we'll take a leaf out of your
-book, Henry, and we won't worry over what cannot be helped. We're doing
-the right thing now, anyway, so there's that much to feel good about."
-
-"There's the _Nancy Jane_," said Henry Burns.
-
-Sure enough, Captain Sam's pride was just turning the point, and Captain
-Sam, looking at the _Spray_ coming down free and pointing its nose right
-at him, could hardly believe his eyes.
-
-"It's them, all right," he assured the squire and the colonel. "They are
-coming back; tired of being runaways, I guess. Well, I thought they would
-get sick of it after a night or two away from home. They ain't the kind
-of boys to enjoy running away."
-
-"Humph!" snorted the colonel.
-
-"They're a lot of young scamps and scapegraces," snarled the squire.
-
-Getting aground and spending a night in a bed that the colonel swore was
-stuffed with pig iron and seaweed had not improved their tempers.
-
-"Well, anyhow," responded Captain Sam, "they are coming back of their own
-accord, and that is something in their favour."
-
-The colonel and the squire only sneered.
-
-Meanwhile the little _Spray_ came running down the wind in merry style,
-and the end of the next hour found her swinging up into the wind, with
-sails flapping, while the _Nancy Jane_ ran alongside.
-
-The colonel and the squire were at last avenged.
-
-Full of wrath was the one, and brimming with wrathful satisfaction was
-the other.
-
-"So we have caught you at last, have we?" exclaimed Squire Brackett.
-
-"We seem to have sort of caught ourselves, squire," answered George
-Warren.
-
-"Well, never mind about being smart," said the colonel, hotly. "You are
-under arrest for burning my hotel down. Perhaps that will take some of
-the smartness out of you."
-
-"Under arrest!" George Warren's face paled. "It isn't right," he added.
-"We didn't do it nor have any hand in it."
-
-"Guess you won't attempt to deny that you were in the billiard-room, will
-you?" broke in Squire Brackett. "Because, bein' as I saw you all in
-there, it might not do you any good to swear as how you wasn't."
-
-"Don't you dare accuse us of trying--" But young Joe got no further.
-
-"Be quiet, Joe," said George Warren, calmly. And then, turning to the
-colonel, he said:
-
-"We are not going to deny anything, Colonel Witham. That is why we are
-coming back of our own accord. We have got nothing to conceal, and we are
-going to tell everything just as it happened."
-
-"That is just about what we are arresting you for," said the squire,
-sneeringly. "We calculate you'll have to tell everything."
-
-"Hold on there a minute, squire," cried Captain Sam. "Let's not be too
-hard on these boys. There may be some mistake, as they say. I hold these
-'ere warrants, and I don't see as there is any necessity of serving of
-'em just yet. If these boys will give me their word to go along straight
-as they can sail for Mayville, and agree to appear when wanted before
-Judge Ellis, why, I guess maybe the warrants will keep till--say, just as
-we go in the door. Or perhaps Judge Ellis will consent that they come
-before him of their own accord, without serving these warrants at all,
-considering as they are only boys."
-
-It is needless to say that Captain Sam's legal experience was of the most
-limited sort.
-
-"Bully for you, Captain Sam!" cried Bob. "You're a brick,--and you won't
-regret it." And a yell of thanks from the others gave Captain Sam a warm
-glow under his blue shirt.
-
-The squire and the colonel were loud and furious in their denunciation of
-such a course.
-
-"It's against the law," cried the colonel; and he vowed he would make it
-hot for Captain Sam when Judge Ellis found his orders were not obeyed.
-But Captain Sam knew better than they of the warm corner in the judge's
-heart, and knew, moreover, that his old friend of years, the judge, would
-never reprimand him for a breach of duty of this sort. So he shut his
-lips firmly and let the squire and the colonel boil away as best they
-might between themselves.
-
-The captain shortened sail on the _Nancy Jane_, so that the two boats
-kept along near together, heading back for Southport.
-
-It was a sorry crew aboard the _Spray_ as the little craft silently
-followed in the wake of the _Nancy Jane_. They might have been in
-dreamland as they sailed all that day, for scarcely a word was spoken;
-and when night dropped down and the boys, all but George Warren, piled
-into the cabin to sleep, it was scarcely more quiet than by day.
-
-Very late that night, as the _Spray_ and the _Nancy Jane_ ran into
-Southport harbour and brought up for a few moments alongside the wharf,
-to let a serious-looking man, and a tearful woman aboard, the boys were
-still sleeping soundly; and George Warren and his father and mother sat
-alone together till the sun rose, while the _Spray_, following the _Nancy
-Jane_, ran along up the island and then stood across to Mayville, where
-Judge Ellis would hold his court that morning.
-
-"I don't need you to make any denial about the fire," Mr. Warren had
-said, when he stepped aboard the _Spray_ and put his hand on his eldest
-son's shoulder. "I know you boys would not do such a thing as that; but I
-fear your recklessness has gotten you into serious trouble, and Colonel
-Witham seems inclined to press the matter to the extreme. So I want to
-hear everything from beginning to end."
-
-And George Warren told him all.
-
-
-There was another boat coming sluggishly up the bay that night, far
-astern of the _Spray_, a handsome big sloop, beautifully modelled and
-with finely tapered, shining yellow spars. But she carried little sail,
-was reefed, in fact, though the breeze was very light; and she moved
-through the water so like a dead thing, or like a creature crippled by a
-wound, that a sailor would have seen at once that there had been some
-mishap aboard, some injury to hull or spars that held her back.
-
-The youth at the wheel of this strange, big sloop bore a striking
-resemblance to Jack Harvey, though the yacht was not the _Surprise_, but
-bigger and far more elegant. And the crew--yes, they were surely Harvey's
-crew--George and Allan and Tim and Joe,--and they addressed the boy at
-the wheel as "Jack."
-
-And the _Surprise_--where was she?
-
-Four days had passed since, on that morning following the fire, the
-_Surprise_ had turned the point of the island that marked an entrance to
-the thoroughfare where, a half-mile to leeward, a big black sloop was
-coming fast up the wind.
-
-"There he is!" Harvey had cried. "Come, boys, get into shape now; but
-stay below till I give the word,--all but you, Joe,--and when I yell you
-pile out and get aboard that sloop the quickest you ever did anything in
-all your lives. He will fight, and we have got to act quick."
-
-If the thick-set, ill-visaged man who sat at the wheel of the black sloop
-felt any concern at the sudden appearance of this new craft, dead ahead
-and coming down the narrow thoroughfare toward him, his alarm must have
-abated as on its near approach the apparent number of its occupants
-became disclosed.
-
-"She looks harmless enough," he muttered, between his teeth. "Pshaw!
-There's only a couple of boys aboard. But it did give me a start for a
-moment." And he slapped a hand at his jacket pocket.
-
-"He's taking long chances, if he did but know it," said Harvey, as the
-big sloop came about after a tack close in shore. "That boat cannot more
-than clear those ledges by an inch, if it does that. It's a regular stone
-field where he's sailing. The channel here winds like a cow-path in a
-pasture. However, if he can clear there, we can, so we'll begin to crowd
-him."
-
-It was no easy matter now to close in on a boat beating across the
-thoroughfare and not arouse suspicion. To follow him, tack by tack, and
-point so as to head him off every time he went about, must inevitably put
-him on his guard long before the time came to strike, and might even
-allow him, by clever sailing, to slip by.
-
-With his cap pulled down over his eyes, so that the stranger could not by
-any chance identify him as the youth he had knocked down in the pasture
-the night of the fire, and his head bent low, Jack Harvey watched the
-man's every move, and calculated every inch of the way.
-
-"Three more tacks will bring him up to us," he said. "And there's shoal
-water to starboard and some ledges just beyond them. He's got to meet us
-about in that spot," and Harvey laid his own course according to his
-calculation and held to it steadily.
-
-It must have served to allay the man's suspicions, if he still had any,
-but now, as he came about on the third tack, he viewed the oncoming
-_Surprise_ with anger.
-
-"Keep away, there!" he cried, in a fierce, violent tone. "Keep off! Can't
-you see you're going to foul me if you don't keep off?"
-
-"Ready to jump, now, Joe," said Harvey, in a low voice. "I'm going to run
-him down. It's the only way to be sure, though it may wreck us.
-
-"Fellows," he called, softly, to the boys below, "all ready, now. You
-know what you've got to do the moment she strikes."
-
-The man at the wheel had risen to his feet, and he shook one fist
-threateningly, while his other hand clutched the wheel, throwing his
-sloop off as far as he could.
-
-"Curse you!" he cried. "You're running me down. Keep off, I say, or I'll
-blow your stupid head off your shoulders."
-
-The next moment Harvey, with a sudden turn of the tiller, threw the
-_Surprise_ full tilt at the oncoming sloop. There was a sharp crash of
-splintering wood, the tearing of head-sails, and a shock that shook the
-yachts from keel to topmast, as the _Surprise_ rammed the big black sloop
-just by the foremast stays, snapping her own bowsprit short off and
-making an ugly hole in her own planking.
-
-Leaping just as the boats crashed, and holding a coil of rope on his arm,
-Joe Hinman landed on the top of the big sloop's cabin in the very midst
-of the confusion. A moment more and he had made a few quick turns about
-the mast, lashing the two yachts fast together at the moment when Harvey,
-followed by the rest of his crew, who came swarming out of the cabin,
-sprang aboard the strange sloop.
-
-"I'll shoot the first boy that steps a foot on this boat," cried the man;
-but the words were scarce out of his mouth before they were upon him. He
-had been in danger before and knew how to make the most of his chances,
-and he stood, desperate but cool, as they made their rush.
-
-There was a shot, and Jack Harvey, who was leading, gave a cry of pain,
-for a bullet just grazed his left shoulder. He stumbled and fell full at
-the feet of the man as another shot was fired and young Tim thought his
-right hand was gone.
-
-The next moment Harvey had the man by the legs, while Allan Harding and
-George Baker and Joe made a rush for him. The man fell heavily, Joe
-Hinman clinging with both hands to one wrist, so that he could not fire
-again. They rolled over and over in the cockpit for a moment, the boys
-and he. Twice the man got to his knees and twice they dragged him down
-again; till, at length, young Tim, whose hand was not shot away, but only
-slightly wounded, managed to run in and deal the man a blow with the end
-of an oar, which stunned him for a moment, so that they got him flat and
-had bound the loose end of a halyard about him before he came fully to
-his senses. Then, as they proceeded to complete the job and tie him fast,
-hand and foot, he recognized Harvey for the first time.
-
-"Hulloa!" he exclaimed. "Why, where have I seen you before? You're not
-the chap in the pasture, are you?"
-
-"The same," said Harvey.
-
-"Well, the game's up," said the man, coolly. "'Twas a mistake, and I knew
-it the moment after I had done it. I was a fool to hit you that night.
-It's my temper, that's what has beat me. It gets away from me sometimes.
-I dare say if I had gone along about my business you wouldn't have
-followed me, eh?"
-
-"Probably not," answered Harvey. "That is why I am glad you knocked me
-down," and then, taking a quick glance over the side of the boat, he
-cried:
-
-"Joe! Allan! George! Out with the sweeps, lively! We're going aground."
-
-Harvey sprang to the wheel, hauling in on the main-sheet as he did so.
-
-But it was too late. There was a gentle shock that shook the sloop from
-end to end, a dull, grating sound, and the next moment the big sloop
-rested firmly on a jagged rock of the reach, listing as she hung, and
-wrenching the bilge so that she made water rapidly.
-
-"Whew!" cried Harvey. "Here's a mess. We're wrecked, and badly, too. How
-in the world are we ever going to get out of this?"
-
-It was, indeed, a serious problem. The _Surprise_, her bow planks ripped
-open by the collision, had sunk within a few minutes, and now lay on
-bottom, with her deck covered. The big sloop, hard aground and full of
-iron ballast, was not a thing to be moved easily.
-
-"This is a scrape and no mistake," said Harvey. "Here we are, where a
-boat may pick us up in a day or a week, but more likely not for a week.
-We've got our man, but the reefs have got us. Well, we have got to figure
-out some way to get out of it ourselves."
-
-But first they took account of their wounds, which had, now that the
-excitement was over, begun to sting and smart. They found that neither
-Harvey's nor Tim's wound was at all serious, mere surface flesh-wounds.
-The back of young Tim's hand was bare of skin for the length of three
-inches across, and Harvey's shoulder bled badly till it was cleansed and
-bandaged, but it was the price of victory, and they accounted it cheap.
-All of them had honourable scars of battle, bruises and scratches without
-number, and every one of them was proud of his, and wouldn't have had one
-less for the world.
-
-Taking their prisoner, securely bound, they all rowed ashore to survey
-their surroundings, build a fire and get breakfast, and make plans for
-getting away.
-
-"There's only one thing to be done," said Harvey, after they had finished
-breakfast and sat by the shore, surveying the wrecks of the yachts. "The
-_Surprise_ is done for. We can't raise her. But the big sloop is not so
-badly hurt but what we can repair her, if we can only float her. The
-first thing we have got to do, when the tide goes out, is to get all that
-pig iron out of her, and that's a day's job, at the least. Then we may
-beach her at high tide and patch her up. It's a big contract, though."
-
-That day they brought the spare sails of the sloop ashore and pitched a
-tent with them; and, when the tide was low enough for them to work, they
-began the hard labour of lightening the big sloop of its ballast.
-
-They worked all that tide like beavers, and by night the yacht was light.
-They camped on shore that night, standing watch by turns over their
-prisoner.
-
-The next day at low water they found the worst of the leaks in the sloop,
-and made shift to patch them up temporarily with strips of canvas tacked
-on and daubed with paint, which they found in the sloop's locker, and by
-recaulking some of the seams with oakum. By the next high tide, with hard
-pumping, she was sufficiently lightened to float clear of the reef,
-though still leaking badly, and they got her around to a clear, steeply
-shelving strip of beach, where they rested her more easily when the tide
-fell, and so could work on the repairs to better advantage.
-
-Another night in camp ashore, and the next day they floated the sloop off
-again at high tide and loaded about half of her ballast in again.
-
-"That will keep her right side up till we can get back to Southport,"
-said Harvey. "I think we can make it, if we carry short sail, so as not
-to strain her and open up those places where we have patched her. We will
-try it, anyway, for I have half an idea that our running off so soon
-after the fire may have made talk about us, and the quicker we get back
-and put an end to that the better."
-
-So that afternoon they began their voyage home again, looking very
-serious as the mast of the yacht _Surprise_, sticking out of water, faded
-from their view, but swelling with pride and satisfaction as they peered
-in now and then at a form that lay secure on one of the cabin bunks.
-
-They sailed all that night, for the breeze held fair and light, and by
-daybreak of the following morning they came into the harbour of
-Southport.
-
-Harvey and Joe Hinman rowed ashore, soon after they came to their old
-moorings off the camp, to see how the land lay; but came back on the run
-in about twenty minutes, and made the water boil as they rowed out to the
-yacht.
-
-"We're off for Mayville," cried Harvey. "We'll put on more sail, too, if
-it pulls the bottom out of her. Why, what do you think! Who's arrested
-for the fire?"
-
-And he told the news, to the amazement of young Tim and George Baker and
-Allan Harding.
-
-"I've got a score to pay to Tom Harris and Bob White," he exclaimed.
-
-"Why, they saved your life, Jack," said young Tim.
-
-"That's what," said Harvey. "I owe them one for that. Here's a chance to
-get square, if we can only make it in time."
-
-"And only to think," muttered the man in the cabin, as he looked out at
-the stalwart but boyish figure at the wheel, "that I had that young
-fellow in the same boat with me at night in the middle of Samoset Bay!
-Well, if I had only done as I set out to, then, I wouldn't be here now,
-that's all. But how is a man to look ahead so far?"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI.
- THE TRIAL
-
-
-What one man knew in Mayville was every man's property. Gossip always
-spread through the town like wildfire. So it happened that on the morning
-of the arrival of the _Nancy Jane_ and the _Spray_ there was a buzzing
-and a shaking of heads and a wagging of tongues; and before long the
-whole town knew that something of vast importance was about to take place
-up at Squire Ellis's court.
-
-"It's those young fellows that set the hotel afire over across at
-Southport," said a certain tall, gaunt individual, who happened to be the
-centre of an excited group on one of the street corners, near the town
-pump. "I hear as how Squire Barker is going to defend them, but they do
-say he's got no case, because I heard Lem Stevens say as he heard Squire
-Brackett declare he saw them young chaps down in the billiard-room of the
-hotel along about midnight, and the fire started pretty quick after
-that."
-
-"Well, guess they'll catch it if Squire Brackett is on their trail,"
-volunteered another of the group. "He ain't given to showing kindness to
-anybody, much less to a lot of firebugs."
-
-"I don't believe they ever done it, anyway," ventured a third. "They
-don't seem like that kind, from all I can learn, and they do say as how
-they pitched in and saved a lot of Colonel Witham's boarders from being
-burned in their beds, when the flames was a-spreadin' fast."
-
-And so the gossip waged, this way and that, while impatient knots of
-idlers hung around the entrance to Squire Ellis's court, waiting for ten
-o'clock, when proceedings should begin.
-
-Shortly before the old town clock beat out the ten solemn strokes that
-proclaimed the formal sitting of justice, a whisper ran along the line of
-loiterers, "Here he comes. It's the judge." And that person of great
-importance, a short, thick-set man, with a quick, nervous step, an
-energetic, sharp manner, but, withal, a kindly eye, entered the
-court-room. The next moment the clock announced his punctuality.
-
-The crowd swarmed into the court-room, stuffy and hot enough already, and
-the air vibrated with expectancy.
-
-Proceeding up the long village street at this moment was a little group,
-headed by Captain Sam, not wholly unimpressed with the importance of his
-own part in the affair, the boys and Mrs. Warren following, and, not far
-in the rear, the colonel and the squire. Just as they reached the
-court-room door, Captain Sam halted the little party for a moment, and,
-not without reluctance, said: "Well, boys, I suppose I'll have to serve
-these 'ere warrants before we go inside. I'm free to say I'm sorry to do
-it, but they're the orders of this 'ere honourable court, and they must
-be obeyed by me, a sworn officer of the law."
-
-And having disposed of this somewhat painful formality, Captain Sam
-opened the door and the party were in court.
-
-Presently they were joined by Squire Barker, a sober, elderly,
-clerical-looking lawyer, dressed in a somewhat rusty suit of black,
-serious-minded, whose lugubrious manner was not calculated to infuse a
-spirit of cheer into hearts that were sinking.
-
-The county attorney, who was to conduct the case for the people of the
-State, a youthful attorney, of comparatively recent admission to
-practice, bustled about as became a functionary with the burden of an
-important matter upon his shoulders.
-
-The court-room, save for the buzzing of innumerable flies upon the
-uncleaned window-panes, was still as a church when His Honour announced
-that the court was now open for whatsoever matters the county attorney
-had to bring before it.
-
-After the usual formality of acquainting His Honour officially of the
-matter in hand, which matter His Honour was already as much acquainted
-with as a thousand and one busy tongues of gossip could make him, the
-likewise formal answer of "Not guilty" was returned, and, without further
-delay, Colonel Witham was called to the stand.
-
-The colonel, fully awake to his opportunity, took the stand rather
-pompously, thrust a well-filled, expansive waistband to the front, whence
-there dangled from a waistcoat pocket a ponderous gold chain, plentifully
-adorned with trinkets, in the handling of which, as he testified, a large
-seal ring on a finger of his right hand was ostentatiously displayed.
-
-Yes,--in answer to questions,--he was the lessee of the Bayview Hotel on
-the 10th of September last, on which day it was burned to the ground;
-and, if he did say it, there was no better conducted hotel along the
-shores of Samoset Bay.
-
-Suggestion by His Honour that he please answer the questions as put, and
-reserve his own personal opinions and convictions to himself, received by
-the colonel with evident surprise and some little loss of dignity.
-
-Then the colonel detailed, so far as he knew them, the events of the
-night of the fire; how he was first aroused by the cry of "Fire!" and how
-the first persons he encountered--within his very hotel, in fact--were
-the accused; how the smoke was even then pouring up from the basement
-windows, and that upon investigation he had found the whole basement
-floor to be on fire, so that it was already far beyond control.
-
-Then there followed a detailed account of the fire, of the destruction of
-this section and that, and, finally, the utter collapse and ruin of the
-entire structure, with all that it had contained. The colonel did the
-scene full justice in his description, making an unmistakable impression
-on the minds of the assembled townsfolk.
-
-Asked if he had seen any suspicious characters in or about the hotel on
-the day or night of the fire, the colonel said he had not; nor had any
-stranger who had not been subsequently accounted for come ashore from the
-steamers on that day.
-
-Leaving at length the subject of the fire, County Attorney Perkins came
-down to the subject of the attempt to serve the warrants upon the boys at
-the camp and at the Warren cottage, the failure, the subsequent pursuit
-of the boys down the bay in the _Nancy Jane_, and the final surrender of
-the yacht _Spray_ in the middle of the bay.
-
-It was clear that this part of the evidence would have great weight with
-the court. After the attorney's questions he put several of his own,
-regarding the escape from Little Reach, and whether it must have been
-clear to the boys in the yacht that they were being pursued.
-
-It was this testimony that made Mr. Warren breathe hardest, and put his
-hand to his head with a troubled look.
-
-Squire Barker's cross-examination was brief, but he made two telling
-points, which might have their influence. One was, that the boys had been
-very brave on the night of the fire, and had undoubtedly saved many
-lives. This the colonel reluctantly had to admit. The other, and far more
-important point, was the bringing out that early on the morning of the
-fire the colonel had seen that the yacht _Surprise_ was absent from her
-moorings, whereas the colonel had seen her lying there the afternoon
-preceding.
-
-"Was it not common talk in the village that Harvey and his crew were
-missing the very morning after the fire?" inquired Squire Barker.
-
-"It was," answered the colonel.
-
-"And did you not see all of the accused about the village for the entire
-day following the fire?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-There was a buzz in the court-room, which indicated that this point had
-told.
-
-"And is it not true," continued Squire Barker, "that this Jack Harvey and
-his crew have not yet returned, are still missing?"
-
-The colonel said he believed such was the case.
-
-Asked why he had not secured their arrest, he responded that he felt sure
-he was on the right track, as he would prove by his witness, Squire
-Brackett.
-
-And Squire Brackett, nothing loath, was the next witness. Having brought
-out, what everybody knew, that the squire was a property owner and a man
-of importance in his own village, the county attorney asked:
-
-"And where were you shortly after midnight on the night of September
-10th?"
-
-"I was passing the Hotel Bayview on my way to the shore."
-
-"What did you see as you neared the hotel?"
-
-"I saw a light in the billiard-room window, and went to the window and
-looked in."
-
-"Did you see any one in there?"
-
-"I did."
-
-"And who were they?"
-
-"These accused," and the squire named in turn each of the six boys and
-pointed them out in court.
-
-They, feeling the eyes of all turned toward them, the awful stillness of
-the court-room for the moment following the squire's declaration, and
-oppressed more than ever by the hot, choking atmosphere of the stuffy
-little court, turned white and red by turns, wished that the floor would
-open beneath their feet and swallow them, and felt a burning sensation in
-their throats as though they were stifling.
-
-"And how soon did you see flames coming up from the location of the
-hotel?"
-
-"I could not say exactly; it might have been half an hour. I was out in
-the bay in my sloop."
-
-"Had you seen any suspicious characters in the village on that day?"
-
-"I had not."
-
-Then the squire also recounted the events of the pursuit of the yacht
-_Spray_, the escape through Little Reach, and the subsequent surrender of
-the boys.
-
-From Squire Barker it was brought out, as in the testimony of the
-colonel, the fact that after Harvey and his crew in the yacht _Surprise_
-had suddenly set sail on the very morning of the fire, they had not been
-seen nor heard of since. This, the squire admitted, was common knowledge
-throughout the village.
-
-Then there came to the stand Captain Sam, standing awkwardly, with a hard
-clutch on the rail in front of him, as if he were afraid of the
-court-house suddenly dipping and rolling on a breaker and spilling him
-overboard.
-
-No, he had no objection to removing his tobacco in deference to the
-Court, and did so; but forgot that august presence before he had been
-testifying long, and took another and a bigger chew.
-
-Did he know the accused?
-
-Reckoned he did, with a haw-haw that shook the court-room.
-
-Had he pursued them in his sloop the _Nancy Jane_, in an endeavour to
-serve the warrants?
-
-He had, and they worked their boat like sailors, if he did say it.
-
-"And were you assisted in your pursuit by Colonel Witham and Squire
-Brackett?"
-
-"Assisted!" drawled Captain Sam, and grinning from ear to ear. "Well, I
-dunno how much assisting you'd be pleased to call it, being as they were
-sick as a boy that had eaten a peck of green apples, and was sprawling
-around in the bottom of the boat like a couple of halibut just catched."
-
-Which, being pronounced by Captain Sam with the utmost gravity, produced
-such a decided impression on the audience of fisher-people and
-sailor-folk, that there was a roar throughout the court-room, at which
-His Honour announced that any such further interruption would be followed
-by the clearing of the room.
-
-The squire and the colonel turned red in the face and looked rather
-foolish, inwardly wishing that Captain Sam was at the bottom of the bay.
-
-Captain Sam, under further questioning, told again the story of that
-afternoon's sailing, mentioning casually that the colonel had requested
-to be set ashore when the _Nancy Jane_ was out in the middle of the bay,
-which request, as Captain Sam explained, there being no land near by
-excepting that straight down under water, he was unable to grant.
-
-Another titter through the court-room, the colonel and the squire
-blushing redder than ever.
-
-It was embarrassing enough to Captain Sam to tell how he had put the
-_Nancy Jane_ aground in Little Reach, for he knew there was scarce a man
-or boy within the sound of his voice who wouldn't vow to himself that, if
-he had been in Captain Sam's place, he would have known better. It was
-really mortifying.
-
-Squire Barker made the most of this, not because it could help his
-clients, but because it served in its way to put one of the people's
-witnesses in a ridiculous light, and because it gave him a chance to show
-how smart a cross-examiner he could be, thereby elevating himself in the
-eyes and admiration of his townsfolk.
-
-"So you got aground where these young men took their boat through all
-right, did you?" queried Squire Barker.
-
-"I got aground," snapped Captain Sam, sharply.
-
-"And these young men took their boat through safe and sound?"
-
-"I don't know," roared Captain Sam. "I didn't see them."
-
-"But you saw them just a few minutes before that, didn't you?"
-
-"Guess I did."
-
-"And when you got to the entrance they were nowhere in sight, and
-therefore must have sailed through; they couldn't have dragged the
-_Spray_ over the rocks?"
-
-"Suppose not."
-
-The colonel and the squire were rather enjoying this, and had plucked up
-spirits enough to titter with the rest at the discomfiture of Captain
-Sam.
-
-"Then you tried to imitate these young men and go through as they did,
-but you didn't seem to know the channel, and so got aground?"
-
-"Channel!" roared Captain Sam, bellowing out the word in a rage and
-shaking a fist at the squire. "Channel, did you say? Haven't I told you
-there wasn't enough channel there to wash a sheep in? Didn't I tell these
-two thick-headed numskulls"--pointing to the colonel and the
-squire--"that we'd get aground if we went in there? And didn't they snarl
-at me like two old women, and accuse me of letting them 'ere boys get
-away? Didn't I know we'd get aground in there, and didn't these two
-seasick old pussy-cats make me go ahead and do it?"
-
-Captain Sam, beside himself with indignation, roared this out so his
-voice could be heard far out in the street. In vain the court rapped for
-order. The whole court-room was convulsed, and, finally, His Honour,
-overcome with the situation, leaned back in his chair and laughed too.
-
-Only the colonel and the squire, the butt of all the merriment, looked
-alternately at the floor and the ceiling, and mopped their faces with
-handkerchiefs as red as their cheeks.
-
-At length, when order was restored, Judge Ellis said: "Captain Sam, you
-are excused. You are in contempt of court. The case will proceed without
-testimony from you."
-
-At which Captain Sam, feeling that he had in a measure vindicated his
-name and reputation, got down from the stand in a somewhat better frame
-of mind.
-
-There followed several of the hotel guests, who had been duly summonsed
-to tell what they knew of the early stages of the fire, and whether they
-had seen any suspicious characters about the hotel or the village on that
-day. They made it very clear, together with the testimony of some of the
-villagers, that there had been no strange person seen in the town either
-on that day or the preceding or the following day, all of which argued,
-of course, that, if the fire was set, it was set by some one in the town,
-who was more or less known to every one.
-
-On the other hand, it was definitely established by Squire Barker that
-Harvey and his crew had set sail in the _Surprise_ while the hotel was
-still blazing furiously, for there were two of the villagers who lived
-down the island several miles from the hotel who testified to seeing the
-_Surprise_ beating down alongshore about daylight.
-
-This was highly important, and yet the one essential thing was lacking,
-nor could it be supplied by any evidence at hand, that Harvey or any one
-of his crew had been seen about the hotel that night.
-
-It was noon now, and time for recess. So His Honour announced an
-adjournment to half-past two that afternoon, and the crowd swarmed
-out-of-doors, leaving the flies in undisputed possession of the unclean
-windows.
-
-It was hard for the boys to realize that at last they were under
-restraint; that they were not free to follow the crowd of villagers and
-their friends. The seriousness of the situation assumed an even more
-depressing aspect.
-
-"Do you think he will hold them?" asked Mr. Warren, anxiously, of Squire
-Barker, as the little party, under the nominal charge of Captain Sam, sat
-in the anteroom of the court-house, trying to partake of a luncheon which
-had been provided, but for which nobody seemed to have any appetite.
-
-"Well, I can't say," answered the squire, wisely. "But I'm a little
-afraid of it. I'm just a little afraid. You see, their getting into the
-hotel and being there just before the fire can't be denied. And I suppose
-that His Honour will hold that it was really breaking and entering to get
-into the hotel in the night-time in the way they did. And then, even
-though it may have been accidental, the setting the fire, still, as it
-followed and grew out of their unlawful act, they can be held for setting
-the hotel on fire."
-
-This sentence, somewhat involved as it was, but delivered with sageness
-and an ominous shake of the head, set the boys to breathing hard, and
-more than one of them found himself swallowing a lump in his throat.
-
-"But there isn't the slightest evidence that we set the fire," said young
-Joe.
-
-"Yes," answered the squire; "there's what they call circumstantial
-evidence, and that is, the fact of your being in there just before it was
-discovered. It may not be enough to convict on, but the question that's
-bothering now is, will it be enough to hold you over on, and I'm bound to
-say it does look just a little bad. However, we won't give up. We'll
-fight it out to the last."
-
-But just what there was to fight it out on, not one of them could for the
-life of him suggest.
-
-The minutes, which seemed like hours, dragged wearily on, and the air in
-the stuffy little court-house seemed to grow denser and more unendurably
-stifling. One o'clock. Two o'clock. The hum of returning villagers became
-more loud. The hour for the resumption of the session was only thirty
-minutes away.
-
-Suddenly there was the sound of light, quick, nervous footsteps along the
-hallway, the door was pushed open, and in there bounced a little old
-lady, whose thin face beamed and flushed with excitement under a bonnet,
-fashionably but rather youthfully trimmed with bright flowers, dressed in
-a gown quaintly cut, but giving evidence of the means of the wearer, and
-bearing on one arm a small basket and in the other hand a chatelaine-bag.
-
-"Why, it's Mrs. Newcome!" exclaimed Mrs. Warren, jumping up excitedly,
-and glad even of this interruption. "What can have brought you here?"
-
-"Isn't this a wicked shame!" cried the little old lady, paying no
-attention to Mrs. Warren's question. "It's just the cruellest thing I
-ever heard of, bringing these boys here. I'll tell the judge that, too,
-if they'll let me. Where is that old scamp, Colonel Witham, and that old
-mischief-maker, Squire Brackett? If I don't give them a piece of my mind!
-I told Jerry about it all the way over, and you ought to have heard him
-growl. Here he is; just listen how angry he is."
-
-And Mrs. Newcome, unfastening the cover of the basket which she had been
-carrying, disclosed to view the aforesaid Jerry, lying within on a
-cushion. The cat, in corroboration of his mistress's declaration,
-certainly did growl and snarl and then yowl dolorously; but whether as an
-endorsement of old Mrs. Newcome's indignation, or whether giving vent to
-his own at being whisked about in a basket on a boiling hot day, no one
-but he could say positively.
-
-"These boys didn't set that fire," snapped the old lady, decisively; "and
-I just want to do what I can for them. I couldn't leave Jerry behind. He
-gets so lonesome without me. So I brought him along. And now, Mr. Warren,
-I suppose you know I'm not the poorest person that comes down here to
-spend summers, and I've got some property around these parts, too--some
-land in this very town. And if there's any what-do-you-call-it to pay--"
-
-"Any bail?" suggested the squire.
-
-"That's it--bail. That's the word. If there's any of that to pay, I've
-got the securities right here," and Mrs. Newcome shook the chatelaine-bag
-vigorously.
-
-"You are very kind," said Mr. Warren, amused in spite of himself. "But
-I'm hoping we shall not have need of bail."
-
-But in the midst of it there came the ringing voice of the crier in the
-court-room adjoining, and the little party all filed into court again,
-old Mrs. Newcome bringing up the rear, with the basket on her arm, whence
-there emerged now and then a stifled wail, in spite of her whispered
-admonitions.
-
-"We have closed our case," said the prosecuting attorney. And the defence
-was begun.
-
-"George Warren!" called Squire Barker, and George, paling slightly at the
-ordeal, but doing his best to keep up a stout heart, took the stand.
-
-He told his story with a frankness that was convincing, keeping nothing
-back; and at the close Squire Barker asked: "And did you, or did you see
-anybody else set a fire that night?"
-
-"Certainly not," he answered. And there was no doubt that he had made a
-good impression.
-
-But there were certain ugly facts that were made to stick out more
-embarrassingly on the prosecuting attorney's cross-examination.
-
-"You will admit," he asked, "that you left on the second day following
-the fire, because you did not care to be questioned about it?"
-
-"Yes, because we knew that our being in the hotel that night would look
-suspicious, if it were known," answered George Warren.
-
-"Then you were going to conceal that fact, if you could?"
-
-"Yes--I think we were--for awhile, at least."
-
-"And so you ran away?"
-
-"We didn't start out with the idea of running away."
-
-"But you did run from the _Nancy Jane_ when you found she was following
-and pursuing you?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"I really can't tell you," said George Warren. "I realize now it was a
-foolish thing to do. But it was not because we were guilty."
-
-"But you were all in the basement of the hotel a few moments before the
-fire started?"
-
-"Yes, we were."
-
-"That is all," said the prosecuting attorney, and George left the stand.
-
-Henry Burns, called next, did the best he could for his comrades.
-
-"If it's anybody's fault, it's mine," he said. "You see, it was my
-suggestion that got us in there. I was the first to go inside, and the
-others came only after I had urged them."
-
-But Squire Barker knew that this avowal, honest as it was, could not help
-them in the eyes of the law. So, having asked a few perfunctory
-questions, he turned the witness over to the prosecuting attorney. The
-latter brought out about the same points that he had made in the
-testimony of George Warren, and that was all.
-
-It was quite clear that Squire Barker was only calling the boys from a
-sense of duty to them, to let them make the best impression they might
-upon the mind of the judge. It was the only suit he had to play.
-
-Then followed Arthur and Joe, and at length Tom and Bob.
-
-The squire was at the end of his resources now, as far as evidence could
-go. It remained but for him to do his duty in the minds of his clients
-and his townsmen, and he did it--to his own satisfaction, at least, in
-his address to the court. He painted the heroism of the boys at the fire
-in colours glowing as the flames. He enlarged upon the probability and
-the presumption of innocence. And he paid his respects to the colonel and
-the squire in a few stinging sentences that turned the eyes of the
-assembled audience upon them in indignation.
-
-And when he was all done and the court-room turned with expectancy toward
-the prosecuting attorney, the latter simply said:
-
-"Your Honour, the people will submit their case without argument."
-
-And so, with startling abruptness, the case had come to its crisis. There
-was nothing left but for the law to act.
-
-There succeeded a deathlike stillness in the court-room. His Honour sat
-for some moments, with his eyes cast down upon his desk. He seemed loath
-to speak. Finally he arose and, with some effort, said, gently:
-
-"In all my experience as attorney and as judge I have never before been
-placed in a position so distasteful to me nor so distressing. The case of
-these young men is most unfortunate. Their stories impress me as honestly
-told. Their characters are clearly such as are opposed to any such wanton
-destruction as is here alleged. And yet the circumstances are such that I
-should be blind to the duty of my office if I failed to hold them for
-trial. I hope that when their case shall come to trial this fall that
-they will have gathered evidence that shall show conclusively their
-innocence. In the meantime, deeply as I regret it, it becomes my painful
-duty to order that they be held."
-
-Again an utter stillness in the court-room, broken only by the sobbing of
-a woman. The entire court-room waited silently for the next move, amazed
-at the suddenness of the conclusion. Six boys set their teeth hard and
-tried to look undismayed, but the face of each spoke only too plainly of
-his distress.
-
-Then all at once the patter of feet broke the silence in the court-room,
-and a slight boyish figure, poorly dressed and unkempt, darted up the
-aisle, into the august presence of the court, and sought refuge in the
-seat next to that occupied by Mr. Warren.
-
-A court officer, who had been stationed at the door, lumbered in after
-the boyish figure.
-
-"Officer," cried Squire Ellis, irritably, "how came you to let this lad
-into the court-room? What does this mean? Put him out."
-
-"If you please, Your Honour," said the officer, very red in the face, "I
-drove him away from the door once, but he dodged in past me again before
-I could stop him."
-
-"Remove him from the room at once," said the court, sharply.
-
-The officer advanced.
-
-But Tim Reardon--for it was he--had in the meantime seized upon Mr.
-Warren, and, though labouring under an excitement so intense as almost to
-deprive him wholly of the power of speech, communicated something to him
-of the greatest importance. Mr. Warren, in turn, having repeated this
-communication to Squire Barker, the latter hastily arose.
-
-"Your Honour," he began, "this young man brings evidence of the most
-startling character, and which will, I am sure, reverse Your Honour's
-decision. He--"
-
-But here a sound from the street outside was borne in upon the
-court-room, which caused the squire to pause for a moment, while he and
-every person in the room listened in amazement.
-
-The noise outside increased, and now there came the sound of many voices,
-men and women and boys and girls shouting out some piece of news, and
-then a loud cheering. The tumult rapidly grew, until it seemed as if all
-in a moment the entire village was marching upon the court-house.
-
-Despite the loud rapping for order of the court officers and the sharp
-order of the court for silence, many in the court-room rushed to the
-windows and looked out. A strange sight met their eyes. A procession was
-coming up the street, in the midst of which, his hands bound behind his
-back, a man was walking, while, grasping him by either arm as they walked
-beside him, were Jack Harvey and Joe Hinman.
-
-Into the court-room the procession burst like an avalanche. The room had
-seemed somewhat crowded before, but now at least fifty or sixty more men
-wedged themselves in, with Harvey and his crew and the strange man still
-in the centre of them. The rest of the crowd that followed, not being
-able to force themselves into the court-room, seated themselves on the
-stairs just outside, and formed a long line out into the street.
-
-His Honour, powerless to stay this astonishing inrush of the townspeople,
-waited till the crowd had resolved itself into something like order, and
-then, rapping for silence, demanded to know the cause of this invasion of
-and assault upon the dignity of the court.
-
-There was a moment's silence and delay, and then a broad-shouldered youth
-pushed his way through the crowd and walked toward the witness-stand.
-
-"Here!" cried His Honour. "Officer, stop that young man. Let the business
-of this court proceed in its regular order. Mr. Barker, does the court
-understand that you ask to have the case reopened on the ground of newly
-discovered evidence?"
-
-"Yes, Your Honour," replied the squire, gravely.
-
-"And this young man, do you wish to make him your witness?"
-
-"I do, Your Honour," answered Squire Barker. "Although I am not certain
-as to just what he has to testify to, I wish to have him made our
-witness."
-
-"State your name to the court," said Squire Barker, as the youth ascended
-the witness-stand.
-
-"Jack Harvey."
-
-"And am I correctly informed that you have important testimony to give
-before this court in this case?"
-
-"I have the man that set the fire," replied Harvey.
-
-"And can you produce him?"
-
-"He is here in this room," answered Harvey.
-
-And at this moment the crowd parted and allowed to pass a man who walked
-doggedly forward, with eyes downcast, hands firmly bound behind his back,
-while with him walked the remaining members of Harvey's crew.
-
-"Is this the man whom you say set the fire?" queried Squire Barker.
-
-"Yes," said Harvey.
-
-"And how do you know he set the fire?"
-
-"He's confessed it, because he knew there was no way out of it for him.
-Haven't you?" demanded Harvey, turning to the man.
-
-The other nodded his head sullenly.
-
-The uproar that greeted this acknowledgment was deafening. It was several
-moments before order could be restored in the court-room, and then the
-news borne rapidly to those outside gave rise to a second tumult, which
-again stopped the proceedings of the court.
-
-Then, when order had been finally restored, Harvey narrated the
-extraordinary events that had followed the meeting of the man in the
-pasture, down to his capture and confession; a confession that included
-the admission that he was none other than the man Chambers, and that he
-had set fire to the hotel for revenge.
-
-There never was anything like the scene that followed in all the history
-of court procedure in the county from time out of mind. It did not take
-the court long, however, to declare that the youthful prisoners, whom he
-had felt it his solemn duty to hold for trial, were honourably cleared,
-and were free to go at liberty. It did not take long, considering the
-fact that the prisoner pleaded guilty, to hold him for trial. Nor did it
-take long for good-hearted Judge Ellis to descend from the bench and
-shake hands with the boys, each and every one of them, and congratulate
-them upon their complete exoneration.
-
-Once outside the court-room, however, what a storm and tumult of
-congratulation awaited them. The first thing they knew there was a rush
-for them, and up on the shoulders of a crowd of excited fishermen they
-went, and were borne along, amid cheering. And Harvey, too, though he
-struggled against it, was borne aloft, while the news of his brave
-capture of the man Chambers was shouted out to all in the town.
-
-In the midst of it all two figures were espied, slinking along toward the
-boat-landing, anxious to escape notice. A din of yells and catcalls and
-hisses told them they were discovered, and the colonel and the squire,
-sorry pictures of dismay and humiliation, quickened their steps and made
-their escape, thankful enough to escape unharmed from the indignant
-villagers.
-
-"Harvey," said George Warren, as he stood grasping the other's hand about
-two hours later, as the boys formed a little group on the deck of the
-steamer that was heading for Southport, "you have more than evened the
-thing up. Tom and Bob saved you from drowning; but you have saved us all
-from disgrace, and I'm not sure but what I'd rather drown than go through
-a disgraceful ordeal like this again."
-
-"No," said Harvey, clasping the hand of the other warmly. "I'm still the
-one that's in debt. They saved me from more than drowning. They saved me
-from disgrace, too."
-
-"Let's call it even, anyway," said Henry Burns, "and shake hands all
-around."
-
-Some weeks later, as Henry Burns and George Warren sat on the veranda of
-the Warren cottage, looking out across the cove, a graceful yacht turned
-the headland and came up into the harbour.
-
-"She looks familiar," said Henry Burns. "Where have we seen her before?
-Why, it's the _Eagle_, or the _Sprite_, or whatever her real name may be.
-I wonder what she's doing here. She was seized by the county and her
-owners advertised for. I wonder if they can have been discovered."
-
-"Let's go down and take a look at her," said George Warren. "She is the
-prettiest thing that ever came into this harbour."
-
-As they walked down to the shore a boat put off from the yacht and a man
-pulled in to land.
-
-"Can you tell me where I can find either Henry Burns or Jack Harvey?" he
-inquired, addressing the two boys.
-
-"I don't know about Harvey," answered Henry Bums, "but I can inform you
-about the other person. What do you want of him?"
-
-"Here's a note for you, if you mean that you're Henry Burns," said the
-man.
-
-"That's funny," said Henry Burns. "It's the first note I've got since
-I've been here. I wonder who can have written it."
-
-Henry Burns deliberately tore open the envelope and unfolded a letter. He
-glanced hastily at the contents, stopped short, and gave a cry of
-surprise.
-
-"George," he said, solemnly, "will you hit me once, good and hard, so I
-can tell whether I am dreaming or not?"
-
-"I hardly think there's any need of that," answered the other, laughing.
-"You seem to be about as wide-awake as usual."
-
-"Well," said Henry Burns, "if you won't hit me, just read that letter to
-me aloud, anyway. Perhaps I'll believe it if I hear you read it."
-
-"It seems to be addressed to you and Jack Harvey both," said George
-Warren. "Perhaps I need his permission, too, to read it."
-
-"No you don't. Go ahead," demanded Henry Burns.
-
-The letter read as follows:
-
- "Mayville.
-
- "Henry Burns and Jack Harvey,
-
- "_My dear Young Men:_--You have each of you proved yourselves heroes in
- the events of the last few weeks. To you, Henry Burns, I am indebted
- for the rescue of my devoted Jerry, my pet and companion of many years.
- To you and your companions, I am, indeed, indebted for my own life. To
- you, Jack Harvey, I am indebted for the saving from disgrace of these
- young friends of mine. As you may know, the yacht captured from the man
- Chambers was condemned by the county officials, advertised, and finally
- put up at auction and sold, her former owner, if there ever was another
- besides Chambers, not having claimed her. She was, I am informed, a
- very expensive boat; but as there were few bidders among the fishermen,
- I was enabled to bid off the boat at a figure easily within my means.
- This letter is to inform you that I have presented the yacht to you, to
- be owned equally by you two. The papers will be made out later and sent
- to your parents or guardians. Hoping that you will enjoy many happy
- days aboard her, I remain,
-
- "Sincerely yours,
- "Anna Newcome.
-
- "P. S. Don't upset her and get drowned."
-
-"Henry, old fellow," cried George Warren. "Let me congratulate you. You
-are the two luckiest--"
-
-But Henry Burns was running as fast as his legs could carry him in the
-direction of Harvey's camp.
-
-
- THE END.
-
-
-
-
- BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
-
-
- THE LITTLE COLONEL BOOKS
- (Trade Mark)
-
- _By ANNIE FELLOWS JOHNSTON_
-
- Each, 1 vol., large 12mo, cloth decorative, per vol. $1.50
-
-
- The Little Colonel Stories.
- (Trade Mark)
-
-
- Illustrated.
-
-Being three "Little Colonel" stories in the Cosy Corner Series, "The
-Little Colonel," "Two Little Knights of Kentucky," and "The Giant
-Scissors," put into a single volume.
-
-
- The Little Colonel's House Party.
- (Trade Mark)
-
-Illustrated by Louis Meynell.
-
-
- The Little Colonel's Holidays.
- (Trade Mark)
-
-Illustrated by L. J. Bridgman.
-
-
- The Little Colonel's Hero.
- (Trade Mark)
-
-Illustrated by E. B. Barry.
-
-
- The Little Colonel at Boarding School.
- (Trade Mark)
-
-Illustrated by E. B. Barry.
-
-
- The Little Colonel in Arizona.
- (Trade Mark)
-
-Illustrated by E. B. Barry.
-
-
- The Little Colonel's Christmas Vacation.
- (Trade Mark)
-
-Illustrated by E. B. Barry.
-
-Since the time of "Little Women," no juvenile heroine has been better
-beloved of her child readers than Mrs. Johnston's "Little Colonel."
-
-
- Joel: a Boy of Galilee.
-
-By Annie Fellows Johnston. Illustrated by L. J. Bridgman.
-
-New illustrated edition, uniform with the Little Colonel Books, 1 vol.,
- large 12mo, cloth decorative $1.50
-
-A story of the time of Christ, which is one of the author's best-known
-books, and which has been translated into many languages, the last being
-Italian.
-
-
- Asa Holmes; or, At the Cross-Roads. A sketch of Country Life and
- Country Humor. By Annie Fellows Johnston. With a frontispiece
- by Ernest Fosbery.
-
- Large 16mo, cloth, gilt top $1.00
-
-"'Asa Holmes; or, At the Cross-Roads' is the most delightful, most
-sympathetic and wholesome book that has been published in a long while.
-The lovable, cheerful, touching incidents, the descriptions of persons
-and things are wonderfully true to nature."--_Boston Times._
-
-
- In the Desert of Waiting: The Legend of Camelback Mountain.
- The Three Weavers: A Fairy Tale for Fathers and Mothers as Well as for
- Their Daughters. By Annie Fellows Johnston.
-
- Each one volume, tall 16mo, cloth decorative $0.60
-
-There has been a constant demand for publication in separate form of
-these two stories, which were originally included in two of the "Little
-Colonel" books, and the present editions, which are very charmingly
-gotten up, will be delightful and valued gift-books for both old and
-young.
-
-"'The Three Weavers' is the daintiest fairy-story I ever read," wrote one
-critic, and the _Louisville Post_ calls "In the Desert of Waiting" a
-"gem, an exquisite bit of work. Mrs. Johnston is at her best in this web
-of delicate fancy, woven about the deep centre truth." Those who have
-read the stories as they originally appeared will be glad to find them
-published individually.
-
-
- Asa Holmes; or, At the Cross-Roads. A sketch of Country Life and
- Country Humor. By Annie Fellows Johnston. With a frontispiece
- by Ernest Fosbery.
-
- Large 16mo, cloth, gilt top $1.00
-
-"'Asa Holmes; or, At the Cross-Roads' is the most delightful, most
-sympathetic and wholesome book that has been published in a long while.
-The lovable, cheerful, touching incidents, the descriptions of persons
-and things, are wonderfully true to nature."--_Boston Times._
-
-
- The Rival Campers; or, The Adventures of Henry Burns. By Ruel P. Smith.
-
- Square 12mo, cloth decorative, illustrated by A. B. Shute $1.50
-
-Here is a book which will grip and enthuse every boy reader. It is the
-story of a party of typical American lads, courageous, alert, and
-athletic, who spend a summer camping on an island off the Maine coast.
-
-"The best boys' book since 'Tom Sawyer.'"--_San Francisco Examiner._
-
-"Henry Burns, the hero, is the 'Tom Brown' of America."--_N. Y. Sun._
-
-
- The Rival Campers Afloat; or, The Prize Yacht Viking. By Ruel P. Smith,
- author of "The Rival Campers."
-
- Square 12mo, cloth decorative, illustrated $1.50
-
-This book is a continuation of the adventures of "The Rival Campers" on
-their prize yacht _Viking_. Every reader will be enthusiastic over the
-adventures of Henry Burns and his friends on their sailing trip. They
-have a splendid time, fishing, racing, and sailing, until an accidental
-collision results in a series of exciting adventures, culminating in a
-mysterious chase, the loss of their prize yacht, and its recapture by
-means of their old yacht, _Surprise_, which they raise from its watery
-grave.
-
-
- The Young Section-hand; or, The Adventures of Allan West. By Burton E.
- Stevenson, author of "The Marathon Mystery," etc.
-
- 12mo, cloth, illustrated by L. J. Bridgman $1.50
-
-Mr. Stevenson's hero is a manly lad of sixteen, who is given a chance as
-a section-hand on a big Western railroad, and whose experiences are as
-real as they are thrilling.
-
-"It appeals to every boy of enterprising spirit, and at the same time
-teaches him some valuable lessons in honor, pluck, and
-perseverance."--_Cleveland Plain Dealer._
-
-
- The Young Train Despatcher. By Burton E. Stevenson, author of "The
- Young Section-hand," etc.
-
- Square 12mo, cloth decorative, illustrated $1.50
-
-A new volume in the "Railroad Series," in which the young section-hand is
-promoted to a train despatcher. Another branch of railroading is
-presented, in which the young hero has many chances to prove his
-manliness and courage in the exciting adventures which befall him in the
-discharge of his duty.
-
-
- Jack Lorimer. By Winn Standish.
-
- Square 12mo, cloth decorative. Illustrated by A. B. Shute $1.50
-
-Jack Lorimer, whose adventures have for some time been one of the leading
-features of the Boston Sunday _Herald_, is the popular favorite of
-fiction with the boys and girls of New England, and, now that Mr.
-Standish has made him the hero of his book, he will soon be a favorite
-throughout the country.
-
-Jack is a fine example of the all-around American high-school boy. He has
-the sturdy qualities boys admire, and his fondness for clean, honest
-sport of all kinds will strike a chord of sympathy among athletic youths.
-
-
- The Roses of Saint Elizabeth. By Jane Scott Woodruff, author of "The
- Little Christmas Shoe."
-
- Small quarto, cloth decorative, illustrated and decorated in color by
- Adelaide Everhart. $1.00
-
-This is a charming little story of a child whose father was caretaker of
-the great castle of the Wartburg, where Saint Elizabeth once had her
-home, with a fairy-tale interwoven, in which the roses and the ivy in the
-castle yard tell to the child and her playmate quaint old legends of the
-saint and the castle.
-
-
- Gabriel and the Hour Book. By Evaleen Stein.
-
- Small quarto, cloth decorative, illustrated and decorated
- in colors by Adelaide Everhart $1.00
-
-Gabriel was a loving, patient, little French lad, who assisted the monks
-in the long ago days, when all the books were written and illuminated by
-hand, in the monasteries. It is a dear little story, and will appeal to
-every child who is fortunate enough to read it.
-
-
- The Enchanted Automobile. Translated from the French by Mary J.
- Safford.
-
- Small quarto, cloth decorative, illustrated and decorated in colors by
- Edna M. Sawyer $1.00
-
-The enchanted automobile was sent by the fairy godmother of a lazy,
-discontented little prince and princess to take them to fairyland, where
-they might visit their old story-book favorites.
-
-Here they find that Sleeping Beauty has become a famously busy queen;
-Princess Charming keeps a jewelry shop; where she sells the jewels that
-drop from her lips; Hop-o'-My-Thumb is a farmer, too busy even to see the
-children, and Little Red Riding Hood has trained the wolf into a trick
-animal, who performs in the city squares.
-
-They learn the lesson that happy people are the busy people, and they
-return home cured of their discontent and laziness.
-
-
- Beautiful Joe's Paradise; or, The Island of Brotherly Love. A sequel to
- "Beautiful Joe." By Marshall Saunders, author of "Beautiful
- Joe," "For His Country," etc. With fifteen full-page plates and
- many decorations from drawings by Charles Livingston Bull.
-
- One vol., library 12mo, cloth decorative $1.50
-
-"Will be immensely enjoyed by the boys and girls who read
-it."--_Pittsburg Gazette._
-
-"Miss Saunders has put life, humor, action, and tenderness into her
-story. The book deserves to be a favorite."--_Chicago Record-Herald._
-
-"This book revives the spirit of 'Beautiful Joe' capitally. It is fairly
-riotous with fun, and as a whole is about as unusual as anything in the
-animal book line that has seen the light. It is a book for juveniles--old
-and young."--_Philadelphia Item._
-
-
- 'Tilda Jane. By Marshall Saunders, author of "Beautiful Joe," etc.
-
- One vol., 12mo, fully illustrated, cloth, decorative cover, $1.50
-
-"No more amusing and attractive child's story has appeared for a long
-time than this quaint and curious recital of the adventures of that
-pitiful and charming little runaway.
-
-"It is one of those exquisitely simple and truthful books that win and
-charm the reader, and I did not put it down until I had finished
-it--honest! And I am sure that every one, young or old, who reads will be
-proud and happy to make the acquaintance of the delicious waif.
-
-"I cannot think of any better book for children than this. I commend it
-unreservedly."--_Cyrus Townsend Brady._
-
-
- The Story of the Graveleys. By Marshall Saunders, author of "Beautiful
- Joe's Paradise," "'Tilda Jane," etc.
-
- Library 12mo, cloth decorative, illustrated by E. B. Barry $1.50
-
-Here we have the haps and mishaps, the trials and triumphs, of a
-delightful New England family, of whose devotion and sturdiness it will
-do the reader good to hear. From the kindly, serene-souled grandmother to
-the buoyant madcap, Berty, these Graveleys are folk of fibre and
-blood--genuine human beings.
-
-
- PHYLLIS' FIELD FRIENDS SERIES
-
- _By LENORE E. MULETS_
-
- Six vols., cloth decorative, illustrated by Sophie Schneider.
- Sold separately, or as a set.
- Per volume $1.00
- Per set 6.00
-
-
- Insect Stories.
- Stories of Little Animals.
- Flower Stories.
- Bird Stories.
- Tree Stories.
- Stories of Little Fishes.
-
- In this series of six little Nature books, it is the author's intention
- so to present to the child reader the facts about each particular
- flower, insect, bird, or animal, in story form, as to make delightful
- reading. Classical legends, myths, poems, and songs are so introduced
- as to correlate fully with these lessons, to which the excellent
- illustrations are no little help.
-
-
- THE WOODRANGER TALES
-
- _By G. WALDO BROWNE_
-
-
- The Woodranger.
- The Young Gunbearer.
- The Hero of the Hills.
- With Rogers' Rangers.
-
- Each 1 vol., large 12mo, cloth, decorative cover, illustrated,
- per volume $1.25
- Four vols., boxed, per set 5.00
-
- "The Woodranger Tales," like the "Pathfinder Tales" of J. Fenimore
- Cooper, combine historical information relating to early pioneer days
- in America with interesting adventures in the backwoods. Although the
- same characters are continued throughout the series, each book is
- complete in itself, and, while based strictly on historical facts, is
- an interesting and exciting tale of adventure.
-
-
- Born to the Blue. By Florence Kimball Russel.
-
- 12mo, cloth decorative, illustrated $1.25
-
-The atmosphere of army life on the plains breathes on every page of this
-delightful tale. The boy is the son of a captain of U. S. cavalry
-stationed at a frontier post in the days when our regulars earned the
-gratitude of a nation.
-
-The author is herself "of the army," and knows every detail of the life.
-Her descriptions are accurate, which adds to the value and interest of
-the book.
-
-
- Pussy-Cat Town. By Marion Ames Taggart.
-
-Small quarto, cloth decorative, illustrated and decorated in colors $1.00
-
-"Pussy-Cat Town" is a most unusual, delightful cat story. Ban-Ban, a pure
-Maltese who belonged to Rob, Kiku-san, Lois's beautiful snow-white pet,
-and their neighbors Bedelia the tortoise-shell, Madame Laura the widow,
-Wutz Butz the warrior, and wise old Tommy Traddles, were really and truly
-cats, and Miss Taggart has here explained the reason for their mysterious
-disappearance all one long summer.
-
-
- The Sandman: His Farm Stories. By William J. Hopkins. With fifty
- illustrations by Ada Clendenin Williamson.
-
- Large 12mo, decorative cover $1.50
-
- "An amusing, original book, written for the benefit of very small
- children. It should be one of the most popular of the year's books for
- reading to small children."--_Buffalo Express._
-
- "Mothers and fathers and kind elder sisters who take the little ones to
- bed and rack their brains for stories will find this book a
- treasure."--_Cleveland Leader._
-
-
- The Sandman: More Farm Stories. By William J. Hopkins.
-
- Large 12mo, decorative cover, fully illustrated $1.50
-
-Mr. Hopkins's first essay at bedtime stories has met with such approval
-that this second book of "Sandman" tales has been issued for scores of
-eager children. Life on the farm, and out-of-doors, is portrayed in his
-inimitable manner, and many a little one will hail the bedtime season as
-one of delight.
-
-
- THE LITTLE COUSIN SERIES
-
- The most delightful and interesting accounts possible of
- child-life in other lands, filled with quaint sayings, doings,
- and adventures.
-
- Each 1 vol., 12mo, decorative cover, cloth, with six or
- more full-page illustrations in color.
-
- Price per volume $0.60
-
- _By MARY HAZELTON WADE (unless otherwise indicated)_
-
-
- Our Little African Cousin
- Our Little Armenian Cousin
- Our Little Brown Cousin
- Our Little Canadian Cousin By Elizabeth R. Macdonald
- Our Little Chinese Cousin By Isaac Taylor Headland
- Our Little Cuban Cousin
- Our Little Dutch Cousin By Blanche McManus
- Our Little English Cousin By Blanche McManus
- Our Little Eskimo Cousin
- Our Little French Cousin By Blanche McManus
- Our Little German Cousin
- Our Little Hawaiian Cousin
- Our Little Indian Cousin
- Our Little Irish Cousin
- Our Little Italian Cousin
- Our Little Japanese Cousin
- Our Little Jewish Cousin
- Our Little Korean Cousin By H. Lee M. Pike
- Our Little Mexican Cousin By Edward C. Butler
- Our Little Norwegian Cousin
- Our Little Panama Cousin By H. Lee M. Pike
- Our Little Philippine Cousin
- Our Little Porto Rican Cousin
- Our Little Russian Cousin
- Our Little Scotch Cousin By Blanche McManus
- Our Little Siamese Cousin
- Our Little Spanish Cousin By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
- Our Little Swedish Cousin By Claire M. Coburn
- Our Little Swiss Cousin
- Our Little Turkish Cousin
-
-
- THE GOLDENROD LIBRARY
-
-The Goldenrod Library contains only the highest and purest
-literature,--stories which appeal alike both to children and to their
-parents and guardians.
-
-Each volume is well illustrated from drawings by competent artists,
-which, together with their handsomely decorated uniform binding, showing
-the goldenrod, usually considered the emblem of America, is a feature of
-their manufacture.
-
- Each one volume, small 12mo, illustrated, decorated cover,
- paper wrapper $0.35
-
-
- LIST OF TITLES
-
-
- Aunt Nabby's Children. By Frances Hodges White.
- Child's Dream of a Star, The. By Charles Dickens.
- Flight of Rosy Dawn, The. By Pauline Bradford Mackie.
- Findelkind. By Ouida.
- Fairy of the Rhone, The. By A. Comyns Carr.
- Gatty and I. By Frances E. Crompton.
- Great Emergency, A. By Juliana Horatia Ewing.
- Helena's Wonderworld. By Frances Hodges White.
- Jackanapes. By Juliana Horatia Ewing.
- Jerry's Reward. By Evelyn Snead Barnett.
- La Belle Nivernaise. By Alphonse Daudet.
- Little King Davie. By Nellie Hellis.
- Little Peterkin Vandike. By Charles Stuart Pratt.
- Little Professor, The. By Ida Horton Cash.
- Peggy's Trial. By Mary Knight Potter.
- Prince Yellowtop. By Kate Whiting Patch.
- Provence Rose, A. By Ouida.
- Rab and His Friends. By Dr. John Brown.
- Seventh Daughter, A. By Grace Wickham Curran.
- Sleeping Beauty, The. By Martha Baker Dunn.
- Small, Small Child, A. By E. Livingston Prescott.
- Story of a Short Life, The. By Juliana Horatia Ewing.
- Susanne. By Frances J. Delano.
- Water People, The. By Charles Lee Sleight.
- Young Archer, The. By Charles E. Brimblecom.
-
-
- COSY CORNER SERIES
-
- It is the intention of the publishers that this series shall contain
- only the very highest and purest literature,--stories that shall not
- only appeal to the children themselves, but be appreciated by all those
- who feel with them in their joys and sorrows.
-
- The numerous illustrations in each book are by well-known artists, and
- each volume has a separate attractive cover design.
-
- Each 1 vol., 16mo, cloth $0.50
-
- _By ANNIE FELLOWS JOHNSTON_
-
-
- The Little Colonel. (Trade Mark)
-
-The scene of this story is laid in Kentucky. Its heroine is a small girl,
-who is known as the Little Colonel, on account of her fancied resemblance
-to an old-school Southern gentleman, whose fine estate and old family are
-famous in the region.
-
-
- The Giant Scissors.
-
-This is the story of Joyce and of her adventures in France. Joyce is a
-great friend of the Little Colonel, and in later volumes shares with her
-the delightful experiences of the "House Party" and the "Holidays."
-
-
- Two Little Knights of Kentucky. Who Were the Little Colonel's
- Neighbors.
-
-In this volume the Little Colonel returns to us like an old friend, but
-with added grace and charm. She is not, however, the central figure of
-the story, that place being taken by the "two little knights."
-
-
- Mildred's Inheritance.
-
-A delightful little story of a lonely English girl who comes to America
-and is befriended by a sympathetic American family who are attracted by
-her beautiful speaking voice. By means of this one gift she is enabled to
-help a school-girl who has temporarily lost the use of her eyes, and thus
-finally her life becomes a busy, happy one.
-
-
- Cicely and Other Stories for Girls.
-
-The readers of Mrs. Johnston's charming juveniles will be glad to learn
-of the issue of this volume for young people.
-
-
- Aunt 'Liza's Hero and Other Stories.
-
-A collection of six bright little stories, which will appeal to all boys
-and most girls.
-
-
- Big Brother.
-
-A story of two boys. The devotion and care of Steven, himself a small
-boy, for his baby brother, is the theme of the simple tale.
-
-
- Ole Mammy's Torment.
-
-"Ole Mammy's Torment" has been fitly called "a classic of Southern life."
-It relates the haps and mishaps of a small negro lad, and tells how he
-was led by love and kindness to a knowledge of the right.
-
-
- The Story of Dago.
-
-In this story Mrs. Johnston relates the story of Dago, a pet monkey,
-owned jointly by two brothers. Dago tells his own story, and the account
-of his haps and mishaps is both interesting and amusing.
-
-
- The Quilt That Jack Built.
-
-A pleasant little story of a boy's labor of love, and how it changed the
-course of his life many years after it was accomplished.
-
-
- Flip's Islands of Providence.
-
-A story of a boy's life battle, his early defeat, and his final triumph,
-well worth the reading.
-
-
- _By EDITH ROBINSON_
-
-
- A Little Puritan's First Christmas.
-
-A story of Colonial times in Boston, telling how Christmas was invented
-by Betty Sewall, a typical child of the Puritans, aided by her brother
-Sam.
-
-
- A Little Daughter of Liberty.
-
-The author's motive for this story is well indicated by a quotation from
-her introduction, as follows:
-
-"One ride is memorable in the early history of the American Revolution,
-the well-known ride of Paul Revere. Equally deserving of commendation is
-another ride,--the ride of Anthony Severn,--which was no less historic in
-its action or memorable in its consequences."
-
-
- A Loyal Little Maid.
-
-A delightful and interesting story of Revolutionary days, in which the
-child heroine, Betsey Schuyler, renders important services to George
-Washington.
-
-
- A Little Puritan Rebel.
-
-This is an historical tale of a real girl, during the time when the
-gallant Sir Harry Vane was governor of Massachusetts.
-
-
- A Little Puritan Pioneer.
-
-The scene of this story is laid in the Puritan settlement at Charlestown.
-The little girl heroine adds another to the list of favorites so well
-known to the young people.
-
-
- A Little Puritan Bound Girl.
-
-A story of Boston in Puritan days, which is of great interest to youthful
-readers.
-
-
- A Little Puritan Cavalier.
-
-The story of a "Little Puritan Cavalier" who tried with all his boyish
-enthusiasm to emulate the spirit and ideals of the dead Crusaders.
-
-
- _By OUIDA (Louise de la Ramée)_
-
-
- A Dog of Flanders: A Christmas Story.
-
-Too well and favorably known to require description.
-
-
- The Nurnberg Stove.
-
-This beautiful story has never before been published at a popular price.
-
-
- _By FRANCES MARGARET FOX_
-
-
- The Little Giant's Neighbours.
-
-A charming nature story of a "little giant" whose neighbours were the
-creatures of the field and garden.
-
-
- Farmer Brown and the Birds.
-
-A little story which teaches children that the birds are man's best
-friends.
-
-
- Betty of Old Mackinaw.
-
-A charming story of child-life, appealing especially to the little
-readers who like stories of "real people."
-
-
- Brother Billy.
-
-The story of Betty's brother, and some further adventures of Betty
-herself.
-
-
- Mother Nature's Little Ones.
-
-Curious little sketches describing the early lifetime, or "childhood," of
-the little creatures out-of-doors.
-
-
- How Christmas Came to the Mulvaneys.
-
-A bright, lifelike little story of a family of poor children, with an
-unlimited capacity for fun and mischief. The wonderful never-to-be
-forgotten Christmas that came to them is the climax of a series of
-exciting incidents.
-
-
- _By MISS MULOCK_
-
-
- The Little Lame Prince.
-
-A delightful story of a little boy who has many adventures by means of
-the magic gifts of his fairy godmother.
-
-
- Adventures of a Brownie.
-
-The story of a household elf who torments the cook and gardener, but is a
-constant joy and delight to the children who love and trust him.
-
-
- His Little Mother.
-
-Miss Mulock's short stories for children are a constant source of delight
-to them, and "His Little Mother," in this new and attractive dress, will
-be welcomed by hosts of youthful readers.
-
-
- Little Sunshine's Holiday.
-
-An attractive story of a summer outing. "Little Sunshine" is another of
-those beautiful child-characters for which Miss Mulock is so justly
-famous.
-
-
- _By MARSHALL SAUNDERS_
-
-
- For His Country.
-
-A sweet and graceful story of a little boy who loved his country; written
-with that charm which has endeared Miss Saunders to hosts of readers.
-
-
- Nita, the Story of an Irish Setter.
-
-In this touching little book, Miss Saunders shows how dear to her heart
-are all of God's dumb creatures.
-
-
- Alpatok, the Story of an Eskimo Dog.
-
-Alpatok, an Eskimo dog from the far north, was stolen from his master and
-left to starve in a strange city, but was befriended and cared for, until
-he was able to return to his owner. Miss Saunders's story is based on
-truth, and the pictures in the book of "Alpatok" are based on a
-photograph of the real Eskimo dog who had such a strange experience.
-
-
- _By WILL ALLEN DROMGOOLE_
-
-
- The Farrier's Dog and His Fellow.
-
-This story, written by the gifted young Southern woman, will appeal to
-all that is best in the natures of the many admirers of her graceful and
-piquant style.
-
-
- The Fortunes of the Fellow.
-
-Those who read and enjoyed the pathos and charm of "The Farrier's Dog and
-His Fellow" will welcome the further account of the adventures of Baydaw
-and the Fellow at the home of the kindly smith.
-
-
- The Best of Friends.
-
-This continues the experiences of the Farrier's dog and his Fellow,
-written in Miss Dromgoole's well-known charming style.
-
-
- Down in Dixie.
-
-A fascinating story for boys and girls, of a family of Alabama children
-who move to Florida and grow up in the South.
-
-
- _By MARIAN W. WILDMAN_
-
-
- Loyalty Island.
-
-An account of the adventures of four children and their pet dog on an
-island, and how they cleared their brother from the suspicion of
-dishonesty.
-
-
- Theodore and Theodora.
-
-This is a story of the exploits and mishaps of two mischievous twins, and
-continues the adventures of the interesting group of children in "Loyalty
-Island."
-
-
- _By CHARLES G. D. ROBERTS_
-
-
- The Cruise of the Yacht Dido.
-
-The story of two boys who turned their yacht into a fishing boat to earn
-money to pay for a college course, and of their adventures while
-exploring in search of hidden treasure.
-
-
- The Lord of the Air
- The Story of the Eagle
- The King of the Mamozekel
- The Story of the Moose
- The Watchers of the Camp-fire
- The Story of the Panther
- The Haunter of the Pine Gloom
- The Story of the Lynx
- The Return to the Trails
- The Story of the Bear
- The Little People of the Sycamore
- The Story of the Raccoon
-
-
- _By OTHER AUTHORS_
-
-
- The Great Scoop.
-
-_By MOLLY ELLIOT SEAWELL_
-
-A capital tale of newspaper life in a big city, and of a bright,
-enterprising, likable youngster employed thereon.
-
-
- John Whopper.
-
-The late Bishop Clark's popular story of the boy who fell through the
-earth and came out in China, with a new introduction by Bishop Potter.
-
-
- The Dole Twins.
-
-_By KATE UPSON CLARK_
-
-The adventures of two little people who tried to earn money to buy
-crutches for a lame aunt. An excellent description of child-life about
-1812, which will greatly interest and amuse the children of to-day, whose
-life is widely different.
-
-
- Larry Hudson's Ambition.
-
-_By JAMES OTIS_, author of "Toby Tyler," etc.
-
-Larry Hudson is a typical American boy, whose hard work and enterprise
-gain him his ambition,--an education and a start in the world.
-
-
- The Little Christmas Shoe.
-
-_By JANE P. SCOTT WOODRUFF_
-
-A touching story of Yule-tide.
-
-
- Wee Dorothy.
-
-_By LAURA UPDEGRAFF_
-
-A story of two orphan children, the tender devotion of the eldest, a boy,
-for his sister being its theme and setting. With a bit of sadness at the
-beginning, the story is otherwise bright and sunny, and altogether
-wholesome in every way.
-
-
- The King of the Golden River: A Legend of Stiria. By JOHN RUSKIN
-
-Written fifty years or more ago, and not originally intended for
-publication, this little fairy-tale soon became known and made a place
-for itself.
-
-
- A Child's Garden of Verses.
-
-_By R. L. STEVENSON_
-
-Mr. Stevenson's little volume is too well known to need description. It
-will be heartily welcomed in this new and attractive edition.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Notes
-
-
---Silently corrected a few typos (but left nonstandard spelling and
- dialect as is).
-
---Rearranged front matter (and moved illustrations) to a more-logical
- streaming order.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Rival Campers, by Ruel Perley Smith
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RIVAL CAMPERS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 40548-8.txt or 40548-8.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/4/0/5/4/40548/
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Rod Crawford, Dave Morgan
-and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
-will be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
-one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
-(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
-permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
-set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
-copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
-protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
-Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
-charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
-do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
-rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
-such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
-research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
-practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
-subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
-redistribution.
-
-
-
-*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
- www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
-all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
-If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
-terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
-entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
-and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
-or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
-collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
-individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
-located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
-copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
-works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
-are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
-Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
-freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
-this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
-the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
-keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
-a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
-the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
-before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
-creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
-Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
-the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
-States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
-access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
-whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
-copied or distributed:
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
-from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
-posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
-and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
-or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
-with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
-work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
-through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
-Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
-1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
-terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
-to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
-permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
-word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
-distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
-"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
-posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
-you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
-copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
-request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
-form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
-that
-
-- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
- owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
- has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
- Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
- must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
- prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
- returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
- sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
- address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
- the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or
- destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
- and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
- Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
- money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
- of receipt of the work.
-
-- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
-forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
-both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
-Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
-Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
-collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
-"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
-corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
-property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
-computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
-your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
-your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
-the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
-refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
-providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
-receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
-is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
-opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
-WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
-WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
-If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
-law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
-interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
-the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
-provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
-with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
-promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
-harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
-that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
-or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
-work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
-Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
-
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
-including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
-because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
-people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
-To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
-and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
-Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
-permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
-Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
-throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at 809
-North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email
-contact links and up to date contact information can be found at the
-Foundation's web site and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
-SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
-particular state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
-To donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
-with anyone. For forty years, he produced and distributed Project
-Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
-unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
-keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
-
- www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/40548-8.zip b/40548-8.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index e74987a..0000000
--- a/40548-8.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/40548-h.zip b/40548-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 14c6294..0000000
--- a/40548-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/40548-h/40548-h.htm b/40548-h/40548-h.htm
index 796592f..ae4a06c 100644
--- a/40548-h/40548-h.htm
+++ b/40548-h/40548-h.htm
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
<head>
-<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
<!-- terminate if block for class html -->
<title>The Rival Campers, or, The Adventures of Henry Burns, by Arthur M. Winfield</title>
@@ -149,46 +149,7 @@ p.t15,div.t15,.t15 { margin-left:19em;text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-b
span.jr4 { margin-right:4em; }</style>
</head>
<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Rival Campers, by Ruel Perley Smith
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
-
-
-Title: The Rival Campers
- or, The Adventures of Henry Burns
-
-Author: Ruel Perley Smith
-
-Illustrator: A. B. Shute
-
-Release Date: August 20, 2012 [EBook #40548]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RIVAL CAMPERS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Rod Crawford, Dave Morgan
-and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40548 ***</div>
<div id="cover" class="img">
<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="THE RIVAL CAMPERS" width="500" height="717" />
@@ -13102,380 +13063,6 @@ attractive edition.</p>
<ul><li>Silently corrected a few typos (but left nonstandard spelling and dialect as is).</li>
<li>Rearranged front matter (and moved illustrations) to a more-logical streaming order.</li></ul>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Rival Campers, by Ruel Perley Smith
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RIVAL CAMPERS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 40548-h.htm or 40548-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/4/0/5/4/40548/
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Rod Crawford, Dave Morgan
-and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
-will be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
-one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
-(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
-permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
-set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
-copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
-protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
-Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
-charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
-do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
-rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
-such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
-research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
-practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
-subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
-redistribution.
-
-
-
-*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
- www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
-all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
-If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
-terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
-entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
-and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
-or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
-collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
-individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
-located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
-copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
-works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
-are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
-Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
-freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
-this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
-the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
-keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
-a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
-the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
-before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
-creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
-Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
-the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
-States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
-access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
-whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
-copied or distributed:
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
-from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
-posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
-and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
-or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
-with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
-work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
-through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
-Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
-1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
-terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
-to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
-permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
-word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
-distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
-"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
-posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
-you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
-copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
-request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
-form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
-that
-
-- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
- owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
- has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
- Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
- must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
- prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
- returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
- sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
- address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
- the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or
- destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
- and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
- Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
- money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
- of receipt of the work.
-
-- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
-forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
-both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
-Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
-Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
-collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
-"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
-corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
-property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
-computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
-your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
-your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
-the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
-refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
-providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
-receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
-is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
-opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
-WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
-WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
-If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
-law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
-interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
-the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
-provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
-with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
-promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
-harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
-that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
-or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
-work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
-Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
-
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
-including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
-because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
-people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
-To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
-and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
-Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
-permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
-Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
-throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at 809
-North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email
-contact links and up to date contact information can be found at the
-Foundation's web site and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
-SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
-particular state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
-To donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
-with anyone. For forty years, he produced and distributed Project
-Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
-unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
-keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
-
- www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
-
-</pre>
-
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40548 ***</div>
</body>
</html>
diff --git a/40548.txt b/40548.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 5d4f561..0000000
--- a/40548.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,12515 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Rival Campers, by Ruel Perley Smith
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
-
-
-Title: The Rival Campers
- or, The Adventures of Henry Burns
-
-Author: Ruel Perley Smith
-
-Illustrator: A. B. Shute
-
-Release Date: August 20, 2012 [EBook #40548]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RIVAL CAMPERS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Rod Crawford, Dave Morgan
-and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE
- RIVAL CAMPERS
- Or,
- THE ADVENTURES OF HENRY BURNS
-
-
- By
- Ruel P. Smith
-
- ILLUSTRATED BY
- A. B. SHUTE
-
- BOSTON
- L. C. PAGE & COMPANY
- 1905
-
-
- _Copyright_, _1905_
- By L. C. Page & Company
- (INCORPORATED)
-
- _All rights reserved_
-
-
- Published July, 1905
-
-
- _Second Impression_
- _Third Impression, July, 1906_
-
-
- _COLONIAL PRESS
- Electrotyped and Printed by C. H. Simonds & Co.
- Boston. U. S. A._
-
-
- WITH LOVE TO
- _Ruel Stevenson Smith_
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I. The Camp 1
- II. To the Rescue 17
- III. A Surprise 32
- IV. A Night with Henry Burns 51
- V. A Hidden Cave 72
- VI. Jack Harvey Investigates 90
- VII. Squire Brackett's Dog 109
- VIII. The Haunted House 125
- IX. Setting a Trap 142
- X. A Midnight Adventure 160
- XI. An Unpleasant Discovery 181
- XII. A Cruise Around the Island 199
- XIII. Storm Driven 220
- XIV. The Man in the Boat 238
- XV. Good for Evil 259
- XVI. A Treaty of Friendship 278
- XVII. The Fire 290
- XVIII. The Flight 306
- XIX. The Pursuit 324
- XX. Among the Islands 343
- XXI. The Trial 364
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PAGE
- "'Look, Bob! Look!' he cried. 'What have we done?'"
- (_Frontispiece_) 86
- "'What's the matter with you?' roared the Colonel" 67
- "'You're the worst one of all, Jack Harvey'" 114
- "Craigie reeled under the blow and staggered back against the
- wall" 173
- "Boys and lobster-pot slumped into the sea" 211
- "'Will you shake hands with me?' he asked" 279
-
-
-
-
- THE RIVAL CAMPERS
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
- THE CAMP
-
-
-On a certain afternoon in the latter part of the month of June, the
-little fishing village of Southport, on Grand Island in Samoset Bay, was
-awakened from its customary nap by the familiar whistle of the steamboat
-from up the river. Southport, opening a sleepy eye at the sound, made
-deliberate preparation to receive its daily visitor, knowing that the
-steamer was as yet some distance up the island, and not even in sight,
-for behind the bluff around which the steamer must eventually come the
-town lay straggling irregularly along the shore of a deeply indented
-cove.
-
-A few loungers about the village grocery-store seemed roused to a renewed
-interest in life, removed their pipes, and, with evident satisfaction at
-this relief from island monotony, sauntered lazily down to the wharf. The
-storekeeper and the freight-agent, as became men burdened with the
-present responsibility of seeing that the steamer was offered all
-possible assistance in making its landing, bustled about with importance.
-
-Soon a wagon or two from down the island came rattling into the village,
-while from the hotel, a quarter of a mile distant, a number of guests
-appeared on the veranda, curious to scrutinize such new arrivals as might
-appear. From the summer cottages here and there flags were hastily run
-up, and from one a salute was fired; all of which might be taken to
-indicate that the coming of the steamer was the event of the day at
-Southport--as, indeed, it was.
-
-Now another whistle sounded shrilly from just behind the bluff, and the
-next moment the little steamer shoved its bow from out a jagged screen of
-rock, while the chorused exclamation, "Thar she is!" from the assembled
-villagers announced that they were fully awake to the situation.
-
-Among the crowd gathered on the wharf, three boys, between whom there
-existed sufficient family resemblance to indicate that they were
-brothers, scanned eagerly the faces of the passengers as the steamer came
-slowly to the landing. The eldest of the three, a boy of about sixteen
-years, turned at length to the other two, and remarked, in a tone of
-disappointment:
-
-"They are not aboard. I can't see a sign of them. Something must have
-kept them."
-
-"Unless," said one of the others, "they are hiding somewhere to surprise
-us."
-
-"It's impossible," said the first boy, "for any one to hide away when he
-gets in sight of this island. No, if they were aboard we should have seen
-them the minute the steamer turned the bluff, waving to us and yelling at
-the top of their lungs. There's something in the air here that makes one
-feel like tearing around and making a noise."
-
-"Especially at night, when the cottagers are asleep," said the third boy.
-
-"Besides," continued the eldest, "their canoe is not aboard, and you
-would not catch Tom Harris and Bob White coming down here for the summer
-without it, when they spend half their time in it on the river at home
-and are as expert at handling it as Indians,--and yet, they wrote that
-they would be here to-day."
-
-It was evident the boys they were looking for were not aboard. The little
-steamer, after a violent demonstration of puffing and snorting, during
-which it made apparently several desperate attempts to rush headlong on
-the rocks, but was checked with a hasty scrambling of paddle-wheels, and
-was bawled at by captain and mates, was finally subdued and made fast to
-the wharf by the deck-hands. The passengers disembarked, and the same
-lusty, brown-armed crew, with a series of rushes, as though they feared
-their captive might at any moment break its bonds and make a dash for
-liberty, proceeded to unload the freight and baggage. Trucks laden with
-leaning towers of baggage were trundled noisily ashore and overturned
-upon the wharf.
-
-In the midst of the bustle and commotion the group of three boys was
-joined by another boy, who had just come from the hotel.
-
-"Hulloa, there!" said the new boy. "Where's Tom and Bob?"
-
-"They are not aboard, Henry," said the eldest boy of the group.
-
-The new arrival gave a whistle of surprise.
-
-"How do you feel this afternoon, Henry?" asked the second of the
-brothers.
-
-"Oh, very poorly--very miserable. In fact, I don't seem to get any
-better."
-
-This lugubrious reply, strange to say, did not evoke the sympathy which a
-listener might have expected. The boys burst into roars of laughter.
-
-"Poor Henry Burns!" exclaimed the eldest boy, giving the self-declared
-invalid a blow on the chest that would have meant the annihilation of
-weak lungs. "He will never be any better."
-
-"And he may be a great deal worse," said the second boy, slapping the
-other on the back so hard that the dust flew under the blow.
-
-"Won't the boys like him, though?" asked the third and youngest
-boy,--"that is, if they ever come."
-
-Henry Burns received these sallies with the utmost unconcern. If he
-enjoyed the effect which his remarks had produced, it was denoted only by
-a twinkle in his eyes. He was rather a slender, pale-complexioned youth,
-of fourteen years. A physiognomist might have found in his features an
-unusual degree of coolness and self-control, united with an abnormal
-fondness for mischief; but Henry Burns would have passed with the
-ordinary person as a frail boy, fonder of books than of sports.
-
-Just then the captain of the steamer put his head out of the pilot-house
-and called to the eldest of the brothers:
-
-"I've got a note for you, George Warren. A young chap who said he was on
-his way here in a canoe came aboard at Millville and asked me to give it
-to you; and there was another young chap in a canoe alongside who asked
-me to say they'd be here to-night."
-
-"Hooray!" cried George Warren, opening and reading the note. "It's the
-boys, sure enough. They started at four o'clock this morning in the
-canoe, and will be here to-night. Much obliged, Captain Chase."
-
-"Not a bit," responded the captain. "But let me tell you boys something.
-You needn't look for these 'ere young chaps to-night, because they won't
-get here. What's more," added the captain, as he surveyed the water and
-sky with the air of one defying the elements to withhold a secret from
-him, "if they try to cross the bay to-night you needn't look for them at
-all. The bay is nothing too smooth now; but wait till the tide turns and
-the wind in those clouds off to the east is let loose! There's going to
-be fun out there, and that before many hours, too."
-
-With this dismally prophetic remark the captain gave orders to cast off
-the lines, and the steamer was soon on its way down the bay.
-
-The three brothers, George, Arthur, and Joe Warren, and Henry Burns left
-the wharf and were walking in the direction of the hotel, when a remark
-from the latter stopped them short.
-
-"Did it occur to any of you," asked Henry Burns, speaking in a slightly
-drawling tone, "that we shall never have a better opportunity to play a
-practical joke on your friends than we have to-day--?"
-
-"What friends?" exclaimed George Warren, indignantly.
-
-"I thought you said Tom Harris and Bob White were coming down the river
-to-day in a canoe," said Henry Burns, in the most innocent manner.
-
-"And so they are. And you think we would play a joke on them the first
-day they arrive, do you? I believe you would get up in the night, Henry
-Burns, to play a joke on your own grandmother. No, sirree, count me out
-of that," said George Warren. "It will be time enough to play jokes on
-them after they get here. I don't believe in treating friends in that
-way."
-
-"Rather a mean thing to do, I think," said Arthur Warren.
-
-"I'm out of it," said Joe.
-
-"It doesn't occur to any of you to ask what the joke is, does it?" asked
-Henry Burns, dryly.
-
-"Don't want to know," replied George.
-
-"Nor I, either," said Arthur.
-
-"Keep it to play on Witham," said Joe.
-
-"Then I'll enlighten you without your asking," continued Henry Burns,
-nothing abashed. "You did not notice, perhaps, that though your friends,
-Tom and Bob, did not come ashore to-day, their baggage did, and it is
-back there on the wharf. Now I propose that we get John Briggs to let us
-take his wheelbarrow, wheel their traps over to the point, pitch their
-tent for them, and have everything ready by the time they get here. It's
-rather a mean thing to do, I know, and not the kind of a trick I'd play
-on old Witham; but there's nothing particular on hand in that line for
-to-day."
-
-Henry Burns paused, with a sly twinkle in his eyes, to note the effect of
-his words.
-
-"Capital!" roared George Warren, slapping Henry Burns again on the back,
-regardless of the delicate state of that young gentleman's health. "We
-might have known better than to take Henry Burns seriously."
-
-"Same old Henry Burns," said Arthur. "Take notice, boys, that he never is
-beaten in anything he sets his heart on, and that his delicate health
-will never, never be any better;" and he was about to imitate his elder
-brother's example in the matter of a punch at Henry Burns, but the
-latter, though of slighter build, grappled with him, and after a moment's
-friendly wrestling laid him on his back on the greensward, thereby
-illustrating the force of his remark as to Henry Burns's invincibility.
-
-The suggestion was at once followed. Within an hour the boys had wheeled
-the baggage of the campers to a point of land overlooking the bay.
-
-"It's all here," said Henry Burns, finally, as two of the boys deposited
-a big canvas bag, containing the tent, upon the grass, "except that one
-box on the wharf, which looks as though it contained food."
-
-"We can let that stay there till we get things shipshape here, or get
-Briggs to put it in the storehouse by and by," suggested young Joe.
-
-But if they could have foreseen then that the leaving of the box there
-upon the wharf, seemingly such an inconsequential thing, was to be the
-means of creating no end of trouble, it is quite possible that even young
-Joe himself, though rather fond of his ease, would have brought it away
-on his own shoulders; but it seemed of no consequence whether it should
-be removed then or later, and so the box remained where it was.
-
-It required but a brief time to pitch the tent. It was a large,
-square-shaped canvas, with high walls on two sides, so that a person of
-medium height could stand erect there, and running to a peak at the top
-in the usual "A" shape. Putting the frame, of two poles and a
-cross-piece, together, and drawing the canvas over it as it lay on the
-ground, the two larger boys raised it into position while the others
-drove the pegs and stretched the guy-ropes.
-
-"Now, then," drawled Henry Burns, "if you care to, we can carry the joke
-still further by cutting some poles and putting up the bunks."
-
-This proposition also meeting with approval, Henry Burns and the eldest
-of the Warrens started for the woods, about a mile distant, to cut some
-spruce poles, leaving the younger brothers to complete the pegging of the
-tent, ditching it, and getting things in order.
-
-The spot which had been selected for the camping-ground was one of the
-most beautiful on the island. It was a small point of land projecting
-into the bay, with a sandy beach on either side. Its outermost extremity,
-however, ended in a wall of ledge, which went down abruptly, so that the
-water at high tide came up to within a few feet of the greensward, and at
-low tide dropped down, rather than receded, leaving no bare rocks
-exposed.
-
-A few spruce-trees grew on the point, sufficient to give shade, and in
-the midst of a clump of them was a clear spring of water that was cool to
-iciness during the hottest days. The point commanded a view of the entire
-bay on the eastern side of the island, so that when the breeze came up
-from the south, as it did almost daily through the summer, blowing fresh
-and steadily, the billows over all its broad surface seemed to be aiming
-their blows directly at it, while every breath of wind was laden with a
-salt odour that was health-giving and inspiring.
-
-It was a choice bit of land that Bob's uncle had purchased several years
-ago, when a few speculators had thought the island might be "boomed" as a
-summer resort. The little fishing village of Southport, which numbered
-then some twenty odd houses, had, indeed, been augmented by the "boom" by
-about the same number of cottages; and adjoining the old tavern there had
-been built a more imposing structure, the new and the old composing the
-summer hotel.
-
-But the village had not "boomed." It remained the same peaceful, quiet,
-quaint, and interesting village as of yore. Those cottagers who remained
-after the boom died out were rather glad than otherwise that the
-picturesque place had not been transformed into a fashionable resort.
-They liked it for its tranquillity and quaintness, and soon came into
-sympathy and friendliness with the villagers, who had parted with their
-lands only with the greatest reluctance, and who viewed the new order of
-things with a suspicion born of years of conservativeness.
-
-The gaiety of the place centred about the hotel, where, too, the greater
-number of the guests were those who came year after year, and who would
-as soon have thought of going to Jericho as to any other place than the
-island.
-
-The leading citizen of the village was Squire James Brackett, and its
-moving spirit one Captain Curtis, or "Cap'n Sam," as he was familiarly
-known. The former owned the best house in the village, a big, rambling,
-two-story farmhouse, perched on the hill overlooking the harbour. He was
-a vessel-owner and a man of importance. He was the only man in the town
-who had persistently refused to associate with the summer residents,
-which some attributed to the fact that he feared lest their coming might
-disturb his sway over town affairs.
-
-Captain Sam was a man of altogether different stamp. It is safe to say he
-was on good terms with everybody on the island. He was for ever busy; the
-first man to arise in the town, and the last to retire at night. In fact,
-it is a fair assumption that, had Captain Sam deserted the island at an
-early date in its history, the town might have eventually fallen so sound
-asleep that it would not have awakened to this day.
-
-Captain Sam united in his activities the duties of storekeeper, coal and
-ice merchant, musician, constable, and schoolmaster, the latter vocation
-occupying his winter months. The energy of the village was concentrated
-in this one man, who seemed tireless. He was on intimate terms with
-everybody, and knew everybody's business. That he was rather good-looking
-was the cause of some pangs of jealousy on the part of young Mrs. Curtis,
-when business called her husband away among the housewives and maids of
-the village. Finally, Captain Sam had a voice which defied walls and
-distance. It was even told by some of the village humourists that he had
-once stood at the head of the island and hailed a vessel sailing around
-the extreme southern end, thirteen miles distant.
-
-Grand Island, lying in the middle of the bay, almost divides the upper
-part of it into two big bodies of water, so that there are two great
-thoroughfares for vessels, leading out to sea, the western being the more
-generally used, for it is a more direct passage. The eastern bay is
-filled with islands at the entrance to the sea.
-
-In the course of an hour, the boys who had gone to the woods returned to
-the camp, bringing with them four spruce poles. These were quickly
-trimmed of their branches, and cut to an even length of about seven feet.
-Then, four stakes being driven into the ground on each side of the tent
-under the walls, to form the legs of the bunks, the poles were mounted on
-these and made fast. Then pieces of board were nailed across from pole to
-pole, and on these were placed mattresses stuffed with dry hay from
-Captain Sam's stable.
-
-"There," said young Joe, throwing himself on one of them, "is a spring
-bed that can't be beaten anywhere. I know some think spruce boughs are
-better, but they dry, and the needles fall off, and the bed gets hard.
-These will last all summer."
-
-The pliant spruce poles were as good, indeed, as springs.
-
-In the meantime the younger boys had dug a trench completely around the
-tent, extending to the edge of the bank on one side of the point, so that
-a heavy rain could not flood the floor. In the rear of the tent they had
-set a huge box belonging to the campers, made of a packing-case and
-provided with a cover that lifted on leather hinges, and a padlock. It
-was, presumably, filled with the camp outfit. In one corner of the tent,
-on a box, they placed a large oil-stove and oven. The bedding was taken
-inside, and everything made shipshape. The comfort of the prospective
-campers seemed assured.
-
-Over the top of the tent they had also stretched a big piece of stout
-cloth, made for the purpose, which was fastened to the ground at the ends
-with guy-ropes and pegs, and which was to protect the tent against
-leaking water in any long rainy period, and also serve as additional
-shade in hot weather.
-
-The boys had done a hard afternoon's work. Pinning back the flaps of the
-tent, they sat at the entrance and looked out across the bay. The wind,
-which blew from the southeast, had not grown idle during the afternoon,
-but had increased steadily, and now came strong and damp from off the
-bay, rushing in at the opening of the tent and bulging it out so that it
-tugged violently at the ropes.
-
-"It won't do to leave the tent-door unpinned," said Henry Burns. "It's
-going to blow great guns to-night." So, closing the entrance and making
-it fast, they went to the edge of the bank and sat there.
-
-"It's rough out there now," said George Warren, pointing to the bay,
-which was one mass of foaming waves; "but it will be worse from now till
-midnight. The wind is going to blow harder and the tide is just beginning
-to run out."
-
-The tide indeed set strongly down the island shore, so that when it met
-the wind and waves blown up from oceanward it made a rough and turbulent
-chop sea.
-
-All at once as they sat there a sailboat rushed out from behind the
-headland across the cove and thrashed its way through the white-capped
-waves, heading down the island and throwing the spray at every plunge
-into the seas. Those aboard had evidently a reckless disregard for their
-own safety, for, although such few coasters as could be seen in the
-distance were scudding for harbour, fearful of the approaching storm,
-this craft carried not only full mainsail and forestaysail,--sail, too,
-that was large for the boat at all times,--but a topsail and a jib. The
-boat was hauled well into the wind and heeled over, so that the water
-again and again came over the board into the cockpit.
-
-Perched upon the windward rail were three boys. A fourth, a boy evidently
-near George Warren's age, stood at the wheel, seemingly the most
-unconcerned of all. He was large of his age and powerfully built, and his
-sleeves, rolled above the elbow, showed two brown and brawny arms. A
-fifth boy, somewhat younger in appearance, lying in the bottom of the
-boat, with feet braced against the side, held the main-sheet.
-
-The boat was a white sloop, about thirty feet in length over all, and
-clearly fast and able.
-
-"I'll say one thing for Jack Harvey and his crew," exclaimed George
-Warren, as the yacht rushed by the point, "although I think they're a
-mean lot. They can handle a boat as well as any skipper on the island.
-And as for fear, they don't know what it means."
-
-"Look!" he cried. "Do you see what they are doing?" as the yacht was
-suddenly brought, quivering, into the wind and headed away from the
-island on the other tack. "There's nothing in the world Jack Harvey's
-doing that for except to frighten the hotel guests. He sees the crowd on
-the piazza watching him, and is just making game of their fright. He'll
-sail out there as long as he dares, or until his topmast goes, just to
-keep them watching him."
-
-And so indeed it proved. An anxious crowd of summer guests at the hotel
-had no sooner begun to rejoice at the boat's apparent safety, than they
-saw it go about and head out into the bay once more. Then they breathed
-easier as it headed about again, and came rushing in. Then as it once
-more headed for the bay, they realized that what they were witnessing was
-a sheer bit of folly and recklessness. Angry as they were, they could but
-stand there and watch the yacht manoeuvre, the women crying out whenever
-a flaw threw the yacht over so that the mainsail was wet by the waves;
-the men angry at the bravado of the youthful yachtsmen, and vowing that
-the yacht might sink and the crew go with it before they would lift a
-hand to save one of them. All of which they knew they did not mean,--a
-fact which only increased their irritation.
-
-"Ah!" said George Warren, as a big drop of rain suddenly splashed on his
-cheek. "Perhaps this will drive them in, if the wind won't." It had,
-indeed, begun to rain hard, and, although the crew of the yacht must have
-been drenched through and through with the flying spray, the water from
-the sky had, evidently, a more dampening effect on their spirits, for the
-yacht was headed inshore, and soon ran into a cove about three-quarters
-of a mile down the island, behind a point of land where, through the
-trees, the indistinct outlines of a tent could be seen.
-
-And so, as it was now the time when the sun would have set upon the bay,
-if it had not been shut out from sight by a heavy mass of clouds, and as
-the wind came laden with rain, which dashed in the faces of those who
-were out-of-doors to encounter it, the boys turned from the spot where
-they had gathered and hurried for shelter, the brothers to their cottage,
-and Henry Burns to the hotel.
-
-The tent, swayed by the fierce gusts of wind, tugged at its ropes; the
-reckless crew of the white sloop had found shelter, and those vessels
-that were out upon the bay eagerly sought the same.
-
-But in that part of the bay which rolled between the northern end of the
-island and the mouth of the river, fifteen miles away, a greater piece of
-recklessness was being enacted than was ever dared by Harvey and his
-careless crew. There was none on shore there to witness it, for the
-island at that extreme end was bare of settlement.
-
-A mile from the nearest land, seemingly at the mercy of a wild sea which
-threatened every moment to engulf it, a small canoe slowly and stubbornly
-fought its way toward the island shore. At a distance one would have
-thought it a mere log, tossed about at random by the waves; and yet, one
-watching it would have seen it slowly draw ahead, glide from under the
-spray that broke constantly over its bow, and still make progress;
-sometimes beaten back by billows that tumbled fast one upon another, but
-gaining something through it all.
-
-There were two occupants of the craft, and, though but mere youths, none
-could have handled the paddles more skilfully. Yet it was a question of
-the great sea's strength against their endurance. What would happen
-should they find that there came a time when they made no gain? If they
-turned about, even supposing that were possible, the storm might drive
-them across the bay once more, but their strength and courage would be
-gone, and they could hardly hope to reach the shore. It was either the
-island goal or nothing.
-
-One standing on the shore would scarce have seen them now. Darkness began
-to hide them. But the island loomed up, dim and shadowy, before them, and
-they struggled on against the storm.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
- TO THE RESCUE
-
-
-A person leaving the wharf at Southport would ordinarily take one of
-three roads: the one directly ahead leading up through the village and
-past the hotel; the one to the left passing by, though at some distance
-from, the cottages that were scattered irregularly along the south shore
-of the bay; the road to the right leading similarly to the cottages on
-that shore. The shore there, however, made a deep sweep, bordering on a
-cove of some considerable extent.
-
-From the shore in all directions the land sloped back, with a gradual
-rise for about a mile. Cottages dotted the slope here and there.
-
-To the right of the wharf and the farthest away from it of any dwelling
-was the Warren cottage. Somewhat hidden in a grove of spruce-trees, its
-broad piazza commanded a fine view of the bay and the islands in the
-distance.
-
-On this particular evening, however, there was little inducement of wind
-or weather for one to linger there. The rain, driven by the wind through
-fluttering tree-branches, dashed itself against the cottage windows as
-though the drops were drawn, like moths, to the light which shone from
-within; then fell in pools and was swept away by driving gusts. Nought to
-be seen there now but sea and sky in wild commotion; darkness in all the
-air, blackness over all the bay.
-
-But, despite the dreariness of the storm outside, there was pleasing
-comfort within the cottage. The increasing darkness of the night, the
-dashing rain and the noisy wind, like unwelcome guests, came only to the
-threshold and gained no admittance. A fire of driftwood blazed in the big
-stone fireplace, and the soft rays shed by a lamp suspended from the
-ceiling further lighted up the cosy room.
-
-There were four occupants of the room. Mrs. Warren, a sweet-faced, cheery
-little woman, and the three brothers, were seated about the fire. They
-were conversing earnestly, and, as the talk progressed, it seemed as
-though the influence of the storm was getting into the room.
-
-"It's no use, mother," said George Warren, who stood in front of the
-fireplace, facing the others, "trying to make us think that Tom and Bob
-did not start to cross the bay. Ever since the boys were out in the big
-storm on Moosehead Lake they've been afraid of nothing. Tom Harris
-declares his canoe will stand as rough a sea as a dory,--and, what's
-more, the storm hadn't begun by the time they must have left the mouth of
-the river."
-
-"Yes, but Captain Chase would warn them not to cross."
-
-"I've no doubt he did, mother; and, if he did, that might make it so much
-the worse. If the boys had been in a sailboat they probably would have
-listened to him; but the captain would sneer at that canoe, and would
-like as not tell them it wasn't fit to cross the bay in at any time, much
-less in rough water. And that would be just enough to put them on their
-mettle. They'd make the attempt, even if they had to put back."
-
-"Yes, and Tom said in the note that they would be here to-night," broke
-in young Joe. "And when he gave that to Captain Chase to bring, it showed
-he meant to start, anyway."
-
-"But when the storm increased they would put back," urged Mrs. Warren.
-
-"No," answered George, "they must have gotten two-thirds of the way
-across the bay before the worst of the storm broke. The storm seemed to
-hold up for an hour or two during the latter part of the afternoon, and
-then increased all of a sudden with the turn of the tide. The boys would
-have gotten so far across that it would be too late to turn back, and
-they would have to keep on."
-
-"And yet you boys want to imitate their recklessness!" cried Mrs. Warren,
-impatiently. "Come, Arthur," and she turned to the boy who had remained
-silent thus far during the discussion. "Help me convince your brothers of
-their mistake. You don't agree with them, I am sure."
-
-The boy thus addressed, though a year younger than his elder brother, was
-the one on whose judgment the mother more often relied. He was fully as
-active as the other two, but his was a calmer temperament than theirs.
-This confidence in him really extended to his brothers, though they joked
-him on his moderate, studious ways, and called him the "professor,"
-because he was a little near-sighted and sometimes wore glasses. He came
-forward now and stood by his mother's chair.
-
-"I can't help thinking, mother, that George and Joe are right," he said,
-deliberately, while poor Mrs. Warren gasped with dismay. "You wouldn't
-have us play the parts of cowards while the boys may be in danger, and
-when we can perhaps save them. There isn't half the danger you imagine,
-either. The wind is blowing now squarely from the east, and once we have
-beaten out of the cove we can sail alongshore without heading out to sea.
-
-"Then, too," he continued, "the yacht is nearly new, and was fitted with
-new rigging this year. We'll promise to sail only a little past the head
-of the island and return, or run into Bryant's Cove and walk back. It's
-no more than we ought to do for the best friends we've got. There's not
-another sailboat in the harbour to-night that is as stiff as ours, except
-Jack Harvey's, and it's out of the question to ask him. The other boats
-went out to the races at Seal Harbour, or we would get Captain Sam to go
-in his yacht. We can't ask Jack Harvey to go--that's certain."
-
-"Wouldn't he laugh at us, though!" said George. "He would offer to tow
-our boat along, too, or something of that sort, just to be mean, and then
-there'd be a nice row."
-
-Besieged on all sides, Mrs. Warren could but yield a partial consent.
-
-"You and George can go," she said, turning to Arthur, "but Joe must stay
-with me. I can't spare you all to take such an awful risk."
-
-"I won't stay!" cried young Joe, hotly. "That is to say, I--I don't want
-to," he hastened to add, as Mrs. Warren looked reproachfully at him.
-"They need me to help sail the _Spray_,--don't you, fellows?"
-
-"There ought to be three to manage the boat in this wind," said George,
-somewhat reluctantly. "I guess you'll have to let him go, mother--"
-
-But at this moment there was the sound of footsteps upon the piazza. Some
-one walked around the house, gave a premonitory knock at the door, and
-let himself in.
-
-It was Henry Burns. He was equipped for the storm, in oilskins, rubber
-boots, and a tarpaulin hat. The water ran from his clothing in little
-streams and made a series of pools on the polished wood floor. Declining
-Mrs. Warren's offer of a seat, on the ground that he was too wet, Henry
-Burns stood by the mantel near the fireplace, and, with tarpaulin
-removed, still looked the pale and delicate student, despite his rough
-garments.
-
-"Ahoy there, shipmates," he said, with great gravity, waving the
-tarpaulin at the group. "You weren't thinking of cruising for your health
-this evening, were you? Because, if you were, my health isn't as good as
-it might be, and I think a little salt air would do it good."
-
-"Bravo!" cried George Warren. "You might know Henry Burns would be on
-hand if there was any excitement going on. Never knew him to fail,--Joe,
-you'll have to stay at home now and keep mother company. We don't need
-more than three. Come, Arthur, hurry! We mustn't lose a minute longer."
-
-And while young Joe turned away, almost in tears at the verdict, the
-other two boys scrambled about, hastily donning reefers, oilskins, and
-heavy boots. Then they were gone with a rush and a bang of the door, and
-Mrs. Warren and Joe composed themselves as best they could to await their
-return.
-
-And could any of them have imagined then, looking forth through the
-darkness and the storm, an overturned canoe pounding helplessly upon the
-beach of that island shore, it surely would not have comforted the
-watchers nor have given courage to those who went forth to rescue.
-
-Descending the bank to the shore of the cove, the boys quickly launched a
-rowboat, the tender to the yacht, and, with Henry Burns seated in the
-stern, tiller-ropes in hand, the brothers, about equal in strength,
-pulled vigorously across the cove, where the sloop lay at anchor under
-the lee of the bluff. It was no easy task to cross the cove in that sea;
-and often Henry Burns turned the boat from its course and headed out
-toward the entrance, to meet some enormous wave that, had it broken over
-the side of the boat, would have filled and swamped it.
-
-The yacht _Spray_, sheltered as it was from the brunt of the storm, was
-tossing about uneasily as the boys climbed aboard and made the tender
-fast astern. It was a small craft, about twenty-five feet over all, with
-the hull painted black. It was trim and was able for its size, but, safe
-to say, not a fisherman in the village would have cared to put out in it
-this night. Still, the boat had been built on an outer island of the bay
-for fishing in heavy weather, and was seaworthy.
-
-There were three sets of reefing-points in the mainsail, and, after some
-discussion, it was decided to reef the sail down to its smallest size.
-While Henry Burns hoisted the sail slightly, the brothers hastily tied in
-the reefs, and the halyards were then drawn taut at throat and peak and
-made fast. The tender was tied to the buoy. There was no use trying to
-tow it in that sea. Then, with George Warren at the tiller, Arthur and
-Henry Burns cast off, and the voyage was begun.
-
-When Mr. Warren purchased the boat for his boys, he had it rigged with
-especial care for an emergency. The main-sheet was rigged to run through
-a double set of pulleys, so that the mainsail could be hauled with
-comparative ease in a heavy gale. The sail he had cut down smaller than
-the boat had been carrying, so there was less danger of her capsizing.
-That very precaution was, however, to prove a source of trouble on this
-particular night.
-
-Arthur Warren and Henry Burns now came aft, the iron centreboard was
-dropped, and the yacht was almost instantly under headway, standing out
-by the bluff and heading almost directly across the cove. Arthur Warren
-held the main-sheet, while Henry Burns seated himself, with feet braced
-against the centreboard-box, ready for any emergency.
-
-For a moment they were in comparatively smooth water, and then, as they
-emerged from the lee of the headland, it seemed as though they had been
-suddenly transported into another sea. The wind that struck them careened
-the boat over violently, as they were as yet under but little headway.
-Easing the yacht for a moment with the sheet, they righted somewhat, but
-the prospect was not pleasing. The _Spray_ did not head into the wind
-well, and they soon found they could not make even a straight course
-across the harbour, with the slant of wind they had.
-
-"We may make something on the next tack," said George, "but it doesn't
-look very encouraging."
-
-"Supposing you see how she comes about before we run in near shore,"
-suggested Arthur, after some minutes.
-
-In answer, George put the tiller hard down, after giving the little boat
-a good headway. The yacht went sluggishly in stays, hung almost in the
-eye of the wind for a moment, and then, failing to make headway against
-the heavy seas, fell off once more and would not come about.
-
-"There's only one thing we can do, boys," said George. "We must run in
-under the shelter of the wharf and shake out that last reef. The sail is
-too small to reef down so close. I'm sure she will beat under a double
-reef. It's the only thing left to do."
-
-It was the work of but a few minutes to carry out this plan. The third
-reef was shaken out and the sail hoisted. Once more the yacht emerged
-from shelter. The change for the better in its working was at once
-apparent. It pointed higher into the wind, though careening over so that
-the water came unpleasantly near the top of the high wash-boards. But the
-yacht would stand this. The question now to be tested was, would she act
-and come about under the still small sail she was carrying against the
-force of such a sea.
-
-"Now, then," said George, as they neared the bluff again, "we will try
-her once more. If she fails now we are beaten. We cannot carry more sail.
-That's sure."
-
-He put the tiller down as he spoke, and the _Spray_, responding bravely,
-headed into the seas. They strove angrily to overwhelm the little craft,
-and dashed furiously against her bows, while the wind worried the
-flapping sails as though it would tear them from boom and mast; but the
-_Spray_ held on and came about nobly, and they were away again on the
-other tack, standing across the harbour.
-
-It seemed an hour before they had beaten out where they dared to stand
-past the bluff and head alongshore. They had left all shelter hopelessly
-behind; on one side of them a wilderness of foaming waves rushed upon
-them from the darkness; on the other side lay the lee shore, high and
-rock-bound for the most part, but now and then broken by small stretches
-of beach. Against the former, the seas broke with heavy crashings; upon
-the other, with an ominous booming.
-
-But they headed off the wind a trifle, eased the sheet, made by the
-point, and stood along the shore as near as they dared to run. It was
-well for them that the little yacht was a good sea boat. Again and again,
-as some wave, lifting its white crest above the others, threatened to
-overwhelm them, the yacht was headed out to sea, and then the wave,
-lifting the boat high on its crest and rolling rapidly from beneath it
-till half the length of the yacht seemed poised in air, left it to fall
-heavily upon the next oncoming wave, or, worse still, to plunge into a
-watery gulf, there to be half-buried by the next big sea.
-
-But the yacht lived through it all and kept bravely on its course. Henry
-Burns's arms ached with bailing out the cockpit, where the seas broke in
-over the quarter, or came aboard in clouds of spray as they headed into
-the wind.
-
-They dared not sail near the shore, and could see it but indistinctly,
-save when some larger wave broke upon the beach and carved out a white
-line of foam, which vanished as quickly as it appeared. So against the
-cliffs that they passed they could see a sudden blur of white as a big
-wave hurled itself to destruction. Beyond this all was blear and
-indistinct.
-
-They were now within half a mile of the head of the island, and, looking
-ahead into the darkness, which, with the rain, had greatly increased
-within the last hour, like the beginning of a fog, they realized how
-useless was the search they had begun. They could see but the merest
-distance in any direction. The storm was steadily increasing, and already
-a new condition confronted them. The wind was shifting to the southeast,
-from east, so that their return was rendered impossible. It was worse
-than folly to think of beating back in such a head sea. The wind on their
-quarter was driving them along furiously. It was madness to dream of
-keeping on past the head of the island.
-
-"We can't make Bryant's Cove any too soon to suit me," said George. "The
-_Spray_ has got more wind now than she knows what to do with."
-
-The little boat was, indeed, burying her bows under at every plunge, and
-trembled in all her timbers at the fearful strain. It was plain that she
-had reached the limit of her seaworthiness. Bryant's Cove was a short
-distance around the head of the island. Once there, they would be
-sheltered from the storm.
-
-The boys had ceased to speak of a possible rescue of their friends. It
-was a question of their own salvation now, and the instinct of
-self-preservation asserted itself. Henry Burns peered eagerly ahead, but
-looked only for the point of land behind which lay their safety. Suddenly
-he turned and uttered a shrill cry of fright, such as no one had ever
-heard from him before.
-
-"Luff her, George! Luff quick--quick, for your life!" he cried, and,
-springing for the tiller, threw his weight against it ere the startled
-helmsman could find strength to act.
-
-The yacht, with sails slatting, came into the wind amid a cloud of spray.
-The boom, striking a wave, had nearly snapped in two. But it was not an
-instant too soon.
-
-A black object that looked enormous rose suddenly out of the sea in front
-of the _Spray_. The next wave lifted it high in the air, and hurled it
-down upon them. It was a ship's yawl-boat, of immense size, fully as
-large as the yacht itself. Down the watery declivity it shot, swift and
-straight, like some sea-monster in pursuit of its quarry.
-
-But the little yacht had answered her helm well. There was a crash and a
-splintering of wood, and the yawl drifted rapidly past and was lost in
-the darkness. The yacht _Spray_, her bowsprit and fore-rigging torn away,
-once more fell off the wind and was driven on by the storm. It was an
-escape so narrow that a moment more and they had been dashed to pieces.
-
-Henry Burns was the first to regain his courage.
-
-"It's better the bowsprit than the rudder," he said, coolly. And his
-courage gave them strength. A few minutes later they had passed the head
-of the island and gained the lee of the land, and in fifteen minutes more
-they had cast anchor in Bryant's Cove.
-
-"I am willing to do whatever you boys think is best," said George Warren,
-as they lowered and furled the sail and made the yacht snug for the
-night. "But I think it's of no use for us to make any search for the boys
-along this shore. If they capsized in the bay to-night, neither they nor
-their canoe would come ashore here. The canoe would be blown across the
-bay; and they-- Well, we're bound to believe that they didn't start, or,
-if they did, that they put back."
-
-"I don't see but what we have done all we can to-night," responded his
-brother; "and, as we have got five miles of muddy road to travel, the
-sooner we start the better. We could stay in the boat to-night, but we
-must get back on mother's account. Depend upon it, she has worried every
-single minute we have been gone, and I don't blame her, either. Now it's
-all over, I don't mind saying I think we were fools to come out. But we
-meant well, so perhaps the less said the better. We'll have to leave the
-_Spray_ to herself till the storm goes down. Nobody will harm her."
-
-"I don't mind staying here to-night and looking after her," said Henry
-Burns. "To be sure, old Witham doesn't know I have left the hotel, but I
-tumbled my bed up before I came away, and he will only think I got up
-early in the morning, if he wonders where I am."
-
-"No, no, old fellow. We won't let you stay. We won't hear of it," said
-both brothers. "The sooner we all get home and get dry clothes on, the
-better. There's no need of any of us staying. The _Spray_ won't sail out
-of the cove of herself, and every one on the island knows her."
-
-So, as they had left the tender behind, they removed their clothing, tied
-it into bundles, slung them around their necks, and, slipping overboard,
-swam to shore.
-
-"If I ever was more glad to get on land alive than I am at present," said
-Henry Burns, his teeth chattering with the cold, as he hastily scrambled
-into his clothes, "I don't happen to remember it just at this instant. I
-wonder if my aunt would send me down here again for my health if she
-could see me now."
-
-There was something so ludicrous in the idea that the boys could not help
-bursting into roars of laughter,--though they felt little enough like
-merriment.
-
-"The more I think of it," said Henry Burns, "the more I believe the boys
-are snug ashore at Millville, and that they haven't been within ten miles
-of Grand Island to-night."
-
-"I think you are right, Henry," responded Arthur.
-
-"It must be so," said George.
-
-And yet not one of them dared to believe absolutely that what he said was
-true.
-
-They started off across lots now, walking as rapidly as their wet and
-heavy clothing would allow, to strike the road which led to the harbour.
-Coming at length into this road, they had walked but a short distance,
-and were at the top of a hill at a turn of the road where it left the
-shore, when Henry Burns, pointing down along the shore, said:
-
-"We ought to remember that part of the bay as long as we live, for we
-shall never be much nearer to death than we were right there."
-
-"Sure enough," responded Arthur, "it was just about off there that the
-big yawl smashed our bowsprit off."
-
-"The yawl must have been driven ashore by this time," said George. "Wait
-a minute and I will take a look." And he disappeared over the bank and
-was lost in the bushes. The two boys seated themselves by the side of the
-road to await his return, but started up with a horror in their hearts as
-a shrill cry came up to them from the shore. There was that in the cry
-that told them that George Warren had found other than the ship's
-long-boat. They scarcely dared to think what. Then they, too, dashed down
-the slope to the shore.
-
-When they reached his side, George Warren could scarcely speak from
-emotion.
-
-"Look! Look!" he cried, in a trembling, choking voice, and pointed out
-upon the beach where the tide had gone down.
-
-There were two strange objects there that the sea had buffeted in its
-wild play that night, and then, as though grown tired of them, had cast
-upon the shore, among the rocks and seaweed.
-
-One was the long-boat, no longer an object of danger, for the sea had
-hurled it against a rock and stove its side in. The other was a canoe.
-The sea had overturned it and tossed it upon the shore. Two of its
-thwarts were smashed where it had been dropped down and pinioned upon a
-rock--and the rock held it fast.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
- A SURPRISE
-
-
-With hearts beating quick and hard, they lifted the canoe from the rock,
-fearful of what they might find beneath it; but there was nothing there.
-Then they searched along the beach in the darkness as best they could,
-peering anxiously into clumps of seaweed, and standing now and again
-fixed with horror as some dim object, cast up by the sea, assumed in
-shadowy outline the semblance of a human form. The shore was heaped here
-and there with piles of driftwood and ends of logs that had come down
-through countless tides and currents from the lumber-mills miles up the
-river, and this stuff had lodged among the ledges and boulders at various
-points along the beach. Here and there among these they hunted, groping
-amid the seaweed, cold and chill to the touch, and suggesting to their
-minds, already alert with dread, the most gruesome of discoveries which
-they feared to make.
-
-That the boys had crossed the bay in the frail craft which they had just
-found there seemed to be no possible doubt. Furthermore, they were now
-led to believe that Tom and Bob, having once reached a point where they
-could have found shelter, had chosen to keep on past the head of the
-island in an effort to make the harbour of Southport. They must at least,
-as the wind had blown, have reached a point opposite where the boys had
-found the canoe, and have, perhaps, paddled some distance beyond.
-
-But it was clearly useless to continue the search further in the darkness
-and storm. They lifted the canoe and carried it up from the beach, and
-hid it in the bushes upon the bank. Then they went slowly back to the
-road.
-
-"I tell you what we can do," said Arthur Warren. "I hate to go back to
-the cottage without making one more search. Let's get a lantern and come
-back. We shall not have to go far for one,--and we shall have done all we
-can, then, though it is a bad night to see anything."
-
-The rain was, indeed, pouring in torrents and driving in sheets against
-their faces.
-
-"Yes, we must do that much," said George. "And then--then we can come
-back in the morning--" His voice choked, and he could not say more. They
-went on down the muddy road in silence.
-
-Shortly below the hill, upon the road, was a big farmhouse, arriving at
-which they turned into the yard. The house was in darkness, save one dim
-light in a chamber; but they pounded at the door with the heavy brass
-knocker till they heard the shuffling of feet in the entry, and a voice
-inquired roughly what was wanted. They answered, and the door was opened
-cautiously a few inches, where it was held fast by a heavy chain. An old
-man's face peered out at them. The sight of the boys was evidently
-reassuring, for, in a moment more, the man threw open the door and
-invited them to walk in.
-
-"There be rough sailors come by some nights," he said, in a manner
-apologizing for his suspicion. "I'm here alone, and"--he lowered his
-voice to a husky whisper--"they do say that I have a bit of money hid
-away in the old house. But it's a lie. It's a lie. It's the sea and the
-garden I live on. There's not a bit of money in the old house. But what
-brings you out in such a storm? You haven't lost your way, have you?"
-
-They told their story, while the old man sat in a chair, shaking his head
-dubiously. When they told him of the finding of the canoe, and their
-certainty that the boys had crossed in it, he declared that it could
-never have lived to get to the island.
-
-"It must have come from down below," he said. "It could never have been
-paddled across the bay against this sea. Two boys, d'ye say, paddled it?
-No. No, my lads, never--upon my life, never. Two stout men in a dory, and
-used to these waters, might have done it; but two lads in a cockle-shell
-like that would never have reached the Head, let alone getting beyond
-it."
-
-He seemed to regard them almost with suspicion, when they told him of how
-they had sailed up along shore in search of their comrades, and was
-perhaps inclined to believe their whole story as some kind of a hoax.
-Certain it was he gave them little comfort, except to say he would look
-alongshore in the morning. If any one had drowned offshore in the
-evening, they might not come ashore till the next day, he said.
-
-But he got a battered lantern for them and handed it over with a
-trembling hand, cautioning them to be careful of it, and to leave it by
-the door on their way back. They heard him bolt the heavy door behind
-them as they turned out of the yard into the road. A clock in the kitchen
-had struck the hour of ten as they left the house.
-
-"Isn't it very probable, after all," said George, as they walked along,
-"that the man may be right, and that this canoe we have found is one that
-has been lost off some steamer?"
-
-"It seems to me perhaps as probable," answered Henry Burns, "as that the
-boys should have attempted to keep on in the storm, having once reached a
-place of safety."
-
-"I wish I could think so," said Arthur. "But I can't help fearing the
-worst,--and if the boys are lost," he exclaimed bitterly, "I've seen all
-I want to of this island for one summer. I'd never enjoy another day
-here."
-
-"I won't believe it's their canoe until I have to," said George. "They
-are not such reckless chaps as we have been making them out."
-
-And he tried to say this bravely, as though he really meant it.
-
-They tramped along the rest of the way to the shore in silence, for none
-of them dared to admit to another that which he could not but believe.
-
-By the lantern's dim and flickering light they searched the beach again
-for a half-mile along in the vicinity of where the canoe had come ashore.
-But nothing rewarded their hunt.
-
-"The old man must be right," said George Warren. "The canoe must have
-come ashore from some steamer. Let's go home, anyway. We've done all we
-can."
-
-Heart-sick and weary, they began the tramp back to the cottage. At about
-a mile from the old farmhouse, where they left the lantern, they turned
-off from the road and made a cut across fields, till they came at length
-to the shore of the cove opposite the Warren cottage. They could see
-across the water the gleam of a large lantern which young Joe had hung on
-the piazza for them; but the boat they had expected to find drawn up on
-shore was gone.
-
-"Old Slade must be over in town," said Henry Burns; "and he won't be back
-to-night, probably. So it's either walk two miles more around the cove or
-swim out to the tender. We're all of us tired out. Shall we draw lots to
-see who swims?"
-
-"I'll go, myself," volunteered George. "I'd rather swim that short
-distance than do any more walking. I'm about done up, but I am good for
-that much." And he threw off his clothing once more, and swam pluckily
-out to the tender and brought it ashore. They pulled across the cove to
-the shore back of the cottage, and, springing out, carried the boat high
-up on land.
-
-They were at the cottage then in a twinkling; but, even before they had
-reached the door, dear Mrs. Warren, who had heard their steps upon the
-walk, was outside in the rain, hugging her boys who had braved the storm
-and who had come back safe. She was altogether too much overcome at the
-sight of them, it seemed, to inquire if they had found those in search of
-whom they had set out.
-
-And then the dear little woman, having embraced and kissed them as though
-they had been shipwrecked mariners, long given up for lost,--not
-forgetting Henry Burns, who wasn't used to it, but who took it calmly all
-the same, as he did everything else,--hurried them into the kitchen,
-where young Joe had the big cook-stove all of a red heat, and where dry
-clothing for the three from the extensive Warren wardrobe was warming by
-the fire.
-
-A comical welcome they got from young Joe, who had been just as much
-worried as Mrs. Warren, but who hadn't admitted it to his mother for a
-moment, and had scornfully denied the existence of danger, and yet who
-was every bit as relieved as she to see the boys safe. He tried not to
-appear as though a great weight had been removed from his mind by their
-return, but made altogether a most commendable failure.
-
-The big, roomy, old-fashioned kitchen--for the Warren cottage had
-originally been a rambling old farmhouse, which they had remodelled and
-modernized--had never seemed so cosy before. And the fire had never
-seemed more cheery than it did now. And when they had scrambled into dry,
-warm clothing, and Mrs. Warren had taken the teakettle from the hob, and
-poured them each a steaming cup of tea, to "draw out the chill," they
-forgot for the moment what they had been through and their sad discovery.
-
-In fact, it seemed as though Mrs. Warren and young Joe were strangely
-indifferent to what had sent them forth, and were easily satisfied with
-the opinions expressed by the boys, who had agreed not to mention the
-finding of the canoe until something more definite was learned, that Tom
-and Bob had in all probability not left the river.
-
-So easily satisfied, indeed, and so little affected by the fruitless
-errand they had been on, that all at once Henry Burns, who had been eying
-Mrs. Warren sharply for some moments, suddenly rose up from where he was
-sitting, and rushed out of the kitchen, through the dining-room, into the
-front part of the house. Wondering what had come over him, the others
-followed.
-
-What they saw was a tableau, with Henry Burns as exhibitor. He had drawn
-aside the heavy portiere with one hand, and stood pointing into the room
-with the other.
-
-There, seated before the fireplace, were two boys so much like Tom and
-Bob, whom they had given up for lost, that their own mothers, had they
-been there, would have wept for joy at the sight of them. And then, what
-with the Warren boys pounding them and hugging them, like young bears, to
-make sure they were flesh and blood, and not the ghosts of Tom and Bob,
-and with the cheers that fairly made the old rafters ring, and the
-happiness of Mrs. Warren, who was always willing to adopt every boy from
-far and near who was a friend of one of her boys,--what with all this,
-there was altogether a scene that would have done any one's heart good,
-and might have shamed the storm outside, if it had been any other kind of
-a storm than a pitiless southeaster.
-
-Then, though the hour was getting late, they all sat about the big
-fireplace, and Tom narrated the story of the shipwreck.
-
-But, just as he began, young Joe said, with mock gravity:
-
-"We haven't introduced Henry Burns to the boys yet. Henry, this is Tom
-Harris, and this is Bob White."
-
-"I don't think we need an introduction to one who has risked his life for
-us," said Tom Harris, heartily, as he and Bob sprang up to shake hands
-with Henry Burns. But Henry Burns, carrying out the joke, bowed very
-formally, and politely said he was extremely happy to make their
-acquaintance. At which Tom and Bob, unfamiliar with the ways of Henry
-Burns, stared in astonishment, which sent the Warren boys into roars of
-laughter.
-
-The boys thus introduced to Henry Burns were handsome young fellows,
-evidently about the same age,--in fact, each lacked but a few months of
-fifteen,--thick-set and strongly built. The sons of well-to-do parents,
-and neighbours, they had been inseparable companions ever since they
-could remember. Tom Harris's father was the owner of extensive tracts in
-the Maine woods, from which lumber was cut yearly and rafted down the
-streams to his lumber-mills. In company with him on several surveying and
-exploring expeditions, the boys had hunted and fished together, and had
-paddled for weeks along the streams and on the lakes of the great Maine
-wilderness.
-
-They had hunted and fished in the Parmachenee and the Rangeley Lake
-region, and knew a great deal more of real camp life than most boys of
-double their age. Further than this, they were schoolmates, and were so
-equally matched in athletic sports, in which they both excelled, that
-neither had ever been able to gain a decided victory over the other. Tom
-was of rather light complexion, while Bob was dark, with curly, black
-hair.
-
-It was through their friendship with the Warren boys, who lived not far
-from them, in the same town, that they had decided to spend the summer
-camping on Grand Island.
-
-As they all gathered around the cheerful blaze of the fire, Tom told the
-story of the day's adventures.
-
-With so much of their camp kit as they needed for cooking along the
-river, they had started from the town of Benton at about four o'clock
-that morning, just as the tide began to ebb. Hardened as they were to the
-use of the paddle, by the time the tide had ceased to ebb and slack water
-ensued, they had left the city miles behind and were well down the river.
-
-Then the flood tide began to set strong against them, and a wind arose
-that furrowed the river with waves that were not big enough to be
-noticeable to larger craft, but which seriously impeded the progress of
-the frail canoe. They kept steadily on, but made slow headway.
-
-At Millville, a few miles above the mouth of the river, where it
-broadened out into the bay, they had met the steamer, and had hastily
-scrawled the note which Captain Chase had brought to the Warren boys.
-
-Sure enough, Captain Chase had warned them of the impending storm, and,
-furthermore, had offered to transport them and their canoe across the
-bay; but they had declined his offer, wishing to paddle the entire
-distance to the island. They had set their hearts on making the trip of
-forty miles in one day; and partly for this reason, and partly because
-Captain Chase had looked askance at their canoe, and had assured them
-that it was not a fit craft for bay work in any weather, let alone in a
-heavy sea, they had set out, toward the latter part of the afternoon, to
-cross the fifteen miles of bay which lay between them and Grand Island.
-
-The storm which had threatened gradually closed in around them, but they
-held on stubbornly, until, when too far across the bay to put back, it
-rapidly gathered strength, and soon turned what had been a comparatively
-safe pathway across the sea into a wilderness of waves, that at one
-moment rose high above the bow of the canoe, dashing them with spray as
-the sharp canoe cleaved them, and the next dropped down beneath them,
-opening a watery trench, into which they plunged.
-
-They had seen storms like this, that came quick and sharp upon the lakes,
-heaving up a sea almost in a moment, with squalls that swept down from
-the hills. They had been safely through them before; but at those times
-it had been a short, sharp battle for a half-hour at most, before they
-could reach a friendly shore. But here it was different. Here were miles
-of intervening water between them and the nearest land. This was no lake,
-to be quickly within the shelter of some protecting point of land.
-
-But they had never for a moment lost courage nor despaired of coming
-through all right. They struggled pluckily on, and might have gotten
-safely to land without mishap, if they had been familiar with the shore
-of the island. To a stranger, the shore about the head of the island
-presented a sheer front of forbidding cliffs, rising abruptly from the
-water, and against which, in a storm, the sea dashed furiously.
-
-There was apparently no place at which a boat could be landed; and yet,
-hidden behind the very barrier of ledge that sheltered it, lay Bryant's
-Cove, as quiet and sequestered a pool as any fugitive craft could wish to
-find. Had the boys known of its existence, they would have landed there,
-and have been at the Warren cottage before the _Spray_ had left the
-harbour.
-
-As it was, there seemed to them to be no alternative but to keep on to a
-point about half a mile farther along the shore, where they hoped to be
-able to make a landing upon the beach.
-
-They had accomplished the distance, and were fast nearing a place where
-they could land in safety, when a most unexpected and disastrous accident
-happened. Suddenly, and without the slightest warning of its weakness,
-the paddle which Bob was using snapped in two in his hands. At the same
-moment a wave hit the canoe, and, with nothing with which to keep his
-balance, Bob was thrown bodily from the canoe into the sea, upsetting the
-canoe and spilling Tom out at the same time.
-
-The boys were able to grasp the canoe and cling on for a few minutes.
-They were both good swimmers, and often, in smooth water, had practised
-swimming, with the canoe upset, and were able to accomplish the feat of
-righting it, bailing it with a dipper, which they always carried attached
-to one of the thwarts by a cord, and then climbing aboard over the ends.
-But it was useless to attempt such a thing in this boisterous sea.
-
-Indeed, it was more than they could do, even, to cling to the overturned
-craft, for soon an enormous wave struck it a blow broadside and tore it
-from their grasp. Then ensued a fight for life that seemed almost
-hopeless. They were near to shore, but the sea seemed to delight in
-mocking them; tossing them in at one moment, so that they could grasp at
-seaweed that lay above the ledges, and then clutching at them and drawing
-them relentlessly back.
-
-It was then that their athletic training stood them in good stead. Less
-hardy constitutions and weaker muscles than theirs would have quickly
-tired under the strain. Refraining from useless struggles to gain the
-shore, they waited their opportunity, and strove merely for the moment to
-keep themselves afloat. In this manner they were, several times, almost
-cast up on shore.
-
-All at once Tom Harris felt a sharp pain in his right hand. Then he
-realized, with a thrill of hope, that he had struck it upon a rock. It
-was, indeed, a narrow reef that made out some distance from shore. They
-had narrowly escaped being dashed upon it head-foremost. Tom waited and
-gathered his strength as the next wave hurled him on its crest in the
-direction of the ledge. Then, as the wave bore him with great force
-against it, he broke the force of the shock with his hands, was thrown
-roughly up against it, and managed to cling fast, with his fingers in a
-niche of the rock, as the wave, receding, strove to drag him back again.
-
-Then, holding on with one hand, he managed somehow to grasp at Bob as he
-was drifting by, and hold him fast and draw him in. Clinging to the ledge
-as each succeeding wave broke over them, they waited till they had
-regained their strength and recovered their wind, and then slowly worked
-their way along the ledge to shore, and at length were safe, out of the
-sea's fury.
-
-Then they had rested awhile, before setting out on foot. Their canoe they
-could see at some distance out from shore, tossing about at the mercy of
-the waves. It must of necessity come ashore in due time, but it might not
-be for an hour, and they resolved not to wait for it, but to push on to
-their destination, returning on the morrow to look for it. They followed
-the shore for about a mile down the island, till they met a fisherman,
-who told them how to get to the Warren cottage by the same route the
-Warren boys and Henry Burns had taken a few hours later.
-
-They had crossed the cove in old Slade's boat, and, expecting to astonish
-the Warren boys by their appearance, in the midst of the storm, had
-found, to their dismay, that those whom they had expected to find safe at
-home were imperilling their lives for them out in the bay.
-
-"Well, I must be up and moving," said Henry Burns, when Tom had concluded
-his narrative. "I don't mind saying I'm a bit tired with this night's
-work--and I guess you are, by the looks. I can sleep, too, now that I
-know that you are not down among the mermaids at the bottom of Samoset
-Bay."
-
-"Why don't you stay here with the boys to-night, Henry?" said Mrs.
-Warren. "You cannot get into the hotel at this hour of the night, without
-waking everybody up. Colonel Witham closes up early, you know."
-
-"No one but Henry Burns can, mother," said Joe Warren. "Henry has a
-private staircase of his own."
-
-"It's a lightning-rod staircase, Mrs. Warren," explained Henry Burns. "I
-use it sometimes after ten o'clock, for that is my bedtime, you know.
-Mrs. Carlin--good soul--sends me off to bed regularly at that hour, no
-matter what is going on; and so I have to make use of it occasionally."
-
-Mrs. Warren shook her head doubtfully.
-
-"You shouldn't do it, Henry," she said. "Although I know it is hard for a
-strong, healthy boy to go off to bed every night at ten o'clock. Well,
-that comes of being too strict, I suppose,--but do look out and don't
-break your neck. It's a bad night to be climbing around."
-
-"Don't worry about Henry Burns, mother," said Arthur. "He wouldn't do it,
-if he wasn't forced to it,--and he knows how to take care of himself, if
-anybody does."
-
-"Well, good night," said Henry Burns. "And don't forget, I hold my
-reception to-morrow night; and I extend to Tom and Bob a special
-invitation to be present." And, with a knowing glance at George Warren,
-Henry Burns took his departure.
-
-As the boys went off to bed that night, George Warren explained to them
-that on the next night, the occasion being an entertainment in place of
-the regular Wednesday night hop at the hotel, he and Henry Burns had
-planned a joke on Colonel Witham, in which they were all to take part,
-and, with this prospect in view, they dropped asleep.
-
-In the meantime Henry Burns, arriving at the hotel, and having learned by
-previous experience that a lock on a rear door of the old part of the
-hotel, which was not connected with the new by any door, could be
-manipulated with the aid of a thin blade of a jack-knife, crept up to the
-garret by way of a rickety pair of back stairs, and from thence emerged
-upon the roof through a scuttle. Then, carefully making his way along the
-ridge-pole to where the new part joined the old, he climbed a short
-distance up a lightning-rod, to the roof of the new part.
-
-This was a large roof, nearly flat. He walked across, about midway of the
-building, to where another rod, fastened at the top to a chimney, came
-up. Clinging to this, Henry Burns disappeared over the edge of the roof,
-found a resting-place for his foot on a projection which was directly
-over his own window, and then lowered himself, like an acrobat, down the
-rod to a veranda. Raising the window directly beside the rod, he slipped
-inside, closed it softly, and in a few minutes more was abed and sound
-asleep.
-
-While all Southport slept, the storm spent its force, and toward morning
-gradually subsided. In the place of the beating rain there stole up
-through the islands, in the early morning hours, great detached banks of
-fog,--themselves like strange, white islands,--which shut out the bay
-from the shore. They lay heavy over the water, and, as the boisterous
-seas gradually gave way to the long, smooth waves that rolled in without
-breaking, one might have fancied that the fog, itself, had a depressing
-and tranquillizing influence upon the sea.
-
-Yet old fishermen would have ventured out then, without fear, for there
-were signs, that might be read by the weather-wise, that a light west
-wind was soon to be stirring that would scatter the fog at its first
-advance, and sweep it back out to sea.
-
-But, brief as was the visitation of the fog, it sufficed to hide all
-things from sight. And if a boat, in which one boy rowed vigorously, had
-put forth from the camp of Jack Harvey, down in the woods, and had come
-up along the shore to the wharf, and the box, which was a part of the
-belongings of Tom Harris and Bob White, had been lowered from the wharf
-into the boat and conveyed back to the camp and hidden away there,--if
-all this had happened, it is safe to say that no one would have seen what
-was done, nor would any one have been the wiser.
-
-Perhaps some such a thing might, indeed, have occurred, for when Tom and
-Bob, Henry Burns, and the Warren boys met at the wharf the next
-fore-noon, they found the box gone. They hunted everywhere, ransacked the
-storehouse from one end to the other, but it was nowhere to be found.
-
-"And to think that it's all my fault," groaned young Joe, as they stood
-at the edge of the wharf, after the unsuccessful search. "I might have
-known John Briggs would forget to lock it up! It was left in the open
-shed there, boys, protected from the rain, and he promised to look out
-for it; but he must have forgotten. I spoke to him about it the last
-thing last night, on our way home to the cottage."
-
-"Was it very valuable?" asked Henry Burns.
-
-"Ask Tom what he thinks," laughed Bob, while Tom tried to look
-unconscious, but blushed furiously.
-
-"There's a pretty sister of mine," continued Bob, "that thinks so much of
-us that she spent a week cooking up a lot of things for us to start our
-camping with. There's a box full of the best stuff to eat you ever
-tasted, that somebody will gobble up, I suppose, without once thinking or
-caring about the one that made them. Pretty tough, isn't it, Tom?"
-
-Tom turned redder still, and felt of his biceps, as though he was
-speculating what he would do to a certain person, if that person could
-only be discovered and come up with.
-
-"I tell you what it is, boys," said George Warren; "things have had a
-strange way of disappearing here this summer, as they never did before;
-and, what's more, if Jack Harvey and his crew haven't stolen them, they
-have at least got the credit for taking the most of it,--and you may
-depend upon it, that box is down there in the woods, somewhere about that
-camp."
-
-"Then what's to hinder our raiding the camp and getting it?" Tom broke
-in, angrily. "Bob and I, with two of you, could make a good fight against
-all of them."
-
-"No doubt of that, Tom," answered George Warren; "but there are two
-things to be considered. First, we want to get the box back; and, second,
-we are not absolutely certain that they have it. If they have it, you may
-be certain that it is carefully hidden away, and we shouldn't recover it
-by making an attack on them. We must find out where it is hidden first,
-and then, if we cannot get it away otherwise, we will fight for it."
-
-"So it seems that we have two scores to settle now," said Henry Burns,
-dryly. "We owe a debt now to Jack Harvey and his crew, and there's a
-long-standing account with Colonel Witham, part of which we must pay
-to-night. Be on hand early. The latch-string will be out at number
-twenty-one." So saying, Henry Burns left them.
-
-Late that afternoon Tom and Bob, looking from the door of their tent
-across the cove, saw a sight that was at once familiar and strange. It
-was a canoe, in which were two occupants, and it was being paddled toward
-their camp. The long seas, smooth though they were, still rolled in
-heavily, and the light canoe tossed about on their crests like a mere
-toy. Still, it did not take long for them to discover that the canoe was
-their own. They had supposed it lost, though they had intended to set out
-in search of it on the following morning.
-
-In the bow and stern, propelling the craft with paddles roughly
-improvised from broken oars, were George and Arthur Warren.
-
-"Tom, old fellow," said Bob, as the canoe came dancing toward them,
-"we've lost the box, but we've got the luck with us, after all. Not only
-are we proof against drowning, but we own a canoe that refuses to be
-wrecked."
-
-And then the bow of the canoe grated on the sandy shore.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
- A NIGHT WITH HENRY BURNS
-
-
-Henry Burns, having neither father nor mother living, had been taken in
-charge several years before this by an elderly maiden aunt, whose home
-was in the city of Medford, Massachusetts. She was fairly well-to-do,
-and, as there had been a moderate inheritance left in trust for the boy
-by his parents, they were in comfortable circumstances.
-
-But Henry Burns was made, unfortunately, to realize that this does not
-necessarily mean a home, with the happiness that the word implies. Good
-Miss Matilda Burns, a sister of Henry's late father, never having known
-the care of a family of her own, had devoted her life to the interests of
-a half a score of missions and ladies' societies of different kinds,
-until at length she had become so wrapped up in these that there was
-really no room in her life left for the personality of a boy to enter.
-
-Henry Burns was a problem which she failed utterly to solve. Perhaps she
-might have succeeded, if she had seen fit to devote less of her time to
-her various societies, and more to the boy. But she deemed the former of
-far more importance, and felt her duty for the day well performed, in the
-matter of his upbringing, if she kept him out of mischief, saw that he
-went off to school at the proper hour, and that he did not fall ill.
-
-To achieve two of these ends the most conveniently to her, Miss Matilda
-exercised a restraint over Henry Burns which was entirely unnecessary and
-altogether too severe. Henry Burns was naturally of a studious turn of
-mind, and cared more for a quiet evening with a book than he did for
-playing pranks about the neighbourhood at night. At the same time, he had
-a healthy fondness for sports, and excelled in them.
-
-He was captain of his ball team, until Miss Matilda found it out and
-ordered him to stop playing the game. She considered it too rough for
-boys, having had no experience with boys of her own. And so on, with
-swimming and several other of his healthful sports. They were altogether
-too risky for Miss Matilda's piece of mind. It came about that Henry
-Burns, in order to take part with his companions in their out-of-door
-sports, found it necessary to play "hookey" and indulge in them without
-her knowing it. He won a medal in a swimming-match, but never dared to
-show it to Miss Matilda.
-
-Withal a healthy and athletic youth, he had a pale complexion, which
-deceived Miss Matilda into the impression that he was sickly. He was
-slight of build, too, which confirmed in her that impression. When once
-her mind was made up, there was no convincing Miss Matilda. The family
-doctor, called in by her for an examination, found nothing the matter
-with him; but that did not avail to alter her opinion. The boy was
-delicate, she said, and must not be allowed to overdo.
-
-Accordingly, she made life miserable for Henry Burns. She kept a watchful
-eye over him, so far as her other duties would admit of, sent him off to
-bed at nine o'clock, tried to dose him with home remedies, which Henry
-Burns found it availed him best to carry submissively to his room and
-then pitch out of the window, and, in short, so worried over, meddled
-with, and nagged at Henry Burns, that, if he had been other than exactly
-what he was, she would have succeeded in utterly spoiling him, or have
-made him run away in sheer despair.
-
-Henry Burns never got excited about things. He had a coolness that defied
-annoyances and disappointments, and a calm persistence that set him to
-studying the best way out of a difficulty, instead of flying into a
-passion over it. He had, in fact, without fully appreciating it, the
-qualities of success.
-
-If, as was true, he was a problem to Miss Matilda, which she did not
-succeed in solving, it was not so in the case of his dealings with her.
-He made a study of her and of the situation in which he found himself,
-and proceeded deliberately to take advantage of what he discovered. He
-knew all her weaknesses and little vanities to a degree that would have
-amazed her, and cleverly used them to his advantage, in whatever he
-wanted to do. Fortunately for her, he had no inclination to bad habits,
-and, if he succeeded in outwitting her, the worst use he made of it was
-to indulge in some harmless joke, for he had, underlying his quiet
-demeanour, an unusual fondness for mischief.
-
-What to do with Henry Burns summers had been a puzzle for some time to
-Miss Matilda. She was accustomed, through these months, to visit an
-encampment, or summer home, composed of several ladies' societies, and
-the presence of a boy was a decided inconvenience. When, one day, she
-learned that an old friend, one Mrs. Carlin, a fussy old soul after her
-own heart, was engaged as housekeeper at the Hotel Bayview, at Southport,
-on Grand Island, in Samoset Bay, she conceived the idea of sending Henry
-Burns there in charge of Mrs. Carlin.
-
-So it came about that Henry Burns was duly despatched to Maine for the
-summer, as a guest of Colonel Witham. He had a room on the second floor,
-next to that occupied by the colonel, who was supposed also to exercise a
-guardianship over him. As Colonel Witham's disposition was such that he
-disliked nearly everybody, with the exception of Squire Brackett, and as
-he had a particular aversion to boys of all ages and sizes, he did not
-take pains to make life agreeable to Henry Burns. He was suspicious of
-him, as he was of all boys.
-
-Boys, according to Colonel Witham's view of life, were born for the
-purpose, or, at least, with the sole mission in life, of annoying older
-people. Accordingly, the worthy colonel lost no opportunity of thwarting
-them and opposing them,--"showing them where they belonged," he called
-it.
-
-But this disagreeable ambition on the part of the colonel was not,
-unfortunately, confined to his attitude toward boys. He exercised it
-toward every one with whom he came in contact. Despite the fact that he
-had a three years' lease of the hotel, he took absolutely no pains to
-make himself agreeable to any of his guests. He looked upon them secretly
-as his natural enemies, men and women and children whom he hoped to get
-as much out of as was possible, and to give as little as he could in
-return.
-
-He was noted for his meanness and for his surly disposition toward all.
-Then why did he come there to keep a hotel? Because he had discovered
-that guests would come, whether they were treated well or not. The place
-had too many attractions of boating, swimming, sailing, and excellent
-fishing, winding wood-roads, and a thousand and one natural beauties, to
-be denied. Guests left in the fall, vowing they would not put up with the
-colonel's niggardliness and petty impositions another year; but the
-following season found them registered there again, with the same cordial
-antipathy existing as before between them and their landlord.
-
-In person, Colonel Witham was decidedly corpulent, with a fiery red face,
-which turned purple when he became angry--which was upon the slightest
-occasion.
-
-"Here's another boy come to annoy me with his noise and tomfoolery," was
-the colonel's inward comment, when Mrs. Carlin, the housekeeper, informed
-him that Henry Burns was coming, and was to be under her charge.
-
-So the colonel gave him the room next to his, where he could keep an eye
-on him, and see that he was in his room every night not later than ten
-o'clock, for that was the hour Mrs. Carlin had set for that young
-gentleman's bedtime.
-
-Henry Burns, having in due time made the acquaintance of the Warren boys,
-as well as a few other youths of his age, had no idea of ending up his
-evenings' entertainments at ten o'clock each and every night; so he set
-about to discover some means of evading the espionage of the colonel and
-Mrs. Carlin. It did not take him more than one evening of experimenting
-to find that, by stepping out on to the veranda that ran past his own and
-Colonel Witham's windows, he could gain the ascent to the roof by a
-clever bit of acrobatics up a lightning-rod. Once there, he found he
-could reach the ground by way of the old part of the hotel, in the manner
-before described. It is only fair to Henry Burns to state that he did not
-take undue advantage of this discovery, but kept on the whole as good
-hours as most boys of his age. Still, if there was a clambake, or some
-other moonlight jollification, at the extreme end of the island, where
-Henry Burns had made friends among a little fishing community, he was now
-and then to be seen, sometimes as the village clock was proclaiming a
-much later hour than that prescribed by Mrs. Carlin, spinning along on
-his bicycle like a ghost awheel. He was generally known and well liked
-throughout the entire island.
-
-On the night following the arrival of Tom and Bob, the sounds of a
-violin, a clarionet, and a piano, coming from the big parlour of the
-Hotel Bayview, told that a dance was in progress. These dances, withal
-the music was provided by the guests themselves, were extremely
-irritating to Colonel Witham. They meant late hours for everybody, more
-lights to be furnished, more guests late to breakfast on the following
-morning, and, on the whole, an evening of noise and excitement, which
-interfered more or less with his invariable habit of going to bed at a
-quarter after ten o'clock every night of his life.
-
-They brought, moreover, a crowd of cottagers to the hotel, who were given
-anything but a cordial welcome by Colonel Witham. He argued that they
-spent no money at his hotel, and were, therefore, only in the way,
-besides adding to the noise.
-
-The guests at the Bayview were, on the whole, accustomed to the ways of
-Colonel Witham by experience, and really paid but little attention to
-him. They went ahead, planned their own dances and card-parties, and left
-him to make the best of it.
-
-This particular evening's entertainment was rather out of the ordinary,
-inasmuch as it was given by a Mr. and Mrs. Wellington, of New York, in
-honour of their daughter's birthday, and, on her account, invitations to
-the spread, which was to be served after the dancing, were extended to
-the young people of the hotel. In these invitations Henry Burns had, of
-course, been included; but Mrs. Carlin and Colonel Witham were obdurate.
-It was too late an hour for him; his eating of rich salads and ices was
-not to be thought of; in short, he must decline, or they must decline for
-him, and that was the end of it.
-
-"Never you mind, Henry," said good-hearted Bridget Carrington, who was
-Mrs. Carlin's assistant, and with whom Henry Burns had made friendship.
-"It's not you that'll be going without some of the salad and the
-ice-cream, not if I know it. Sure, and Mrs. Wellington says you're to
-have some, too. So just breathe easy, and there'll be a bit for you and a
-little more, too, a-waitin' just outside the kitchen window about nine
-o'clock. So go on now and say never a word."
-
-So Henry Burns, with the connivance of Bridget, and by the judicious
-outlay of a part of his own pocket-money, in the matter of sweet things
-and other delicacies dear to youthful appetites, had prepared and planned
-for a small banquet of his own in his room, next to that of Colonel
-Witham.
-
-"But how will you manage so that Colonel Witham won't hear us, as he will
-be right alongside of us?" George Warren, who was a partner in Henry
-Burns's enterprise, had asked.
-
-"Leave that to me," said Henry Burns.
-
-The evening wore on; the strains of the music sounded merrily along the
-halls; dancing was in full swing,--everybody seemed to be enjoying the
-occasion, save Colonel Witham. He had at least conceded to the occasion
-the courtesy of a black frock coat and an immaculate white tie, but he
-was plainly ill at ease. He stood in the office, the door of which was
-open into the parlour, his hands twisting nervously behind his back,
-while he glanced, with no good humour in his expression, now at the blaze
-of lights in the parlour, and now at the clock, which, however, even
-under his impatient gaze, only ticked along in its most provokingly
-methodical fashion.
-
-The outer door opened and in walked young Joe Warren, recognized by
-Colonel Witham as one of the plagues of his summer existence.
-
-"Good evening, Colonel Witham," said young Joe, with studied politeness,
-and in a tone that ostensibly anticipated an equally cordial response.
-
-"Good evening!" snapped the colonel.
-
-"Good evening, Colonel Witham," chimed Arthur Warren, close at his
-brother's heels.
-
-The colonel responded gruffly.
-
-"Good evening, colonel," came an equally cordial greeting from Tom and
-Bob, and from George Warren, smiling at Colonel Witham, as though he had
-extended them a hearty invitation to be present.
-
-The colonel snorted impatiently, while the colour in his red face
-deepened. He did not respond to their salutations.
-
-The boys seated themselves comfortably in the office chairs, and listened
-to the music.
-
-"You needn't think you're going to get Henry Burns to go off with you,"
-the colonel said, finally. "It's half-past nine now, and his bedtime is
-ten o'clock. I wonder where he is."
-
-Arthur Warren chuckled quietly to himself. He could have told the colonel
-just where Henry Burns was at that moment; that he was busily engaged in
-conveying a certain basket of supplies from outside the kitchen window,
-up a pair of back stairs, to his room on the second floor above.
-
-"You go and keep an eye on Colonel Witham," he had said to Arthur Warren,
-"and if he starts to look for me, you go to the door and whistle."
-
-Which accounted for the sudden appearance of all the Warrens and Tom and
-Bob in the presence of Colonel Witham.
-
-Fifteen minutes elapsed, and one by one they had all disappeared.
-
-"Good riddance," was the colonel's mental ejaculation when he found them
-gone.
-
-Great would have been his amazement and indignation could he have but
-seen them, a few minutes later, seated comfortably on the bed in Henry
-Burns's room. It was approaching ten o'clock.
-
-"Where's Bob?" asked Henry Burns, as the boys quietly entered, and he
-made the door fast behind them.
-
-"Hm!" said Tom, shaking his head regretfully. "It's a sad thing about
-Bob. It's too bad, but I don't think he will be here, after all."
-
-"Why, what's the matter?" exclaimed Henry Burns, with surprise. "He isn't
-hurt, is he? I saw him a few hours ago, and he seemed all right."
-
-"No, he isn't hurt,--at least, not the way you mean, Henry. The fact is,
-he was dancing out on the piazza about half an hour ago with pretty
-little Miss Wilson,--you know, the one in the cottage down on the
-shore,--and the last I saw of Bob he was escorting her home. I'm afraid
-we shall have to give him up for to-night."
-
-"That's too bad," said Henry Burns, solemnly, as though some grievous
-misfortune had come upon Tom's chum. "And the worst of it is, it may last
-all summer. Well, Bob will miss a very pleasant surprise-party to Colonel
-Witham, to say nothing of the spread. That, by the way, is stowed away in
-those baskets over behind the bed and the wash-stand,--but, first, we've
-got to clear the coast of Colonel Witham."
-
-"We're yours to command, Henry," replied George Warren. "Tell us what to
-do."
-
-"Well, in the first place," said Henry Burns, opening one of his windows
-that led out on to the veranda, as he spoke, "the rest of you just listen
-as hard as ever you can at my door, while George and I make a brief visit
-to the colonel's room. If you hear footsteps, just pound on the wall, so
-we can get back in time. It's pretty certain he won't be here, though,
-until we are ready for him. He hasn't missed a night in weeks in getting
-to bed exactly at a quarter past ten o'clock. He's as regular as a
-steamboat; always on time. And he's a good deal like a steamboat, too,
-for he snores like a fog-horn all night long."
-
-Henry Burns and George Warren disappeared through the window and were
-gone but a moment, when they reappeared, each bearing in one hand a lamp
-from the colonel's room.
-
-"The colonel is always talking about economy," explained Henry Burns, "so
-I am not going to let him burn any oil to-night, if I can help it. My
-lamps happen to need filling,--I've borrowed an extra one for this
-occasion, and so, you see, I don't intend to waste any of the colonel's
-oil by throwing it away. I'll see that not a drop of the colonel's oil is
-wasted."
-
-Henry Burns carefully proceeded to pour the oil from each lamp which he
-and George Warren had brought from the colonel's room into those in his
-own room.
-
-"There," he said, "there's enough oil in each of those wicks to burn for
-several minutes, so the colonel will have a little light to start in on.
-But we don't want to return his lamps empty, and so I'll just fill them
-up again. I'm sure the colonel would approve of this economy."
-
-And Henry Burns carefully refilled the colonel's lamps from his
-water-pitcher.
-
-"It won't burn very well," he said. "But I'm sure it looks better."
-
-"Now, we'll just take these back again," he continued, addressing George
-Warren. "And there's another little matter we want to arrange while we
-are in there. The colonel is always finding fault with the housemaids.
-Now we'll see if we can't improve on their work."
-
-Again the two boys disappeared, while the remaining three stood watch
-against the colonel's sudden appearance.
-
-Once in the colonel's room, Henry Burns seized hold of the bedclothes and
-threw them over the foot-board. Then he snatched out three of the slats
-from the middle of the bed, replacing them with three slender sticks,
-which he had brought from his own room.
-
-"Those will do to support the bedclothes and the mattress," he explained,
-"though I'm really afraid they would break if any one who was kind of
-heavy should put his weight on them." Then he carefully replaced the
-mattress and the bedclothes, making up the colonel's bed again in the
-most approved style, with his friend's assistance.
-
-"You take notice," he said to George Warren, as he opened a closet door
-in the colonel's room, "that I am careful to destroy nothing of the
-colonel's property. I might have sawed these slats in two, and left them
-just hanging so they would support the bedclothes, and would not have
-been any more trouble; but, being of a highly conscientious nature, I
-carefully put the colonel's property away, where it can be found later
-and restored."
-
-"I'm afraid the colonel wouldn't appreciate your thoughtfulness," said
-George Warren.
-
-"Alas, I'm afraid not," said Henry Burns. "But that's often the reward of
-those who try to look after another's interests. However, I'll put these
-slats in this closet, shut and lock the door, and put the key here on the
-mantelpiece, just behind this picture. It would be just as easy to hide
-the key, but I don't think that would be right, do you?"
-
-"Certainly not," laughed George Warren.
-
-"There," said Henry Burns, taking a final survey of everything. "We've
-done all we can, I'm sure, to provide for the colonel's comfort. If he
-chooses to find fault with it, it will surely be from force of habit."
-They took their departure by way of the colonel's window, closing it
-after them, and quickly rejoined their companions in the next room.
-
-"I deeply regret," said Henry Burns to his guests, "that this banquet
-cannot begin at once. But we should surely be interrupted by the colonel,
-and, on the whole, I think it is best to wait until the colonel has taken
-his departure for the night from that room,--which I feel sure he will
-do, when the situation dawns fully upon him.
-
-"It also pains me," he added, "to be obliged to invite you all to make
-yourselves uncomfortable in that closet for a short time. At least, you
-will hear all that is going on in the colonel's room, for the partition
-is thin between that and his room. So you will have to be careful and
-make no noise. I feel quite certain that the colonel will make me a
-sudden call soon after he retires, if not before, and he really wouldn't
-approve of your being here. He's likely to have a decidedly unpleasant
-way of showing his disapproval, too."
-
-"I think we can assure our kind and thoughtful host that we fully
-appreciate the situation," said Arthur Warren, gravely, "and will be
-pleased to comply with his suggestion to withdraw. Come on, boys, let's
-get in. It's after ten now, and time is getting short."
-
-"You take the key with you," said Henry Burns, "and lock the door on the
-inside. It's just an extra precaution; but I can say I don't know who has
-the key, if anything happens. I won't know which one of you takes it."
-
-The four boys stowed themselves away in the stuffy closet, turned the key
-in the lock, and waited. Henry Burns quickly divested himself of his
-clothing, put a bowl of water beside his bed, placed a clean white
-handkerchief near it, set a lamp near by on a chair, turned it down so
-that it burned dim, unlocked his door so that it could be opened readily,
-and jumped into bed.
-
-He did not have long to wait. Promptly at a quarter past ten o'clock the
-heavy, lumbering steps of the corpulent colonel were heard, as he came up
-the hallway. The colonel was puffing with the exertion which it always
-cost him to climb the stairs, and muttering, as was his custom when
-anything displeased him.
-
-"Suppose they'll bang away on that old piano half the night," he
-exclaimed, as he passed Henry Burns's door. "And every light burning till
-midnight. How do they expect me to make any money, if they go on this
-way?"
-
-He opened the door to his room and went inside, locking it after him.
-Henry Burns pressed his ear close to the wall and listened.
-
-The colonel, still talking angrily to himself, scratched a match and
-lighted one of the lamps. Then he divested himself of his collar and tie,
-threw his coat and waistcoat on a chair, and reseated himself, to take
-off his boots.
-
-All at once they heard him utter a loud exclamation of disgust.
-
-"What on earth is the matter with that lamp?" he cried. "That comes of
-having hired help from the city. Never look after things, unless you keep
-right after them. How many times have I spoken about having these lamps
-filled every day!"
-
-The colonel scratched a match. "Hulloa," he exclaimed, "it's full, after
-all. Well, I see, the wick hasn't been trimmed. There's always something
-wrong." The colonel proceeded to scrape the wick. Then he scratched
-another match. The wick sputtered as he held the match to it.
-
-"Confound the thing!" yelled the colonel, now utterly out of temper. "The
-thing's bewitched. Where's that other lamp? Oh, there it is. We'll see if
-that will burn. I'll discharge that housemaid to-morrow."
-
-He scratched still another match, held it to the wick of the other lamp,
-and was evidently satisfied with that, for they heard him replace the
-lamp-chimney and go on with his undressing.
-
-In a few minutes more there came another eruption from the colonel.
-
-"There goes the other one," he yelled. "I know what's the matter.
-Somebody's been fooling with those lamps. I'll make 'em smart for it."
-The colonel unscrewed the part of the lamp containing the wick, took the
-bowls of the lamps, one by one, over to his window, opened them, and
-poured the contents of the lamps out upon the veranda.
-
-"Water!" he yelled. "Water! That's what's the matter. Oh, but I'd just
-like to know whether it's that pale-faced Burns boy, or some of those
-other young imps in the house. I'll find out. I'll make somebody smart
-for this. Wasting my oil, too. I'll make 'em pay for it."
-
-The colonel set down the lamps, rushed out of his room into the hall for
-the lamp that usually occupied a standard there. He did not find it,
-because Henry Burns had taken the pains to remove it. The colonel made a
-sudden dash for Henry Burns's door, rattled the door-knob and pounded,
-and then, finding that in his confusion he had failed to discover that it
-was unlocked, hurled it open and burst into the room.
-
-What the colonel saw was the pale, calm face of Henry Burns, peering out
-at him from the bed, as that young gentleman lifted himself up on one
-elbow. Around his forehead was bound the handkerchief, which he had
-wetted in the bowl of water. The lamp burning dimly completed the picture
-of his distress.
-
-"Hi, you there! You young--" The colonel checked himself abruptly, as
-Henry Burns slowly raised himself up in bed and pressed one hand to his
-forehead. "What's the matter with you?" roared the colonel, completely
-taken aback by Henry Burns's appearance.
-
-"Oh, nothing," said Henry Burns, resignedly. "It's nothing."
-
-The colonel little realized how much of truthfulness there was in this
-answer.
-
-"Did you want me for anything?" asked Henry Burns, in his softest voice.
-
-"No, I didn't," said the colonel, sullenly. "Somebody has been fooling
-with my lamps, and I--I thought I would use yours, if you didn't mind."
-
-"Certainly," replied Henry Burns. "I may not need mine again for the rest
-of the night." Again he pressed his hand dismally to his forehead.
-
-"I won't take it!" snapped the colonel. "You may need it again. Why don't
-you tell Mrs. Carlin you've got a headache? She'll look after you. It's
-eating too much--eating too much, that does it. I've always said it. Stop
-stuffing two pieces of pie every day at dinner, and you won't have any
-headache."
-
-With this parting injunction, the irate colonel abruptly took his
-departure, slamming the door behind him.
-
-Henry Burns dived beneath the bedclothes and smothered his roars of
-laughter. The colonel, disappointed in his quest for a lamp, and not
-caring to search further in his present condition of undress, returned
-once more to his room and finished undressing in the dark.
-
-"I'll make somebody smart for this to-morrow," he kept repeating. "Like
-as not that little white-faced scamp in the next room had some hand in
-it. I can't quite make him out. Well, I'll go to bed and sleep over it."
-
-The colonel rolled into bed.
-
-There was a crash and a howl of rage from the colonel. He floundered
-about in a tangle of bedclothes for a moment, filling the room with his
-angry ejaculations, and endeavouring, helplessly, for a moment, to
-extricate himself from his uncomfortable position on the floor. Then he
-arose, raging like a tempest, stumbling over a chair in his confusion,
-and nearly sprawling on the floor again.
-
-He rang the electric button in his room till the clerk in the office
-thought the house was on fire, and came running up, breathless, to see
-what was the matter.
-
-"Fire! Who said there was any fire, you idiot!" shrieked the colonel, as
-his clerk dashed into the room and ran plump into him. "There isn't any
-fire," he cried. "Somebody's been breaking the furniture in here; tearing
-down the beds, ruining the lamps. Get that room on the next floor, down
-at the end of the hall, ready for me. I can't stay here to-night. Don't
-stand there, gaping like a frog. Hurry up. Get Mrs. Carlin to fix that
-bed up for me. She's gone to bed, do you say? Well, then, get somebody
-else. Don't stand there. Go along!"
-
-The clerk hurried away, as much to prevent the colonel seeing the broad
-grin on his face as to obey orders. The colonel, stumbling around in the
-darkness, managed to partly dress himself; and, five minutes later, the
-boys heard him go storming along the hall to the stairway, which he
-mounted, and was seen no more that night.
-
-The closet door in Henry Burns's room swung softly open, and there rolled
-out helplessly on the floor four boys, choking with suppressed laughter,
-the tears fairly running down their cheeks.
-
-Henry Burns, calm as ever, quietly arose from bed, removed the bandage
-from his brow, slid into his clothes, and remarked, softly, "I feel
-better now."
-
-"Oh, don't, Henry," begged George Warren. "If you say any more I shall
-die. I can't laugh now without its hurting me."
-
-"You need something to eat," said Henry Burns. Pinning a blanket up over
-the transom to hide the light, and stopping his keyhole, to prevent any
-ray of light from penetrating into the hallway, and throwing down a
-blanket at the door-sill for the same purpose, Henry Burns lighted both
-his lamps, carefully locked his door, and made ready to entertain his
-guests.
-
-"It's not just according to the rules of etiquette," he said, producing a
-package from the basket, "but we'll have to start on the ice-cream first
-before it melts. Then we'll work back along the line, to salad and ginger
-ale."
-
-He drew forth from the package, which proved to be a box filled with
-chopped ice, a small brick of ice-cream. It was beginning to melt about
-the edges, but they made short work of it.
-
-"Now," said Henry Burns, "if you please, we'll start all over again. Here
-are the sandwiches."
-
-"It's the finest spread I ever had," said young Joe, appreciatively, as
-he stowed away his fourth sandwich and helped himself to an orange.
-
-"Joe always goes on the principle that he may be cast away on a desert
-island before he has another square meal," said Arthur, "so he always
-fills up accordingly."
-
-"It's a good principle to go on," responded Henry Burns. "George, you
-open the ginger ale."
-
-So they dined most sumptuously, and had gotten down to nuts and raisins,
-when Henry Burns, whose ears were always on the alert, suddenly sprang
-up, with a warning "Sh-h-h," and, quickly stepping across the room,
-turned the lamps down, signalling at the same time for the boys to be
-silent.
-
-Not one of the others had heard a sound; but now they were aware that
-soft footsteps were pattering along the hallway.
-
-Presently some one came to Henry Burns's door, turned the knob, and
-rapped very gently.
-
-Not a sound came from the room.
-
-Then a voice said: "Henry, Henry."
-
-There was no reply.
-
-"Strange," said the person outside; "I could have sworn that I heard his
-voice as I came up. Well, I must have been mistaken. He seems to be sound
-asleep. I guess his headache is better."
-
-They heard the footsteps die away again along the hallway.
-
-"Whew!" said Henry Burns; "that was a narrow escape. That was Mrs.
-Carlin. Somebody must have told her I was sick. She sleeps all night with
-one eye and one ear open, they say."
-
-"Well," said George Warren, "I reckon we'd better take it as a warning
-that it's time to be going, anyway. It's eleven o'clock, I should say,
-and we have got to get up early and overhaul the _Spray_. She's up at
-Bryant's Cove yet, and we have got to bring her down and have a new
-bowsprit put in, and reeve some new rigging. We've had a great time,
-Henry. Count us in on the next feed, and give our regards to Colonel
-Witham. Come on, boys."
-
-"Sorry to have to show you out the back way," said Henry Burns, "but the
-front way would be dangerous now, and my lightning-rod staircase seems to
-be the only way. It's a very nice way when one is used to it; but look
-out and don't slip."
-
-By the time the last boy was on the roof, Henry Burns was half-undressed;
-and by the time the last one had reached the ground, his light was out
-and he was half-asleep. That was Henry Burns's way. When he did a thing,
-he did it and wasted no time--whether it was working or playing or
-sleeping.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
- A HIDDEN CAVE
-
-
-It was a little after eleven o'clock when Tom left the hotel. His mind
-was so occupied with the events of the evening that he started at once
-toward his camp, forgetting an intention he had earlier in the night of
-visiting the locality of Jack Harvey's camp in search of the missing box.
-He stopped every few minutes to laugh long and heartily, as, one by one,
-the mishaps of Colonel Witham came to his mind.
-
-All at once he remembered the missing box. He had nearly reached his tent
-by this time, but he stopped short. He called to mind the contents of the
-box; among other things, a certain big cake, with frosting on it, and,
-although he and Bob, as young athletes, were bound to hold such food in
-little regard, there was one thing about it which particularly impressed
-him just now, and that was the remembrance of how he had watched Bob's
-sister, with her dainty little fingers, mould the frosting on the top,
-and how she had slyly wondered--as if there could be any doubt of
-it--whether they, meaning Tom, would think of her while they were eating
-it.
-
-The thought of that cake falling into the hands of Jack Harvey and of Tim
-Reardon and the others of Harvey's crew, and of the jokes they would
-crack at Tom's expense, made his blood boil. He started in the direction
-of Harvey's camp, then turned back to get Bob to accompany him,--and then
-paused and went on again, saying to himself that he would not awaken his
-chum at that hour of the night. He started off through the woods alone.
-
-The night was warm and pleasant, though it was quite dark, as there was
-no moon. He passed by the cottages, and then turned into a foot-path that
-followed the windings of the shore. The path led for some distance
-through a thicket of alders and underbrush, from which at length it
-emerged into an open field. Crossing this, Tom again entered a growth of
-wood, the path winding among the roots of some old hemlocks and cedars.
-
-All at once he saw a light shining indistinctly through the trees, and
-knew that it must be in the immediate vicinity of Harvey's camp.
-
-"So much the better, if they are up," muttered Tom. "If they're sitting
-around that fire they are sure to be talking." He hurried on in the
-direction of the light, still following the path.
-
-The fire soon became plainly visible. At a point where the path divided
-he could see the white tent, lit up by a big fire of driftwood that
-blazed in front of it. He could hear the sound of voices, and
-distinguished that of Harvey above the others. There seemed to be some
-insubordination in camp, for Harvey's tones were loud and angry.
-
-Tom concluded not to take the path to the left, which was the one leading
-direct to the camp, but continued on for a distance along the main path.
-It was well he did so, for presently he heard some one coming toward him.
-The paths were at this point so near together that he could not
-distinguish which one the person was taking; so he drew aside and
-crouched in the bushes, which were very dense between the two paths. A
-boy, whom he recognized as Tim Reardon, soon came in sight, and passed
-close by the spot where Tom was concealed. He carried a pail in his hand,
-and was evidently going to a spring near by for water. He was grumbling
-to himself as he passed along.
-
-"I'm always the one!" he said. "Why don't he make some one else lug the
-water part of the time? I'm not going to be bullied by any Jack Harvey,
-and he needn't think I am."
-
-He kept on to the spring, however. Tom remained where he was, and Tim
-soon returned, carrying the pail filled with water. Tom waited till he
-saw Tim arrive at the camp and deposit the pail of water near the fire,
-before he again emerged from the clump of bushes into the path that led
-past the camp. He followed this cautiously. He could not as yet see
-whether all the members of the crew were present about the camp-fire, and
-he knew that to encounter any one of them at that hour near the camp
-would not only put an end to all hopes of recovering the box, by
-revealing to Harvey and his crew that he suspected them of having stolen
-it, but that, once an alarm being given, he should have the whole crew at
-his heels in a twinkling.
-
-Tom was sufficiently acquainted with the reputation of Harvey's crew to
-know that it would go hard with him if they found him there. He stole
-quietly along past the camp some little distance, and then, turning from
-the path, got down on his hands and knees and crept toward the camp
-through the bushes.
-
-Near the camp was a hemlock-tree, with large, broad, heavy branches, that
-grew so low down on the trunk that some of them rested on the ground. It
-offered a place of concealment, and Tom, at the imminent risk of being
-discovered, reached it and crawled in between the branches. If the
-campers had been expecting any one, and had been on the watch, he must
-surely have been discovered, for several times branches cracked under
-him, and once so loudly that he thought it was all up with him, expecting
-them to come and see what had made the noise. But they took no notice of
-it, either because they were accustomed to hearing noises in the woods,
-of cattle or dogs, or thought nothing at all about it.
-
-From where he now lay, Tom could see the entire camp, and hear everything
-the boys said. It was a picturesque spot which Harvey had chosen. The
-land here ran out in one of those irregular points which was
-characteristic of the shores of the island, and ended in a little,
-low-lying bluff, that overlooked the bay. On the side nearer the village,
-the shore curved in with a graceful sweep, making a perfect bow, and the
-land for some distance back sloped gradually down to the beach. The beach
-here was composed of a fine white sand, making an ideal landing-place for
-rowboats. On the side farther from the village, the waterfront was of a
-different character. It rounded out, instead of curving in, and the shore
-was bold, instead of sloping. It was not easily approached, even by small
-boats, as the water, for some distance out, was choked up with reefs and
-ledges, which were barely covered at high tide, and at low water were
-exposed here and there.
-
-This apparently unapproachable shore had been taken advantage of by
-Harvey in a way which no one in the village had ever suspected. There was
-a channel among the reefs, which a small sailboat could pursue, if one
-were accurately acquainted with its windings. With this channel, which
-they had discovered by chance, the campers had become thoroughly
-familiar, at both low and high water.
-
-The point had been cleared of undergrowth, and most of the larger trees
-had been cut down for some little distance back from the water. In the
-rear of this clearing there were thick woods, extending into the island
-for a mile or more.
-
-The campers had pitched a big canvas tent at the edge of the clearing,
-where they lived in free and easy fashion, cooking mostly out-of-doors.
-They scorned the idea of making bunks, as smacking too much of
-civilization, and at night slept on boughs covered with blankets. They
-lived out-of-doors in front of the tent when the weather was pleasant,
-and, when it was stormy, they went aboard the yacht and did their cooking
-in the cabin, over a small sheet-iron stove.
-
-It was altogether a romantic and picturesque sight that Tom saw as he
-looked out from his hiding-place. At a little distance from the tent the
-fire was blazing, while the members of the crew either sat around it or
-lay, stretched out at full length, upon the ground. A pot of coffee was
-placed on a flat stone by the side of the fire, near enough to get the
-heat from it, and the delicious odour of it as it steamed made Tom
-hungry.
-
-The members of Harvey's crew were utterly without restraint, saving that
-which was imposed capriciously by Harvey himself. Harvey was not
-naturally vicious. His mind had been perverted by the books he had read,
-so that he failed to see that his acts of petty thievery were meannesses
-and acts of cowardice of which he would some day be ashamed.
-
-He fashioned his conduct as much according to the books he read as
-possible, and, if he had been but trained rightly, would have been proud
-to do courageous things, instead of playing mean jokes, for he had at
-heart much bravery. He rarely wore a hat, and was as bronzed as any
-sailor. The sleeves of his flannel blouse were usually rolled up to the
-elbows, showing on his forearms several tattooed designs in red and blue
-ink. He was large and strong.
-
-The boys around the fire were telling stories and relating in turn
-incidents of adventure that had taken place since their arrival on the
-island. At the close of their story-telling, they arose and began making
-preparations for a meal. Near by the fireplace they had built a rough
-table, of stakes driven into the ground, and boards, with benches on
-either side of it, fashioned in the same way. Two of the boys went to the
-tent and brought out some tin dishes, and the steaming pot of coffee was
-taken from the stone and set on the table.
-
-Then Joe Hinman, taking a long pole in his hand, went to the fire and
-proceeded to scatter the brands about, while a shower of sparks rose up
-and floated off into the forest. Presently Joe raked from among the
-embers a dozen or more black, shapeless objects. These he placed one by
-one on a block of wood and broke the clay--for such it was--with a
-hatchet. The odour of cooked fish pervaded the camp and saluted Tom's
-nostrils most temptingly. Inside of the lumps of clay were fish of some
-kind, which Tom took to be cunners. As fast as they were ready, Tim
-Reardon carried them to the table, where they were heaped up on a big
-earthen platter.
-
-The boys then fell to and ate as though they were starving. Tom wondered
-for some time if this could be their usual hour for supper; but
-remembered that he had seen the _Surprise_ several miles off in the bay
-that evening, and concluded that the evening meal had been long delayed.
-The _Surprise_ now lay a few rods offshore, with a lantern hanging at her
-mast.
-
-The boys continued to talk, as they ate, of tricks they had played and of
-raids they had taken part in, down the island. In fact, the good citizens
-of Southport would have given a good deal for the secrets Tom learned
-from his hiding-place that night. Tom waited impatiently, however, for
-some mention of the missing box. Could he be mistaken in suspecting them
-of having taken it? No, he was sure not. That they were capable of doing
-so, their own conversation left no room for doubt. Tom felt certain the
-box was in their possession.
-
-But he began to feel that his errand of discovery to-night would be
-fruitless. They must, he argued, have some sort of storehouse, where they
-hid such plunder as this, but no one had as yet made the slightest
-mention of it. It was clearly useless for him to grope about in the
-vicinity of the camp at night, and he began to think it would be better
-after all to wait until day and select a time for his search, if
-possible, when all the members of the crew were off on the yacht. But
-that might come too late, and Tom wondered what to do.
-
-All at once Joe Hinman made a remark that caused Tom to raise himself
-upon his elbow and listen intently.
-
-"Boys," said Joe, "I've got a little surprise for you."
-
-The crew, one and all, stopped eating, rested their elbows on the table,
-and looked at Joe curiously.
-
-"I'll bet it's a salmon from old Slade's nets," said George Baker. "Joe's
-sworn for a week that he'd have one."
-
-"He's all right, is Joe," remarked Harvey, patronizingly. "There isn't
-one of you that can touch Joe for smartness."
-
-Thus encouraged, Joe told how he had seen the box that had been a part of
-Tom's and Bob's luggage left on the wharf the night it arrived; how he
-had ascertained that it contained food, by prying up the cover; and how,
-early on the following morning, he had rowed up under cover of the fog,
-and had brought back the box to the camp.
-
-"It's down in the cave now," said Joe. Tom gave a start. "There's a
-meat-pie in it that is good for a dinner to-morrow, and a big frosted
-cake, if you fellows want it to-night."
-
-"Hooray!" cried Jack Harvey. "You and I will go and get it." Whereupon he
-and Joe sprang up and made directly for the spot where Tom lay, passing
-by so close that he could have reached out and touched them, and hurried
-along the bank, down to the shore.
-
-Tom allowed them to get well in advance before he ventured to crawl from
-his hiding-place and follow them. He saw them at length disappear over
-the bank at a point where there grew a thick clump of cedars. He turned
-from the path into the woods, made his way cautiously past the place
-where he had seen them disappear, turned into the path again, and then
-climbed down the bank, which was there very steep, holding on to the
-bushes, and looked for the boys, but they were nowhere to be seen.
-
-Tom knew they could not have passed him. They had not reappeared over the
-edge of the bank, and they were nowhere in sight along the shore. There
-could be but one conclusion. The entrance to the cave must be located in
-the clump of cedars.
-
-It seemed to Tom that he had waited at least a quarter of an hour,
-though, in fact, it was not more than five minutes, when he saw the boys
-reappear. Tom groaned as he saw the big cake in Joe's hand. Joe laid it
-down on the ground, while he and Jack picked up several armfuls of loose
-boughs lying about, and threw them up carelessly against the bank. Then
-Joe took up the cake again, and they emerged from the cedars, climbed up
-over the bank, and disappeared in the direction of their camp.
-
-Tom lost no time in scrambling to the spot. The hiding-place was
-cunningly concealed. It was an awkward place to crawl to from any part of
-the bank, and no one would have thought of trying to land there in a
-boat. The entrance to the cave might have been left open, with little
-chance of its ever being discovered. Tom threw aside the boughs
-sufficiently to discover that beneath them was a sort of trap-door, made
-of pieces of board carelessly nailed together. Then he replaced the
-boughs and, without even attempting to lift the board door, regained the
-path at the top of the bank.
-
-"There'll be time enough to explore that later," he muttered. "I'm not
-the only one that will have lost something out of that cave before
-morning, though." He made his way cautiously past the camp once more, and
-then started on a run for his own camp. His hare and hounds practice at
-school stood him in good stead, and he did not stop running till he had
-come to the door of his tent. He unfastened the flap and entered, panting
-for breath. Bob was sleeping soundly. He shook him, but Bob was loath to
-awake, and resented being so roughly disturbed.
-
-"Wake up, Bob! Wake!" cried Tom, shaking him again.
-
-Bob opened his eyes. "Why, is it morning, Tom?" he asked.
-
-"No, it isn't, Bob, but it soon will be. I've found the box, Bob.
-Harvey's got it, and I know where it is hidden,--down near his camp in a
-cave."
-
-Bob shivered, for Tom had pulled the blanket off the bed, and the moist
-sea air penetrated the tent. He dressed, stupidly, for he was not fully
-rid of his drowsiness.
-
-The boys went down to the beach, and Bob washed his face in the salt
-water.
-
-"I'm all right now, Tom, old fellow," he said, "but, honest, Tom, I feel
-ugly enough at being waked up, not at you, though, to just enjoy a fight
-with those fellows."
-
-"There's little prospect of that, if we are careful," answered Tom. "What
-we want to do is to show them we are smart enough to get the box back,
-and, perhaps, play them a trick of our own."
-
-Then they carried the canoe down to the shore, launched it, and set off.
-It was about one o'clock in the morning. They paddled away from the tent
-and down along the shore, noiselessly as Indians. Past the village and
-past the cottages, and not a sign of life anywhere, not even a wisp of
-smoke from a chimney. The canoe glided swiftly along, making the only
-ripples there were on the glassy surface of the bay.
-
-As they came to the beach near Harvey's camp, they landed, and Tom crept
-up over the bank to reconnoitre. He came back presently, reporting that
-the crew were all sound asleep, and everything quiet around the camp.
-Then they paddled quickly by the end of the bluff and along the bold
-shore beyond, picking their way carefully among the reefs, as they could
-not have done in these unknown waters with any other craft than the
-buoyant canoe.
-
-They disembarked at the clump of cedars, and made the canoe fast to the
-trunk of one that overhung the water. Tom took from the bow of the canoe
-a lantern, and they scrambled up the bank. Throwing aside the boughs,
-they disclosed the trap-door, which they lifted up. Tom lit the lantern
-and they entered the cave.
-
-They found it much larger than the opening indicated. It was excavated
-from the hard clay of which the bank was composed, and, though not high
-enough for them to stand quite erect, it was about eight feet long and
-five feet wide.
-
-It was filled with stuff of all sorts. There were spare topsails
-and staysails,--possibly from coasters that had anchored in the
-harbour,--sets of oars from ships' boats, several boxes of canned goods,
-that the grocer of the village had hunted for far and wide, coils of
-rope, two shotguns, carefully wrapped in pieces of flannel and well
-oiled, to prevent the rust from eating them, four lanterns, two axes and
-a hatchet, and odds and ends of all descriptions useful in and about a
-camp or a yacht.
-
-The roof of the cave was shored up with boards, supported by joists. In
-one corner of the cave was the box for which they sought, broken into,
-and with the gorgeous cake gone; but that was all. The rest of the
-contents were untouched.
-
-They took the box, carried it down to the shore and placed it in the
-canoe. Tom started to return to the cave.
-
-"What are you going to do now, Tom?" queried Bob. "We don't want to take
-anything of theirs, of course."
-
-"Not a thing," answered Tom. "We don't go in for that sort of business,
-but I just want to show them that we have been here and had the
-opportunity to destroy anything that we were of a mind to. Perhaps it
-will teach them a good lesson. It will show them that we are as smart as
-they are, anyway."
-
-So saying, Tom began to gather up the guns, the good sails, the boxes of
-provisions, and other things of value, and carry them outside the cave,
-setting them down on the bank at some distance from the mouth of it.
-
-"We won't destroy anything of value," said Tom. "But here are some odds
-and ends of old stuff, some of these pieces of oars, empty crates,
-bagging, and that sort of thing, which will make a good blaze, and which
-would have to be thrown away some day. They are of no use to anybody. I
-propose to make a bonfire of these in the cave, just to show Jack Harvey
-that we have been here. He'll find all his stuff that's good for anything
-put carefully outside the cave, and no harm come to it. But he'll be just
-as furious to find his cave discovered and on fire, for all that."
-
-"All right," said Bob, "here goes."
-
-Bob was thinking of that cake.
-
-Tom took one of the axes and chopped a small hole in the top of the cave,
-some distance above the door.
-
-"That will make a draught," he said, in answer to Bob's inquiry.
-
-Then he blew out the lantern and poured the oil with which it was filled
-over the pile of rubbish. There was still a small heap of stuff in one
-corner of the cave, some old boards, and a few pieces of sail, thrown
-carelessly in a pile, as though of no value. They did not stop to bother
-with these, as they seemed of no consequence, and they were in a hurry.
-
-Tom struck a match and set fire to the heap that he had accumulated.
-
-"We can't get away from here any too soon, now, Bob," he said. "There'll
-be some furious chaps out here, when that fire gets to crackling and
-smoking. We don't care to be about here at that time. They are too many
-for us."
-
-The boys scrambled down the bank, got into the canoe, and pushed off. As
-they paddled away, the light of the fire gleamed in the mouth of the
-cave. As soon as they had gotten clear of the reefs, they did not stop to
-reconnoitre the camp, but pushed by at full speed. It was a race against
-fire--and they little dreamed of its swiftness, nor of the hidden force
-which they had let loose.
-
-Along the shore they sped, speaking not a word till they had got the
-village in sight and their arms were cracking in the joints. Then they
-paused a moment for breath, for their little craft was out of sight of
-the camp now, in the dull morning light.
-
-Tom, who had the stern paddle, had looked back from time to time, but if
-there was any light to be seen through the bushes it was very slight. The
-spot was hidden now, too, by the intervening point of land.
-
-"I don't know whether I see a light or not," he said. "There's a lot of
-smoke, though, and I can imagine, anyway, that I see a gleam of fire in
-the midst of it."
-
-The words were scarcely out of his mouth before he swung the canoe around
-with one quick sweep of his paddle.
-
-"Look, Bob! Look!" he cried. "What have we done?"
-
-The sight that met their eyes was amazing.
-
-A sheet of flame shot suddenly into the sky. It looked like a tiny
-volcano, belching up fire and debris and pushing up through the midst of
-it a great black canopy of smoke. This was followed by the report of an
-explosion that echoed and reechoed through the village, reverberating on
-the rocks across the harbour, and filling the whole country around with
-its noise--at once startling and terrifying. Then the light as suddenly
-went out, a shower of burning sticks and shreds of blazing canvas drifted
-lazily down through the air, and a cloud of smoke hung over the spot.
-
-Tom and Bob trembled like rushes. It seemed as though every particle of
-strength had left them. There could be but one conclusion. They had blown
-up the camp. Harvey and all his crew were, perhaps, killed.
-
-Bob was the first to speak.
-
-"Come, Tom," he said. "We must get to camp before we are seen. Brace up
-and try to paddle."
-
-Somehow or other they got to camp and dragged the canoe ashore. They
-carried the box up to the tent and locked it up in the big chest. Bob's
-hand trembled so he could hardly put the key into the lock.
-
-Tom seated himself, dejectedly, on the edge of one of the bunks, the
-picture of despair.
-
-"I guess I may as well go and give myself up first as last," he said. "I
-suppose I'll have to go to jail, if they're killed. What can there have
-been in the cave? I didn't see anything to explode, did you?"
-
-"No," answered Bob, "unless it was something over in that pile of stuff
-in one corner. I didn't examine it, but they must have had something
-stored or hidden underneath there, either kerosene or gunpowder. By Jove!
-Tom, I remember now hearing Captain Sam Curtis say he had missed a keg of
-blasting-powder that he had bought for the Fourth of July, and he said he
-thought some of the sailors down the island had stolen it. That's where
-it went to; it was hidden in that corner."
-
-"That doesn't help matters much, if they're all dead," said Tom. "I'll be
-to blame, just the same. Oh, Bob, what shall I do?"
-
-"Whatever you do," answered Bob, "I stand my share of it, just as much as
-you. I'm just as guilty as you are. But don't go to pieces that way, Tom.
-We don't know yet whether they are hurt or not. The best thing we can do
-is to get down there as quick as ever we can. Shall we take the canoe and
-make a race for it?"
-
-"I can't do it," answered Tom. "I haven't got the strength,--and, to be
-honest, Bob, the courage. It's taken every bit of strength and nerve out
-of me. Bob, I tell you, I'm afraid we've killed them,--and I, for one,
-don't dare to go and look."
-
-And Tom hid his face in his hands, while the tears trickled through his
-fingers.
-
-"I don't believe they're killed," said Bob, stoutly. "They were some
-distance away from the cave, you know. Come, we'll go with the crowd, for
-the whole town must be out by this time."
-
-And so he half-persuaded, half-dragged Tom away from the tent, and they
-started for the hotel.
-
-The explosion had, indeed, aroused every one. Men were running to and
-fro, and the greatest excitement prevailed. The news quickly spread that
-some frightful accident had happened at Harvey's camp, and Tom and Bob
-heard expressions of sympathy for them on all sides, from many who had
-been the victims of their tricks, and who had time and again wished the
-island rid of them. A rumour spread among the crowd of villagers--no one
-knew where it originated--that a keg of powder, which the campers had
-left to dry near the fire, had exploded, and blown them all to pieces.
-This was only one of a number of wild rumours that were noised about that
-morning in the confusion and uncertainty. It was generally believed that
-the crew must have been killed.
-
-Tom and Bob hung on to the edge of the excited crowd, which had assembled
-in front of the hotel, and listened to these various expressions with
-horror. Then, when the crowd moved on for the camp, they followed, with
-sinking hearts.
-
-It was a strange procession that went down along the shore that morning.
-There were cottage-owners, who had grievances against the crew;
-villagers, who had been tormented and tricked by them time and again; and
-fishermen, who had lost many a tide's fishing, because their dories had
-been found sunk alongside the wharf, with heaping loads of stones aboard.
-Yet, now that disaster had befallen the crew, they were one and all
-willing to condone the offences, and anxious to render what help they
-could.
-
-They went on rapidly. Tom and Bob soon heard a cry from those in advance
-that the tent was still standing. Then hope rose in Tom's heart, that
-spurred him forward.
-
-He dashed ahead, rushed past the leaders, cutting through the woods where
-the path made a circuit. There was the tent still standing, and
-apparently uninjured by the storm of stones and debris that had rained
-down about it. But the crew! Not the sound of a voice was to be heard.
-Not a soul was stirring anywhere in the locality.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
- JACK HARVEY INVESTIGATES
-
-
-Tom's heart sank as he approached the tent, stepping over stones and
-fragments of wood that lay all about. Pulling open the flap of the tent,
-he looked anxiously inside. There lay the crew, to a man, stretched upon
-the ground, motionless. A sudden fear seized on Tom that the shock had
-killed them as they lay sleeping, and he reeled and clutched one of the
-guy-ropes to keep from falling.
-
-The next minute the crowd of villagers had arrived, and several heads
-were thrust inside the tent. Just at that moment one of the crew slowly
-raised himself on an elbow and said, angrily:
-
-"What's all this fuss about? Aren't you people satisfied with trying to
-blow us up, without coming around and making such a rumpus and keeping us
-awake?"
-
-It was Jack Harvey. The others of the crew, taking their cue from him,
-made a pretence of rousing themselves up from sleep, yawned and rubbed
-their eyes, and asked what was wanted.
-
-Then, perceiving for the first time that there were several stalwart
-fishermen in the party, and not daring to go too far, Harvey added, in a
-sneering tone:
-
-"Oh, we're obliged to you all for coming down here. It wasn't curiosity
-on your part--of course not. You came down because you thought we were
-hurt, and we're much obliged to you. Of course we are. We're glad to see
-you, moreover, now we're awake. Wait a minute, and we will stir up the
-fire and boil a pot of coffee."
-
-This was maddening to the rescuers. Some of the fishermen suggested
-pitching in and giving the crew a sound thrashing; but, so Squire
-Brackett said, "there was really no ground for such a proceeding, though
-he, for one, would be more than glad to do it." They could blame
-themselves for trying to help a pack of young hyenas like these. For his
-part, he was going back home to bed. "They'll drown themselves out in the
-bay if let alone," he commented. However, he ventured the query to
-Harvey: "Guess you boys had a little powder stored around here, didn't
-you?"
-
-"Guess again, squire," answered Harvey, roughly. "Maybe we had a fort
-with cannon mounted on it,--and maybe we'd like to go to sleep again, if
-you people would let us. We're not trespassing. We've got permission to
-camp here, so don't try to go bullying us, squire."
-
-This was the satisfaction, then, that the rescuers got at the hands of
-the crew. They had come, burying their grievances, and with hearts full
-of sympathy and kindness for the unfortunate boys, and they had
-encountered only the same reckless crew, that mocked them for their
-pains. So they turned away again, angry and disappointed, and nursing
-their wrath for a day to come.
-
-And then, as the sound of the last of their footsteps died away through
-the woods, Jack Harvey, chuckling with vast satisfaction to himself,
-said: "Wasn't that fine, though? Wasn't old Brackett and the others
-furious?"
-
-"Wild!" exclaimed Joe Hinman. "But I don't think, after all, Jack, that
-it paid. We ought to have treated them better, after they had come all
-the way down here to help us."
-
-"Pshaw!" answered Harvey. "Don't you go getting squeamish, Joe. For my
-part, I'm mad enough at somebody to fight the whole village. There's our
-cave that it took us weeks to dig, and hidden in the only spot around
-here that couldn't be discovered, gone to smash, with everything we had
-in it. Those two guns that the governor bought me were worth a pretty
-price, let me tell you. They must have gone clear into the bay, for I
-can't even find a piece of the stock of either one of them."
-
-"It looks to me as though somebody did discover the cave, after all,"
-said Joe Hinman. "You can't make me believe that it blew itself up."
-
-"Nonsense!" exclaimed Harvey--and then he paused abruptly; for, of a
-sudden, there came sharply to his mind the white face of Tom Harris,
-peering in at the tent door, with a haggard, ghastly expression. He
-recalled how Tom had started back and nearly fallen at the sight of the
-crew lying still.
-
-"He was the first one at the tent, too," muttered Harvey to himself.
-
-"What's that?" asked Joe Hinman.
-
-"Nothing," said Harvey. "But you may be right, Joe. You may be right,
-after all. Come, let's all go out and look over the ground once more.
-There may be a few things yet, to save from the wreck."
-
-The explosion, strangely enough, had not injured a single member of the
-crew. Not a piece of the wreckage had struck the tent. Pieces of rock and
-bits of branches and boards lay on every hand about the camp, and a
-stone, torn from the bank, had crashed down on the bowsprit of the
-_Surprise_, breaking it short off, carrying away rigging and sails. There
-was also a hole broken in the yacht's deck by a falling piece of ledge.
-
-The crew, awakened from sound slumber by the awful crash and by the
-shower of earth and stones, had rushed out, frightened half out of their
-wits, and at an utter loss at first to know what had happened. The full
-discovery of what had occurred only served to deepen the mystery. How it
-had happened no one could tell. To be sure, they knew what had escaped
-the notice of Tom and Bob, that four lanterns in a corner of the cave
-were filled with kerosene oil, and that in another corner, in a hole
-under the floor, covered with a few pieces of board and a thin sprinkling
-of earth, were two kegs of blasting-powder.
-
-It had been a narrow escape for them. A hole was torn in the bank big
-enough to hold several yachts the size of the _Surprise_. Not a vestige
-remained to show that a cave had ever been dug there. Several boulders
-had been dislodged from the bank and carried bodily down to the water's
-edge, besides the one that had hit the bowsprit of the _Surprise_. Of the
-stuff that Tom and Bob had placed carefully outside the cave, not a scrap
-remained. Every bit of it must have been blown into the sea. But not a
-rock nor so much as a stick had struck the tent. Beyond being dazed for
-some moments by the shock of the explosion, not one of the crew was hurt.
-
-When they had made a second and unavailing search for anything that might
-have escaped the destruction, and some half-hour after the villagers had
-departed, the crew went back to the tent and laid themselves down again
-for a morning's nap. They were soon off to sleep, save one.
-
-As often as he closed his eyes, Jack Harvey could see, in his mind's eye,
-Tom Harris come again to the door of the tent; and he could see him start
-back and almost fall. Could Tom Harris have had anything to do with the
-explosion? And if so, how? It hardly seemed possible, but Harvey could
-not put the idea out of his head. Tom's frightened face looked in at him,
-in his troubled sleep that morning, and, long before his crew were awake
-again and stirring, he rose and stole out of the tent to the shore, where
-the cave had been.
-
-And so, while Tom and Bob rolled in on to their bunks that morning,
-thankful in their hearts that no harm had come to the crew, Jack Harvey
-was down there by the shore, examining the ground over and over again,
-every inch of it, from the place where the entrance to the cave had been
-to the place where the canoe had been made fast. Much of the bank had
-been torn away there, but where the canoe had been moored there was a
-spot for some few feet that was undisturbed. Jack Harvey, after studying
-the spot carefully, went back to camp. If he had found anything that
-surprised him, he did not, for the present, mention it to his crew.
-
-Jack Harvey was a curious mixture of good and bad qualities. His parents
-were wealthy, but uneducated and unrefined. They allowed him to have all
-the money he wished to spend, and permitted him to do pretty much as he
-pleased about everything. Harvey's father had been a miner, and had
-"struck it rich," after knocking about the California gold-fields for
-nearly a score of years. Because he had managed to get along well in the
-world without any education, and without the influence of any restraint,
-such as society imposes, he had a theory that it was the best thing for a
-boy to work out his own upbringing. As a consequence, his son was rarely
-thwarted in anything. Left to himself, Harvey, though not naturally bad,
-fell in with a rough, lawless class of boys, read only the cheapest kind
-of books, which inspired him to lead an idle, good-for-nothing life, and,
-as a result, went wild.
-
-He was strong and, among his associates, a leader. They gladly awarded
-him this distinction, as they were, for the most part, poor, and he spent
-his allowance freely. He was captain of a ball nine, for which he bought
-the uniforms and the necessary equipment; captain of his yacht's crew,
-and, in all things, their acknowledged leader. His companions came
-generally to be known as Harvey's crew.
-
-Tom and Bob had a mere speaking acquaintance with him, as they all
-attended the same school at home,--from which, however, Harvey was more
-often truant than present. Beyond that association they had nothing to do
-with him. There were four members of the yacht's crew, although that term
-was applied by the people of the town to some dozen or more boys. Of
-these four, Joe Hinman was a thin, hatchet-faced, shrewd-looking boy,
-whose father was employed by a railroad in some capacity that kept him
-much away from home; George Baker and Allan Harding were cousins, whose
-parents had a rather doubtful reputation, as dealers in second-hand goods
-and articles pawned, at a little shop in an obscure quarter of the town.
-Tim Reardon had no parents that he knew of, and earned an uncertain
-living, doing chores and working at odd jobs through the winter. In the
-summer, he was usually to be found aboard Harvey's yacht, where he was
-fairly content to do the drudgery, for the sake of the livelihood and the
-fun of yachting and camping.
-
-It was not the sort of companionship that a wise and careful parent would
-have chosen for his son, but they sufficed for Harvey, and no one
-interfered with him. These boys did as he said, and that was what he
-wanted.
-
-Nearly every one in the entire village had gone down to Harvey's camp in
-the next hour following the explosion. Curiously enough, however, Henry
-Burns was not of this number. He had jumped out of bed at the crash and
-the shock, and had hastily dressed and rushed down-stairs, ready to go
-with the crowd. For once, however, Mrs. Carlin got ahead of him.
-
-"Why, Henry Burns," she had exclaimed, catching sight of him as he dodged
-out of the door. "Where do you think you are going at this hour of the
-night, and you that was feeling so bad only a few hours ago. You're not
-going off through those woods to-night, not if I know it. You can just
-take yourself back to bed, if you don't want to be laid up with a sick
-spell."
-
-And Henry Burns, now that attention was thus publicly attracted to him,
-did not dare to steal out later and join the others, lest Mrs. Carlin
-should hear of it, and, perchance, become suspicious of him. So he went
-back unwillingly to bed, but not to sleep. He was wide-awake when the
-angry party returned. Listening from his window, he heard their
-description of the explosion and their impudent reception by Harvey's
-crew; and proceeded to draw his own conclusion from it all.
-
-The more he thought of it, the more his suspicion grew that, in some way,
-Tom or Bob, or both, had had a hand in the thing. Tom, indeed, had
-expressed his intention to Henry Burns of spying on the camp in his hunt
-to find the missing box; and, although it seemed a most unlikely hour for
-him to have gone down there, Henry Burns wisely conjectured that that was
-what he must have done.
-
-Accordingly, shortly after Henry Burns had arisen that morning, and after
-he had gathered from a few villagers who were abroad some fuller details
-of the night's adventures, he made his way to the camp on the point.
-There were no signs of life about the camp, and, softly opening the flap
-of the tent, he peered within. Tom and Bob lay stretched out, sound
-asleep.
-
-Henry Burns stepped noiselessly inside. He called them by name in a low
-tone, but they did not awaken.
-
-"Last night's excitement was too much for one of them, at least, I
-guess," was his comment. And then he added: "If my suspicions are true,
-their fun lasted later than mine, and was far more exciting--but I'll
-find that out."
-
-There was a camp-stool beside each bunk, upon which Tom and Bob had
-thrown their clothes before turning in. Henry Burns quietly removed the
-clothing from these chairs, made them into a bundle, and, tucking the
-bundle under his arm, walked out of the tent and lay down on the grass,
-just outside.
-
-It seemed to him as though another hour had passed before he heard a
-creaking of one of the bunks, and a voice, which he recognized as Bob's,
-said: "Hulloa, there, Tom, wake up!"
-
-"Ay, ay," growled Tom, sleepily, but made no move.
-
-Again Bob's voice: "Say, Tom?"
-
-No answer.
-
-"Tom--hulloa, old fellow--come, let's get up. It's late."
-
-"All right, all right, Bob, so it is." And Tom roused up on an elbow and
-rubbed his eyes. Then he gave a prodigious yawn.
-
-"Whew!" he exclaimed. "What a night I had of it. I don't wonder we slept
-late, do you?"
-
-"Well, hardly," answered Bob. "My! But I can hear that explosion go off
-now, it seems to me. And wasn't that an awful sight when the flame shot
-up against the sky? I'll never forget it as long as I live."
-
-"We'll have to keep our eyes on Harvey after this for awhile," said Tom.
-"Hulloa!" he exclaimed, suddenly, as they tumbled out on to the floor.
-"Where are our clothes? We left them right here when we turned in, didn't
-we?"
-
-The boys looked at each other and stared in astonishment.
-
-"Of course we did," answered Bob.
-
-"What can it mean?" gasped Tom.
-
-"Hope to die if I can guess," said Bob. "It's plain enough, though, that
-some one has been in here while we were asleep and cleaned out our
-wardrobe. Not a thing left. You don't suppose that Harvey--"
-
-"Nonsense," interrupted Tom. "It's that young scoundrel of a Joe Warren.
-He's always up to his monkey-shines. It's some of his doings. He was the
-one, mind you, that proposed yesterday that we carry our change of good
-clothing up to his cottage for safe-keeping. Here we are, now, without a
-rag to put on."
-
-"I suppose he thinks we'll have to march up to his cottage in blankets,
-like Indians," said Bob. "Well, if it comes to that, I'll stay right here
-till night. You don't catch me parading around in a blanket in the
-daytime, to be laughed at by everybody."
-
-"We'll have to pay him up for this," said Tom.
-
-At this moment Henry Burns appeared at the doorway.
-
-"I have some cheap second-hand clothes here," he said. "They're pretty
-well worn out, and you can have them for a small consideration, seeing
-that you need them so bad. I want the money for my poor mother, who's
-sick at home with the smallpox."
-
-"Scoundrel!" yelled Tom.
-
-"Pirate!" muttered Bob.
-
-They rushed fiercely at Henry Burns, who, however, smiling serenely,
-still held on tightly to the bundle of clothing.
-
-"Pay me my price for them, and you can have them all," he said.
-
-"How much?" asked Tom.
-
-"Wait till we try them on and see if they still fit," said Bob.
-
-"My price," answered Henry Burns, depositing the bundle on a chair and
-seating himself upon an end of one of the bunks, "is that you tell me how
-you came so near to blowing up Jack Harvey's camp last night."
-
-It was a long shot on his part, but it went straight to the mark. There
-was an awkward silence for almost a minute. Finally Tom said:
-
-"There's no use trying to keep a secret from him, Bob. He knows half
-already. We may as well tell him all, and see what he thinks of it."
-
-"Fire away, Tom," said Bob. "No one was injured, anyway, so no great harm
-can come of it."
-
-So Tom related to Henry Burns the story of the night's adventure. Henry
-listened with the greatest interest.
-
-"I'd have given a good deal," he said, "to see Jack Harvey when he found
-his cave blown up, with all their spoils along with it."
-
-When the story was finished, however, he was inclined to treat the matter
-more seriously than they had supposed he would.
-
-"I'm afraid it's a bad scrape to be in," he said at length. "From what I
-have heard about our friend Harvey, I judge he is not one of the kind to
-let a thing of this sort go without paying somebody back for it. And I
-believe he is as sure to find out who blew up that cave as I am that I am
-sitting here."
-
-"How can that be?" asked Bob.
-
-"I can't say," replied Henry Burns; "but if you keep your eyes open, you
-will see that he suspects you. I'll warrant if we could see Jack Harvey
-now, we should see him out examining every inch of the shore, looking at
-the rocks on the beach for any paint that might be scraped off your
-canoe, and all such things as that. He is a shrewd one, and, when he has
-once satisfied himself that you and Tom wrecked his cave, why, I wouldn't
-give a fig for your camp here,--that is, unless you propose to stay at
-home all the time to guard it."
-
-Strange to say, if they could have seen Jack Harvey just then, they would
-have witnessed a most startling confirmation of Henry Burns's words. For
-Jack Harvey, at that moment, was at the shore once more. He was examining
-every inch of it. He was scrutinizing every rock along the beach. He was
-out among the ledges, looking carefully along their sides. He was
-searching here, and he was searching there,--but what he found he neither
-confided to his crew nor to any one else, but kept locked for the present
-in his own breast.
-
-"I believe Henry is right," said Tom. "And it isn't the most pleasant
-prospect to think that our camp may be overhauled at any time, whenever
-we happen to be away, and perhaps disappear altogether some dark night,
-if we happen to be caught out on the bay or down the island. But what to
-do I don't see, for the life of me,--except to keep as quiet as possible
-about it."
-
-"I may not be right," suggested Henry Burns, "but my advice would be to
-do just the opposite,--that is, when you once feel certain that Harvey is
-hunting for you.
-
-"Tell Harvey," continued Henry, "that you blew up his camp, and how you
-did it, and why. Tell him what you saw in that cave. Ask him point-blank
-if he would want the villagers to know what you saw in there. Strike a
-bargain with him to call it even. He will be glad to do it; whereas, if
-he finds you and Bob out, without your knowing what he is up to, he will
-watch night and day for a chance to harm you."
-
-"The fact is," added Henry Burns, as he arose to go, "what with Jack
-Harvey and Colonel Witham on the war-path after you, you are likely to
-have quite a lively summer before you get through. So keep your eyes open
-and look out. And remember, when in trouble, always apply to H. A. Burns,
-care Colonel Witham--always ready to serve you." And Henry Burns walked
-away, whistling.
-
-Tom and Bob went about their breakfast preparations, looking rather
-serious for a time; but a hearty meal made them look at the matter
-somewhat less seriously.
-
-"Henry Burns is quite apt to be right about things, so the Warrens say,"
-commented Tom, after awhile, as they were finishing their meal. "But I
-guess he likes to talk some, too, just to make an impression. I don't see
-how Harvey can find out who blew up his cave in a hundred years, if we
-only keep quiet and don't give it away ourselves."
-
-"I'm not so sure," answered Bob. "Those things do get out."
-
-Jack Harvey, in the meantime, having completed a careful survey of the
-shore, and either finding or not finding what he sought for, went back to
-his camp and crew. Toward noon, however, he left his camp, and a little
-later Tom saw him coming up along the shore.
-
-When he came to where the canoe lay on the beach, Harvey paused and
-examined it closely. Then, as though to test its weight, he lifted it up
-on his broad shoulders, and then set it down on the beach again, this
-time bottom up.
-
-Tom and Bob started down to the shore at this, but, before either they or
-Harvey had spoken, they had seen plainly that which, perhaps, Harvey had
-looked for, a long broad scratch upon the bottom of the canoe, near the
-middle, where the fresh paint had been scraped off.
-
-"Hulloa, there," said Harvey, as they approached. "That's a fine canoe
-you've got there. Guess I'll have to get the governor to buy me one. I
-saw your tent yesterday, but didn't have a chance to come around. You
-fellows got ahead of me, by coming over last night--with the crowd."
-
-"Yes," answered Bob. "We expected to find you all blown into the sea.
-What was the matter over at your camp?"
-
-"Why, between you and me," replied Harvey, eying them cautiously as he
-spoke, "I think some one of the crew did it, as a joke. They're up to
-that sort of thing, you know. They'd just as lieve do it as not, any one
-of them. Like as not that young Tim Reardon did it, because I make him
-lug water, and don't let up on him when he has lazy spells. To tell you
-the truth, we had a little powder stored away in a hole under a tree, and
-I guess one of them touched it off."
-
-Harvey tried to speak carelessly; but there was an angry light in his
-eyes and an expression around his mouth which would not be concealed, and
-which boded no good for somebody, and this was not lost on Tom and Bob.
-
-"Come up to the camp, won't you?" asked Tom. Harvey first declined, as
-though it had not been his intention to stop, and then accepted, and the
-three went toward the tent. On the way there Tom found a chance to say to
-Bob, "I guess Henry Burns was right, wasn't he, Bob?" And Bob answered,
-"Yes."
-
-"Snug quarters you have here," said Harvey, as they entered the tent.
-"Tight and dry,--and bunks, too. We can't beat these accommodations
-aboard the _Surprise_. And here's camp-chairs, like a steam-yacht or a
-cottage. You'll be having pictures on the walls next, and a carpet on the
-floor,--and then you won't allow each other to have mud on your boots."
-
-Harvey was still watching them sharply as he spoke, and may have made the
-last remark with a purpose, inasmuch as the boots of both Tom and Bob
-were begrimed and smeared with the clay from the bank near Harvey's camp,
-and their clothes, for that matter, were muddy in spots.
-
-"Sure enough," answered Tom, "we have things as shipshape as we can.
-We've got a camp-kit here that can't be beaten on the island. Maybe you
-would be interested to have a look at it." So saying, Tom deliberately
-unlocked the big packing-case and threw back the cover.
-
-"There," cried Tom, pointing to the box that had been stolen, "what do
-you think of that?"
-
-Harvey drew back quickly, and looked as though he were about to strike
-Tom a blow, while his face flushed angrily. Bob sprang quickly from his
-seat on one of the bunks, and he and Tom stood confronting Harvey. If the
-latter had intended to strike a blow, he changed his mind and did not do
-it. Instead, he gave a half-laugh and said:
-
-"That's what I came up to see you about. The fact is, I have known you
-fellows blew up our cave ever since I saw your face"--looking at Tom--"at
-the door of our tent last night. Then I found, too, where your canoe had
-landed on the edge of the shore, and just where that big scratch was
-made. The paint is on the rocks yet. Now I don't think you fellows used
-me square, though I know you did it because you thought we stole your
-box--"
-
-"Which you did," interrupted Tom.
-
-Again the quick flush in Harvey's face, and again the gesture as though
-he would strike Tom a blow; but he did not do it, as he had refrained
-before.
-
-"No, there's where you are wrong," he said; "though I don't deny that one
-of the crew took it,--not knowing it was yours. They wouldn't one of them
-take anything from you."
-
-"Which is not true," said Tom, quietly.
-
-This was more than Harvey could stand. With clenched fist, he rushed at
-Tom, aiming a heavy blow at his face, and crying, as he did so: "I lie,
-do I? Then take that!"
-
-Tom partially avoided the blow by stepping back and guarding his face
-with one arm. The blow fell short, striking him near the shoulder. At the
-same time, however, he tripped over the packing-case, and that, with the
-force of the blow, sent him over backwards, so that he fell all in a heap
-in one corner of the tent.
-
-Harvey darted for the door, to make his escape; but Bob sprang at him and
-the two clinched. Harvey was larger and more than a match for either one
-of them, and, with a quick twist, threw Bob violently to the floor. But
-the latter clung to him and brought him down, too. Then, before Harvey
-could break Bob's hold, Tom had recovered himself and thrown himself upon
-him. He rolled Harvey over, and the next moment he and Bob had him
-securely pinned to the floor.
-
-"Now," said Tom, as they held him fast, "we are not going to hurt you,
-Jack Harvey, because we are no such cowards; but I've got something to
-say to you which it will be for your advantage to listen to.
-
-"In the first place, let me tell you that you are a coward and as good as
-a thief. You didn't steal our box because one of your crew did it for you
-and saved you the trouble; but you knew it was stolen from us, and would
-have taken it yourself if you had had the chance. You need not tell us
-that your crew would not steal from us, for we know better, and so do
-you. In the second place, I want to tell you that we blew up your cave
-without intending to do more than burn some of the things in it. The rest
-we took out,--though it doesn't make much difference now what our
-intentions were.
-
-"And, last of all, let me tell you that neither you nor your crew are
-going to try to be revenged on us. Why? Because you don't dare to. It
-wouldn't be healthy for any of you, if it became known in the village
-what was in that cave, and nobody knows that better than you. Not that
-Bob and I intend to tell, ever, unless you give us cause to. But let me
-tell you that it won't do for you to play any tricks on us.
-
-"Please don't forget that neither you nor a single one of your crew dares
-to disturb so much as a rope around this camp. Now you can get up."
-
-Harvey rose, white with rage, and stood for a moment, as though undecided
-whether or not to continue the unequal combat; but his better judgment
-prevailed, and he walked slowly out of the tent, pausing at the door long
-enough to say:
-
-"You need not have any fear of our troubling you or your camp. You have
-been too smart for us, and we shall steer clear of you after this.
-
-"In fact," he added, sneeringly, "any little thing we can do for you at
-any time, just let us know. We shall think a great deal of two such smart
-fellows as you, I assure you." And so saying, he left them.
-
-"Sorry we can't say as much for you," Bob called out after him, and was
-half-sorry for the words the next moment; for it was foolish to increase
-an enmity which could only lead to trouble.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
- SQUIRE BRACKETT'S DOG
-
-
-The island got a respite of at least a week, after the explosion, from
-excitement of any sort. A calm like that of the primeval days before the
-"boom" pervaded all the settlement. But it was not to endure. One morning
-a little fishing-schooner, which had fallen into the hands of Squire
-Brackett, through a mortgage which he had foreclosed upon a poor skipper
-across the bay, and which was now lying at anchor in the harbour, was
-found painted with broad stripes of blood red, and flying the skull and
-cross-bones at the masthead, a veritable pirate craft.
-
-The squire was never able to discover whether the authors of this piece
-of mischief were the boys or some of his own townsmen, who, indignant at
-his seizure of the only means of livelihood belonging to the unfortunate
-skipper, had roundly denounced Squire Brackett for his meanness. However,
-the incident resulted in the squire leaving on the boat one day for the
-city of Benton to make a purchase.
-
-What the squire purchased he brought back with him the next day. And, as
-it is a matter of passing interest how his purchase arrived at the island
-and how brief a time it remained there, it shall be here recorded. By the
-same boat there came to the village an individual whose arrival made no
-stir, but who remained long enough to create the greatest excitement the
-village had ever known.
-
-The arrival of the steamer from Benton was an event of great interest
-daily, for it brought not only mysterious packages, bundles, and messages
-from fathers whose business kept them in the city, but now and then a new
-face, which was duly scrutinized and commented upon by the summer
-colonists before its possessor had crossed the gangplank.
-
-So that on this day when Squire Brackett returned to his native isle
-there were many gathered upon the wharf, though, it is hardly necessary
-to say, not for the purpose of welcoming his return. Yet one might
-readily believe the squire thought otherwise; since, as the steamer
-neared the wharf, this self-important individual, arrayed in a suit of
-shining black, with a great deal of staring shirt-front, and with an
-enormous slouch-hat surmounting his ponderous head, seemed the most
-conspicuous person aboard.
-
-The squire stood nearest the gangway, and, indeed, it looked from a
-distance as though the other passengers, in recognition of the greatness
-of this island magnate, had drawn respectfully back a little distance, to
-wait till he should have gone ashore ere they approached the railing.
-
-As the steamer came nearer, however, the reason for this seeming
-deference on their part became apparent. It was plainly not due so much
-to any awe inspired by the squire as it was to fear,--fear of the
-squire's purchase. The squire's purchase was as ugly and vicious looking
-a bulldog as ever walked on four legs. The squire held the dog by a stout
-piece of cord, which was wound several times about his wrist.
-
-The dog and the squire, being each in equally ill-humour, may have found
-their companionship agreeable. Certain it was that the squire was the
-only person whom the dog did not snarl and snap at. It growled and
-snapped at every one, and even snarled and showed its teeth at the
-good-natured cook aboard the steamer, who had offered it a scrap of meat.
-
-This surliness on the part of his new acquisition had particularly
-pleased the squire, who argued from it that here was an incorruptible
-beast, that would meet in the same spirit any such advances upon the part
-of strangers when it should be duly installed as guardian of his
-farmhouse.
-
-The squire would be magnanimous on this occasion, however, and, despite
-the fact that the crowd on the wharf looked to him, as it always did in
-his eyes, like invaders of his domain, he gave a bow accompanied by a
-sweeping gesture of his hand, presumably intended to be a patronizing
-greeting, which should include everybody, and nobody in particular, at
-once.
-
-Then the steamer made its landing. It was not always an easy matter here,
-for the tide at certain times ran swift, and seemed to strive fiercely to
-drive the boat away from the wharf. Therefore, when the steamer was as
-yet at some distance from the wharf, a deck-hand at the bow skilfully let
-fly a coil of small rope, which unwound in the air and was caught by a
-man standing on the wharf. To an end of this rope was attached the usual
-heavy hawser, which was then drawn on to the wharf by means of the small
-rope, and the bight thrown over a spiling. In like manner the other big
-hawser was drawn up astern on to the wharf.
-
-When things were done shipshape, it was the rule of the steamer that the
-small rope should be coiled again and at once thrown back to the boat
-while one end was still fast to the wharf, so that when the hawser was
-cast off from the spiling it could be drawn aboard by the small rope,
-without its splashing down into the water and getting wet.
-
-But things were more often done hurriedly than shipshape at the Southport
-landing. The steamer's crew had all they could do usually to land freight
-and get it out quickly enough, so that the boat could go on down the bay
-without losing time. The line thrown to the wharf was usually caught by
-the village storekeeper, who had little time to spare, or by whatever man
-or boy happened to be standing near at hand. The boat's rule was seldom
-obeyed. Scarcely any one ever took the trouble to coil up the small rope
-and throw it back. When the hawsers were cast off they fell into the
-water, regardless of the fact that they thereby got wet and became
-heavier, dragging the small ropes after them, and were hauled aboard as
-the boat steamed away.
-
-The steamer having, on this occasion, been made fast to the wharf and the
-gangplank put out, Squire Brackett crossed it, dragging his purchase
-behind him,--the purchase skulking very unwillingly across the plank and
-showing its teeth at the crowd upon the wharf.
-
-The squire hated and despised boys, and made it a point to ignore them
-whenever it was possible. For this very reason they delighted to annoy
-him by hailing him whenever they met him. Young Joe Warren had a way of
-driving the squire nearly into fits by pretending to mistake him for one
-Captain Kendrick, who was the bitterest enemy the squire had, and then
-always apologizing for his mistake by explaining to the squire that he
-could not tell them apart.
-
-"Good morning, Squire Brackett, glad to see you back again!" cried Henry
-Burns, in the heartiest fashion imaginable, as the squire stepped on to
-the wharf.
-
-"Humph! Morning--morning," grunted the squire, as he eyed Henry Burns
-suspiciously.
-
-Henry Burns smiled most affably, as though the squire had been his
-dearest friend and adviser.
-
-"Why, how do you do, squire?" said George Warren, cordially.
-
-Squire Brackett scowled angrily at him, but answered, "How d'ye do?" as
-short as he could.
-
-Just then young Joe made his appearance.
-
-"How are you, Captain Kendrick?" he bawled, loud enough to be heard all
-over the wharf.
-
-The crowd began to smile, and young Joe added, hastily:
-
-"Oh, I beg pardon, Squire Brackett--always take you for Cap'n
-Kendrick--strange how you do look so much alike."
-
-"You little idiot," yelled the choleric squire, "I'd Cap'n Kendrick you
-with a rawhide, if I had the say of you,--insulting an honest man with a
-name like that,--every one of you ought to be in State prison. And you,
-you're the worst one of all, Jack Harvey," pointing to the latter, who
-had just come upon the wharf. "And you, too!" shaking his fist at Tom and
-Bob. "You're sly, but you'll get caught yet. You're a pack of young
-rascals, every one of you. Don't any of you come around my house, if you
-don't want to be chewed up. Here, you brute! Quit that!"
-
-The dog had snapped viciously at a child that ran past, causing her to
-scream with fear.
-
-Just then the freight-agent called out to the squire:
-
-"You'll have to come in here and see about this freight of yours," he
-said. "It's all mixed up. And don't bring that dog in here, or the crew
-may take him for a piece of freight and run a truck against him."
-
-At one corner of the freight-house on the wharf was a big iron ring, to
-which the squire tied the dog.
-
-"I wouldn't advise anybody to meddle with him," he said; but the advice
-seemed hardly necessary, for the dog showed its teeth and sprang savagely
-at any one who ventured to come near.
-
-There were some expressions of indignation that such a dangerous brute
-should be brought to the island.
-
-Every one did keep as far out of the dog's way as possible, excepting Tim
-Reardon, who, after a whispered consultation with Jack Harvey, after
-which the latter disappeared behind the freight-house, seated himself
-just out of the dog's reach, and caused that animal to froth at the mouth
-and nearly strangle itself in trying to get loose, by pointing a finger
-at the dog and making a loud hissing noise between his teeth.
-
-Not content with this form of annoyance, Tim Reardon varied it now and
-again by darting a hand out at the dog, as though in an attempt to seize
-him by the throat. To which the maddened animal, with true bulldog
-ferocity, responded with savage rushes as far as the rope would permit,
-his wide-open jaws fairly dripping with rage and disappointment.
-
-If there was any design on the boy's part to distract the dog's attention
-from what Jack Harvey was doing at the corner of the freight-house, to
-which the dog was tied, it succeeded admirably. Moreover, it is certain
-that, when Harvey reappeared, Tim stopped teasing the brute, and he and
-Harvey walked around to the rear of the freight-house.
-
-The freight-house was situated almost at the end of the wharf on its
-seaward side, so near to the edge of the wharf that there was only room
-for a single person to walk along on the outside, and that at the risk of
-losing one's balance and falling off the wharf. The ring to which the dog
-was tied was on the side near the end, and was not visible to those
-standing on the front of the wharf. Any one going around to the further
-side of the freight-house at this moment might have seen Harvey and Tim
-standing there,--Harvey nearest the ring and holding a knife in his hand.
-
-The steamer in landing had made a complete circuit in the harbour, and
-had come alongside the wharf with her head pointing out into the bay, so
-that now, as Captain Chase called out "All aboard," and gave orders to
-cast off bow and stern lines, the boat was ready to steam directly away
-from the wharf. The gangplanks were drawn in. There was a tinkling of
-bells; a great commotion as the steamer's wheels began to revolve
-rapidly; a general waving of handkerchiefs from the wharf to those who
-were bound farther down the bay; the steamer began to glide away from the
-wharf, when suddenly somebody shrieked:
-
-"The dog! The dog! Run! Run! He's broken loose."
-
-And before the crowd had time to scatter, the dog, infuriated with the
-tormenting it had received at the hands of Tim Reardon, dashed toward it.
-Men, women, and children fled in terror. Squire Brackett, who came
-running out of the freight-house, did not dare face the dog, but dodged
-back into the freight-house and slammed the door shut, in a cold sweat of
-fear.
-
-The boys, most of them, rushed for points of safety, clambering up the
-ends of the spiling that jutted above the floor of the wharf, and young
-Joe and Tom Harris, being at the very edge of the wharf, and having no
-other means of escape, and nothing to defend themselves with, dropped off
-the wharf into the water and swam to shore. Several of the other boys and
-some men scrambled about for clubs to ward off the brute's fierce rush.
-
-Among these latter was Henry Burns. Realizing on the instant that to
-attempt to flee was worse than hopeless, he had glanced about for
-something to defend himself with, and had seized upon a broken piece of
-oar. Grasping it with both hands, he stood, calmly awaiting the attack.
-The dog, seeing him right in his path, rushed at him, and when within a
-yard of the boy suddenly gave a spring, as though to seize him by the
-throat.
-
-Henry Burns, summoning all his strength, aimed a terrific sweeping blow
-at the dog, but it missed its mark. Meeting no obstruction, the force of
-the blow swung the boy completely around, so that he lost his balance and
-fell sprawling upon the wharf, while the piece of oar flew from his hands
-and landed far out in the water.
-
-A strange thing had happened. The crowd, pausing breathlessly in the
-midst of flight, had seen with horror the dog spring at Henry Burns; but
-the animal's leap had a most extraordinary termination. All at once the
-dog was jerked violently backward through the air, and fell heavily on
-the wharf, yelping with surprise and fright. Then it was dragged rapidly
-across the wharf, and the crowd yelled with derision as they saw that the
-rope by which the dog had been tied to the ring had been unfastened or
-cut from the ring, and had been fastened to the rope which had been
-thrown from the steamer, and the other end of which was made fast to the
-steamer's hawser.
-
-As the boat steamed away it drew the rope after it. There was no possible
-escape for the dog. Struggling as best it could, barking and yelping, and
-snapping madly at the rope, it braced itself for one instant on the edge
-of the wharf, and then was dragged over and fell, still struggling, to
-the water below. The steamer kept on its way a short distance, and then
-stopped. The rope was drawn in by a deck-hand and the dog hauled to the
-railing of the steamer, but it was not taken aboard, for nobody on board
-wanted a dead dog. The deck-hand cut the rope, and the body splashed into
-the water.
-
-Thus perished the squire's bulldog, unmourned, save for the squire
-himself, who raged about the wharf, looking for some boy whom he might
-accuse of the trick, and vowing untold vengeance upon the perpetrators of
-it. But, one and all, they had wisely dispersed, the guilty and the
-innocent alike, and the squire was soon left alone in his wrath.
-
-Who had done the thing? The crowd did not know, for it had been too
-excited to notice that Jack Harvey and Tim Reardon had emerged from
-behind the freight-house just at the critical moment when the dog had
-sprung at Henry Burns.
-
-As for Henry Burns, he was the hero of the hour.
-
-There had been on the whole so much excitement attending the squire's
-arrival that few had noticed a stranger who had come ashore soon after
-Squire Brackett. He had not waited on the wharf, but had gone directly to
-the hotel. There Henry Burns met him later; for the man sat at Colonel
-Witham's table, as that was the only one then available.
-
-The new arrival was the sort of guest to please the colonel, for he was
-extremely quiet. He walked only with the aid of a cane, and then,
-apparently, with great effort, stopping frequently to rest. He told them
-he had been very ill; that his health had broken down with overwork, and
-he had accordingly tried cruising along the coast. His friends had left
-him up the river some days before, and would call for him.
-
-He was a man a little under middle age, of medium height and thick-set,
-with black hair and a pale, smooth-shaven face. He was evidently somewhat
-a man of the world and had travelled abroad, for, seated before the
-fireplace in the office that evening, he talked for some time of his
-travels.
-
-But there were other things of more interest to the boarders than this
-quiet, reserved stranger, who did not play cards and who hobbled about
-with a cane. There was, above all, a morning paper from town, which
-bristled with startling head-lines, descriptive of a robbery of the
-residence of one of the richest men in the town. It told how the thieves,
-three in number, had entered the house where Mr. Curtis, the owner, was
-sleeping alone, in the absence of his family; how they had put a pistol
-to his head and made him get up and open a safe, from which they had
-taken several hundred dollars in money and a jewel-case containing a
-diamond necklace and other gems to the value of several thousand dollars.
-
-The jewels, it said, were the property of Mrs. Curtis, and most of them
-had been bridal presents. A reward of $500 was offered for their return
-or for information leading to the arrest of any one of the robbers.
-
-The article stated further that Mr. Curtis was positive he could identify
-the man who subsequently bound and gagged him, his mask having but
-partially concealed his face. He was, he said, a man of about medium
-height, with black hair, black moustache, and heavy black beard,
-broad-shouldered, thick-set, and unusually active and powerful.
-
-All this, as it was read aloud, threw the guests into the greatest
-possible excitement, as a great part of them were from the very town and
-knew the Curtis family, by reputation if not personally.
-
-It did not, of course, interest the stranger guest, for he nodded in his
-chair and nearly dozed off several times during the reading. Still, when
-the guests had dispersed, he picked up the paper from a chair and took it
-with him to his room.
-
-It was the very next night following that of his arrival that Henry Burns
-met with a surprise.
-
-On the night in question there was a full moon about half-past ten
-o'clock, and, as Henry had agreed with Tom and Bob to meet them at their
-tent, he opened his window, stepped out on to the ledge and started to
-climb to the roof.
-
-Mackerel had struck in at the western bay, and the boys had planned to
-paddle down the island that night, carry their canoe across the short
-strip of land that saved the island from being cut into almost equal
-halves by the sea, launch it again in the western bay, and paddle around
-to where the Warren boys' sloop lay anchored in Fish Hawk's Cove. Then
-they were all to try for mackerel early in the morning.
-
-Henry Burns stepped softly out, grasped the lightning-rod, and, with a
-quickness that would have amazed the worthy Mrs. Carlin, scrambled to the
-ledge over the top of his window. There he paused a moment for breath,
-and then climbed up the lightning-rod, hand over hand, and gained the
-roof.
-
-He had proceeded then across the roof but a little ways, when he heard
-suddenly, almost directly beneath him, the sound of footsteps. Some one
-was coming up the stairs that led to the roof.
-
-Henry Burns had barely time to conceal himself behind a chimney when the
-trap-door in the roof was softly opened, and he saw the head and
-shoulders of a man emerge through the opening. Henry Burns lay flat on
-the roof, in the dark shadow cast by the chimney. The moon shone full in
-the man's face, and Henry Burns saw, to his amazement, that it was the
-stranger guest. The sickly, weak expression in the man's face was gone,
-and in its stead there was a sinister, bold look, which seemed far more
-natural to his powerful physique.
-
-Suddenly the man, with the strength and ease of an athlete, sprang
-lightly out on to the roof. He still carried his cane, but he had no use
-for it, save to clutch it in one hand more after the manner of a cudgel
-than a cane.
-
-Henry Burns, for once in his life, was afraid. It was all so strange and
-incomprehensible.
-
-Once upon the roof, the man straightened himself up, threw out his chest
-and squared back his broad shoulders. He was erect in stature, without
-the suggestion of a stoop. He seemed to exult in the freedom of the
-place, like one who had been kept in some confinement. When he walked
-across the roof to the edge facing the sea, there was no suggestion of
-any limp in his gait. It was quick and firm, but noiseless and almost
-catlike.
-
-What did it mean? Henry Burns thought of the robbery. Could the man have
-had anything to do with that? Why had he pretended to be weak and ill?
-Why had he come to this out-of-the-way place, pretending that he was an
-invalid? Surely he could have no designs upon any one on the island.
-There was no house there that offered inducement to a robber, if the man
-were one.
-
-It must be that his coming was an attempt to hide himself away--to
-secrete himself. But why? The description of the robber that had bound
-Mr. Curtis--did that tally with the appearance of this man? Broad
-shoulders, medium height, active, powerful,--all these agreed. But the
-black moustache and heavy beard. The stranger's face was smoothly shaven.
-That transformation, however, could have been quickly effected.
-
-One thing was certain. It would not be well that this man, a pretended
-invalid, but strong, and armed with a heavy cane, that had suddenly
-become transformed from a cripple's staff to a cudgel, who could but have
-some dark motive in thus disguising and secreting himself, should find
-himself watched and his secret discovered. Henry Burns crouched closer in
-the shadow of the chimney, and hardly dared to breathe. The evil that he
-had so accidentally uncovered in the man, his own helplessness compared
-with the other's strength, and the dangerous situation, there upon the
-house-top, made him afraid. If they had been upon the ground he would
-have feared less.
-
-The man scanned the moonlit waters of the bay long and earnestly. His
-survey done, he paced a few times back and forth, swinging the cane, and
-then, stealing noiselessly to the doorway, disappeared down the stairs,
-closing the trap-door after him.
-
-Henry Burns lost little time in descending to the ground. On the way to
-the boys' camp that night he made two resolves: first, that he would keep
-to himself, for the present, at least, the stranger's secret; second,
-that, whatever that secret was, he would find it out if any clue was to
-be had upon that island. The second resolution, he thought, rather
-included the first, since, the greater the number of those who knew of
-the stranger's secret, the greater the chances of his suspicions being
-aroused.
-
-Another thing that disturbed Henry Burns not a little was the knowledge
-that his excursions over the roof were now attended with greater risk
-than ever. It would not do to encounter the stranger there unexpectedly.
-What might not the man, suddenly aroused, and desperate, as Henry Burns
-believed him to be, do to him, if he found himself discovered? A fall
-from such a height must mean instant death, and who was there to suspect
-that he had not fallen, if he should be found next day lying upon the
-ground?
-
-In the future he must know whether the roof were occupied or not before
-he ventured upon it, and especially must he be careful when returning
-late at night.
-
-Henry Burns resolved to keep the man's secret for a time, for the reason
-that he was firmly convinced he had not come to the island to commit any
-wrong there, but to hide away. The island offered every advantage for the
-latter, and no inducement for the former. The man's design certainly was
-to secrete himself. Still, Henry Burns had no intention of letting the
-man escape from the island. He would watch also for those friends that
-the man had said were to come for him with their yacht, and he would make
-sure that they did not sail away again. Though but a boy, the stranger's
-secret was in dangerous hands, if he had but known it. And yet luck was
-to effect more than Henry Burns's scheming.
-
-Tom and Bob were waiting impatiently when Henry Burns arrived at the
-tent. They launched the canoe, the three embarked, and soon left the tent
-and then the village behind. They glided swiftly along the picturesque
-shore till they came at length to the narrows; here they carried the
-canoe across and launched it again in the western bay. In an hour from
-the time they had left the tent, they had come alongside the sloop
-_Spray_ in Fish Hawk's Cove, and the Warren boys had sleepily made room
-for them in the cabin.
-
-It was crowded for them all there, and it may have been for that reason
-that Henry Burns did not sleep soundly,--either that, or because of the
-figure of a man that he could not drive from his mind, and that appeared
-to him, half-dreaming and half-awake, as a figure that hobbled along,
-stooping and bent, but which suddenly sprang up before him, lithe and
-threatening, and brandishing in his hand a cudgel that looked like a
-cane.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
- THE HAUNTED HOUSE
-
-
-At four o'clock next morning, when Arthur Warren tried to rouse the other
-boys, they were loath to turn out. It was warm inside, under the
-blankets, and the sea air outside was cool and damp. Out in the cockpit
-Arthur lighted an oil-stove, which they always carried aboard, made the
-coffee in a big pot, and set it on to boil. Then he called the sleepers
-in the cabin again.
-
-"Come you, Art, shut up out there! How do you expect any one can sleep,
-with you bawling out in that fashion?"
-
-This was from George Warren, whose voice denoted that he was only about
-half-awake.
-
-"Don't want you to sleep any more," answered Arthur. "Want you to get up
-and fish."
-
-"Don't care to fish," said George, still only half-awake.
-
-"Well," persisted Arthur, "may I inquire what you did come over here
-for?"
-
-"Certainly you may. I came over here to sleep. I like the air over here.
-Now, please don't disturb us any more, Arthur. You can be decent, you
-know, when you've a mind to be." And with this request, drowsily mumbled,
-George pulled the blanket comfortably about him and settled back for
-another nap.
-
-At this juncture, however, his brother poked his head in at the
-companionway and yelled at the top of his lungs:
-
-"Hulloa, there! Hulloa, I say! There's a school of mackerel breaking off
-the point. Wake up, every lazy lubber aboard!"
-
-"Say, Art, you're a mean scoundrel," said George Warren, emerging once
-more from the blankets. "You know there isn't a mackerel in sight. I'll
-be just fool enough to look out of the window, though, so you can laugh,
-so get ready." And George looked sleepily out of the little cabin window.
-
-He had no sooner done so, however, than he sprang up, exclaiming,
-excitedly:
-
-"There they are, sure enough. Boys, get up! Get up! There's a school of
-mackerel breaking off the point, as sure as we're alive."
-
-The boys needed no further urging. They dressed and scrambled out on
-deck. Not far away from the sloop could be seen plainly that tiny
-chop-sea which is caused by the breaking of a school of mackerel. The
-calm surface of the water was broken there by a series of miniature
-ripples which could not be mistaken. The fish were there, but would they
-bite?
-
-"They are coming this way," said Arthur. "We can soon reach them with the
-throw-bait. We shall not have to leave the sloop."
-
-Hastily they got the bait out. It was a bucket filled with scraps of fish
-and clams, chopped fine and mixed with salt water. Taking a long-handled
-dipper, Arthur half-filled it with the bait and threw it as far as he
-could out toward the school of fish.
-
-The mackerel seized upon it greedily. From the sloop the boys could see
-them dart through the water after it as it slowly sank. The water was
-fairly alive with fish, ravenously hungry.
-
-"Hurrah!" cried Arthur. "They're hungry as sharks. Get the lines out,
-quick."
-
-In a twinkling every boy had a line overboard; but, to their
-disappointment, not a fish would bite. They still seized the throw-bait
-that was cast out, but not one of them would take a baited hook.
-
-"If that isn't a regular mackerel trick, I'll eat my bait," said George
-Warren. "Cap'n Sam said mackerel would often act that way, though I never
-saw them when they wouldn't bite before. He says they will play around a
-boat for hours and not touch a hook, and, all of a sudden, they'll
-commence and bite as though they were starving."
-
-The boy's words were unexpectedly verified at this moment by a sudden
-twitch at his line and by corresponding twitches at all the other lines.
-The fish had begun biting in earnest. The next moment the boys had three
-or four aboard, handsome fellows, striped green and black, changing to a
-bluish shade, and soon the cockpit seemed alive with them.
-
-It was new sport for Tom and Bob, but they soon learned to tend two
-lines, one in each hand; to drop one and haul the other in at a bite, and
-to slat the mackerel off the hook with a quick snap, instead of stopping
-to take them off by hand.
-
-The mackerel bit fiercely, sometimes at the bare hook even, like fish
-gone crazy. It seemed as though they might go on catching them all day
-long, for the water was alive with them; but all at once the fish stopped
-biting as abruptly as they had begun. They still played around the boat,
-but not a fish would touch a hook.
-
-"We may as well put up our lines, boys. They are through biting for this
-morning," said Arthur Warren. "Besides, we have more fish now than we
-know what to do with."
-
-There was no doubt of that. They had caught several hundred of the
-fish--enough to supply the village.
-
-"We'll make friends with every one in town," said George Warren. "These
-are the first mackerel of the season, and we will give away all we cannot
-use."
-
-"I feel as though I could eat about four now," said young Joe.
-
-"I can eat at least six," said Henry Burns.
-
-"We'll try you and see," said Arthur, producing an enormous frying-pan
-from a locker and a junk of pork from another. "Tom, you're the boss cook
-of the crowd. You fry the fish while the rest of us clean up the boat,
-make things shipshape, and get ready to sail."
-
-"Ay, ay, sir," said Tom, rolling up his sleeves. "Let's see, four apiece
-is how many?"
-
-And soon the appetizing odour of the frying fish, mingled with that of
-the steaming coffee, saluted most temptingly the nostrils of the six
-hungry boys.
-
-It was several hours after this, when the yacht was bowling along in the
-western bay, near the head of the island, before a fresh southerly
-breeze, that young Joe said:
-
-"I know how we can play a stupendous joke on everybody in the village."
-
-Joe being the youngest of the brothers, and of the party, and it being
-therefore necessary that he should be occasionally squelched, George
-merely said:
-
-"You don't think of anything, Joe, but playing jokes."
-
-"All right," retorted Joe, "seeing you are all so wildly enthusiastic,
-I'll just keep it to myself."
-
-"Nonsense, Joe, don't be huffy," said Arthur, whose curiosity was
-aroused. "Tell us what it is, and if it is any good we'll try it, won't
-we, boys?"
-
-There being an unanimously affirmative reply, young Joe proceeded.
-
-"Well," said he, "there's no risk at all about this. You know the old
-farmhouse on the bluff across the cove? Everybody in the village believes
-it is haunted. I found that out yesterday, when I was in Cap'n Sam's
-store. The house hasn't been lived in for two years, and not a soul in
-the village has dared to go near it at night in all that time. If any of
-them had to stay over there all night, they would sleep out in the woods
-rather than go into the house.
-
-"You see, the house belonged to a man by the name of Randall, Captain
-Randall, who lived there with his wife. This was a little more than two
-years ago. He owned a little fishing-smack, in which he went short trips
-down the coast. One night in a storm he drove in on to the bluff; the
-smack was pounded to pieces, and he was drowned. His wife died not long
-after.
-
-"Since then, the villagers have thought the house haunted. They hear
-shrieks from there during the night, and think they see strange lights in
-the windows. They were discussing it in the store yesterday. Cap'n Sam
-declared that, only a few nights ago, when he was coming across the cove
-from Billy Cook's, he saw the ghost of Captain Randall pass out of the
-back door of the old house and disappear in the woods.
-
-"Billy Cook, who lives up the cove, was in the store, too. He said he and
-his wife hear screams come from there often in the night, especially when
-it is storming; and two other villagers said they had seen lights in the
-windows long after midnight.
-
-"That new boarder at Colonel Witham's was in there, too, Henry. He said
-he knew houses were haunted, and told several stories about ghosts, which
-he said were true. But I believe he knew they were lies, and he was only
-amusing himself; but that's nothing to do with the matter. The villagers
-seemed to believe all that he said.
-
-"Now, what I propose is, that we manufacture some brand-new ghosts for
-them, some they have never seen before. There are some red and green
-lights up at the cottage, that were left over from the Fourth of July,
-which we can burn inside the house, after letting out a few screeches
-that will arouse the village. Then we'll wrap sheets around us and run
-past the windows, while the lights are burning. We'll have something
-wrapped in white to fling off the cliff, too, in a flare of light.
-
-"Then we'll run down through the woods and take everything with us. And
-if we don't have some fun the next day listening to the ghost-stories
-about the village, why, my name isn't Joe, that's all."
-
-"That's not such a bad scheme, Joe," said George.
-
-"It's a daisy," said Henry Burns, "and easily done. What's to hinder our
-going up there to-night and taking up the lights and the sheets and
-looking the place over? I never was inside the old house myself, though I
-have been close to it at night, and never saw or heard of any ghosts. We
-can carry a lantern up with us and light it after we get inside. If any
-one sees the light from the village he will think it's the ghosts walking
-again."
-
-"I don't like so much of this running around in the night," said Tom,
-flexing his biceps. "A fellow must have sleep to keep in condition, but I
-guess they can count on us in this case, can't they, Bob? It's too good
-to be missed."
-
-"You bet!" replied Bob. "We can turn in and sleep this afternoon. Count
-me in, for one."
-
-"Then," said George, "suppose we all start from our cottage at ten
-o'clock to-night. We'll launch the rowboat from the beach and slip across
-and look things over."
-
-So it was agreed.
-
-The yacht had long turned the head of the island and was beating down
-alongshore in the eastern bay. Presently they rounded the bluff and came
-into the cove. It was nearly noon.
-
-High up on the bluff, and several rods back from the edge of the cliffs,
-was the old farmhouse; it stood out conspicuously, though at some
-distance from the water-front, for the land rose quite sharply and the
-house occupied the top of the eminence. Around it, on all sides except
-that facing the village, was a dark, heavy growth of hemlocks and pines.
-It was a mysterious, shadowy place, even by day; but when darkness set in
-about it, standing off solitary and alone, as it did, from the rest of
-the village, with the waters lying between, it is little wonder that
-superstition inhabited it with ghosts and that it was a spot to be
-shunned.
-
-At the outermost end of the cliffs that protruded into the bay, a ravine,
-where the ledge at some time had been rent apart, led from the water up
-toward the cottage, affording a precarious pathway. There was a natural
-stairway of rock for some distance from the water's edge, and at the end
-nearest the old house a series of clumsy wooden stairs led up from the
-ravine to the surface of the bluff. These were now old and rather
-rickety; but a light person, at some risk, could still use them.
-
-The villagers, as a rule, avoided the house and this pathway to the
-bluff. If they had occasion to go ashore there, they usually landed
-farther up the cove at a beach, and walked through the woods at a
-distance from the house. No one cared to go very near it.
-
-When the sloop had come to anchor in the cove opposite the Warren
-cottage, the boys took a boatload of mackerel ashore, besides a basketful
-in the canoe. They carried them around to every cottage in the village,
-and even to the hotel, though, as George Warren remarked, they would have
-to get Colonel Witham out of bed some night in a hurry to make up for it.
-
-Certainly the village, supping that night on their catch, was inclined to
-forget and forgive them many a prank that had been stored up for future
-punishment.
-
-When Henry Burns made his exit across the roof that night, he made a
-careful survey before climbing out on it to see that the stranger was not
-there. There were no signs of him, and Henry got away safely. Tom and Bob
-were at the Warren cottage when he arrived. Everything was in readiness,
-and they all set out for the shore.
-
-"These clouds in the sky are favourable," said Tom. "If it was as bright
-as it was last night, we might have to postpone our trip. This mackerel
-sky, through which the moon shines dimly, is just the thing."
-
-"Everything seems to be favourable," added George, as they hurried down
-the bank to the beach.
-
-And yet not quite everything, for, when they had reached the shore and
-came to look for the boat, it was not there.
-
-"That's too bad," cried young Joe. "And we left it here at five o'clock,
-too, after washing it out thoroughly, because we had brought the mackerel
-ashore in it."
-
-"Who could have stolen it?" asked Tom.
-
-"No one," replied Joe. "Nobody ever has a boat stolen in this harbour.
-Some one who wanted to cross the cove has borrowed it. We shall find it
-all right in the morning,--but that don't help us out now. It's provoking
-enough, and strange, too, after all, that the one who took it didn't step
-up to the cottage and let us know, as the cottage is so near. But boats
-are almost common property here; any man in the harbour would lend us his
-boat in a minute."
-
-"We must do the next best thing," said Arthur, "and take one from the
-slip at the wharf. No one will want his boat at this hour."
-
-"Though some one does seem to want ours," broke in Joe. "Curious, isn't
-it, that whoever it is should come around into the cove and get our boat,
-when there are any number at the slip?"
-
-It certainly was rather strange.
-
-Following Arthur's suggestion, the boys proceeded to the slip and
-embarked in a big dory, the property of Captain Sam. Then they rowed
-quickly across the cove.
-
-It took them but a few minutes to reach the other shore, for the cove was
-smooth as glass. They headed for the bluff, and pointed directly into the
-black, shadowy hole which they knew to be the natural landing-place. It
-was a peculiar, narrow little dock, completely rock-bound, except for the
-passage leading into it. It lay entirely in the shadow, but they had
-landed there before, and knew just where to steer for a shelf, or ledge,
-of rock that made a natural slip.
-
-Still, their familiarity with the place did not prevent them from bumping
-suddenly into a rowboat that lay moored there. They pushed it aside to
-make a landing, and found to their amazement that it was their own.
-
-"Hulloa!" cried George, springing out on to the broad, shelving ledge;
-"that is queerer still. Here's the old _Anna_, and what in the world is
-she doing here? Who can have brought her? And what for? There's something
-strange about it. Why, there isn't a man in the village that would dare
-go near the haunted house at night, and yet somebody is over here now,
-for some reason."
-
-If it were possible for Henry Burns to be excited ever, he was so now.
-
-"Get in here, quick, George," he said, "and don't make any noise. I think
-I know what it means, and I'll tell you just as soon as we get out of
-here. We can't get away any too soon, either."
-
-"Why not take the _Anna_ out with us?" said young Joe, "and pay somebody
-off for running away with it? He would only have to walk a few miles
-around the cove to get back again--"
-
-"No, no, leave the boat where it is," said Henry Burns. "And let's get
-out of here quick."
-
-"Why, what's the matter with you, Henry?" asked George, jumping back into
-the boat and giving it a vigorous shove off. "Any one would think to see
-you that some one was being murdered up there."
-
-Henry Burns's earnestness was sufficient to convince them, however, that
-something serious was involved in their actions, and they made haste to
-get out into the cove again.
-
-"Row for the beach above, boys," continued Henry Burns, "and we will go
-up to the old house through the woods. I think I know who is up there in
-the house, and if I am right it means that we may make an important
-discovery. The man who I think is up there is Mr. Kemble."
-
-"What! The cripple?" asked Tom.
-
-"This is another one of Henry Burns's jokes," said George. "You're having
-lots of fun with us, aren't you, Henry?"
-
-"I tell you I am in earnest," said Henry Burns. "We won't burn any lights
-to-night, and you better make up your mind to that, right off. There's
-more serious business ahead of us."
-
-And then, when they had landed on the beach and had drawn the boat
-noiselessly up on the shore, Henry Burns told them of the adventure he
-had had on the roof of the hotel. How he had seen the stranger throw off
-his disguise of weakness, and become, suddenly, a man of strength and
-action; how he believed the man to be somehow connected with the thieves
-who had committed the robbery, and how he believed that the man was now
-up there in the haunted house, though for what purpose he could not tell.
-It might be he had something to conceal there.
-
-"Cracky!" exclaimed Tom, when Henry Burns had finished his story. "This
-beats ghost hunting all hollow; but we are by no means certain that it is
-this stranger who is up there."
-
-"No, but I believe as Henry does, that it is he," said George Warren.
-"Who else would have any object in being up there this hour of the night?
-We know from what Henry saw that the man is dangerous, that he seems to
-be in hiding--"
-
-"And that if he should catch one of us spying on him up there in the old
-house, he wouldn't hesitate to shoot," interrupted young Joe, who would
-rather have risked the meeting with a legion of ghosts than with one real
-live thief, armed and desperate.
-
-"That's true enough," answered Henry Burns; "but we must not give him
-that opportunity, if it is he, which, of course, we're by no means sure
-of. At any rate, we want to see and not be seen by whoever is there, and
-we cannot go any too quietly."
-
-Then, as the tide was rising, and they might be gone some time, they
-lifted the dory and carried it up out of the reach of high water, after
-which they began the ascent of the hill. There was not a breath of wind
-stirring, and there was not a sound of life in the woods. The tide crept
-in softly, and not even a wave could be heard on the shore.
-
-Out through the trees they could see, as they climbed, glimpses of the
-water, calm and placid as a mill-pond, lit up dimly by the moonlight
-shining through a patchwork of clouds that covered all the sky. Beyond
-this the darkness of the village was accentuated by a light here and
-there, glimmering from the window of some cottage.
-
-Then they came to the brow of the hill, and could see the haunted house
-through the trees. They approached cautiously. It looked gloomier than
-ever, with its sagging, moss-grown roof, its shattered window-panes, and
-the door in the side hanging awry from a single hinge.
-
-In what once had been the dooryard there were a few straggling clumps of
-bushes, and thistles and burdocks grew in rank profusion.
-
-It was a sight to dampen the ardour of stouter hunters than this band of
-boys. But when, added to all this, there suddenly flashed across one of
-the windows a ray of light, faint and flickering, but discernible to them
-all, and which the next instant disappeared, they halted irresolutely and
-debated what they should do.
-
-It was finally determined that Henry Burns and Bob White should go on
-ahead to the old house, while the rest waited at a little distance till
-they should reconnoitre. The two set off at once, while the others waited
-behind a clump of trees. They did not have to wait long, for the two
-returned shortly, telling them to come on softly. When within a few rods
-of the house they dropped on their hands and knees and crept along.
-
-All at once the two ahead stopped and whispered to the others to listen.
-They heard noises that seemed to come from the cellar, which sounded as
-though some one was digging in the earth. Then, as they came within range
-of a long, shallow cellar window, they saw the rays of a lantern.
-
-They crept up closely and peered in through the pane. There, in the damp,
-dingy, cobwebbed cellar of the haunted house, dimly lighted by the rays
-of a lantern, which stood on an old wooden bench, a man was working. He
-had his coat off and was digging in the ground with a spade, throwing up
-shovelfuls of the hard clay.
-
-The rays of light from the lantern were not diffused evenly throughout
-the cellar, but shot out in one direction, toward the spot where the man
-was at work; and this because it was neither the ordinary ship's lantern,
-nor yet a house lantern, but a small dark lantern, such as a burglar
-might carry on his person, with a sliding shutter in front.
-
-The man's sleeves were rolled up, displaying arms that were corded with
-muscle, and on which the veins stood out as he worked. He handled the
-spade awkwardly enough, but made up in strength for his lack of skill.
-Presently he paused and looked up, and they saw that it was, as Henry
-Burns had prophesied, the stranger guest.
-
-A curious occupation for one who was cruising for his health! Indeed, he
-looked so little like a man that was weak and ill, and so much like one
-that was powerful and reckless and devoid of fear, as the light of the
-lantern caused his figure to stand out in relief against the darkness,
-that, though they were six and he but one, had he seen them and sprung
-up, they would have fled in terror.
-
-Then, as he stooped down to grasp the lantern, they drew quickly back
-from the window. It was well they did so, for, taking up the lantern, the
-man flashed it upon the window-panes, and then, turning it in all
-directions, threw the rays of light in all parts of the cellar and out
-through a window opposite. Then he set it down again; and it was evident
-his suspicions had not been aroused, for he resumed his digging.
-
-After a few minutes he threw down the spade and produced from the
-darkness a small tin box, which they had not seen before, which he
-deposited in the hole he had dug. Then he shovelled the earth back upon
-it, stamping it in with his feet, and so refilled the hole. The remaining
-loose earth he scattered about the cellar.
-
-The boys waited no longer, but crept back to the edge of the woods. In a
-few minutes they saw a faint flash of light through one of the windows in
-the floor above, and presently they saw the man come out of the door in
-the front of the house. He had extinguished the lantern and was still
-carrying the spade. As he walked quickly down the path to the
-landing-place, he left the path and hid the spade beneath some
-underbrush, after which he disappeared over the edge of the cliff.
-Finally they saw him out in the middle of the cove, pulling vigorously
-for the other shore.
-
-"Well," said Henry Burns, as they watched him out of sight, "there are
-lots of sick men whom I would rather meet over here in the night-time
-than that same Mr. Kemble."
-
-"He's as strong as a lion," said young Joe. "Did you see the veins stand
-out on his arms as he worked? I felt like making for the woods every time
-he straightened himself up, with that spade in his hand."
-
-"I don't believe any of us felt any too comfortable," said Tom, "though
-I'm sure I shouldn't be afraid to meet him in the daytime, with Bob and
-one of the rest of us. It's the influence of the night-time that
-frightened us. And he seemed to be right in his element in it."
-
-"Let's dig that box up and get away from here and discuss the matter
-afterward," said George. "It's getting late, and we don't want mother to
-worry. I'll get the spade." And he ran and brought it.
-
-They went into the haunted house then, groping their way in the darkness,
-for they had left their own lantern in the dory. They made their way to
-the kitchen and found the cellar door, with some difficulty. Then, lest
-the old stairs should be unsafe, they went down one at a time.
-
-It was an easy matter to unearth the box, though they worked in utter
-darkness. When they had secured it, they refilled the hole and then
-stamped the earth down as they had found it. This being done, they were
-glad enough to get away from the house, to replace the spade beneath the
-underbrush, where the man had hidden it, and hurry down to the shore.
-Launching the dory, they embarked, Henry Burns carrying the box, and,
-with George and Arthur Warren at the oars, they had soon crossed the cove
-and landed on the beach.
-
-There, too, was the _Anna_, drawn high up on shore, where the stranger
-had left it. It was a large and heavy boat, and it must have required
-enormous strength in one man to drag it there.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
- SETTING A TRAP
-
-
-When the boys had at length gathered around the table in the
-old-fashioned kitchen of the Warren cottage and had drawn the
-window-shades, they proceeded to examine the box. It was an ordinary
-shallow tin box, such as a business man might keep odds and ends of
-papers and cash in. It was fastened with a small padlock. After trying to
-unlock this with every key they could find in the house, and without
-success, young Joe produced a file, and with this filed through the small
-staple in the box.
-
-When the cover was thrown back there was disclosed a layer of fine
-cotton, like jewellers' cotton, and when this was lifted out there came
-from the box a myriad of tiny flashes of light. The inside of the box was
-fairly ablaze. Countless little flashes of light danced and twinkled
-there.
-
-"Hooray!" cried George Warren. "We have the stolen jewels, and no
-mistake. Just see how these sparkle." And he lifted up a necklace of
-diamonds, that blazed in the light of the lamp like a ring of fire. They
-sparkled and gleamed like little stars, as the boys passed them from hand
-to hand.
-
-"Mercy on us!" cried a pleasant voice, all of a sudden; and Mrs. Warren,
-who had been awakened by the sound of their voices and had hastily
-dressed, entered the kitchen. "Is this den the cave of the forty
-thieves?" she asked, smiling, and then, as she caught sight of the
-glittering gems, she exclaimed, anxiously: "Why, boys, what on earth does
-all this mean?"
-
-"It means, mother," answered George, "that Henry Burns has done what the
-detectives have been trying to do ever since the robbery at Benton. Here
-are the stolen diamonds, and Henry will take them to town to-morrow and
-claim the reward."
-
-"Only on one condition," interrupted Henry Burns. "I don't stir one step
-to secure the reward until it is agreed that it shall be evenly divided
-between us all. You fellows have just as much claim upon it as I, and,
-unless every one of you solemnly swears to take his share, I shall never
-take one cent of it."
-
-And every one of them knew that he meant exactly what he said.
-
-Early next morning Henry Burns and George Warren stood upon the wharf,
-awaiting the arrival of the boat for Mayville. The boat connected there
-with a train that would arrive in Benton during the forenoon. Henry Burns
-carried in one hand a small satchel.
-
-"I had hard work to persuade old Witham to let me go," said Henry Burns.
-"He didn't see what I wanted to go poking off to Benton for. Said I
-better stay here and save my money. As it is, I've got to go and call on
-an aged aunt of Mrs. Carlin and spend the night there. Well, I guess I
-can manage to amuse myself, even there. I'm likely to see a few other
-people before I get back, eh, George?"
-
-"I know one man who won't turn you out-of-doors, when you produce those
-diamonds," answered George.
-
-"Well, George," returned the other, "you mustn't lose sight of this
-stranger, although I almost know he won't attempt to leave the island for
-several days. I remember that yesterday he got a letter, and I have no
-doubt it was from his confederates, saying when they would arrive. They
-are coming in a sailboat, for he has said so. Now, if they were coming
-to-night or to-morrow, he would not have hidden that box over there in
-the old house. You may be sure he did not expect them for a day or
-two,--but still you boys must keep him in sight, for one never knows what
-is going to happen.
-
-"If he goes over to the bluff, you know what to do. You must get Captain
-Sam, the constable, to have him arrested at once. By to-morrow night I'll
-be back with everything arranged to capture the whole three. I think you
-and I will see lively times around this harbour before many days are
-over."
-
-"Speak of the evil one and he appears," said George Warren. "And, as true
-as I live, here comes Mr. Kemble. You do the talking, Henry, for I feel
-as though I should give him cause for suspicion if I said a single word
-to him."
-
-"Leave him to me," replied Henry Burns. "He's playing a bold game, and so
-must we;" and, as the stranger guest hobbled down to the wharf, groaning
-and wincing, as though racked with pain, Henry Burns gave him a cheery
-greeting.
-
-"Good morning, Mr. Kemble," said he. "I see you're out bright and early.
-I declare, you have begun to look better already than you did the night
-you arrived."
-
-"Oh, I'm very miserable--very miserable," answered Mr. Kemble, most
-dejectedly. "My rheumatism is something awful. I'd give everything I
-possess in the world if I could run around and be as active as you young
-men."
-
-"You will, I'm sure, in a few days," answered Henry Burns.
-
-"How's that?" asked the man, turning upon Henry Bums sharply, while a
-strange look, that he could not conceal, stole over his face.
-
-George Warren turned away precipitately, and, taking a fishing-reel from
-his pocket, dropped a line over the side of the wharf.
-
-"There's something peculiar in this island air," continued Henry Burns,
-looking Mr. Kemble full in the eye, with the most innocent expression on
-his face. "No matter how bad a person feels when he first comes here, it
-puts new life into him. The first thing he knows he begins to feel like
-rowing boats, and going fishing, and all that sort of thing. I come here
-sick every summer, and I go away feeling strong."
-
-"Well," replied Mr. Kemble, uneasily, but looking relieved, "I hope it
-may do as much for me. If it does, I'll buy a cottage here."
-
-"You won't find any cottages to sell, I'm afraid," said Henry Burns. "But
-there are several old farmhouses that could be bought cheap, and they
-make over as good as new."
-
-"Humph! I'm not looking for old farmhouses," said Mr. Kemble, gruffly;
-and then, as the whistle of the boat sounded suddenly from behind the
-bluff, he added, "But I must be getting back to the hotel. I'm not
-feeling well to-day, at all."
-
-"Any errand I can do for you in the city?" Henry Burns called after him.
-
-But Mr. Kemble was hobbling away as fast as he could, and did not heed.
-
-"I fancy he would feel worse if he could see what I've got in this
-satchel," chuckled Henry Burns, as Mr. Kemble went on toward the hotel,
-somewhat faster than he had come down. "Did you notice how suddenly he
-had to leave when he heard the boat's whistle?"
-
-"Yes,--but what on earth were you thinking of, Henry, talking as you did
-to him?" said George. "It scared him in an instant when you told him he
-would be running around in a few days as lively as any of us. I almost
-believe he half-suspects something."
-
-"How can he?" replied the other. "Perhaps my remark about his running
-around in a few days may have startled him at first. That was a sudden
-jolt to his guilty conscience. But, upon reflection, he decided it was
-only a coincidence. Then he did look a little queer when I spoke of
-farmhouses, didn't he?"
-
-"He certainly did," said George. "What possessed you to do it? You might
-upset everything."
-
-"No," answered Henry Burns. "He don't suspect us. By the way, do you
-remember how we got into this thing in the beginning?"
-
-"Why, what do you mean?"
-
-"If I remember rightly," said Henry Burns, speaking with a slight drawl,
-"we started out last evening to have some fun. My little chat with our
-friend is the nearest approach to fun that this scrape has afforded me so
-far."
-
-"That may have been fun for you," said George. "To my mind it was very
-much like playing with fire; but here's the steamer. You've got my note
-of introduction to father?"
-
-"Yes, I've got everything all right. Now keep your eyes open and expect
-me to-morrow night." And Henry Burns crossed the gangplank to the
-steamer.
-
-The train from Mayville to Benton reached its destination at eleven
-o'clock, and at that hour in the forenoon Henry Burns walked briskly out
-of the station. Half an hour later he stood in the waiting-room at the
-wealthy banking-house of Curtis & Earle.
-
-"Well, what do you want, young man?" asked an important and decidedly
-officious attendant, bustling up to him.
-
-"This is Mr. Curtis, I presume," answered Henry Burns, blandly, but with
-the faintest suspicion of a twinkle in his eye.
-
-"No, it isn't," said the man, abruptly, and looking a little foolish as
-several other attendants tittered audibly. "And, what's more, you cannot
-see Mr. Curtis, for he is just preparing to leave for the day."
-
-"But I must see him," insisted Henry Burns. "I've got some very important
-information for him. Have the kindness to take this in to him," and he
-handed the surprised attendant a card upon which he had written in a
-clear but boyish hand:
-
- _Henry Allen Burns
- Private Detective_
-
-The attendant took the card, read it with a grin, looked at the boy, as
-if puzzled what to make of him, shrugged his shoulders and left the room.
-Presently he returned.
-
-"Mr. Curtis would be greatly obliged if you would call to-morrow," he
-said. "He is going out of town to-day."
-
-"I must see him at once," said Henry Burns, firmly.
-
-"Impossible--" but at this moment the door of the banker's private office
-opened, and a voice said: "Show Mr. Burns in."
-
-Henry Burns entered. He saw before him a tall, well-built man, smooth
-shaven, with black, piercing eyes, and a firm, decisive mouth. He had on
-his hat and gloves, and carried a light coat on his arm, as though about
-to leave his office.
-
-"You will oblige me by stating your business as quickly as possible,
-young man," he said, "as I am about to take a train out of the city.
-
-"I see by your card," he continued, gravely, "that you are a private
-detective. I suppose you are aware that I am a busy man, engaged in
-important affairs, and have no time in office hours for pleasantries."
-
-"If I had said an amateur detective I should have been more correct, sir,
-since this is my first case," answered Henry Burns, calmly. "It is so
-very curious, however, that I feel certain it cannot fail to interest
-you."
-
-"But will you tell me why it should interest me, and not keep me
-waiting?" exclaimed the banker, in a tone of impatience. Evidently he did
-not for a moment connect the boyish figure before him with any possible
-recovery of his lost jewels.
-
-"I will," replied Henry Burns, speaking deliberately. "Last night some
-other boys and I watched a man bury a small tin box in the cellar of a
-deserted house. When the man went away we dug it up. I have the box here;
-would you like to see it?"
-
-Henry Burns calmly opened the satchel.
-
-But the banker sprang up from the chair in which he had seated himself,
-and exclaimed, excitedly:
-
-"What do you mean--let me see it--quick!"
-
-Henry Burns passed him the box, and with nervous fingers the banker broke
-the twine with which the boys had secured it. The next instant he had
-drawn the necklace from the box and held it up, while his hands trembled.
-
-"They're Alice's diamonds, as I hope to live," he cried, unmindful of
-Henry Burns's presence for the moment. "And the rings and the
-brooch--everything--everything is here."
-
-"Why," he exclaimed, "the best detectives in this country are working on
-the case, but I had already begun to despair of ever seeing the jewels
-again. They are exceedingly valuable, but, besides that, as they were
-wedding presents to my wife from me, we both prize them far beyond their
-real worth.
-
-"But be seated. I shall postpone my trip out of town, you may be sure.
-And now let me hear the story of your discovery."
-
-In the calm, graphic manner characteristic of him, Henry Burns told the
-story of the night's adventure.
-
-"Splendid!" exclaimed the banker, as the boy concluded. "You have indeed
-acted as efficiently as the best detective could have done. We are bound
-to capture the robbers. Burton must know of this at once."
-
-He rang for an attendant, and, after writing a note, dispatched him with
-it. At the expiration of about half an hour the attendant returned, and
-ushered into the room a man of medium height, of light complexion, with
-steel-blue eyes, and a face that impressed Henry Burns at once as
-denoting great daring and coolness. The banker introduced him as Mr.
-Miles Burton, of a secret detective bureau.
-
-"Here's a young man, Burton," said the banker, smiling, "who, I take it,
-has some inclinations for your line of work. In fact, here is pretty
-convincing proof of it." And the banker pointed to the box of jewels.
-
-Mr. Miles Burton looked nonplussed. He stared at the box in amazement for
-a minute, and gave a low whistle. Then he laughed and said: "I have
-always maintained that luck is a great factor in detective service,
-though I am ready to give a man his due for a good piece of work. In
-either case, you have my congratulations, young man, for a half a
-thousand dollars is just as good whether it comes by luck or shrewdness,
-or both."
-
-The detective listened with the keenest attention as Henry Burns repeated
-the story he had told the banker. He made him give the minutest details
-of Mr. Kemble's personality, at the same time suggesting features which
-Henry Burns corroborated.
-
-"It's just as I thought from the start, and just as I told you, Mr.
-Curtis," he said. "The man is undoubtedly George Craigie, who is known
-among his class as the 'Actor,' because of his cleverness in
-impersonating one character, and then utterly dropping out of sight and
-appearing as some other person. We want him on a score of charges, two
-bank robberies, attempted murder, several house burglaries, and other
-things. His picture is in the Rogues' Gallery, but he has the art of
-changing his expression and appearance so completely that, although I
-have seen him twice since that was taken, at neither of those times did
-his countenance resemble his photograph. However, I feel positive from
-what this young man tells me that it is none other than he. And as for
-his confederates, I can readily guess who they are. They are two Boston
-men, and are, no doubt, on their way to the island now in the yacht. In
-this case, we cannot act any too soon; and I shall ask Detective Burns,
-who is familiar with the ground, to be my right-hand man in the
-expedition."
-
-"You can count on me," replied Henry Burns, with a smile at the title
-conferred upon him, and who was, truth to tell, vastly flattered. "I can
-answer, moreover, for several good assistants, if you need them."
-
-"Well," said Mr. Miles Burton, rising to go, "I will meet you at the
-train that leaves here to-morrow afternoon. By to-morrow night I hope to
-have some men on Grand Island who will give a pleasant little surprise to
-Messrs. Craigie & Co.;" and, bowing courteously, he took his leave.
-
-"There's a surprising lack of jealousy in that man Burton," remarked the
-banker, when he had gone. "He is disappointed to have the robbers slip
-through his hands, and a little chagrined, I know, to have them caught
-through the aid of a party of boys; but he took pains not to show it,
-and, what's more, he will always give you the credit for it when he
-speaks of it. That's the kind of a man he is. He is as smart as a steel
-trap, too, is Burton, and has done me good service twice before.
-
-"But let us not wait longer. I am going to take you home with me to
-dinner, and have you spend the night at my house. We shall feel more
-secure, I assure you," he continued, smiling, "with a detective under our
-roof."
-
-Henry Burns declined, saying he was not dressed for such hospitality, but
-the keen eye of the banker had long before taken note of his neat and
-gentlemanly appearance, and, moreover, liked the looks of the boy's
-clear-cut features, and the way he had of looking one fair in the eye,
-with a calm but manly and courageous glance. So he waived the boy's
-objections, and they entered the banker's carriage and were driven to the
-finest home Henry Burns had ever visited.
-
-Perhaps they didn't make him at home there when Mr. Curtis had told the
-story of the finding of the jewels hidden in the cellar; and perhaps
-Henry Burns, to his confusion, wasn't embraced by the banker's wife, and
-perhaps he wasn't made a hero of by the banker's two pretty daughters,
-who shuddered at the story of the man in the cellar, and who made Henry
-Burns tell it over and over again.
-
-In short, he was treated with such wholesome and charming hospitality as
-to set him to wondering, after it was all over and he had gone to bed,
-whether he had not missed something in his solitary life, brought up
-without the love of father, mother, sister or brother, in a home where
-noise and cheerfulness were outlawed.
-
-He was up bright and early the next day, and he and the banker went to
-see Mr. Warren, who was let into the secret, and the reward of five
-hundred dollars was, through him, placed to the credit of the boys. Then
-there was the aged aunt of Mrs. Carlin to call upon, and the time passed
-quickly till it was time for the afternoon train.
-
-It was about two o'clock in the afternoon when Henry Burns boarded the
-train in the company of Miles Burton.
-
-"Now," said the detective, as the train rattled noisily on its way, "I
-have been in Mayville and know several parties there, but the island is
-new to me. However, you can explain it to me from this map," and Mr.
-Burton unrolled a map of the bay and island from his pocket. "I shall
-pick up three of my men, whom I have ordered to meet us, in Mayville. One
-of them came all the way down from New York with me to help me work up
-this case. It is my opinion he traced this man Craigie to Mayville and
-lost track of him there. The man must have vanished, as he has done so
-often before.
-
-"We will go over to the island to-night in a launch. Then we shall need
-some one to guide us to what you call the haunted house."
-
-"I will meet you in the road by Captain Hervey's house, right at the very
-head of the island," said Henry Burns. "It is the first house you come to
-on landing at the outermost point. You cannot miss it."
-
-"But how will you get there? It is a long trip up the island."
-
-"I will come on my bicycle."
-
-"Capital! You will go direct to the island, then, by the night boat,
-arriving there, you say, at six o'clock. You will see just how the land
-lies, so you can tell us, when we meet again. And you will instruct your
-friends to keep close to Craigie, so he won't be over there at the house
-to meet us on our arrival. We want to do the welcoming for him, and not
-have him do it for us. Two of the men I shall bring are somewhat familiar
-with the island and know one or two parties there; though I am not sure
-they know where the haunted house is.
-
-"One of you boys must have a boat always in readiness somewhere up the
-cove, on which you say this house fronts, so that, the minute this man
-meets his confederates aboard the yacht, one of you can slip across the
-cove and let us know of it, in case we have missed them.
-
-"Act carefully, and everything will be well; but once give them cause for
-suspicion and they are dangerous men to deal with. I have a little score
-of my own to pay them,--but that's a long story, and I'll save it for
-another time. Now let's go over this map, so I'll be sure of my ground."
-
-When the train left Mayville, Miles Burton, with a hurried handshake,
-left Henry Burns. It was a little after six o'clock when the latter
-stepped ashore at Southport, where the boys were waiting for him, upon
-the wharf.
-
-"Everything is all right," said George Warren, in answer to Henry Burns's
-question. "He was not on the roof at all during last night, for we
-divided up into watches and kept a lookout from Tom's tent. He evidently
-knows about what time his friends are to arrive."
-
-"How is Colonel Witham?" asked Henry Burns. "Has he pined away any during
-my absence?"
-
-"Not any to notice," replied Tom Harris, "but he has gone away, down the
-island, to be gone two days. You must stop with us to-night at the tent,
-and the boys are all coming over to the tent now to eat one of Bob's
-prime lobster stews."
-
-So the crowd marched on Bob, and found him down on the beach to the right
-of the tent, presiding over an enormous kettle, which was hung over the
-glowing coals of a fire of driftwood, and from which there arose such a
-savoury odour of stew that, in a burst of enthusiasm, they seized upon
-the stalwart young cook, and, raising him on their shoulders, bore him
-with hilarious shouts three times around the fire, much to the apparent
-discomfiture of the quiet Bob.
-
-Then they sat about the fire while Tom brought some tin plates and spoons
-from the tent and acted as waiter, and Bob produced a pot of hot coffee
-and some bread. It seemed as though nothing had ever tasted so good. They
-called for stew till Bob's stout right arm almost ached with wielding the
-long-handled tin dipper that served them for a ladle.
-
-The sun sank while they sat about the glow of coals, and, by and by, the
-moon rose slowly over the distant cape and poured a flood of soft light
-over the waters of the bay. They remembered that night long afterward,
-for its soft lights and its silent, mystical beauty. The moon was at its
-full, and the tide crept up on the beach almost to the bed of coals that
-remained from the fire and still showed red. The islands far off across
-the bay seemed to have drifted nearer in to shore, and showed clear and
-distinct.
-
-Henry Burns's story of the day's adventures lost nothing of its interest,
-told down there on the shore by the firelight and under the stars. His
-account of his visit to the banker's, and how he had gained admittance to
-Mr. Curtis's private office, filled them with glee.
-
-"I should have liked to see him when he opened that box," said young Joe.
-"Didn't he look surprised, though, Henry?"
-
-"Rather," said Henry Burns.
-
-"And the banker's daughters,--were they pretty, Henry?" asked Tom.
-
-"I didn't notice particularly," said Henry Burns.
-
-"Henry never does notice those things," said Arthur, dryly.
-
-"Oh, no, never!" said young Joe.
-
-"You fellows will notice something, if you don't let up," said Henry
-Burns, getting a little red in spite of himself.
-
-Then he told them all that he had learned from Mr. Miles Burton about the
-man Kemble, who was not Kemble at all, but one Craigie, and a desperate
-man; and all about the plans that were now to be put into operation to
-capture Craigie and whosoever should come to meet him.
-
-The money, too, that had come to each one of them, as his share of the
-reward, seemed like a fortune, while no expedition that they had ever
-heard or read of seemed half so full of mystery and danger as that upon
-which they were now entering.
-
-Sometime between ten and eleven o'clock Henry Burns left them, and,
-proceeding to the hotel, unlocked a door in the basement, got out his
-bicycle, and rode away. In a little more than half an hour afterward he
-had dismounted from his wheel at Captain Hervey's house, four miles from
-the hotel, on the western side of the island, near the head. The house
-was closed, as the captain and his family were away at sea. Down at the
-shore was an old boat-house, where Henry Burns left his bicycle. He sat
-on the edge of a bluff overhanging a landing-place for boats, and waited
-for the launch. He could see her lights already, out on the bay, and it
-was not long before the little craft had come to shore. Four men
-disembarked, and the launch steamed away again.
-
-"Hello, Private Detective Burns," said Miles Burton, laughing, as he came
-up the ladder from the landing. Then he added, as he introduced the
-others to the boy, "This is a rival to Inspector Byrnes of New York.
-
-"We owe him a good turn, Mason," continued Miles Burton, "for finding
-Craigie for us."
-
-The man addressed as Mason was the detective that had followed Craigie as
-far as Mayville.
-
-"Yes," he replied, shaking hands with Henry Burns, "we've been after him
-a long time."
-
-The other two men, whose names were Stapleton and Watkins, also shook
-hands with the boy. They were sharp-eyed, athletic-looking men, whose
-appearance on the island boded no good to one Craigie, alias Kemble.
-
-Under the guidance of Henry Burns they all set off down the road for a
-distance, then turned from it and made their way through the fields and
-patches of woods toward the bluff. It was hard walking there in the
-darkness, through thickets and over little knolls, with which some of the
-pastures were dotted, and it was nearly one o'clock in the morning when
-they reached the old haunted house.
-
-The house looked even less inviting than ever in the waning moonlight,
-with its sagging roof, dull and broken window-panes, and doors unhinged.
-Still, to those free from superstition and not fearful of ghosts, it
-offered a sufficient shelter on a summer night, and they entered at a
-rear doorway, after making a cautious reconnoisance to make certain that
-there was no one within.
-
-Then, having shown them where the jewels had been buried, and pointing
-out the location of a spring of good water near the house, Henry Burns
-left the four detectives to accommodate themselves to their lodgings and
-went down to the shore. There in the shadow of a bluff he found Tom and
-Bob waiting for him in the canoe, as they had agreed.
-
-When the canoe grated on the sand in front of the tent, Henry Burns, worn
-out with his travels, was fast asleep. So Tom and Bob, by way of a joke,
-lifted up the canoe with its sleeping occupant and carried it to the door
-of their tent. They thrust it inside as far as it would go, laid Henry
-Burns out flat in the bottom of it, made him comfortable with blankets,
-without waking him from his heavy sleep, and let him slumber on.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
- A MIDNIGHT ADVENTURE
-
-
-The inhabitants of the peaceful town of Southport would have viewed the
-old haunted house with more concern than ever if they had known of the
-four ghosts that haunted it now, by day and night. They were stalwart,
-able-bodied looking ghosts, and their habits were strangely like what
-might have been expected of four live men. Sometimes, as they sat in one
-of the front garret rooms, by a window that overlooked the town and the
-whole expanse of the cove lying between it and the bluff, as well as the
-bay beyond, a well-worn pack of cards was produced by one of the spirits,
-and the four joined in a game. Or, again, a bag was brought forth, and
-the spirits ate heartily of the contents thereof.
-
-It might have been noticed, too, that through it all a certain careful
-vigilance on the part of the ghosts was observed, as though they feared
-that if surprised by a chance visitor they would have some trouble in
-vanishing.
-
-Every few minutes throughout the day they made by turns a careful survey
-of the cove and also of the bay, sweeping it with a powerful field-glass.
-No more than two of the ghosts ever took their sleep at the same time,
-and that, too, during the day. When night came they all redoubled their
-vigilance and remained awake and alert. As darkness shut down they left
-the house, one of them going out on the bluff and hiding in a cleft of
-the rock, where he could overlook the cove and the bay, the others hiding
-in the woods near the house, and keeping watch on all its approaches.
-
-They were very patient and very careful; for two of them, who would have
-answered to the names of Burton and Mason, knew that the men for whom
-they watched, and who they knew would surely come within a brief time
-now, were the men for whom they had hunted for years, and by whose
-capture they should win other rewards and settle scores of long standing.
-
-Curiously enough, for the next two days and nights a perfect contagion of
-watching seemed to have spread through the village. Mr. Kemble, as he was
-known to all, was a most annoyed man, and concealed his annoyance only
-with difficulty. If, by chance, he hobbled up the road of an afternoon,
-and wandered off into the woods or fields, he was sure to come upon some
-one of the boys, who seemed surprised enough to see him, and was sure to
-remain with him till he returned to the hotel.
-
-If he hired a horse and went up the island for a drive, he was sure to
-fall in most unexpectedly with Henry Burns, spinning along on his wheel,
-and could not shake him off. If he felt strong enough to get into a
-rowboat and start out, weakly, across the cove, groaning at the effort it
-cost him, he invariably fell in with Tom and Bob, gliding along quietly
-in their canoe, and they would insist on accompanying him, and pointing
-out to him the beauties of the scenery along the shores.
-
-He would have considered far more seriously the attention they paid to
-his movements by night, if he had but known of them. If he could have
-seen six pairs of eyes, striving to discern him as he appeared on the
-hotel roof, or have known of the youths who watched lest he cross the
-cove under cover of night, to say nothing of those who awaited his coming
-on the bluff itself, he might have worried more than he did, and perhaps
-have played a shrewder game.
-
-But neither did he nor any one else, other than they who watched, know of
-it. And so it was that when, a little before sunset on the third day
-after the arrival of the ghosts in the haunted house, and while Mr.
-Kemble sat on the front piazza of the hotel, looking through a
-field-glass off on to the bay, admiring its beauties with Mrs. Carlin,
-who thought him such an unfortunate man,--and while, as he looked, he saw
-the very yacht for which he had waited anxiously for days, he surely
-believed that there was no one in the village who would regard it with
-other than the usual curiosity that fishermen and yachtsmen have for a
-strange craft.
-
-In this, unfortunately for him, he was mistaken. There were others
-besides him who, on seeing the sail emerge from between the islands,
-regarded it with equal interest and even more excitement. Henry Burns,
-being deeply interested in it, came and sat down beside Mrs. Carlin long
-enough to hear Mr. Kemble remark that he believed the yacht was the
-_Eagle_, with his friends; in which case he should spend the night aboard
-with them, and leave the harbour early in the morning, if the wind
-availed.
-
-Henry Burns then quietly took his departure, sauntering along until some
-cottages shut him out from the view of the hotel, and then starting off
-on a run as hard as ever he could toward the Warren cottage. He paused
-long enough at the cottage to communicate the news to young Joe, who was
-the first one he met, and then, calling out that he would return as
-quickly as he could, he ran through the woods down to the shore.
-
-Going up the cove some distance, Henry Burns launched a rowboat and
-pulled rapidly across, landing some ways above the bluff. Then he struck
-down through the woods for the haunted house.
-
-When Henry Burns returned a few minutes later, two of the detectives were
-with him. The three rowed across the cove and proceeded to the Warren
-cottage. There the plan of operation, as it had been mapped out by Miles
-Burton, was told by Henry Burns. Burton and Mason were to make the arrest
-at the haunted house. It was extremely unlikely that more than two of the
-robbers would come for the box of jewels,--perhaps Craigie alone. At all
-events, the detectives would take chances against more than two coming,
-and, if the three came, it would make no difference to them. They would
-take them all by surprise, and could arrest a dozen if necessary. If two
-of the boys chose to go over to the bluff, they could do so, but Miles
-Burton would not advise them to take the risk.
-
-The other two detectives were to wait in boats for the man who should be
-left in the yacht, and arrest him at the proper time. If any of the boys
-chose to accompany these men, they could do so at their risk, but Miles
-Burton had sent warning for them to take no chances. Needless to say, his
-advice on this score was thrown away. He might as well have advised the
-boys not to breathe till it was all over. Their blood was up, and they
-were one and all determined to take part in the capture.
-
-So it was decided that Bob and Henry Burns and George should go over to
-the bluff; that Tom and one of the detectives should take the canoe and
-lie in the shadow of the shore, in wait near the tent; while Arthur and
-Joe, with the other detective, should go around the bluff in a rowboat,
-on a pretence of fishing, and lie in concealment there behind the rocks.
-
-During all this time the yacht, a white-hulled, sloop-rigged, trim
-vessel, was rapidly nearing the village. It came in fast, with a
-southeasterly breeze astern, which blew fresh and which bade fair not to
-die down with the setting of the sun. The yacht attracted some attention
-among the people of the town, where fishing-boats were more commonly seen
-than elegant pleasure-craft. Its topmast was uncommonly tall, and the
-club topsail, which was still set, was somewhat larger than usual in a
-craft of its burden. In fact, it was apparent to the experienced eye
-that, with all its light sails set, the yacht would be enveloped in a
-perfect cloud of canvas. It carried two jibs, besides the forestaysail,
-but these were now furled.
-
-"That craft carries sail enough to beat the _Flying Dutchman_," said
-Captain Sam, who had joined the group on the veranda that was watching
-the graceful yacht coming in, with a tiny froth of foam at its bows.
-"Looks as though she could stand up under it, though. Seems to be pretty
-stiff."
-
-"Yes, she is considered pretty fast," assented Mr. Kemble. "She has taken
-a few races around Boston and Marblehead way, against some yachts that
-carried even more sail. She belongs to a friend of mine, a Mr. Brooks of
-Boston. He's a broker there, and can afford to have as fast a craft as
-there is made."
-
-"Fast!" returned Captain Sam. "Any one can see that with half an eye.
-Give her five minutes start, and nothing in this bay could ever come
-within hailing-distance of her again."
-
-Captain Sam little knew the relief and satisfaction that his remark
-afforded Mr. Kemble.
-
-"She won't want all that sail to-morrow, though," continued Captain Sam.
-"The wind is coming around to the eastward for a storm of some kind.
-Looks more like rain than wind, but there will be wind, too,--enough to
-do all the sailing any one wants. You say you'll sail to-morrow, do you,
-Mr. Kemble, rain or shine? Well, that boat will stand it all right. She
-looks as though she would just like a good blow, and nothing better."
-
-If Mr. Kemble knew of any instances where the yacht _Eagle_, alias _The
-Cloud_, alias _Fortune_, had proved her marvellous speed to the chagrin
-of certain officers of the law, and had demonstrated her ability to run
-away from pursuers in both light and heavy weather, he refrained, for
-reasons best known to himself, from mentioning them. He gave, instead, a
-quiet assent to the truth of Captain Sam's praise.
-
-While tea was being served at the hotel, the yacht entered the cove, and,
-rounding to gracefully with a little shower of spray, dropped anchor
-about midway between the wharf and the bluff opposite. The sails were
-furled, with, strangely enough, the exception of the mainsail, which was
-not even lowered. She would doubtless drop this sail later, unless, by
-any chance, she should decide to put out again during the night.
-
-The men who had brought the yacht across the bay did not come ashore. A
-thin column of smoke that presently wreathed out of a funnel in the cabin
-indicated that the yachtsmen were cooking a meal in the galley aboard.
-
-They were thorough yachtsmen, Mr. Kemble explained, as he paid his bill
-and said good-bye to Colonel Witham and Mrs. Carlin. They hardly ever
-left the yacht, he said, except to buy provisions, or some other errand
-of necessity. Mr. Kemble did not specify what other errands of necessity
-he had in mind.
-
-The colonel saw just how it was, he said. He was sorry, moreover, to lose
-Mr. Kemble as a guest. In fact, he was the kind of guest that just suited
-the colonel, as he went early to bed, minded his own business, and was
-quiet. Good qualities in a summer boarder, in the colonel's estimation.
-
-There was no one to bid Mr. Kemble good-bye, save the colonel and Mrs.
-Carlin, as he had made few acquaintances. Henry Burns would have bid him
-a pleasant voyage if he had been there, but Henry Burns was not to be
-found.
-
-"He will be sorry not to have been here to say good-bye to you," Mrs.
-Carlin explained, politely. "He often expressed the greatest sympathy for
-your lameness. I cannot imagine where he is, and he has had no supper,
-either."
-
-"Bright boy, bright boy, that," responded Mr. Kemble. "Lives just out of
-Boston, does he? Must look him and his aunt up this fall, and see if I
-can't get my friend, Brooks, the broker, interested in him. Well,
-good-bye," and, hobbling away, quite briskly for him, Mr. Kemble followed
-a boy who carried his satchel down to the wharf, and was rowed out to the
-yacht. A voice from the cabin bade him welcome, and he disappeared down
-the companionway.
-
-Early that evening, and shortly after Mr. Kemble had gone aboard the
-_Eagle_, for such was the name painted freshly in gilt on the yacht's
-stern, Miles Burton and the three boys, Bob, Henry Burns, and George,
-held a consultation in the shadow of the woods near the haunted house.
-Mason, in the meantime, was hidden near the head of the rickety old
-stairs at the landing on the bluff, watching for any movement aboard the
-_Eagle_.
-
-Miles Burton's commands were brief and explicit. "There is an old closet
-in the cellar," he said, "just about opposite where the box was buried.
-Mason and I will hide there. We have oiled the hinges of the door so that
-it moves noiselessly. You boys better keep close here in the woods till
-you hear from us. Then you can make as much noise as you want to and come
-in at the capture. There ought not to be so very much excitement about
-it, for we shall have them before they know what's the matter."
-
-It certainly seemed as though the detective could not be mistaken, but
-the sequel would show.
-
-Mason remained at his post, and Miles Burton and the boys sat together in
-the shadow of the woods. It was wearisome waiting, and there was a
-chilliness in the night air which had crept into it with the east wind.
-When eleven o'clock had come and the moon should have shone over the
-cape, a bank of clouds drifted up just ahead of it and half-obscured its
-light. As the moon arose these clouds drifted higher in the sky, still
-just preceding it, and the heavens grew but little brighter. Still it was
-not absolutely dark, for most of the stars were as yet unhidden.
-
-Twelve o'clock came, and then one, and then a half-hour went by. At just
-half-past one o'clock by the detective's watch they saw the figure of
-Mason stealing swiftly up the path.
-
-"It's time to make ready now," he said to Burton, as he joined the party.
-"They'll be at the landing soon. As near as I can make out, there's
-Chambers and French, besides Craigie. It's the men we want all right.
-Chambers is rowing, and he will probably stay in the boat while the other
-two come ashore."
-
-Then, bidding the boys to preserve the utmost silence, the two detectives
-left them, and a moment later the boys saw them disappear through the
-doorway of the haunted house.
-
-There was little need of warning the boys to make no noise. From what the
-detectives had said, they knew that the men they had to deal with were
-desperate adventurers, who would not balk at any means to escape capture.
-
-So they lay close in the underbrush and peered through the trees down
-toward the landing. The night was still, save for the rustling of a light
-wind through the trees. The breeze had held through, as Captain Sam had
-prophesied, though it had abated somewhat, ready, however, to increase
-with the next turn of the tide a few hours later.
-
-They could hear noises across in the village: a solitary cart rattling
-along the country road, the tinkle of a distant cow-bell in a pasture,
-and here and there a dog barking. Presently the sound of oars grinding in
-the rowlocks came to their ears, and a few moments later the sound of a
-boat gently grating on the edge of the stone landing. There was as yet no
-sound of voices.
-
-"Whew!" muttered Bob White. "This waiting here for something to happen
-gives me a creepy feeling. I only wish we knew that they weren't armed to
-the teeth and could only pitch in and run the risk of a good fight. I'd
-like to try a good football tackle, just to keep my nerves from going to
-pieces."
-
-"I wouldn't care much to be waiting for them down in that cellar," said
-Henry Burns. "They're likely to prove ugly customers when they find
-themselves trapped,--but I'll risk Miles Burton to keep his head. He's
-the kind of man for this sort of thing--"
-
-"Sh-h-h," interrupted George Warren, softly. "I hear their voices.
-There's two of them, I think, talking. Yes, here they come. Lie low,
-now."
-
-A head appeared at the top of the ladder, and then a man sprang up on to
-the brow of the bluff. It was the man whom they had known as Mr. Kemble,
-but whom they now knew as Craigie. He was followed by another man,
-somewhat taller than he.
-
-The two came up the path together, talking earnestly. At a certain point
-in the path they paused, and Craigie stepped aside and found the spade
-where he had hidden it in the brush. Then they went on toward the haunted
-house. The boys' hearts beat fast and hard as the men passed close by
-where they lay hidden. Surely two men who would lie in wait in the old
-house for these two must possess good nerve and courage. For the boys'
-part, they were glad to be outside.
-
-"Listen," whispered Henry Burns, softly; "the tall one is downright angry
-with our friend Kemble. He's pitching into him for something."
-
-It was evident that Craigie's newly arrived friend was in a bad humour.
-He spoke angrily, and no longer in a low tone, but gruff and loud enough
-to be heard some distance away.
-
-"What a fool you must have been, Craigie," they heard him say, "to hide
-the jewels away in this tumble-down old place, when you could have hidden
-them well enough on your own person. It's all well enough to say they're
-safer here, but such an act might have attracted attention."
-
-"It might," whispered Henry Burns.
-
-"And here we are," continued the tall man, "fooling away our time in this
-outlandish hole, climbing ledges and stumbling through woods, when we
-ought to be out in the middle of the bay by this time, clear of this
-place. There was the wind, holding on through the night, just opportune
-for us, and all you needed to do was to step aboard, if you had been
-ready, and off we should have gone, without dropping a sail."
-
-"Well, well, French," answered Craigie, impatiently, but trying to
-mollify his companion, "we've got time enough. Don't worry about that.
-You would have blamed me bad enough if the jewels had been found on me.
-Supposing I had had to tell you they'd been stolen, what would you have
-done? Would you have believed it, or would you say I had stolen them from
-you myself?"
-
-"Believe it!" cried the other. "Why, you know I wouldn't believe it. I
-know you too well for that. What would I do? What would Ed Chambers do? I
-tell you what we would do. After that job,--after coming way down here
-for you,--why, man, we'd hunt you to the end of the earth, if you got
-away with those jewels, but we'd have you and the jewels, too."
-
-With this angry utterance, the tall man laid a heavy hand on the other's
-shoulder.
-
-"Nonsense, man," returned the other, impatiently, shaking off his grasp.
-"What a way to talk about nothing. You're in a precious bad humour, seems
-to me. You know right well I wouldn't go back on you and Ed."
-
-"I know nothing of the sort," snarled the other "I know you, I tell you.
-I know you left us when things got hot, and took the jewels that we
-risked our necks for. Don't I know that we shouldn't have seen or heard
-of you again till we had hunted for you--which we would have done--if
-that man Mason hadn't got so close up on to you that you didn't dare try
-to get out of here alone."
-
-"Well, have it so, have it so, then, since you are bound to quarrel,"
-said Craigie, sullenly; and the boys heard no more. The two men passed
-beyond hearing and entered the haunted house.
-
-"I don't intend to miss this," whispered Henry Burns, for once thoroughly
-excited. "There's going to be the worst kind of trouble when that big
-black-looking fellow finds the box gone. Burton's going to let them dig
-for it--he told me so. Said he was curious to see what they would do."
-
-"Rather he would have that sort of fun than I," said Bob. "It's a good
-deal like watching a keg of powder blow up. I say we'd better stay right
-here, as Burton advised, till we hear from them. We might upset the whole
-thing."
-
-"I don't mind saying I'm scared clear down to my boots," said George,
-"but I'm going to see the thing through. I'll go if you will, Henry."
-
-So the two left Bob in the woods, close by the path to the shore, and
-crept up on their hands and knees to that same cellar window through
-which they had before witnessed the hiding of the box.
-
-By the light of a lantern placed on the cellar floor they saw the two
-men. Craigie had removed his coat, and was digging in the earth where he
-had hidden the box. He worked vigorously, throwing up spadefuls of the
-soil with quick, nervous jerks. His tall companion looked on with an
-expression of mingled anger and contempt on his face.
-
-As the box failed to come to light after some minutes of hard work, the
-drops of perspiration stood out in great beads on Craigie's face, and he
-redoubled his efforts with the spade.
-
-"It's down deeper than I thought I buried it," he muttered, with a sort
-of nervous laugh.
-
-"You're a fool!" was all the other said.
-
-"Have it so," said Craigie, and resumed his work.
-
-The man was troubled, although he scarcely dared admit it, even to
-himself. He had already dug far deeper than he had before, and yet no
-signs of the box. The spade trembled slightly in his hands. He widened
-the hole and dug furiously.
-
-"Going to dig over the whole cellar, I suppose," sneered the other, and
-clenched his fists nervously.
-
-Craigie did not reply. Perhaps the truth was beginning to dawn on his
-mind, for he half-paused and cast a quick, anxious glance at his
-companion. His face was ghastly white in the dim lantern light. He
-continued his digging.
-
-All at once he uttered a cry. The boys, staring in with faces close to
-the window-pane, saw the tall man leap forward and deal him a heavy blow.
-
-"Do you think I am tricked by you?" he cried. "You know it isn't there.
-You knew it all the time. But you don't fool me. You don't escape to
-enjoy it."
-
-Craigie reeled under the blow and staggered back against the wall. If the
-other had followed up his advantage instantly, the fight must have been
-his; but one moment was enough for his companion. Still grasping the
-spade, he struck out with it as the man French rushed upon him again, and
-the other, receiving the full force of the blow, fell to the floor.
-
-The next instant, without waiting to see whether his companion were dead
-or alive, Craigie shattered the lantern with a single blow and darted for
-the cellar stairs. At the same moment the detectives threw open the door
-and rushed out into the cellar. They were just too late. One man, indeed,
-lay unconscious at their feet, but the other had already reached the
-cellar stairs, and was at the outer door in a moment more.
-
-Down in the woods, by the path to the landing, Bob saw a sight that sent
-the hot blood to his cheeks. He had heard shots from the cellar, fired by
-the detectives after the fleeing Craigie, and wondered what they meant.
-Now, to his dismay, he saw Craigie at full speed flying along the path
-toward him.
-
-He scrambled to his feet, though his heart beat furiously, and he
-trembled so that for a moment he clung to a tree for support. Then he
-thought of Tom, and it gave him courage. Standing as he had stood often
-before on the football field at home, when, as right tackle, he had saved
-many a goal, he waited breathlessly. Then as Craigie dashed up, he sprang
-out, tackled him about the legs, and the two fell heavily to the ground.
-
-He was half-stunned by the fall, but he had breath enough to cry for
-help, and clung like a drowning man to his antagonist. Well for him then
-that, in his flight, Craigie had dropped the weapon he carried. They
-rolled over and over for a moment, and then the man had Bob in his grasp.
-
-"Let me go!" he cried, fiercely. "Let me go, I say!" Bob felt his
-strength going, as the powerful arms tightened about him.
-
-All at once, however, the other's grasp loosened. Craigie felt himself
-borne backward, as two boyish figures rushed out of the darkness and
-threw themselves upon him. Then a weapon gleamed at his head, and Miles
-Burton stood over him.
-
-"Hold on," cried Craigie. "You've got me this time, though you had to get
-a boy to do it for you."
-
-"It's all the same to me," replied Miles Burton, coolly. "We've got you,
-that's the main thing. Here, Mason, here's our man."
-
-Mason, running up, stooped over the prostrate form for a moment, there
-was the sharp snap of steel, and Craigie lay helpless with a pair of
-handcuffs fastened to his wrists.
-
-"Where's French?" he asked, sullenly.
-
-"Where you left him," said Mason. "It was a bad cut you gave him. He
-won't run away. That's certain."
-
-"Serve him right," said the other.
-
-"Hark! What's that?" cried Miles Burton, as the sound of two pistol-shots
-came up from the water. "They seem to be having trouble down there, too.
-You wait here, Mason, and I'll get down to the shore."
-
-He ran to the steps, followed by the three boys. Down the rickety stairs
-they scrambled, and quickly stood on the ledge of the little landing,
-looking off on to the water.
-
-What they saw was the yacht _Eagle_, not far from the bluff, under full
-mainsail, standing out of the cove. At some distance astern was the
-rowboat, in which were Arthur and Joe at the oars. The detective stood at
-the bow with a smoking revolver in his hand. Not far distant, across the
-cove, was the canoe containing the other detective and Tom. The detective
-also had just fired. Miles Burton and the boys could see no one aboard
-the sloop, but still it sailed steadily on its course. The canoe vainly
-tried to head it off, but the yacht, obedient to an unseen hand at the
-wheel, quickly came about and went off on the other tack, soon putting a
-hopeless distance between it and its pursuers.
-
-They could not see the man aboard, for the reason that he lay flat in the
-cockpit, and, with one arm upraised, directed the course of the yacht.
-
-"What a pity! What a pity!" said Miles Burton, talking softly to himself.
-"How could it have happened? I would rather have lost the other two than
-that man Chambers. He's the most dangerous man of the three, and the man
-I wanted most."
-
-His face showed the keenest disappointment, but he had learned
-self-control in his business, and refrained from speaking above his
-ordinary tone of voice.
-
-"How did it happen, Watkins?" he asked, as the rowboat came in to the
-landing for them.
-
-"It's all our fault, Burton," said the other, bitterly. "Stapleton and I
-should have closed in the moment we heard the first shots; and we should
-have got aboard the yacht and waited. But I was not sure but what
-Chambers would land and go up the bluff to the rescue of his comrades,
-and so I waited to see what he would do. I might have known him better.
-These fellows are always looking out for number one, and that's a safe
-rule to go by.
-
-"All at once we saw him come out from the shadow of the bluff, rowing as
-hard as ever he could for the yacht. We were after him then, both
-Stapleton and I. And I'm certain of one thing. No one could have got us
-out to that yacht faster than these boys. They rowed like men. But, you
-see, he had but a few strokes of the oars to pull, compared with us. And
-he got to the yacht when we were still some rods away.
-
-"I never dreamed but what we had him then, for his anchor was down. But
-what did he do but spring aboard, not stopping to see what became of his
-rowboat, rush forward as quick as a cat, whisk out a knife, and cut his
-hawser before you could say 'Scat.' Then he jumped aft mighty quick,
-grabbed the wheel as cool as anything you ever saw, and had her under
-headway in no time.
-
-"He took long chances, standing up when he went about, and dodging down
-again, at first. Then when we came close he got down in the bottom of the
-boat, just as you saw him, and the best we could do was to fire where we
-thought he ought to be. He dodged back and forth between our boats,
-tacking right and left as quick as anything I ever saw, and just slipped
-by us. He couldn't have done it in any ordinary boat, but that yacht just
-spun around like a weather-vane, and seemed to gain headway as she went
-about, instead of losing anything.
-
-"I never saw anything so beautiful, if I do say it. Look at her now, just
-eating away there to windward and leaving this harbour out of sight."
-
-The yacht was, indeed, flying along like the wind. Chambers had got more
-sail on her now, and they could see him, coolly sitting at the wheel and
-waving a hand in derision back at them.
-
-"Confound it!" said Burton. "Here we are on an island, with no way of
-getting a telegram started till the morning boat lands over at Mayville.
-That will be many hours yet, and I fear he'll give us the slip for good
-and all. What luck, that it should have been he, the only seaman of the
-three, who was left with the boat. Neither of the others could have done
-what he did. He's probably studied these waters some, enough to find his
-way down here, and it will be a hard task ever picking him up again."
-
-"Yes, but a man can't conceal a yacht," said George Warren. "I'd know her
-anywhere. You can telegraph a description, and the whole coast will be on
-the watch. You can describe exactly how she looks."
-
-"Can I?" laughed Miles Burton. "Yes, I can, but that's all the good it's
-likely to do. He'll have her so changed over, if he gets a day to himself
-down among those islands, that the man who built her wouldn't recognize
-her. It won't be the first time he has done it. He carries a full
-equipment aboard, a different set of sails, different fitting spars,
-different gear of all kinds, and paint to change her colour. Once let him
-get in near a sheer bluff, where he can lay alongside, with some trees
-growing close to the water's edge, so he can rig a tackle and heel her
-way over, and he will have a yacht of a different colour before she's
-many hours older. He did the thing up in Long Island Sound for several
-years, and changed her name a half a dozen times into the bargain. He's
-done some smuggling up along the Canadian border, too, I'm told, and
-there isn't a better nor a more daring seaman anywhere in this world.
-However, we'll do the best we can. Lend a hand, now, all of you; we've
-got to get that wounded man down over the bluff, or down through the
-woods, and row him across the cove, where we can get a doctor to dress
-that wound of his. He's not dangerously hurt, I believe, but he's faint
-and sick, and we must work spry."
-
-A half-hour later, at the wharf across the cove, before the eyes of an
-excited crowd, composed of villagers, cottagers, and hotel guests, who
-had gathered hurriedly at the sound of the firing, there was landed a
-strange boat-load,--the strangest that had ever come ashore at the
-harbour. Imagine the amazement of Colonel Witham upon beholding his
-favourite guest, Mr. Kemble, bundled unceremoniously out of the rowboat,
-with manacles upon his wrists. Imagine the concern of the villagers when
-the man French, his wound clumsily swathed in bandages and his face pale
-and distressed, was lifted ashore and carried bodily up the slip to the
-nearest shelter. Nothing like it had ever happened before, not in all the
-island's history.
-
-"And you say you knew that man was a burglar for two or three days, and
-let him stay in the house and didn't tell us?" demanded Mrs. Carlin,
-wrathfully, of Henry Burns.
-
-"Yes'm," said Henry Burns.
-
-"Well, if you're not the worst boy I ever had the care of. Here we might
-all have been murdered and robbed, and you'd be as guilty as he. And to
-think I sat and talked with him there, and shook hands with him when he
-went away. Henry Burns, you'll go to bed an hour earlier for a week for
-this. And you deserve worse punishment than that."
-
-Henry Burns assumed his most penitent expression.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
- AN UNPLEASANT DISCOVERY
-
-
-Two weeks had passed by. Craigie and French were in jail awaiting trial,
-and the sensational arrest had run its course in the papers. Messages had
-sped here and there, and the police of many cities and towns were
-watching day and night for the missing Chambers. But watchers' efforts
-were futile. If the sea had opened and swallowed him up, the man could
-not have disappeared more completely. Not one of the harbours along the
-coast sighted him, nor did he run to any for shelter. It had come on
-stormy the morning he sailed away, and something like a gale had set in
-the next night. So that there were some who believed it more than likely
-that the yacht _Eagle_ had foundered, with only one man to handle her.
-
-Be this as it may, yacht and man had utterly disappeared. Several times
-it was thought she was sighted by some pursuer, but it always turned out
-to be some other craft. Chambers had made good his escape. And he alone
-knew to what use he intended to put that freedom.
-
-The bright August sun glared in through the canvas tent on a hot
-afternoon. It fell warm upon Tom, who, divested of his jersey and bared
-to the waist, stood in the centre of the tent, performing a series of
-movements with a pair of light wooden dumb-bells. A fine specimen of
-sturdy young manhood was Tom, lithe and quick in action. A skin clear and
-soft, bright eyes, muscles that knotted into relief when flexed and
-rounded into nice proportion when relaxed, quick, decisive movements, all
-told of athletics and an abstinence from pipes and tobacco.
-
-"It's your turn," he said, presently, to Bob, after he had counted off
-several hundred numbers. Tossing his chum the dumb-bells, he slipped on
-his jersey again, and, reclining at ease on one of the bunks, watched Bob
-go through the same drill.
-
-"Bob, I'm envious of you," he said. "You are blacker by several shades
-than I am. I'll have to take it out of you with the gloves."
-
-"It's pretty hot," said Bob, "but come on."
-
-"Heat doesn't bother a man when he is in training," said Tom. "It's the
-flabby fellows that get sun-strokes. Sun does one good when he's hardened
-to it."
-
-He fished out a pair of old boxing-gloves, that looked as though they had
-seen hard service, from the chest, and then he and Bob went at it, as
-though they had been the most bitter enemies, instead of the most
-inseparable of friends. They led and countered and pummelled each other
-till the perspiration poured down their faces and they had begun to
-breathe hard.
-
-"Time!" cried Tom. "That's enough for to-day. I think you had just a
-shade the better of it, old chap. Now let's cool off in the canoe. You
-know what's on the programme this afternoon."
-
-"I should say I did," answered Bob; "and I'll be hungry enough for it by
-the time things are ready."
-
-They carried their canoe down to the shore, and in a moment were paddling
-down the island toward the narrows. But they were not destined to go
-alone. Turning a point of ledge some little distance below Harvey's camp,
-they came all at once upon Arthur and Joe Warren, walking along the
-beach.
-
-"Take us in there, Tom," cried Joe.
-
-"I can take one of you," answered Tom, pointing the canoe inshore with a
-turn of his paddle.
-
-Arthur caught the end of the canoe as it came up alongside a ledge on
-which the boys stood, and steadied the frail craft.
-
-"Might as well let us both in," he said. "The more the merrier."
-
-"The more the riskier, too," said Tom; "but if you fellows will take the
-chance of a ducking, I'm willing. Water won't spoil anything I've got on.
-Climb in easy, now, and sit cross-legged, so if we tip over you'll slide
-out head-first, clear of the thwarts."
-
-The canoe was brought to within nearly an inch of the water's edge by the
-addition of the two to its burden. Tom gave a strong push with his
-paddle, and the heavily laden craft glided away from the shore.
-
-There was an extra paddle, which Arthur wielded after a fashion, and it
-did not take long to come within sight of the narrows. There upon the
-shore were gathered some fifty or sixty persons. Over against a ledge a
-fire of driftwood blazed. When they had gotten in nearer they could see a
-smaller fire at a little distance from the other. Over this was hung a
-monster iron kettle, and bending over it and superintending the cooking
-of its contents was a familiar figure. It was Colonel Witham, and he was
-making one of his famous chowders.
-
-At the same time that the occupants of the canoe discerned the colonel,
-he in turn espied them, and also noted a circumstance which they did not.
-A half-mile or more distant from them a big, ocean-going tugboat was
-passing down the bay, without a tow and under full steam.
-
-"There come those mischief-makers," said the colonel, muttering to
-himself. "I'm blessed if the canoe isn't filled with them. If there's an
-inch of that canoe out of water, there's no more." Then, as he noted the
-tug steaming past, an idea came to him that made him chuckle.
-
-"Kicks up a big sea, that craft does,--as much as a steamboat," he said.
-"Perhaps they'll see it and perhaps not. If they don't just let one of
-those waves catch them unawares. There'll be a spill." The colonel,
-chuckling with great satisfaction, went on stirring the chowder.
-
-The possibility of a wave from a chance steamer had, indeed, not been
-thought of by Tom or any of the others. The water was motionless all
-about them, but rolling in rapidly toward them were a series of waves big
-enough to cause trouble, if they did but know it.
-
-The colonel watched the unequal race between the waves and the
-heavily-laden canoe with interest. He looked out at them every other
-minute from the corner of his eye. He was afraid lest others on shore
-should see their danger and warn them.
-
-"Let them spill over," he said. "They can all swim like fish, and a
-ducking will do them good." So he stirred vigorously, watching them all
-the while.
-
-"That stuff won't need any pepper if he cooks it," remarked young Joe,
-looking ahead at the colonel.
-
-"Lucky for us it's not his own private picnic," said Tom, "or we
-shouldn't get much of it. Even as it is, it sort of takes my appetite
-away to see him stirring that chowder."
-
-"I'll risk your appetite--" The words were hardly out of Arthur's mouth
-when precisely what Colonel Witham had been hoping for came to pass. All
-at once Tom, seated in the stern, saw the water suddenly appear to drop
-down and away from the canoe. The canoe was for an instant drawn back,
-then lifted high on the ridge of a wave and thrown forward, with a sharp
-twist to one side. Tom gave one frantic sweep with his paddle, in an
-effort to swing the canoe straight before the wave, but it was too late.
-The canoe was overloaded, and as the weight of the four boys was thrown
-suddenly to one side the sensitive thing lost its equilibrium and
-capsized.
-
-In a moment the four boys were struggling in the water. Thanks to Tom's
-precaution, they all went out headforemost, and came to the surface clear
-of the canoe, blowing and sputtering. A cry went up from the shore, and
-for a moment Colonel Witham was seized with a sudden fear. What if any of
-them should be drowned, and he, to vent a petty spite, had given no
-warning? In his excitement he failed to notice that he had spilled some
-pepper into the ladle which he held in one hand.
-
-Two rowboats were hastily started out from the beach, and, impelled by
-strong arms, surged toward the canoe.
-
-Tom was prompt to act. He and Bob had had many a drill at this sort of
-thing. Each of the boys was a good swimmer, and soon they were all
-clinging to the canoe, which had completely overturned. The boys were in
-about the same positions as they had occupied in the canoe, Tom at one
-end, Bob at the other, and the other two clinging each to one side.
-
-"Quick, boys, let's right her before the boats get here," cried Tom.
-
-Under his directions the two Warren boys now took their positions both on
-the same side of the canoe, with himself and Bob at the ends. Then all
-four took long breaths, treaded water vigorously, and lifted. The canoe
-rose a little and rolled over sluggishly, two-thirds full of water.
-
-While the others supported it, Tom bailed the canoe nearly dry with a
-bailing-dish, which he always kept tied to a thwart for just such an
-emergency. Then he climbed in over one end, and Bob followed over the
-other. The Warren boys clung to the gunwales until one of the boats from
-the shore picked them up. The paddles were recovered for Tom and Bob, and
-the three craft proceeded to shore.
-
-There, stretching themselves out on the hot sands before the blaze, they
-waited for their clothing to dry on them. They were much liked by the
-boys and girls of the village, and were at once a part of a jolly group,
-each of which party had a separate detail to recount in the capsizing of
-the canoe as they had seen it.
-
-All at once the picnickers were startled by a howl of rage from Colonel
-Witham. All eyes were turned upon him. He was executing the most
-extraordinary contortions and dance-steps that could be imagined. An
-Indian chief, excelling all his tribe at a war-dance, could not have
-outdone the grotesque movements of the colonel.
-
-"What ails the man?" cried Captain Sam. "He must have gone clean crazy."
-And he started for the colonel on the run.
-
-But before he could reach him another accident happened. In his dancing
-about, the colonel trod most unexpectedly on a small log of wood, his
-heels flew out from under him, and down he came with a mighty splash in a
-little pool of sea-water that had been left in a hollow of rock by the
-last receding tide.
-
-There the colonel lay, like an enormous turtle, helpless for a moment
-with rage and astonishment, and all the while sputtering fiercely and
-crying out.
-
-"What on earth ails you, colonel?" asked Captain Sam, hurrying to his
-assistance. "You haven't gone crazy, have you?" And he helped the colonel
-to his feet with a great effort.
-
-"Pepper!" roared the purple-faced colonel. "Pepper!"
-
-"Pepper!" cried Captain Sam. "What about pepper?"
-
-"Everything about it!" sputtered the colonel. "It's in the chowder! Taste
-it and see."
-
-"What's that?" cried Captain Sam. "If those young scamps have peppered
-the chowder I'll thrash every one of them myself. Here, let me see," and,
-picking up the ladle which the colonel had dropped, he cautiously tasted
-the chowder.
-
-"Why, there's no pepper in it," he said. "It's just right. I don't taste
-any pepper."
-
-As, indeed, he did not, the colonel having got it all.
-
-"You must have a strong imagination, colonel," he said.
-
-"Imagination!" bellowed the colonel. "Imagination! I just wish your
-tongue was stuck full of a million red-hot needles and your mouth was
-filled with hornets, that's all I wish. Where's the boy that put that
-pepper into that spoon? Where is he? Show him to me and I'll make an
-example of him right here. I'll put him head first into the chowder by
-the heels."
-
-As no one had put the pepper into the ladle, no culprit could be found to
-show to the colonel; and as the colonel could not select a victim out of
-a score or more of boys who were present, he could only vent his rage to
-no purpose, while the villagers, who had laughed themselves nearly sick
-over the colonel's antics, gave him what sympathy they could feign.
-
-It ended in the colonel's taking himself off in a great fury, declaring
-that any one who pleased could make the chowder, and he hoped it would
-choke them all, and that fish-bones innumerable would stick in the
-throats of whoever ate it.
-
-The colonel's departure, however, far from putting any damper on the
-occasion, seemed rather to afford the party a relief; and his mishap made
-no small part of their amusement, as they went on with the preparations
-for the feasting.
-
-Captain Sam, who could turn his hand to anything, took the position left
-vacant by the colonel, and declared he could bring the chowder to
-completion in a way vastly superior to the colonel's. And indeed it was a
-decided improvement in the appearance of things to see the good-natured
-captain standing over the steaming kettle and cracking jokes with every
-pretty girl that went by.
-
-The preparations for the clambake went merrily on. A huge pile of
-driftwood was brought up from the shore and heaped on the fire by the
-ledge. There were pieces of the spars of vessels, great junks of
-shapeless timber that had once been ship-knees and pieces of keels,
-timbers that had drifted down from the mills away up the river, now
-thrown up on shore after miles and miles of aimless tossings, and crates
-and boxes that had gone adrift from passing steamers and come in with
-weeks of tides. The flames consumed them all with a fine roaring and
-crackling, and, dying down at length after an hour or two, left at a
-white heat beneath the ashes a bed of large flat rocks that had been
-carefully arranged.
-
-Several of the boys, with brooms made of tree branches, swept the hot
-stones clean of ashes; clean as an oven they made it. Then they brought
-barrels of clams, big fat fellows, with the blue yet unfaded from their
-shells, and poured them out on the hot stones, whence there arose a
-tremendous steaming and sizzling.
-
-Quickly they pitched damp seaweed over the clams, from a stack heaped
-near, covering them completely to the depth of nearly a foot. Then on
-this, wherever they saw the steam escaping, they shovelled the clean
-coarse gravel of the beach, so that the great broad seaweed oven was
-nearly air-tight.
-
-Then they heaped the hot ashes in a mound and buried therein potatoes and
-corn with the thick green husks left on it.
-
-The women, meantime, had not been idle, for in a grove that skirted the
-beach they had spread table-cloths on the long tables that always stood
-there, winter and summer, fastened into the ground with stakes driven
-firm. If all that great steaming bed of clams and the chowder in the
-mammoth kettle had suddenly vanished or burned up, or had some other
-catastrophe destroyed it, there would still have been left a feast for an
-army in what was spread on the snowy tables from no end of fat-looking
-baskets.
-
-There were roast chickens and ducks, sliced cold meats, and country
-sausages. There were pies enough to make a boy's head swim,--apple,
-mince, pumpkin, squash, berry, custard, and lemon,--in and out of season;
-chocolate cakes and raisin cakes and cakes of all sizes and forms. There
-were preserves and pickles and a dozen and one other messes from country
-cupboards, for the good housewives of Grand Island were generous souls,
-and used to providing for a hearty lot of seafaring husbands and sons and
-brothers, and, moreover, this picnic at the Narrows was a yearly event,
-for which they made preparation long ahead, and looked forward to almost
-as much as they did to Christmas and New Year.
-
-Never were tables more temptingly spread, and when, late in the
-afternoon, the benches around these tables were filled with expectant and
-hungry picnickers, it was a sight worth going miles to see.
-
-Captain Sam pronounced the chowder done, and the great kettle, hung from
-a stout pole, was borne in triumph by him and Arthur Warren to the grove
-near the tables. Somebody else pronounced the clams done, and the gravel
-was carefully scraped off from the seaweed, and the seaweed lifted from
-the clams, and the great stone oven with its steaming contents laid bare.
-The very fragrance from it was a tonic.
-
-Bowls of the chowder and big plates of the clams were carried to the
-tables. There were dishes of the hot corn piled high; potatoes that came
-to table black as coals, and which, being opened, revealed themselves
-white as newly popped corn. There was a mingled odour of foods, piping
-hot, and over all the grateful aroma from half a dozen coffee-pots.
-
-"Cracky! do they expect us to eat all this?" exclaimed young Joe, as he
-surveyed the prospect. "I wonder where it is best to begin--and what to
-leave out."
-
-"Don't try to eat it all, Joe," said Arthur. "Give somebody else a
-chance, too. You know the night you went to Henry Burns's party you ate
-so many nuts and raisins you woke up dreaming that somebody was trying to
-tie you into a square knot, and when you got fully awake you wished
-somebody would, and I had to get up and pour Jamaica ginger into you.
-Don't try to eat more than enough for three ordinary persons this time,
-Joe, and you'll be all right."
-
-Young Joe tried to smile, with a slice of chicken in one hand and a
-spoonful of preserves in the other, and a mouthful of both. His
-reputation at the table had been made long before that day, and had gone
-abroad, and here was the opportunity of a lifetime, for every
-good-hearted motherly-looking housewife within reaching distance was
-passing him food.
-
-"I hope there's a seat for me," said Henry Burns, who came hurrying up.
-He and George Warren had made the run down the island on bicycles.
-
-"Come on, both of you," cried the crowd. "There's always room for you,"
-and made places for them at once.
-
-"It seems too bad not to invite those other campers up on the shore,"
-said one of the women. "I'm sure they haven't had anything as good as
-this for all summer."
-
-"What! Harvey's crew?" queried a chorus of voices, in astonishment.
-"Well, you don't live near enough to where they are camping to be
-bothered by them. If you did, you wouldn't want them."
-
-"We don't mind some kind of jokes so much," continued one of the
-villagers, at which Tom and Bob and Henry Burns and the Warren boys tried
-to look unconscious, "but when it comes to taking things that don't
-belong to them and continually creating a disturbance, we think it is
-going a little too far. Perhaps it might do them good to get them over
-here and repay them with kindness, but some of us are not just in the
-mood for trying it."
-
-"Besides," said another, "it's too late now, if we wanted to, for I saw
-them starting out about half an hour ago in their yacht, and wondered
-where they could be trying to go, with wind enough to barely stir them.
-Some mischief, like as not, they're up to. No good errand, I'll be
-bound."
-
-Which was quite true.
-
-However, in most surprising contradiction to the speaker's assertion,
-there suddenly appeared along the shore Harvey and all his crew, walking
-close to the water's edge, but plainly to be seen.
-
-"Well, those boys must have changed their minds quickly," said the man
-who had spoken before. "It is not more than half an hour, surely, since I
-saw them all starting out in the yacht. I guess they found there was not
-enough wind."
-
-Perhaps, however, there had been wind enough for the purpose of Harvey
-and his crew. There was enough, at all events, to carry them up past the
-village and back again to their mooring-place. If they had had any object
-in doing that, there had been wind enough to satisfy them. They seemed,
-moreover, in high spirits when they returned from this brief voyage, and
-laughed heartily as they made the yacht snug for the night.
-
-Now they went whistling past the picnic party, all of them in line, and
-went down along the shore till they were lost to view in the woods.
-
-"Hope they're not going down my way," said some one. "They're up to
-altogether too much mischief around here; that is, I know well enough
-it's them, but I can't ever succeed in catching them at it. I'd make it
-hot for them if I could."
-
-But Harvey and his crew had surely no designs on the property of any one
-down the island, for they had not gone far in the grove of woods before
-Harvey called a halt, and they all sat down and waited. It was rapidly
-growing dusk, and they waited until it had grown quite dark. Then they
-arose, cut across through the grove toward the Narrows again, but keeping
-out of sight all the while, both of chance villagers who might be passing
-along the road, and of the crowd about the picnic fire.
-
-When they had come to the Narrows, Harvey again called a halt, and stole
-ahead to see if the coast was clear. The island was a narrow strip of
-land here, with the bay on either hand coming in close to the roadway,
-but by keeping close to the water's edge, and dodging behind some low
-cedars, provided the campers were all about the fire, they might pass
-unobserved. This they managed successfully, for, the driftwood fire
-having been renewed, the picnic party were seated about it, singing and
-telling stories.
-
-Harvey and his crew went on up through the woods to their own camp, where
-two of them remained, while Harvey and George Baker and Allan Harding
-took their yacht's tender and rowed rapidly on up toward the town. After
-they had started, Joe Hinman and Tim Reardon stole down through the woods
-again, and kept watch for a long time on the group about the fire. They
-did not return to their camp till the sound of a horn, some hour and a
-half later, signified to them that Harvey and the others had returned
-from their mission, whatever it was.
-
-The driftwood fire began to blaze low as the evening wore on, and by nine
-o'clock the greater number of the picnickers had said "Good night" and
-started on their journey home. Some of them had come from away down at
-the foot of the island, and still others from the little settlement at
-the head. These now harnessed in their horses, which had been allowed to
-feed near the grove, and drove away, their flimsy old wagons rattling
-along the road like so many wrecks of vehicles.
-
-Around the fire, however, there still lingered a group of fishermen and
-village folk, telling stories and gossiping over their pipes.
-
-"I wonder whatever became of that fellow Chambers," said one. "He was the
-slickest one of the lot, so that Detective Burton said. Do you recall how
-he sailed away that morning, as cool as you please, with the pistols
-popping all around his head?"
-
-The subject had never ceased to be the one great topic of interest in the
-village of Southport.
-
-"I reckon he'll never be seen around these parts again," remarked
-another. "Like as not he's up in Long Island Sound long before this. Or
-maybe the yacht's hauled up somewhere, and he's got clear out of the
-country. There's no telling where those fellows will travel to, if
-they're put to it, according to what I read in the papers."
-
-"It's mighty mysterious," said Captain Sam. "For my part, I think it's
-queer nobody's sighted him somewhere along the coast. A man don't sail
-for days without somebody seeing him. He ought to be heard from along
-Portland way, that is, if he ever left this bay, which I ain't so sure
-of, after all."
-
-This remark seemed to amuse most of the group.
-
-"Seems as though you expected you might see him and that crack yacht some
-night sailing around here like the _Flying Dutchman_," said one, at which
-the others took their pipes out and chuckled. "You'll have to get out
-your old _Nancy Jane_ and go scouring the bay after him, Cap'n Sam. If he
-ever saw her coming after him, he'd haul down his sail pretty quick and
-invite you to come aboard."
-
-"Well," replied Captain Sam, good-naturedly, "there's no accounting for
-the strange things of the sea, as you ought to know, Bill Lewis, with the
-deep-water voyages you've been on. Still, I'm free to say I don't see how
-that 'ere craft can have got out of here and gone clear up Boston way or
-New York, without so much as a sail being sighted by all them as has been
-watching for her. I don't try to explain where he may be, but I stick to
-my idea that there's something mighty queer about it."
-
-"He may be at the bottom of this 'ere bay," said the man addressed as
-Bill Lewis. "Stranger things than that have happened, and he was but one
-man in a big boat on a coast he couldn't have known but little of.
-There's many a reef for him to hit in the night, and the day he escaped
-was stormy. For that matter, I give it up, too. He was a slick one,
-that's all I can say."
-
-And so they rolled this strange and mysterious bit of gossip over, while
-the fire burned to coals and the coals died away to ashes.
-
-"Tom," said Bob, as they launched the canoe from the shelving beach some
-time after ten o'clock, "it's too glorious a night to go right home to
-bed. What do you say to a short paddle, just a mile or so out in the bay,
-to settle that terrible mixture of pie and clams that we've eaten? We'll
-sleep all the sounder for it."
-
-"Perhaps 'twill save our lives," replied Tom. "I ate more than I've eaten
-in the last week. Let's take it easy, though. I don't feel like hard
-work."
-
-So they paddled leisurely out for about a mile, enjoying the brilliant
-starlight and watching the dark waters of the bay flash into gleams of
-phosphoric fire at every stroke of the paddle. It was like an enchanted
-journey, gliding along through the still night, amid pools of sparkling
-gems.
-
-It was nearing eleven when they drove the bow of their canoe in gently
-upon the sand at their landing-place and stepped out upon the shore.
-
-"One, two, three--pick her up," said Tom, as each grasped a thwart of the
-canoe, ready to swing it up on to their shoulders. Up it came, fairly on
-to the shoulders of Bob, who had the bow end, but Tom, who never fumbled
-at things, seemed somehow to have made a bad mess of it. His end of the
-canoe dropped clumsily to the ground, twisting Bob's head uncomfortably
-and surprising that young gentleman decidedly.
-
-"What's the matter, Tom?" he asked, laughing good-naturedly, as he turned
-to his companion. But Tom for a moment answered never a word. He stood
-staring ahead like one in a dream. Bob, amazed, looked in the same
-direction.
-
-"Bob," whispered Tom, huskily, "do you see--it's gone--it isn't there. Do
-you see--the camp--the old tent--it's gone, as sure as we're standing
-here."
-
-They rushed forward to where the tent had been but a few hours before
-that afternoon, and stood there dismayed. There in the open air were
-their bunks, their camp-stools, their camp-kit, and the great chest; but
-the tent that had sheltered them had disappeared. Around about the spot
-were holes where the stakes that had held it had been hastily wrenched
-out, but not a scrap of canvas nor a piece of rope that had guyed it were
-to be seen. Only the poles that had been its frame lay upon the ground.
-Their tent had utterly vanished.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII.
- A CRUISE AROUND THE ISLAND
-
-
-"Well, Bob," said Tom, as they seated themselves on the bunks to collect
-their wits and think the situation over, "we know who did it, of course.
-The next thing is to prove it."
-
-"It won't be so easy," responded Bob. "Jack Harvey hasn't done this thing
-without first planning out how he could dispose of the tent without
-attracting the slightest attention. He planned it in a good time, too,
-when half the village was away at the clambake."
-
-"Yes," said Tom, "and that's what he sailed out on that short trip for,
-to look in at our tent without exciting any suspicion. He found out that
-there wasn't anybody around it, and then he and the others came down past
-our fire on purpose for us to see them and to prove by every one there
-that they were in another part of the island when our camp was stolen. He
-did it, though, and he's covered it up well. We'll have hard work to
-prove it against him."
-
-"I'll be madder to-morrow, when I'm not so sleepy." said Bob. "Let's go
-on up to the Warren cottage now, and wait till to-morrow before doing
-anything. It isn't going to rain to-night, and the stuff will not be
-harmed out here without a covering."
-
-So they travelled up to the Warren cottage, greatly to the surprise of
-the Warren boys, who had gone to bed and were sound asleep when they got
-there, and greatly to the concern of good Mrs. Warren, whose indignation
-did more to comfort them than anything else in the world could have.
-There was always room for more in the spacious old cottage, and they were
-soon stowed away in bed, quickly forgetting their troubles in sleep.
-
-"You'll stay right here for the rest of the summer," said Mrs. Warren the
-next morning at breakfast. "You can bring your camp stuff up and store it
-in the shed, and I guess it will be safe there from Jack Harvey or
-anybody else. It's a crying shame, but you're welcome here, so don't feel
-too bad about it. I don't think the boys will be sorry to have you here."
-
-"I guess we won't," cried the Warren boys, in chorus. "But we'll get that
-tent yet, I think," said George Warren. "I don't believe Jack Harvey
-would dare destroy it. He's got it hidden somewhere, depend upon it. And
-we must find out where that place is."
-
-"I wish I could believe it," said Tom, "but I'm afraid his experience
-with our box taught him a lesson. It is my belief that he has taken the
-tent and sunk it out in the bay, weighted with stones, so it will never
-come to light. However, we will start out after breakfast to see if any
-one in the village saw him or his crew anywhere near the tent while we
-were away."
-
-The search through the village for a clue proved, unfortunately, as
-fruitless as Tom had feared. Not a soul had seen Harvey or any one of his
-crew about the camp during the evening, nor, for that matter, anybody
-else. The disappearance remained as mysterious as though the wind had
-borne the tent away out to sea.
-
-"Say the word," said Captain Sam, when he heard of it, "and I'll go over
-to Mayville and get warrants for the whole crew. We'll have them up and
-examine every one of them. We can't have things of that sort going on
-around this village."
-
-"I don't want to do it," said Tom. "At least, not yet awhile. I don't
-like to suspect Harvey or any of his crew of actually stealing the tent.
-It may be they have taken it just to annoy us for a night or two, and we
-shall get it back again. I'd rather take it as a practical joke for a few
-days, at any rate, than to have any boy arrested. I can't believe they
-would steal it for good, intending to keep it. Let's wait and see."
-
-"You'll never see your tent, then, I'm thinking," said Captain Sam, "for
-I don't believe Harvey has the least idea of bringing it back. And the
-longer we wait the harder it will be catching him. However, do as you
-think best. I'll go down to-morrow and look their camp over, anyway, on
-my own hook. I have the right to do that. I'm a constable, and I'll look
-their camp over on general principles."
-
-"You'll not find anything, I fear," said Tom.
-
-"Fellows," said George Warren, as they all sat around the open fire that
-evening, "we haven't been on a cruise for a long time. What do you say to
-starting out in the _Spray_ to-morrow for a trip around the island? It
-will take one, two, or three days, according to the wind, and Henry Burns
-says he can go. We'll take along a fly-tent and some blankets, and part
-of us can sleep on shore, so we won't be crowded."
-
-"Great!" cried Bob. "It comes in a good time for us, when we're without a
-home--oh, I didn't mean that," he added, hastily, as Mrs. Warren looked
-reproachfully at him. "This is a better home than our camp was, to be
-sure. I mean, while our affairs are so upset, while we don't know whether
-we shall be camping to-morrow or living here. It may help to straighten
-matters out, and, if by chance Harvey and his crew feel like putting the
-tent back, this will give them the opportunity."
-
-"Then we'll get the lines ready," said George. "There's lots of small cod
-at the foot of the island,--and we might take a run across to the islands
-below, where there's lots of bigger ones. We'll plan to be gone two days
-or a week, just as it happens, and put in plenty of flour and biscuit and
-some canned stuff, in case we can't get fish."
-
-"How happens it that Henry Burns can get off so easily?" asked Tom.
-
-"Oh, they've let up on him a good deal since the capture of Craigie,"
-answered George. "Now that the papers have said so much about him and the
-rest of us, and the people at the hotel have made so much of him, Mrs.
-Carlin has come to the conclusion that he isn't so much of a helpless
-child as she thought he was. She lets him do pretty much as he likes now,
-and so Colonel Witham don't bother him, either. He will be over by and
-by, and we'll make sure he can go."
-
-Henry Burns put in an appearance soon after, and the subject of the
-voyage was duly discussed in all its phases, and settled. The next
-forenoon found them all aboard the little yacht _Spray_, getting
-everything shipshape and storing away some provisions and water.
-
-"Looks as though we were going on a long voyage," said young Joe, as his
-eyes rested fondly on several cans of lunch-tongue and two large mince
-pies which Mrs. Warren had generously provided, besides several tins of
-beef and a small keg of water.
-
-"Well, Joe," said Arthur, "you know, having you with us to help eat up
-stuff is equivalent to going on a long voyage. And then, one never knows
-on a trip of this kind when he is going to get back."
-
-Which was certainly true, if anything ever was.
-
-They made a great point aboard the _Spray_, these Warren boys, of having
-every rope and sail and cleat in perfect condition; no snarled ropes, no
-torn canvas, and no loose bolts nor cleats to give way in a strain; and
-they began now, as usual, to see that everything was in shipshape
-condition before they cast off from their moorings and headed out of the
-harbour.
-
-The little yacht was, therefore, as trim as any craft could be when they
-set sail on their voyage, with Mrs. Warren waving good-bye to them from
-the front piazza.
-
-"I never feel as free anywhere in the world as I do out aboard the
-_Spray_ on a trip like this," said George Warren, stretching himself out
-comfortably on the house of the cabin, while Arthur held the tiller.
-"It's the best fun there is down here, after all."
-
-"Well, I don't know, a canoe isn't so bad," said Bob. "You can't take so
-many, to be sure, but when Tom and I get off on that and go down among
-the islands for a day or two, sleeping underneath it on the beaches at
-night and cooking on the shore as we go along, we feel pretty much like
-Crusoes ourselves, eh, Tom?"
-
-"Indeed we do," answered Tom. "It's the next best thing, surely, to
-sailing a boat."
-
-"By the way, Tom," asked Arthur, "where did you leave the canoe? Not
-where any one could get that, I hope."
-
-"No, that's safe and snug," replied Tom. "It's locked up in your shed,
-and your mother has the key. That's one thing we shall find all right
-when we get back."
-
-The wind was blowing lightly from the northwest, and, as they were
-starting out to make the circuit of the island by way of the northern end
-first, they had to beat their way up along the coast against a head wind.
-
-"This little boat isn't such a bad sailer," said George Warren,
-admiringly, gazing aloft at a snug setting topsail. "For a boat of its
-size, I guess she goes to windward as well as any. There's only one thing
-the matter with her. She's small, and when she's reefed down under three
-reefs, with the choppy seas we have in this bay, she don't work well to
-windward, and that's a fault that might be dangerous, if there were not
-so many harbours around this coast to run to in a storm."
-
-"I suppose some day we'll have a bigger one, don't you?" queried Joe.
-
-"Yes, when we can earn it, father says," replied George. "That don't look
-so easy, though. A fellow can't earn much when he's studying."
-
-"What's that up there on the ledges?" interrupted young Joe, pointing
-ahead to some long reefs that barely projected above the surface of the
-water.
-
-"They are seals--can't you see?" replied Arthur. "The wind is right, and
-we'll sail close up on to them before they know it. We can't shoot,
-because we haven't any gun aboard, but we'll just take them by surprise."
-
-The little _Spray_, running its nose quietly past the point of the first
-ledge and sailing through a channel sown with the rocks on either hand,
-came as a surprise to a colony of the sleek creatures, sunning themselves
-on the dry part of the ledges. They floundered clumsily off the rocks and
-splashed into the water, like a lot of schoolboys caught playing hookey,
-and only when the whole pack had slipped off into the sea did they utter
-a sound, a series of short, sharp barks, as here and there a curious head
-bobbed up for a moment, and then dived quickly below again.
-
-"They have as much curiosity as a human being," said George Warren. "Just
-watch them steal those quick glances at us, and then bob under water
-again. The fishermen around here shoot them whenever they get a chance,
-because they eat the salmon out of the nets, but I never could bear to
-take a shot at one. They seem so intelligent, like a lot of tame dogs. I
-don't believe in shooting creatures much, anyway, unless you want them
-for food, or unless they are wild, savage animals."
-
-"That don't apply to ducks, I hope," said Tom. "We want to take you up
-into the woods with us some fall, and have you do some shooting of that
-kind,--ducks and partridges and perhaps a deer or two."
-
-"No, I'd like that first rate," answered George. "It's this senseless
-shooting of creatures that you don't want after they are shot that I
-don't believe in. I don't believe in shooting things just for the sake of
-killing them. Actual hunting in the woods for game that you live on is
-another thing. It's a healthful, vigorous sport that takes one into clean
-surroundings and does one good."
-
-They chatted on, discussing this and that, till the yacht at length
-turned the head of the island and ran along past Bryant's Cove.
-
-"We won't forget that harbour in a hurry," they said, as they sailed by.
-
-The wind was gradually dying down with the sun, and would not carry them
-much farther that night, though they were soon running before it, as they
-rounded the uppermost point and headed away for the foot of the island,
-some thirteen miles away.
-
-"We'll have just about wind enough to run along to Dave Benson's place,"
-said George. "It's two miles down, but the wind and tide are both in our
-favour,--what there is of them. We can buy some green corn of Dave, and
-he will let us pull his lobster-pots and charge us only five cents for
-each lobster. Things are cheap down here, if you buy them of the
-fishermen. A little money means a good deal to them. A little flour and
-tea and sugar at the village store, and they live mighty comfortably on
-what they catch and what they raise on their farms. They don't know what
-it means to be poor, as the poor in our city do."
-
-"Yes, and they live a happy life, for the most part," said Henry Burns.
-"They get a good share of their living out of the sea, and I've always
-noticed that seafaring people are generally very well contented with
-their lot. You never hear them grumbling, as men do that work hard on
-farms. The sea seems to inspire them more; at least, it seems so to me."
-
-"What does 'inspire' mean, please, Henry?" queried young Joe, winking at
-Bob. "It sounds like a very nice word."
-
-"Inspiration means a strong desire and ambition to do something, and a
-conviction that one cannot fail," answered Henry Burns. "For instance, I
-might feel myself inspired to knock an idea into your head, just like
-this." And Henry Burns administered a sound cuff on that young
-gentleman's head. "That's a very crude example," added Henry Burns.
-"Perhaps I can give you a better one, if you would like."
-
-"No, I thank you," said young Joe. "That will do very well for the
-present. I think I understand."
-
-Dave Benson's place was a weather-beaten old house set in the midst of a
-corn and bean patch, close by a little creek that ran in from the western
-bay. It had an air of dilapidation, but, withal, of comfort about it.
-There was a little garden, some hake were drying on flakes beyond the
-house, a rowboat and a dory were pulled up on the beach a little way up
-the creek, and the indispensable sailboat, built by Dave himself in the
-winter months, was lying a little offshore in the shelter of a projecting
-hook of land.
-
-"Hulloa, Dave," shouted George Warren, as a tall, sunburned figure, gaunt
-but powerful, emerged from the door of the house and peered out across
-the water at them.
-
-"Hulloa," he said, laconically. "You all ain't been over much to see us
-lately."
-
-"No, but we thought we would make a call to-day," said George. "Will you
-come out and get us? We left the tender behind. We're going around the
-island."
-
-For answer the man shoved his dory off the beach, stepped in, and sculled
-out to them with one oar out over the stern.
-
-"Climb in here sort of easy like, now," said he, "and I guess I can take
-the whole of you ashore at one load. If you two ain't used to this
-craft," he added, addressing Tom and Bob, "you want to look out some, for
-its tippery and no mistake, though there ain't no better boat when you
-know how to behave in it."
-
-"I guess it's something like our canoe," said Tom. "We're used to that,
-so I think we'll manage. Perhaps you never saw a canoe."
-
-"Not as I know of," returned the other. "Though I do recall seeing what I
-thought must be one, from what I've heard, going along the shore down
-below here about an hour ago."
-
-"It couldn't have been a canoe," said Bob, "for ours is the only one on
-the island, and that is locked up safe at home in the Warren's shed."
-
-"Mebbe not," replied Dave Benson. "I ain't sure at all. I just noticed
-there was two boys in it, and they were on their knees and pushing it
-along with what you call paddles, I think."
-
-Tom and Bob looked at each other blankly.
-
-"It can't be possible," said Tom, at length. "I left ours locked up safe
-enough. Dave's made a mistake."
-
-"Got any corn?" asked Arthur.
-
-"Yes, there's some growing out there, I reckon. You can go out and pick
-what you want and gimme what you like for it. It's good and sweet, I
-reckon."
-
-"And lobsters, how about them?" asked young Joe.
-
-"Well, I haven't pulled the pots to-day," said Dave. "You can go and do
-that, too, I reckon. There ought to be some there. I baited them all
-fresh with cunners and sculpins last night."
-
-"Let me go and pull them," said Bob. "I never caught a lobster. Come on,
-Joe, you can show me how and I'll do the work."
-
-"Did you ever handle a dory?" asked Dave.
-
-"No," answered Bob, "but I'm used to a canoe."
-
-"And did you ever pull a lobster-pot?"
-
-"No, never saw one."
-
-"Then you want to look out," said Dave, and took himself off into his
-house, leaving the boys to themselves.
-
-Bob got another oar, and, with young Joe in the stern, rowed out a few
-rods toward some ledges, where Dave had indicated that the lobster-pots
-were set.
-
-"Did you ever pull a lobster-pot, Joe?" asked Bob, as they came in sight
-of half a dozen small wooden buoys, about as big as ten-pins, floating at
-a short distance from one another, with ropes attached.
-
-"No, I never did," replied Joe; "but I've seen it done and it looks easy.
-You just lift the pot aboard the boat and open a trap-door and take out
-the lobsters. Only you want to look out how you take hold of one of them,
-that's all. It's all right if you take him by the back."
-
-On shore, seated on a huge stick of timber, washed ashore long ago and
-half-imbedded in the sand, the other boys watched the proceedings with
-interest.
-
-"Bob will do it all right, of course," said George, winking slyly at
-Arthur. "It's a simple enough trick, only it is harder in a dory than in
-a boat with a keel to it, for a dory slides off so."
-
-"Just like a canoe," said Tom.
-
-"By the way," he added, "is a lobster-pot heavy?"
-
-"That's the deceptive part of it," replied George. "It's a great big cage
-made of laths with a bottom of boards, and it comes to the surface easy
-because the water buoys it up. It's the lifting it out that fools one.
-It's got three or four big stones in it to weigh it down, and you have
-got to bring it out of water with a sudden lift or it will stick
-half-way."
-
-In the meantime, Bob, having grasped one of the floating buoys, proceeded
-to haul in the slack of the rope, which was quite long, to allow for the
-tide, which was now low.
-
-"It comes up easy," he said to Joe, as he drew it up slowly to the
-surface, hand over hand. "Here she comes now. Wait till it lands on the
-gunwale and then lean over on the other side, so we won't capsize." Bob
-grasped the slats of the big cage and lifted manfully.
-
-The lobster-pot came up all right, as George had explained, till, just at
-the point where it should have left the water, it stopped suddenly and
-stuck like a bar of lead. Unluckily, Bob had not counted on that extra
-weight of stone inside, nor on the loss of the buoyancy of the water. At
-the same instant, moreover, young Joe, seeing the cage strike the
-gunwale, shifted over to the other side of the dory. This settled the
-matter. The pot lodged half-way over one gunwale, hung there for a
-moment, long enough to careen the crank thing down on its side; Bob and
-Joe both lost their balance and slid the same way, the dory filled with
-water, and boys and lobster-pot slumped into the sea.
-
-The boys on shore set up a roar at the mishap of their comrades, while
-long Dave Benson, emerging once more from his cabin door, was heard to
-chuckle as he strode down to the shore and shoved off his rowboat.
-
-"It's just like a canoe, exactly," he muttered, "just like it--only it's
-so different." And he doubled up at the oars and laughed silently.
-
-Bob and Joe, coming to the surface, puffing and blowing water, were
-pleased to note the sympathy displayed for them in four boyish forms,
-rolling off the log and holding on to their sides with laughter. Nor did
-the keenness of this sympathy abate the whole evening long, for every now
-and then one of them might be heard to repeat the language of Dave
-Benson, as he glanced significantly at the others, "It's just like a
-canoe--only it's so different."
-
-However, Bob and Joe, being duly scrubbed down and invested in a change
-of duck clothing from the locker of the _Spray_, did not relish any the
-less the supper that awaited them, of broiled live lobster, cooked over a
-glowing bed of coals on the beach, and corn that was as sweet as Dave
-Benson had promised. They took their chaffing as good fellows and
-comrades are bound to do, only vowing inwardly to bide their time for
-revenge.
-
-Then, as night was coming on, they set up their fly-tent on a clean, dry
-part of the beach, well beyond the reach of the tide, spread down their
-blankets, and Tom and Bob and Henry Burns turned in to sleep there,
-leaving the little cabin of the _Spray_ for the Warren boys.
-
-"Bob," said Tom, "did you hear what Dave Benson said as he brought in the
-capsized dory, with the lobsters, too?"
-
-"He said it was 'just like a canoe, only--'"
-
-"Oh, you dry up, Tom," exclaimed Bob. "Your turn will come next, so don't
-rub it in."
-
-And they went off soundly to sleep.
-
-The next morning, when they awoke, they found that the wind had altered
-and was beginning to blow up from the southward. They must, therefore,
-beat their way down to the foot of the island, some ten miles distant,
-against a head wind and sea, for a southerly always rolled in more or
-less of a sea after it had blown for an hour or so.
-
-"Come again," called out Dave Benson, as they left his cabin astern, and
-he stood waving them farewell with his weather-beaten hat.
-
-"I'd just like to know what he meant when he said he saw a canoe out
-here," said Tom. "I know ours is all right, but he certainly did describe
-a canoe, when he spoke about its being paddled, and ours is the only one
-I know of around here."
-
-"Yes, and he saw it last night, or, rather, yesterday afternoon," said
-Bob, "and nobody would have disturbed ours in broad daylight, at any
-rate."
-
-But about an hour later, they came suddenly to the conclusion that Dave
-Benson knew what he was talking about, when Henry Burns exclaimed all at
-once: "Why, there it is now. Dave Benson was right, after all. That's a
-canoe, down about a mile ahead, just off that white line of beach, and
-there are two paddling it."
-
-The boys looked in amazement. There could be no mistaking it. Henry Burns
-had surely spied a canoe. They could make it out quite plainly, pitching
-slightly in the sea, with apparently some one at either end.
-
-"Quick, get the glass, Joe," cried George Warren, who had the tiller.
-"It's in the locker in the cabin, you know. That will show us just who it
-is."
-
-Young Joe dived below and reappeared the next instant, bringing a small
-telescope.
-
-"Here," he said, handing it to Tom, "take a look at them."
-
-Tom adjusted the focus of the glass and sighted the craft ahead, then
-exclaimed, excitedly: "Yes, it's them, sure enough. It's Harvey and Joe
-Hinman and it's the canoe. We've got them, too, if the _Spray_ can only
-catch them. We're sure to get the canoe, at any rate, for they can't run
-far or fast with that on their shoulders, if they see us and take to the
-shore. We know what it is to try to hurry with that."
-
-"That we do," returned Bob. "Let me have a look, Tom."
-
-"Cracky!" he exclaimed, as he put the glass down almost as soon as he had
-sighted it. "Who'd have thought they would have had the nerve to get that
-in broad daylight? They must know they are sure to be seen in it, too.
-What on earth can Harvey be thinking of?"
-
-"We'll set the club topsail and the other jib in a hurry," said George,
-"and perhaps we can overhaul them before they see us."
-
-They got the extra sail on in a twinkling and laid the course of the
-_Spray_ a little closer into the wind. Fifteen minutes went by, and they
-had made rapid progress in overhauling the canoe. They made short tacks,
-so as not to be seen by the paddlers, if possible, by keeping so far as
-they could in a line with the stern of the canoe.
-
-Presently, however, the boy who was wielding the stern paddle turned and
-looked back, and they could see plainly that it was Harvey.
-
-He must have seen them, too, and been vastly surprised, for, carrying
-across the strip of land at the Narrows, he had surely expected to meet
-no familiar yacht in the western bay. The occupants of the canoe turned
-their craft more in toward shore, though not directly, and, at least so
-it seemed to the boys, began paddling desperately, as though they hoped
-to escape.
-
-If they had thought they could run away from the _Spray_ in this way,
-they soon found out their mistake, for the Spray continued rapidly to
-overhaul them.
-
-Turning squarely in toward the shore, Harvey and Joe Hinman soon reached
-it, jumped out, and drew the canoe far up on the beach. Their next move
-surprised the crew of the Spray. Leaving the canoe in full sight on the
-beach, Harvey and Joe Hinman walked deliberately away, without so much as
-looking back at their pursuers.
-
-"That's a mighty strange performance," exclaimed George Warren. "I don't
-understand that at all."
-
-There was no place to run the _Spray_ in close to shore, so they rounded
-to some thirty feet out, and Tom and Bob, hastily throwing off their
-clothes, dived overboard and swam to the beach.
-
-Tom was the first to reach the canoe; but, as he came upon it and turned
-it over, he uttered a cry of astonishment.
-
-"They've fooled us this time, sure enough," he said to Bob, who came
-panting up. "It isn't our canoe."
-
-The canoe, in fact, was new.
-
-It was enough like theirs to be its mate, both as to size and colour, but
-there was not a scratch upon it nor upon the paddles. The canoe could not
-have been used more than once or twice since it had left the maker's
-hands.
-
-"The joke is on us," cried Bob to the boys in the _Spray_. "It's another
-canoe. Harvey's 'governor,' as he calls him, must have bought it for him
-and sent it down on the boat yesterday. He doesn't seem to be afraid to
-trust us with his property, which is more than we would do with him."
-
-"Perhaps he would rather trust the canoe with us than to trust himself
-with all of us just at this time," replied Tom. "I feel like taking it
-along with us, to make him give up our tent, but I'm afraid that wouldn't
-do. We can't prove that he has it, either."
-
-Harvey and Joe Hinman had clearly left the canoe to its fate, so there
-was nothing to do but to swim aboard the _Spray_ again, and the voyage
-down the island was resumed.
-
-"There's one thing about it," said Tom, as he scrambled into his clothing
-once more, "if Jack Harvey is as reckless and as careless in that canoe
-as he is in his yacht it will be washed up on shore some day without him.
-Not that I hope it will happen, but I look to see it."
-
-"I don't think he was born to be drowned," said Henry Burns.
-
-Toward noon they came in sight of the southern extremity of the island,
-or the extremities, to speak more accurately, for the end of the island
-here was divided into a succession of thin points of land of various
-shapes, affording a number of small, rockbound harbours, snug and
-secluded, and each making good shelter for small vessels.
-
-They selected one of these, and, as they knew the waters to be filled
-with a species of small cod, they determined to lay up here for the
-afternoon and night, starting out again the next morning. They brought
-the _Spray_ well in to the head of the harbour which they selected, so
-that it was almost wholly land-locked when they dropped anchor and furled
-their sails.
-
-Toward evening the wind decreased, dying out almost entirely. Big banks
-of clouds piling up in the northwest told them that they might expect the
-breeze from that quarter in the morning.
-
-It was getting dusk and they were cooking their supper in the little
-cabin of the _Spray_, when young Joe, looking out of the companionway,
-exclaimed: "Why, here comes company; another yacht's going to lie in here
-for the night, too."
-
-Looking out, they saw a big black sloop coming slowly into the harbour.
-She had come up from the southward before the wind, and had only her
-mainsail set. There was hardly breeze enough to bring her in. She drifted
-in slowly, with one man at her wheel, and, as she came within hailing
-distance, young Joe, going forward, swung his cap and shouted, "Ahoy."
-
-The man at the wheel did not respond, but, strangely enough, at the sound
-of young Joe's voice the yacht slowly turned again, heading completely
-about, and stood out of the harbour again.
-
-"Doesn't seem to like our company," said Henry Burns.
-
-"Guess he'll have to have it, whether he wants it or not," said George
-Warren. "There's not wind enough to take him out again, as he will find
-when he gets the set of the tide at the entrance."
-
-If the helmsman aboard the strange yacht had really intended to quit the
-harbour again, he found the tide to be as George Warren had said. After
-vainly trying to make out for a few moments, he left the wheel, ran
-forward, and the next moment they heard the splash of his anchor. Then
-the sail dropped and the man went below.
-
-"Whoever they are aboard there, they don't seem inclined to be sociable,"
-said Henry Burns. "Well, they don't have to be, if they don't want to."
-
-"Guess they're afraid we'll keep them awake," said George Warren. "They
-are fishermen, by the looks. See, she carries no topmast, so she is not a
-pleasure yacht, though she looks from here like a fast boat. They make
-them good models now, since Burgess began it."
-
-"I guess that's so," said Arthur Warren. "Those fishermen like to sleep
-nights, after a hard day's work, without being disturbed. I remember one
-night we laid up in a harbour and began singing college songs, and a crew
-of them rowed over to us and threatened to lick us if we didn't keep
-quiet. This fellow doesn't want to be disturbed."
-
-"I'll hail him, anyway, if he comes on deck again," said Henry Burns,
-"and find out where he is from. I like to know my neighbours."
-
-But the man aboard the strange yacht was not inclined to be neighbourly.
-He did not appear on deck again. A thin wreath of smoke curled out of the
-funnel in his cabin, and they knew he was getting a meal. That was the
-only sign of life aboard.
-
-Sometime that night--he did not know the hour--Henry Burns awoke,
-conscious of some sound that had disturbed his light slumbers. Presently
-he became aware that it was the sound of a sail being hoisted. Getting up
-softly without disturbing his companions, he crept out of the cabin and
-looked across the water. The moon was shining, and he could see a lone
-figure aboard the strange yacht, getting the boat under way.
-
-Henry Burns saw him go forward and labour for awhile at the anchor rope.
-Then, for a wind had arisen, the man ran aft to the wheel, and Henry
-Burns saw the strange yacht go sailing out of the harbour.
-
-"That's a queer thing to do," muttered Henry Burns. "There's something
-strange about it. He tried to get out before, the minute he saw us.
-Cracky! You don't suppose---- No, that's nonsense. I'm getting altogether
-too suspicious ever since I came across that man Craigie upon the roof of
-the hotel."
-
-And Henry Burns went back to his bunk again.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
- STORM DRIVEN
-
-
-When they awoke next morning the wind was blowing heavily from the
-northwest, and, while the sun was as yet shining brightly, the sky was
-darkened here and there with banks of clouds, which moved with great
-rapidity, driven by violent currents. Inside the snug harbour the water
-was calm, but, looking out beyond on the bay, they could see its surface
-broken already into big waves.
-
-"Looks like a nasty day outside," remarked George Warren. "I wonder
-whether we ought to lie in here to-day, or take the chance of clearing
-the foot of the island before it gets heavier."
-
-"I'd hate to stay here another whole day," said Joe.
-
-"Do you think it's going to blow much harder, George?" inquired Tom.
-
-"I can't say for certain," replied the other, "but it looks as though the
-wind was going to increase right along."
-
-"But don't you think we could get around the foot of the island before it
-got much worse?" asked Arthur. "There is only about a mile to run before
-we get under the lee of the islands in the other bay."
-
-"Of course, if we can reach the eastern bay all right, we shall be in
-smooth water then," said George, "for the island will shut off the wind
-to a great extent, and there won't be much sea. Well, if you fellows are
-willing to take the chance, I am. I guess it won't get any worse than the
-night we ran to Bryant's Cove. The _Spray_ stood that all right."
-
-Breakfast being finished, they double-reefed the mainsail of the little
-yacht, and did not set the jib, as they would be running with the wind
-about on their quarter and would not need it. Then they stood out of the
-harbour into the bay.
-
-They were almost immediately in rough water, and the very first plunge of
-the yacht into the heavy sea sent the spray flying over them. Young Joe
-and Arthur went scurrying into the cabin for the oilskins, of which they
-had a good supply, and the boys prepared themselves for wet weather.
-
-"We'll get it right along now," said George, "until we can clear that
-point about a mile ahead there. The _Spray_ does the best she can, but
-she does throw the water bad in a heavy sea. It isn't her fault. And
-there's one good thing about her; you can't tip her over. She will stand
-up till the mast and sail are blown out of her."
-
-The boys now realized how deceptive wind and water viewed from a distance
-always are. Gusts of wind that were seen from shore to blacken the water
-and send the spray flying from the crests of waves, were found now to be
-of far greater violence than they had supposed. Viewed from the harbour,
-the waves had not seemed to be of unusual size, but, now that they threw
-the little yacht about like a toy, they assumed a more terrific aspect.
-
-The wind increased, and the _Spray_ rolled dangerously in the seas.
-
-"She won't stand this," said George, at length. "We have got to put the
-third reef in and do it quick."
-
-They got the yacht into the wind for a moment, lowered the sail, and tied
-in a few reef-points; but the yacht would not hold in the wind, and they
-had to be content with a few knots tied at twice or three times the usual
-distance.
-
-"We're blowing offshore at a great rate," exclaimed George, "but I can't
-help it. I can't hold her up any higher. She won't stand it."
-
-"Then we cannot make the point," said Arthur.
-
-"I am afraid not," returned George. "I don't like the prospect of getting
-out into that bay, either, but I'm afraid we are in for it. I had no idea
-there was any such a sea running, nor anything like this wind."
-
-The prospect was, indeed, not encouraging. Across the wide stretch of bay
-for some eighteen miles the sea was one mass of whitecaps, a tumbling
-confusion of waves, which already broke aboard the yacht, covering the
-boys with spray and necessitating the use of bailing-dish and boat-sponge
-to keep the water from standing in the cockpit.
-
-"We've got to get that topping-lift up higher, Arthur," said George
-Warren, as the yacht rolled heavily, bringing the boom down dangerously
-near the waves.
-
-His brother sprang to the halyards at the warning, but it was a moment
-too late. At that instant a wave, rolling higher than any they had yet
-encountered, raised the _Spray_ on its crest and hurled it forward, at
-the same time causing the little craft to yaw so that the boom was buried
-for a moment deep in the seas. That moment was enough. There was a sharp
-snap as the boom, splintered in two in the middle, emerged from the
-waves, a useless thing. The yacht nearly broached to, while the next
-oncoming wave broke fairly aboard, filling the cockpit half-full of
-water.
-
-They thought it was all over with them then, but they kept their heads
-and saved themselves. Henry Burns and Arthur Warren, at the risk of going
-overboard, managed to get the broken boom aboard, after they had let the
-halyards run, and lashed it astern, so that the yacht was utterly without
-sail. At the same time Tom and Bob, who knew little about handling a
-yacht, but were ready for any emergency, bailed furiously with pails to
-clear the boat of water.
-
-Fortunately, the hatch had been shut, and the deluge of water had not
-gone into the cabin, or the boat must have foundered. As it was, she
-rolled heavily till they had bailed the cockpit dry again.
-
-"That does settle it, with a vengeance," said George Warren, when they
-had recovered a little from the shock. "We have got to run for it now,
-clear across this bay. I think we can do it all right, but you fellows
-will have to bail lively. That won't be the only sea we take aboard."
-
-"Where do we run to?" asked Henry Burns.
-
-"That's the worst of it," replied George Warren. "I'm not sure, by any
-means, whether we get blown out to the shoals, or whether we can head
-over to the eastward any, ever so slightly, and strike the Gull Island
-Thoroughfare. If we can land under the lee of Gull Island, we may be able
-to do something. The first thing, though, is to get there."
-
-It was no easy thing to hold the yacht on its course, even with no sail
-to drive it up to windward. Every wave threatened to throw it broadside
-on, and it required now and again the united efforts of George and Arthur
-Warren to steady it. Then a wave would come aboard astern, rolling in and
-nearly filling the cockpit. Several times it did this, and at each and
-every time it seemed as though the little yacht was going down. They
-bailed desperately then, every one of them falling to except George
-Warren.
-
-To their credit, though, not one of them lost his courage. Their faces
-were drawn and set, but they had confidence that the little _Spray_ would
-somehow bring them through.
-
-Toward the middle of the afternoon they had got the Thoroughfare well in
-sight, big Gull Island lying nearly dead ahead and the smaller Gull
-Islands lying away to the eastward.
-
-"If we can manage to get a scrap of sail on her just as we pass the end
-of Gull Island," said George Warren, "I think we can swing her in and not
-capsize. We've got to keep headway on, though, or one of these big
-rollers will get under us and tip us over. We shall have a few rods to
-run broadside on, for, as we are running now, and the best we can head,
-we cannot come nearer than that to the island."
-
-"I'll give her a scrap of sail that she can carry," exclaimed Arthur, and
-dived into the companionway, shutting the door quickly to keep the seas
-out. He returned in a moment, bringing a hand-saw. With this he severed
-clean the broken half of the boom, tying the ends of the rigging to the
-short stub that was left. This left the sail a huge, clumsy bag, that
-would evidently not hoist up but a foot or so on the mast, but might
-possibly be of some service in the emergency.
-
-A torrent of rain now began to pour, falling so dense as almost to shut
-out the islands ahead. Their outlines became obscured, making the effort
-to run into the Thoroughfare a more difficult and dangerous one.
-Moreover, the wind continued to increase.
-
-"Now, fellows," said George Warren, as they came abreast of the end of
-Big Gull Island, "everybody up to windward and hold on hard. She's going
-to lay over when she gets these seas broadside. Hoist the sail, Arthur,
-just as we begin to head in."
-
-Arthur sprang to the halyards, but they were tangled and did not pull
-true. Try as best he could, the sail would hoist but a little ways on the
-mast. It bagged out like a huge balloon, holding the wind and nearly
-capsizing them. Henry Burns, handling the main-sheet, let it run just in
-time to save them. Still the sail gave them headway, and, carefully
-managed, would answer to fetch them in.
-
-Twice they had to head off fairly before the wind again, at the onrush of
-some enormous wave, but they got quickly on their course again, and,
-rolling frightfully, with the boys clinging far out to windward, the
-little yacht all at once felt the relief which the sheltering extremity
-of Gull Island afforded from the awful strain. Almost before they knew
-it, they were in smooth water once more, riding easily at the entrance to
-the Thoroughfare.
-
-"Whew!" cried George Warren, as he dropped the tiller and shook his
-hands, which were numb and aching from the strain and the cold rain.
-"That was a ride for life that I don't care to repeat again in a hurry.
-Didn't the little _Spray_ do well, though, eh, Arthur? She had a good
-excuse to founder if she hadn't been staunch. If she was only a little
-larger she wouldn't have minded this at all."
-
-"We did come flying across that bay and no mistake," said Tom. "I thought
-we were going to founder twice or three times, though."
-
-"Looks as though we were stranded here for some days, that's the worst of
-it," said George Warren. "This storm has just begun, by the looks of it.
-It's a lonesome hole, too, down in this reach. Nobody ever comes here,
-except a few fishermen in the fall and spring. The Thoroughfare is all
-right, but it doesn't lead to any particular place in the course of
-vessels, so it isn't a regular thoroughfare really, like those over to
-the eastward more. Now and then a yacht goes through, just for the sail,
-but one has got to know the channel very well, for it isn't charted
-accurately,--at least, so Cap'n Sam says."
-
-"Well," returned Arthur, "we are not making a race against time, so I
-don't see as it matters much whether we stay here or some other part of
-the bay. We'll just lie snug aboard here to-night, and then to-morrow
-we'll get out and explore. There are some fishermen's shanties around on
-the other side of some of those smaller islands, and we ought to be able
-to build up a fire in one of them and live there till the storm is over,
-so we won't have to stay in this little cabin all the time."
-
-"I'll be glad enough to go down there for awhile now," said Henry Burns,
-"and get dry and warm. Come on, Bob, let's you and me start some coffee
-and biscuit going. You do the cooking, because you know how, and I'll
-look on. I'll get the dishes out, anyway."
-
-There was scarcely room in the cabin of the _Spray_ for more than four of
-them to sit and eat, so they threw the mainsail over the stub of the boom
-and made a shelter out of it against the rain. There, just outside the
-cabin, Tom and Bob sat as they all ate supper, with the rain pouring down
-all around and spattering in under the edges of the canvas. It was
-uncomfortable and dreary at best, and they were all glad when time came
-to turn in, which they did by all crowding into the cabin, where they
-could at least keep dry, although stowed away like sardines.
-
-"Ouch!" exclaimed Henry Burns, as he awoke next morning, feeling stiff
-and sore. "I feel as though I was creased and starched and ironed, and
-every time I move I take out a crease. It will take me half a day to
-straighten out again, I've got so many kinks in my neck and back."
-
-They were all cramped and lame from the uncomfortable positions in which
-they had lain, for on fair nights they had been accustomed to make up two
-bunks just outside the cabin, in the cockpit. It was still raining hard,
-but as soon as they had had breakfast they set out to seek for new
-quarters.
-
-With the scrap of a sail set, and with the use of the sweeps with which
-the yacht was provided, they worked their way about a quarter of a mile
-along into the Thoroughfare, till they got abreast of one of the smaller
-of the Gull Islands. The shores of this were very bold, the rocks going
-down sheer, without any outlying reefs or ledges, so that they were able
-to run the yacht close alongside, making her fast at bow and stern with
-ropes carried out on land.
-
-"It seems good to stretch one's legs again," said Bob, as they all sprang
-out on to the rocks. They were indeed glad to be on land once more.
-
-The island on which they now were was about three-quarters of a mile long
-and about half a mile wide, quite densely wooded with a growth of spruce
-and young birches. From a little elevation they could look out to sea
-toward the southward.
-
-"The shanties are on the other side, if I remember rightly," said George
-Warren. "I was down here once in the fishing season. We may as well
-strike directly across to the south shore. That's where the fishermen
-build their weirs for the salmon that run in along the islands."
-
-They tramped across through the woods in the pouring rain. It was a
-relief to get even the shelter that the trees afforded from the driving
-storm. Presently they came in sight of the fishermen's cabins, a cluster
-of four standing in a clearing at the edge of the woods, facing the sea.
-One of the huts was somewhat larger than the other three, and toward this
-they directed their steps.
-
-"I don't just like to break into other people's property," said George
-Warren, advancing toward the door, hatchet in hand, "but it only means
-forcing a staple, and we can replace that without any harm being done.
-It's the only--hulloa! Why, somebody's been here before us. The door is
-ajar."
-
-Somebody had, indeed, forced the door, and had not taken pains to
-refasten it. The staple, which had been drawn, lay on the ground by the
-door, just where it had been dropped. The boys threw open the door and
-stepped inside.
-
-The one room, for a shanty of the kind, was fairly commodious. Along the
-two ends were ranged tiers of bunks, three at either end, making just
-enough for them.
-
-"Looks as though they were built expressly for us," remarked Henry Burns.
-
-The bunks were rough, clumsily made affairs, a few boards knocked
-together, with a thin layer of hay thrown in at the bottom of each; but
-with the blankets from the yacht they would be comfortable.
-
-In the centre of the room was a large sheet-iron stove, with a funnel
-running up through the roof. In one corner of the room--there was only
-one room in the cabin--was a sort of cupboard, on the shelves of which
-were piled a few tin dishes. A rusty axe was apparently the only tool
-left on the premises.
-
-There was a scrap of kindling and one or two dry sticks of wood beside
-the stove, and with this they started a fire. Driftwood lined the shore,
-and a number of dead spruces, which had not yet rotted, furnished them
-with an ample supply of fuel. They piled the stove full, and soon had a
-fire roaring that turned the stove red-hot and which sent out a grateful
-warmth throughout the cabin.
-
-"That will dry us out in good shape," exclaimed Arthur, as the steam came
-from his wet clothing. "We'll have this old shanty as comfortable as a
-parlour. This is a better house than Crusoe ever had."
-
-It was, in fact, a comfortable shelter against the storm. The roof and
-sides were shingled, so that it kept out the rain, and though the wind,
-which by this time was blowing a gale, shook it till it rattled, it stood
-firm.
-
-After the boys had brought in a supply of firewood, enough to last them
-through the evening, and had stowed it near the stove to dry, they set
-out again for the yacht, and brought back each a blanket, the yacht's two
-lanterns, and a supply of food.
-
-"It's lucky we put a good supply aboard," said young Joe, as they stowed
-the stuff away on the cabin shelves. "Looks as though we were in for a
-couple of days here, at least. It wouldn't have been any fun to have to
-fish for our suppers in this storm."
-
-"You would never have survived it, Joe," returned Arthur, "though you did
-eat enough at that picnic to last you several days."
-
-"Well, here's a funny thing," cried Henry Burns, who had been rummaging
-about in the cupboard. "The parties who were here before us didn't
-believe in starving. And they didn't believe in living on fishermen's
-fare, either." And Henry Burns brought forth three empty wine-bottles and
-a half-emptied jar of imported preserves. "Here are some tins that
-contained turkey and some kinds of game," he added. "The fishermen don't
-buy that sort of canned stuff. It must have been a party of yachtsmen
-that used this place last."
-
-"They might have had the fairness to fasten the door after them, whoever
-they were," said George Warren.
-
-"Perhaps the wine accounts for that," said Henry Burns.
-
-"I'm glad they left us some preserves," said young Joe.
-
-They slept soundly in the shanty that night, with the wind howling about
-their ears and the rain dashing against the single window and beating
-like mad upon the roof. Nor did the storm abate the following day, nor
-the next night. Not till the third morning did the sunlight welcome them
-as they awoke, but then it poured through every chink and crack in the
-shanty, as though to make amends for the length of its absence.
-
-When the woods had dried sufficiently so they could venture abroad, they
-set out to hunt for a young spruce that would do for a boom for the
-_Spray_. After cutting several and finding they had been deceived in
-their length, they finally secured one which would do. Then they brought
-up the stub of the boom from the yacht and got the exact measure of the
-old one from the sail, which they disentangled from the snarl of rigging,
-and spread out.
-
-"I am afraid Captain Sam would laugh at this spar-making effort of mine,"
-said George Warren, as he trimmed away at the slender trunk of spruce,
-from which he had peeled the bark; "but it will do to take us on our
-cruise again. And what's the use of going on a cruise if you don't have
-adventures?"
-
-When he had fashioned the stick as well as his one tool--a hatchet from
-the locker of the _Spray_--would admit of, he unscrewed the jaws from the
-old boom, fastened them upon the new, and the boom was done.
-
-Then they set about mending several tears in the mainsail, with a needle
-and twine, also from the yacht's locker, and by noon everything was in
-readiness for rigging the sail once more. This proved the most difficult
-task of all, for they found that it is one thing to know the running
-rigging of a sailboat, and another thing to reeve it when it has been
-displaced. It was not until the middle of the afternoon that they had the
-job completed, and then, as the wind was dying out, they decided it was
-useless to attempt to set sail till the following morning.
-
-In the meantime, Henry Burns, finding that he was of no service in the
-work of rigging the yacht, had volunteered to get a mess of fish for
-supper. Accordingly he set out, equipped with a short alder pole and line
-and a basket, to try for some cunners and small cod off the ledges on the
-seaward side of the island. He succeeded in getting a fairly good catch,
-and then continued along the shore in search of mussels, as the tide was
-several hours ebbed.
-
-His search brought him at length to the northernmost extremity of the
-island, where he sat down on the beach to rest. Then, as he started to
-resume his walk, he noticed that the receding tide had left bare a narrow
-sand-bar, that connected the island on which the cabins stood and the
-adjacent island, so that he could now pass from one to the other almost
-dry-shod.
-
-Fondness for exploring was ever Henry Burns's ruling passion, so he set
-out across the sand-bar to the neighbouring island, and was pleased to
-find that the mussel-beds were far more plenty there than he had found
-them before. This island was not so large as the other Gull Island. It
-was not more than a half-mile long and about a quarter of a mile across
-in its widest part. It had, however, the same characteristic of the
-other, in that its shores were abrupt, and deep water lay all around it.
-
-There was but one small strip of beach, extending out into mud-flats,
-where Henry Burns could gather mussels; but he soon filled his basket
-here, and, setting it down in the shade of an overhanging rock, climbed
-the ledge that now barred his way, and started to make a circuit of the
-island along the edge of its steep banks.
-
-Henry Burns had a habit of day-dreaming as he walked, unless he happened
-to be in search of some particular thing, when he was the most alert of
-youths. So, as he walked, his mind was far away just then, back in the
-town of Medford, where he pictured to himself familiar objects, and
-wondered what was happening there.
-
-So it happened that he passed a certain tree close by the shore, only
-half-noticing that the end of a stout hawser was tied to it, and not
-paying any attention to it. When he had gone on a rod or two, it suddenly
-struck him that this was an odd thing, as the hawser was new, and so he
-went back to look at it. There was a short length of the rope dangling
-from where it had been made fast about the tree-trunk, and he noticed
-upon examination that the free end had been severed cleanly by the stroke
-of a knife.
-
-"That's odd," said Henry Burns. "Fishermen don't usually waste a good
-piece of hawser like that. Some one was extravagant and in a hurry, or
-impatient--By Jove! You don't suppose--"
-
-Henry Burns had lost his preoccupied air in a moment. Following the line
-from the rope to the edge of the bank, he scrambled carefully down over
-the face of the ledge to the water's edge.
-
-Henry Burns was not surprised to discover that the rock was smeared all
-over with spots of black paint. Moreover, if further evidence were needed
-that some one had been at work there, there lay in a niche of the ledge
-an empty keg in which paint had been mixed.
-
-But what elated Henry Burns still more was a discovery he made by a
-closer examination of the ledge just under water. There at a depth of
-from one to two feet under water were rough, jagged edges of the rock
-which had been in contact with some object--an object that had left upon
-their surface unmistakable smearings or scrapings of paint which was
-white.
-
-"Hooray!" cried Henry Burns, excitedly, for him. "There it is--the old
-and the new. There's where he rubbed against the ledge as he made fast,
-and here's the evidence all about on these rocks of his new disguise. And
-there, right close to the bank, are the trees to which he fastened his
-tackle. If it isn't just as Miles Burton said, to the letter, then
-there's no trusting one's eyes."
-
-Henry Burns lay flat on a shelving bit of rock, with his face close to
-the water, and peered down to the bed below. The water was not very
-clear, but he could discern distinctly a deep, narrow trench in the hard
-sand, which might have been made by the keel of a boat, if the boat had
-touched bottom at low water.
-
-Any one observing Henry Burns at this moment would have been puzzled
-indeed. He suddenly sprang up, tore off his jacket and trousers, bared
-himself in the quickest possible time, and, poising for one brief moment
-on the brink of the water, dived in. He swam to the bottom with two
-strokes, clutched at something that lay on the bottom, grasped it in his
-right hand, came to the surface, and, drawing himself out on land once
-more, stuffed the object into his trousers pocket and scrambled into his
-clothing again, as though his life depended on his haste. Then he started
-on a run for the sand-bar, crossed it, paused never a moment for his
-basket of fish and clams, and dashed back to the shanty as fast as his
-legs could carry him.
-
-It was not constitutional with Henry Burns, however, to continue long in
-a state of excitement, and by the time he had regained his companions his
-composure had returned. Still, they were familiar enough with him to
-perceive that something unusual had happened.
-
-"What's the matter, Henry?" exclaimed George Warren. "We saw you running
-along the beach up there as if somebody was after you. We didn't know but
-what you had found another burglar."
-
-"No," replied Henry Burns, "it was the same one."
-
-It was their turn now to become excited.
-
-"You don't mean really----" began George Warren.
-
-"Yes, I do," interrupted Henry Burns. "Say, do you remember the strange
-black yacht that came into the harbour at the foot of Grand Island the
-other night, and that was in such a hurry to get out again when it saw
-us? Well, that was Chambers, and the yacht was the _Eagle_."
-
-"Well, but she was black," said George Warren, "and she had no topmast.
-The _Eagle_ was white."
-
-"Yes, but don't you recall what Burton said about Chambers, what a hand
-he was for changing a yacht over so she'd look like a different craft?
-Well, that's what he has done, and I've found the place where he did it.
-There's the white paint back there on the edges of the rocks where the
-yacht rubbed alongside, and the rock is all covered with spots of black
-paint."
-
-Henry Burns rapidly recounted what he had discovered, including the end
-of hawser made fast to the tree.
-
-"But that isn't all," exclaimed Henry Burns, triumphantly, as he fished a
-hand into his right trousers pocket. "See here, what do you make of this?
-I saw it shining down in the water just where the stern of the yacht must
-have laid."
-
-Henry Burns drew forth a glittering object from his pocket and held it up
-to their gaze.
-
-It was a gilt letter "E."
-
-"'E' for '_Eagle_,'" cried Henry Burns. "This letter got away from him.
-It's clear as daylight now. Say, fellows, let's start for Southport early
-in the morning. That man Chambers is in the bay. He's up to something,
-and we want to get them after him quick."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
- THE MAN IN THE BOAT
-
-
-"Fellows," said Jack Harvey, one afternoon, a few days following the
-return of the _Spray_ from its cruise, "I have decided to enter that
-free-for-all race over at Bellport. I've just heard that Ed Perkins isn't
-going to race the _Ella_, after all; and, with her out of the race, we
-stand a good show. Let's get the stuff aboard and start while there's a
-wind."
-
-"Who'll stay here and watch the camp?" asked Allan Harding.
-
-"Well, I guess you'd better, now you speak of it," responded Harvey,
-quickly. "There ought to be somebody here, sure. Camps have a way of
-disappearing around here, you know, Allan," giving a huge wink as he
-spoke.
-
-"I'd just as lieve stay, all right," returned Allan, a little out of
-humour, in spite of his assurance. "But you can't win the race without
-me, you know. You always said I was lucky--and there's a good deal of
-luck in racing, after all."
-
-"Well, we'll try to win without luck, that's all," said Harvey. "And,
-mind, we depend on you to have the camp still standing here when we get
-back. I shouldn't think it would be nice to get back and find one's camp
-gone, eh, Allan?"
-
-"No," replied the other, shortly.
-
-The crew lost no time in stowing their blankets and camp-kit aboard the
-_Surprise_, and, leaving Allan Harding sullenly on guard, they sailed
-away for Bellport.
-
-"Looks as though something was missing thereabouts," chuckled Harvey, as
-they sailed past the spot where Tom's and Bob's camp had stood. "Doesn't
-it strike you there used to be something there that's gone now?"
-
-This piece of humour on Harvey's part seemed to tickle the crew vastly,
-for they shouted with derision as they sailed by.
-
-"Guess they must have got tired of camping there," roared Harvey, at
-which the others roared the louder.
-
-Bellport, whither they were bound, lay about four miles down the coast of
-the mainland below Mayville. It was not so large a place as Southport,
-but was a favourite resort for yachtsmen, as the bay there was free of
-islands, and for ten or more miles there was a good sailing course.
-
-The yacht _Surprise_ did not reach Bellport till late that night, but
-Harvey and his crew were up bright and early the next morning, as the
-race was to come off at ten o'clock, and they wished to have everything
-ready for it.
-
-"Hulloa, Harvey!" called a voice from a sloop a few rods away, as the
-captain of the _Surprise_ came on deck.
-
-"Hulloa, Jeff!" answered Harvey.
-
-The speaker was Jeff Hackett, who ran a small sloop from the foot of
-Grand Island over to the mainland once a day to carry the mails.
-
-"Are you in this race, too?" queried Jeff.
-
-"Rather think I am," responded Harvey. "Think I've got any chance?"
-
-"Looks to me as though you had," answered the other. "There are only
-eight yachts going to start. The others backed out because they didn't
-think the handicapping was fair. It's all right, though. You will have to
-give us fellows a trifle allowance, by just a rough measurement on the
-water-line; but you'll get the same from the _Bertha_ and the _Anna
-Maud_. They are the only boats that are bigger than yours. You want to
-get measured right away, too, or it will be too late."
-
-Harvey had soon complied with the requirements of the regatta committee,
-as the committee of summer guests chosen to act as judges were pleased to
-style themselves, and shortly before the hour for the race the yacht
-_Surprise_ sailed out of the harbour at Bellport, and stood off and on
-before the starting-line with the others.
-
-Harvey was in high feather, for, by his own estimate of the situation, he
-had a fair chance of winning. He knew most of the boats, either by
-reputation, or from having seen them sail, and the others he was able to
-judge of in a great measure by their general appearance.
-
-The prize to be sailed for was a handsome silver cup, for which a
-subscription had been taken up among the summer residents of Bellport.
-
-The _Bertha_, which conceded the greatest time allowance to Harvey's
-boat, was a handsome sloop, about four feet longer than the _Surprise_,
-and carrying heavy sail. She had never been considered a fast boat of her
-size, but, owing to the discrepancy in lengths, had to allow the
-_Surprise_ several minutes over the complete course of ten miles. This,
-as the _Surprise_ was really fast for her size and rig, would make it
-quite an even race.
-
-The _Bertha_ was under charter by a party of young men from Benton, who
-had engaged a sailing-master to pilot her for them during the summer.
-This made them an object of contempt in Harvey's eyes, and he wished all
-the more to "take the conceit out of them," as he expressed it.
-
-The _Anna Maud_ was a big catboat, thirty-three feet long, carrying an
-enormous mainsail, and reputed to be one of the fastest boats of her size
-in the bay. She was owned and sailed by Captain Silas Tucker, a native of
-one of the islands at the foot of the western bay, that formed part of
-the main thoroughfare leading out to sea. He was generally accorded the
-distinction of being the best skipper on this part of the coast.
-
-All the other boats, except one, were smaller than the _Surprise_. That
-one was the Sally, a sloop of exactly the same length as the _Surprise_,
-and apparently able to sail about on equal terms with her.
-
-The starting-signal was to be a gunshot, the gun to be fired five minutes
-after a first warning shot. In the interval after the first shot the
-yachts could manoeuvre about the starting-line, ready to cross when the
-second shot was fired. As soon as the second shot was fired, it was
-allowable for a yacht to cross the line, and all yachts were to be timed
-one minute after the second gun, whether they had actually crossed the
-line or not. So that it was to the advantage of all nine craft to be as
-near the starting-line as possible at the signal, and under headway and
-also up to windward as far as possible.
-
-Harvey's boldness stood him in good stead here. And, moreover, he
-certainly did know the working of his yacht to a nicety. After the
-warning gun had been fired, he made his calculations carefully, allowing
-for the tide which was running out to sea. The race was to be five miles
-straight out to windward, and a run home, off the wind. The ebb-tide, and
-the southerly breeze rolling a sea in to meet it, made an ugly chop, and
-the boats thrashed around, throwing the spray clear aboard.
-
-Just before the second gun the relative positions of the four largest
-yachts were as follows: farthest up to windward was the _Surprise_; abeam
-of her, and a short distance to leeward, was the _Bertha_; then the _Anna
-Maud_, and then the _Sally_. The _Sally_, like the Surprise, had an
-amateur skipper, a youth of about Harvey's age.
-
-The _Sally_ was a new boat, not long out of the shipyard, in fact. She
-was perhaps the prettiest craft there. Her hull was beautifully modelled,
-with a graceful overhang, bow and stern; her sails snow-white, and mast
-and spars were glistening. She steered with a wheel of ornamental
-mahogany and brass, and here and there about her cabin and furnishings
-brass and mahogany had been used, regardless of expense.
-
-"Willie Grimes has us all beat for beauty," remarked Harvey, as they
-neared the line, "but that boat is too new for racing; that is, he's too
-scared for fear something will happen to her. Most everybody is that way.
-I used to be scared of the _Surprise_ all the time for fear something
-would knock a bit of paint off somewhere. It takes about a year to get
-over that. He handles her as though he was afraid something was going to
-break. Just watch me take advantage of that."
-
-Harvey had seen that the _Anna Maud_ and the _Bertha_ would cross the
-line a moment ahead of him, but he did not mind that so much, thinking
-his time allowance would give him more than a good chance for the race,
-anyway. He had selected the _Sally_ for his particular antagonist, and
-now prepared to get what advantage he could from the start.
-
-Easing his sheet a trifle, he headed off the wind somewhat, allowing the
-two larger yachts to sail almost directly across his bows. Rushing out
-just astern of them, and heading diagonally for the starting-line, under
-full headway, Harvey bore down on the _Sally_, as though he meant
-deliberately to run her down.
-
-If young Willie Grimes had not been so taken by surprise and so alarmed
-at this move of Harvey's, he would have perceived that the manoeuvre was
-only done to try his nerve; he would have realized that as good a sailor
-as Harvey would not deliberately foul another yacht, when that must lose
-him the race, as well as the boat he fouled.
-
-But Harvey had reckoned on the other's apprehension for his new boat, and
-the move was successful. Just at the point where a moment more would have
-sent his boom crashing aboard the other yacht as he headed up into the
-wind, Harvey threw his yacht quickly about, Joe Hinman hauled in rapidly
-on the main-sheet, Tim Reardon trimmed in the jibs, and away went the
-_Surprise_ over the line, footing after the two other boats as fast as
-full sail would carry her.
-
-At that same moment Willie Grimes, fearful of a collision, threw the
-_Sally_ completely off the wind, so that when he had recovered his nerve
-and realized that he had been imposed upon, he was so far below the boat
-that marked the limit of the starting-line that he had to make another
-tack to reach it. Before this, the last gun had been fired to mark the
-taking of the time, and the luckless _Sally_ crossed the line with one
-full minute counting against her.
-
-The youth's face burned with indignation, and he had hard work to keep
-the tears from springing to his eyes.
-
-"Bye-bye, Willie," sang out Harvey, looking back and waving his cap
-derisively. "Better courage next time. You don't want to mind a little
-paint, you know."
-
-But the other had regained his spirits and paid no heed. "That's what
-yachtsmen call 'jockeying,' I guess," he said, quietly, to his two
-companions in the boat. "It's within the rules, so I suppose we cannot
-complain. That's like Harvey, from all I hear. He might have given us a
-fair show, though, as he knows this is my first summer running a boat by
-myself. Perhaps we won't be far astern of him at the finish, at that."
-
-"You did that slick, Jack," said Joe Hinman, admiringly. "We stand a good
-chance of winning this race, I think, with the allowance we get."
-
-"Didn't he scoot, though, when he saw us coming?" laughed Harvey.
-"Thought his new boat was wrecked that time, sure. I've seen that trick
-played in big yacht races, but I never saw it work better than it did
-to-day, if I do say it."
-
-The yachts were now strung out in line along the course, tacking back and
-forth, and making for a small naphtha launch anchored down the bay at the
-five-mile mark. They made a picturesque sight, laying well over under all
-their canvas and throwing the water high over their bows.
-
-It was soon evident that the _Bertha_, take it all in all, was the best
-boat for working up to windward in rough water and a good breeze. The
-_Anna Maud_ was a very broad, beamy boat, and had a marvellous reputation
-for running free, but now she seemed to feel the waves more than the
-_Bertha_, pounding heavily and drenching every one aboard.
-
-The _Bertha_ took the seas cleaner and headed up higher. She was
-evidently gaining slowly but steadily. Moreover, although she carried an
-enormous club-topsail and a mainsail of big area, she heeled over the
-least of any of the boats. She had been built for heavy weather, and this
-was exactly the breeze she sailed best in.
-
-The _Surprise_ and _Sally_ were, however, holding their own remarkably
-well, and it would not be clear for some time which would come out the
-winner.
-
-"Hello!" exclaimed Jack Harvey, suddenly, in a tone of evident surprise.
-"What on earth--or, rather, on water--is Cap'n Silas doing? Look where he
-is standing. I've been looking for the last few minutes to see him tack,
-but there he keeps on away off toward shore."
-
-The _Anna Maud_ had, strange to say, gone way off the course, apparently
-heading well over to the westward.
-
-"Why, Jack, don't you know," said Joe Hinman, "how we've noticed the tide
-over along that shore? It makes a swing in there and runs like a
-mill-sluice. Don't you remember one night how we tried to row against it,
-and what a time we had?"
-
-"That's true," responded Jack Harvey, "and Cap'n Sile Tucker is clever
-enough to take advantage of it. He knows more about sailing in one minute
-than that captain of the _Bertha_ does in a week. But there must be
-something more in it than the tide alone. I'll tell you, the wind is
-changing. It's heading more and more from the westward, and Captain Sile
-will get the full benefit of the slant when he gets down about a mile
-further. He knows what he's doing. We'll just head over and follow him."
-
-"Seems to me it's taking long chances to go so much off the course,"
-remarked George Baker.
-
-"Of course it is taking chances," responded Harvey, quickly. "You have
-got to take chances in a contest of this kind. The fellows that take the
-chances are the ones that win. But it isn't taking any great chances,
-following Cap'n Tucker. I tell you he knows these waters better than any
-man in the bay. He wouldn't go over there unless he knew he was going to
-make something by it. Why, he has sailed that big catboat of his up and
-down along this coast for the last twenty years and more, that and other
-boats. The skipper in the _Bertha_ comes from away up beyond Millville.
-He can sail his boat all right, but he don't know this coast like Captain
-Sile."
-
-Harvey, accordingly, stood over to the westward, in the wake of the _Anna
-Maud_.
-
-Only one other boat followed him. That was the _Sally_.
-
-"I don't know what they are standing away over there for," said Willie
-Grimes to his companions. "I don't know whether it is the best thing to
-do or not. It may be that they know something about the tide over there.
-But I know one thing, and that is, wherever Jack Harvey goes I'm going to
-follow. I wouldn't care if every other yacht here beat me if I could only
-beat him. You never can tell, you know. Something may happen to him yet."
-
-The wisdom of Captain Silas Tucker's departure from the straight course
-soon became apparent. The tide, indeed, at this point made a sweep
-inshore, for some reason, flowing far swifter in near the land than it
-did offshore. Again, too, the wind had slanted a little, and the yachts
-that had taken this course were soon in a better position relative to the
-stake-boat than the others.
-
-Slowly the _Anna Maud_ drew ahead of the _Bertha_, the captain of the
-latter boat realizing the advantage which the others were gaining too
-late to change his own course. As they neared the mark, even the
-_Surprise_ and the _Sally_ were leading the _Bertha_, which now seemed to
-be hopelessly out of the race.
-
-The race, indeed, seemed narrowed down to these three yachts, with a
-slight advantage in the _Anna Maud's_ favour.
-
-"Hooray!" cried Harvey, "we are holding the _Anna Maud_ in fine style.
-She's gaining ever so little, not enough thus far to cover our time
-allowance. They say she is fast off the wind, but so are we. That's the
-best point of the _Surprise_. She sails better running free than any boat
-of her size I ever saw."
-
-"Cracky!" cried young Tim, "I hope we take that silver cup back to camp
-with us. We'll march through the streets with it, if we get it."
-
-"Yes, if we get it," replied Harvey. "It don't do to be too sure,
-though."
-
-Now the _Anna Maud_ was rounding the stake-boat and coming back over the
-course, not quite before the wind, owing to the slant to the westward
-that it had taken, but with her sheet well out.
-
-"The wind is in our favour," said Harvey, gleefully. "There's just enough
-slant to it so our jibs will help us some. They will draw a little, and
-that gives us an advantage over that catboat. Let that sheet go, now,
-Joe, the minute we turn the mark."
-
-A moment later the _Surprise_ rounded the stake-boat, with a good lead
-over the _Sally_, and still near enough astern of the _Anna Maud_ to give
-her a good race.
-
-"Up with that centreboard, now, George--lively," cried Harvey. "It's a
-big board, and we don't want to drag it a minute longer than we have to.
-It counts a whole lot with this tide running against it. What's the
-matter? What are you waiting for? Up with it!"
-
-"Why, hang the thing!" exclaimed George Baker, "I'm trying to get it up
-as hard as ever I can. It won't come. It's stuck."
-
-"What's that?" cried Harvey. "Stuck? Nonsense! Here, you, Joe, hold this
-wheel a moment. I'll have it up in a hurry."
-
-He sprang forward, brushing George Baker out of the way impatiently.
-
-"Let me get hold there," he said.
-
-Harvey seized the iron rod, which was fastened to the centreboard, and
-gave a strong pull. But the centreboard did not budge. He took a firmer
-hold and pulled with all his strength. It was of no avail. The board had
-stuck fast in its box.
-
-"I'll have it up or break something," cried Harvey, beside himself with
-anger, and again he grasped the rod with both hands and gave a furious
-wrench. There was a most unexpected and baffling verification of his
-threat, for the rod, broken off short at its connection with the
-centreboard, did come up, so suddenly that Harvey sprawled over
-backwards, still grasping the rod with both hands clenched, and rolled
-over on the floor of the cockpit.
-
-There was no such thing as getting the centreboard up now. It was down to
-stay.
-
-Harvey, white with rage, sprang to his feet and hurled the rod into the
-sea. Then he took his seat sullenly at the wheel again.
-
-"That settles it," he said, as soon as he could speak for anger. "We
-haven't a ghost of a chance now. I shouldn't wonder, even, if the _Sally_
-overhauled us." And he looked back helplessly at the yacht astern.
-
-Slowly but surely the _Anna Maud_ forged ahead. The distance between her
-and the _Surprise_ grew ever farther and farther.
-
-"That's queer," said Captain Silas Tucker, looking back at Harvey's
-yacht. "I thought she was going to give us a harder run home than that.
-I've heard the boat was good off the wind, but she doesn't seem to be
-doing well. It's first prize for us this trip, and easily won. Well, your
-Uncle Silas hasn't sailed around these parts all his life for nothing."
-
-Slowly but surely, too, the _Sally_ was creeping up close astern of the
-_Surprise_, to the wild delight of Willie Grimes and his comrades.
-
-"If I can only beat Jack Harvey," he kept saying, "I don't care about the
-other yacht's beating us."
-
-"If Willie Grimes beats us, I'll run him down and sink him some day,"
-muttered Harvey, grinding his teeth.
-
-It was still a close race between these two as the finish-line was
-neared. The _Sally_ had crept up until she was almost abeam of the
-_Surprise_, and was gaining, ever so slowly, but surely. Harvey, dogged
-to the last, waited until the _Sally_ was nearly abreast of him, and
-then, as a last resort, tried once more to bully the race from his less
-experienced rival.
-
-Throwing his wheel over slightly, he tried the tactic of crowding the
-other off the course.
-
-But Willie Grimes was bound to win or sink this time. He kept his own
-boat off just enough to avoid the possibility of Harvey's fouling him,
-maintaining the same relative distance between them, and all the while
-drawing ahead.
-
-The judges, watching the close finish through their glasses, perceived
-this trick of Harvey's, and were ready to disqualify him in case of any
-accident. But their determination was unnecessary. Less than a dozen rods
-from the finish-line the _Sally_ had sailed clear of the _Surprise_, and
-now cut in on to the course, leaving Harvey astern, and crossed the line
-a rod to the good.
-
-Then, as a storm of cheers rang out from the assembled boats, as a
-fluttering of handkerchiefs and waving of parasols, a tossing of hats and
-shrieking of whistles, saluted the victory of Willie Grimes over him,
-Harvey did not deign to cross the line. Angrily he swung out of the
-course, and stood over, without a word, for the town of Bellport.
-
-"Takes his licking hard, doesn't he, Willie?" called out a voice, and a
-chorus of laughter mocked at Harvey's wrath as he sailed away.
-
-The _Anna Maud_ had won the race, but the honours were as much for the
-_Sally_ as for the winner. They took substantial form, moreover, for, one
-of the committee, vowing the _Sally_ should have a second prize, if he
-had to buy one himself, as there had not been any offered, the suggestion
-met with a ready response; and the owner and crew of the _Sally_ rejoiced
-that night in the unexpected award of a handsome compass for their cabin.
-
-"Now," said Harvey, as the _Surprise_ neared the landing at Bellport, "I
-want to get out of this town just as quick as I step foot in it. I don't
-intend to stay here and have those chaps and those girls laugh at me.
-They've got altogether too good a chance. You fellows have got to stay
-here and take the _Surprise_ up to Billy Coombs's marine railway. She'll
-have to be hauled out for a day and the ballast come out of her around
-that centreboard box. Tell him to put a new iron in, and you can pay for
-it, Joe, and I'll pay you when you come back to camp."
-
-"But where are you going?" asked the others.
-
-"I am going to foot it down the road for seven miles to Hackett's Cove,
-and wait for Jeff Hackett to come down," answered Harvey. "Then I'll go
-across to the foot of the island with him in his sloop. I'd walk farther
-than that to get clear of the crowd that will be ashore here soon; but,
-for that matter, I want to get back to the island to-night, anyway.
-There's a dance in the old town hall at Carter's Harbour, and I'll get
-there in time for that."
-
-"He's all cut up over Willie Grimes's beating him," said Joe Hinman, as
-Harvey sprang out on the landing and walked rapidly away. "He won't get
-over it for a week. Well, we shall have to catch it for him when the
-boats come in. However, we didn't sail the boat. That's one comfort."
-
-Late that afternoon, Jack Harvey, hot and dusty with his long walk,
-waited impatiently, seated on a pile of timber by the shore, for the
-arrival of Jeff Hackett's sloop. Five o'clock came, and then six, and no
-sloop in sight. Harvey strolled up to the village store and bought some
-crackers and cheese for his supper.
-
-"So you're waiting for Jeff Hackett's sloop to take you across to the
-island, are you?" said the storekeeper. "Well, you'll wait till morning
-now, I reckon. Wish I'd known you wanted to go over sooner. You see, Jeff
-engaged Tom Crosby to make his trip this afternoon for him, and he's been
-gone an hour now. You must have seen Tom's boat off there."
-
-"I did," replied Harvey, shortly, "but I had no idea he was going across.
-What can I do, now?"
-
-"Nothing that I see," said the storekeeper, "except to take it
-comfortable here to-night, and go over with Jeff in the morning."
-
-Harvey strode angrily out and walked down to the shore again.
-
-A rod or two out a fisherman was rowing in a small boat.
-
-"Here, you, where are you going?" sang out Harvey.
-
-The man looked up, surprised, but did not answer.
-
-"I say, there, where are you going? Can't you hear?" cried Harvey,
-roughly.
-
-The man stopped rowing. "What's that to you?" he answered.
-
-Harvey laughed. "You've got me there," he said. "I didn't mean to be
-rude--but I've been disappointed. I didn't know but you might be going to
-row across to the island, and I thought perhaps you might like to earn a
-dollar. I'll help row, too, if you like. I want to go, the worst way."
-
-The man hesitated for a moment, started as though he were going to row
-away, and then paused again.
-
-"Where do you belong?" he asked.
-
-"Over on the island," said Harvey. "I'm camping there."
-
-"What's that?" said the man, putting his hand to his ear. "Say it again."
-
-"I'm camping out over on the island," repeated Harvey.
-
-The man looked stealthily in at him from under his eyebrows. "Camping
-there!" he muttered to himself, and began backing water slowly with his
-oars.
-
-"I'll take you across for--for a dollar," he said.
-
-"Good!" cried Harvey. "Come on, lively, then. It's a good five miles, and
-I'm in a hurry to get across."
-
-The man, however, was in no hurry. He came in slowly, as though perhaps
-he might still be considering the matter, whether he should take this
-passenger aboard or not. He worked the boat inshore, finally, and Harvey
-sprang aboard.
-
-"You are going to help row," said the man.
-
-"Yes," answered Harvey. "Didn't I say I would?" He took his seat toward
-the stern of the boat, where there were rowlocks for an extra pair of
-oars.
-
-The man at the bow oars was a thick, heavy-set, middle-aged man, burned
-dark by sun and wind. He was roughly dressed in ill-fitting clothes, that
-looked as though they might have come from the dunnage-bag of a fisherman
-who had been long at sea. They were patched in one or two places with
-cloth that did not match the original garments. He wore a red,
-cheap-looking handkerchief tied loosely about his neck, and a rough beard
-of several weeks' growth heightened the effect of his swarthy complexion.
-
-They rowed for some time in silence, making good headway, for the wind
-had gone down with the sun, and the man in the bow pulled a powerful
-stroke, making even the sturdy efforts of Jack Harvey seem like child's
-play.
-
-The sun sank behind the hills and the shadows deepened across the water,
-fading out at length into the darkness that settled over all the bay. A
-few lights glimmered out from the shore of the island, some three miles
-distant, and the stars appeared in the sky.
-
-"Lucky I fell in with you, just as I did," said Harvey, as he slowed up
-his stroke. "Lucky for both of us, I take it. I should have been stuck
-there all night if I hadn't met you; and I don't suppose you mind picking
-up a dollar, as long as you were going this way."
-
-"No," said the man, though there was a queer expression on his face. "I
-don't mind,--and the fishing isn't any too good these days."
-
-"Got a smack, have you?" inquired Harvey.
-
-"No," answered the other. "I don't own any boat myself. But I sail with a
-man as owns his own boat, and I come in for a fair share of the fish."
-
-"Where does she lie?" asked Harvey.
-
-The man waited a moment before answering. "She's down among the islands
-somewhere," he said, finally. "She'll be in for me to-night or to-morrow.
-I've been visiting some relations of mine back of Bellport a few miles.
-So you're a summer visitor at the island, are you?"
-
-"Yes," replied Harvey, "I spend my summers there."
-
-"Pretty quiet place, isn't it?" said the man.
-
-"Mostly," returned Harvey, "but not so quiet this year. We've had some
-exciting times there."
-
-"Yes?" said the man. "How's that?"
-
-He had slowed up, himself, in his rowing now. And if by chance the
-conversation had turned whither he had intended it should, there was no
-way that Harvey should know of that, for his back was toward the man and
-he could not see his face.
-
-"Why," continued Harvey, "they caught the men that stole the Curtis
-diamonds over there; that is, they got two of them. A third one escaped.
-He was the worst of the three, they say."
-
-The man in the bow had paused in his rowing.
-
-"The worst one got away, did he?" said he.
-
-"He did," said Harvey. "It seemed one of them had the diamonds hidden in
-a house that every one thought was haunted. He was stopping at the hotel
-as a regular guest. And no one suspected him but Henry Burns. Then, when
-his confederates came, the detectives were lying in wait for them in the
-cellar. They nearly beat the detectives, though, at that. For they
-smashed the lanterns out--that is, one of them did, and made a run for
-it. The other one was hurt."
-
-"Did he die?" asked the man, quickly.
-
-"No," replied Harvey. "He's all right, waiting trial along with the other
-one. We got him, too, just as he was nearly down to shore, where the
-other man was waiting to take him off in a boat. The third man escaped in
-his yacht. We only captured two."
-
-The man in the bow had drawn his oars in, now, so that they rested along
-the side of the boat. His hands worked nervously together, and he
-half-rose in his seat.
-
-"Who's 'we'?" he asked, huskily. "Who did it--did you have a hand in it?"
-
-If, by chance, this moment was a crisis in the life of Jack Harvey, and
-if, by chance, he was in greater danger at this moment than he had ever
-been before in all his life, there was no shadow of it across his mind.
-He answered with a laugh:
-
-"No, not I. No such luck. If there's anything like that going on, I'm
-sure to miss it. No, 'twas the other camp and a crowd I have no liking
-for that did it all, that got all the glory and all the fun and the
-money, too. The reward, I mean. I'd rather have been there at the
-capture, though, than get the money for it. And I don't know why, but I
-felt rather sorry for the two chaps that got caught, bad as they were."
-
-A good speech for you, Jack Harvey, if you did but know it!
-
-"So you missed all the fun, did you?" said the man, quietly. "That was
-too bad; too bad."
-
-He had put his oars into the water once more now, and resumed his rowing.
-He did not pause to rest again, but pulled long and steadily. Evidently
-he did not care to row and talk too, for he lapsed into silence now, and
-Harvey could not draw him into conversation again. At the end of another
-hour they had come close to the Grand Island shore, and shortly they had
-pulled alongside a ledge, where Harvey could jump out. The man started to
-row away.
-
-"Here, hold on, there," cried Harvey. "Don't you want your dollar? You've
-earned it, fair enough."
-
-The man came slowly back to shore.
-
-"Indeed," he said, as he stretched out his hand, "I ought not to forget
-that, with the fishing as bad as it is." And then he added, quietly, as
-he started to row away again, "And it's worth a dollar to you to get
-here, isn't it?"
-
-"Indeed it is," replied Harvey.
-
-"Indeed it is," said the man to himself.
-
-Then he rowed down the shore for about a mile farther, turned into a
-sheltered cove, rowed his boat alongside a black sloop that lay moored
-there, climbed aboard, dragged the boat aboard, and waited for an hour or
-so, till a faint breeze stole across the water. Then he hoisted sail on
-the sloop and drifted slowly out of the cove; drifted slowly away from
-the island, and was swallowed up in the night.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV.
- GOOD FOR EVIL
-
-
-The yacht _Spray_, arriving home again in the harbour of Southport, two
-days following the discovery made by Henry Burns, had created somewhat of
-a sensation: first, because, on account of the storm, there had been felt
-considerable alarm for the little boat, and, second, because of the story
-that the boys had to tell.
-
-The finding of the letter "E" confirmed their story, so that there could
-be no room for doubt that the yacht _Eagle_ had been secreted there in
-the Thoroughfare and refitted. The question now was, had the man who had
-done this left the bay and gone on his voyage, or had he chosen, for some
-purpose or other, to linger in some part of the great bay till a later
-time.
-
-Henry Burns now told the story of the man they had seen at the foot of
-Grand Island, how he had sailed in and out of the harbour so
-mysteriously, how he seemed to avoid them, and how there had apparently
-been none other than he aboard the black yacht.
-
-Most of the people of the village were inclined to the belief that the
-man Chambers had gone out to sea as soon as he had altered his yacht so
-that it would escape detection in such harbours as he would be obliged to
-make. There was no possible reason why he should return, they said, and
-every reason in the world why he should get away from that part of the
-coast as soon as he could.
-
-There were plenty of black yachts, they argued, that would answer the
-general description of the yacht seen by the boys at the foot of the
-island; and, as for sailing out and away in the night, that was a thing
-commonly done among fishermen, to take advantage of wind and tide when it
-was important that they should reach a certain port on time.
-
-Still, there were one or two yachts that set out cruising about the bay,
-on the chance of running into the mysterious craft, and they cruised
-about for a week or more. Every strange sail that looked as though it
-might belong to a yacht of the size of the _Eagle_ was pursued, until it
-had either outsailed the pursuers and disappeared, or until a nearer view
-had proven that it was not the hunted craft.
-
-By the end of two weeks the village was well satisfied that Chambers and
-the yacht _Eagle_ were far away, and had ceased to think of him, except
-as a group gathered of an evening about the village grocery-store and
-talked of that for lack of something better.
-
-In the meantime, when the excitement was at its height, the Warren boys
-in their yacht, and Tom and Bob in their canoe, took a hand in the
-search. Even Henry Burns took an occasional spin on his bicycle down to
-the foot of the island of an evening, and wandered along the shore in the
-hope of catching a glimpse once more of the sail he had seen that night
-in the harbour. Just what he expected to do in case he should see it, he
-did not know, himself; still, it might be that he could spread the alarm
-and start some of the boats out after any suspicious craft that he saw.
-
-For the time being it was in all the air. Nobody talked of anything else.
-It was really more because people dearly love a mystery than that they
-actually believed the _Eagle_ was still in the bay; but the talk sufficed
-to keep the boys at fever-heat, and Henry Burns firmly believed that he
-had seen the _Eagle_ that night.
-
-Tom and Bob were indefatigable for ten days in searching on their own
-account. They would take their canoe in the afternoon, paddle down five
-or six miles along the shore of the island, land in some lonely spot,
-haul the canoe on shore, and then continue along on foot for a mile or
-two, coming up cautiously to some cove with which they had become
-familiar in their trips through the summer, only to find it empty of
-sails, or some fishing-boat lying snug for the night, and which could by
-no means be mistaken for the craft of which they were in search.
-
-Again, they would paddle down to the Narrows, carry the canoe over into
-the western bay, leave it hidden until sundown, and then go down along
-the shore on that side of the island, repeating their walk along the
-shore. Some days they left the canoe hidden for the night away down the
-island, and came back to the village afoot along the road, going after it
-afoot the next night, and retracing their search of the night before,
-thus varying the search in a dozen different ways.
-
-But the result was always the same. It seemed this time as though the
-_Eagle_, if it had, indeed, ever lingered in the bay, had gone for good.
-What might have been the result if those who sailed in search of the
-mysterious craft had known that the description they now had of her was
-at fault, can never be known. Be that as it might, the exact yacht that
-Henry Burns and his friends had seen down at the foot of the island no
-longer existed. In its place there sailed--somewhere, on some waters--a
-handsome, black yacht, with a tall, slender, glistening topmast, white
-sails, and gleaming brass, in place of the dingy, dirty fisherman. She
-was as fine and handsome, and as polished as to deck and fittings, as the
-_Eagle_ had been of yore, only her colour remained as it had been
-changed--black.
-
-Was this boat the _Eagle_? Those who sailed the bay in quest of her had
-no means of knowing, for if they ever did get sight of her it was but a
-far, fleeting, shadowy glance. They never came within miles of her, this
-fleet, beautiful, and disappearing yacht. Across her stern in letters of
-gold was the name _Sprite_. It may have been most appropriate, for now
-and then a distant view of her tempted some bay craft to follow; but it
-was like a dog pursuing a bird on the wing. She always drifted on and on,
-out of reach, and disappeared.
-
-Since the night when the man that rowed Jack Harvey across the bay had
-climbed aboard this yacht and sailed southward, the yacht had never
-ventured near Grand Island, nor within miles and miles of it. If the man
-Chambers had any plan which he meant to execute, it did not suit his
-purpose to attempt it at this time. He had, perhaps, achieved all he
-desired now, in familiarizing himself with the waters of this coast.
-
-Of all those who joined in the search for the strange yacht, there was
-none more enthusiastic nor persistent than Jack Harvey. No sooner had his
-own yacht been brought back from Bellport by the crew, than he stocked up
-with a week's provisions and began cruising day and night. To be sure, it
-was a most uncertain chase, but Harvey was willing to take chances that
-others would not; and if he should by mistake intercept some respectable
-craft for a few brief moments, he would rely on his assurance to carry
-him through and explain matters.
-
-Harvey had, moreover, a critical eye for a good boat, and had noted the
-_Eagle_, when it had been in the harbour, with more than passing
-interest, and was certain now that he should know her again, even with a
-change of rig. Besides, he had the description furnished by Henry Burns
-and the other boys of the yacht they had seen, which corresponded in size
-with the _Eagle_.
-
-He had never been so aroused about anything before in all his life. The
-adventure that Henry Burns and the others had had with the two men that
-had been caught was an experience after his own heart. He would have
-given his whole summer's fun to take part in that capture. But all the
-glory of that had been denied him; now he made a resolve that if any one
-succeeded in finding the vanished yacht it should be he.
-
-His activity was not destined to go all for naught, either, for on at
-least one occasion he was satisfied in his own mind that he had met with
-the yacht,--yes, and nearly come to close quarters with the man that
-sailed it.
-
-It was miles below Grand Island, for Harvey had for some days made up his
-mind that the man he sought had left the bay, since he had scoured it
-east and west and north and south in vain. It was down among some islands
-that lay out of the much travelled part of the bay, and not far from the
-Gull Island Thoroughfare. It was, in fact, just at the outer rim of the
-bay, where several channels through a chain of islands led out to sea.
-There were three of the crew aboard besides Harvey, only little Tim being
-left ashore to guard the camp.
-
-They had been cruising all evening among these islands, for it was a part
-of the coast with which Harvey was very familiar. They were carrying no
-lights, for the chances of being run down here were small, and, besides,
-it was a part of Harvey's plan to be able to approach any chance craft
-unobserved.
-
-It had come on rainy, and the crew were for putting in at some harbour
-and lying snug, but Harvey would not hear of it. He had sailed until near
-midnight for about a week, and did not like to give it up.
-
-However, as a concession to his crew, and as it bade fair to blow up a
-nasty sea before many hours, Harvey had consented to beat back and forth
-under the lee of a small unnamed island, keeping a lookout down the bay
-for the little distance they could see through the rain.
-
-It seemed that some other craft was also willing to take the risk of
-sailing without lights, for, along about ten o'clock, a yacht, that might
-or might not be the one for which they sought, was beating up toward the
-island, with all dark on board. All at once the man that sat at the wheel
-left his boat for a moment to itself, so that it headed up into the wind
-with sails flapping, while he darted down into the cabin.
-
-He was gone only for a moment, but in that brief moment that he was below
-a light flashed in the cabin,--only a fleeting gleam of light, and then
-all was dark again.
-
-This gleam of light, transient as it was, had sufficed, however, for the
-sharp lookout aboard the _Surprise_.
-
-Harvey seized Joe Hinman by the shoulder and whispered, as he steered the
-_Surprise_ out from behind the end of the island: "Did you see that, Joe?
-Did you see it? There's something coming up. Everybody keep quiet now!"
-
-There was an excited group that crouched silently in the cockpit of the
-_Surprise_ as she swung out from under the lee of the island and headed
-straight for the spot where they had seen the flash of light, running
-almost before the wind.
-
-Whatever the craft was, it seemed as if they must surely catch it,
-leaping out as they had from the darkness. All at once they saw the dark
-outline of a yacht almost dead ahead, and saw for a moment the shadow of
-its sails, a faint blur through the rain.
-
-Then the yacht veered about suddenly, and they saw the white crush of
-water as it heeled over, and, running with the wind on its quarter, was
-gone, like a boat that had vanished. So sudden and so silent was the
-manoeuvre that they could hardly realize that the yacht had, indeed,
-turned like a flash and run away. They followed for a moment, but, seeing
-how useless it was, Harvey soon gave up the chase and went back to
-harbour, beaten but not discouraged.
-
-"That was the man we want," he said, as they came to in the nearest
-harbour that night. "No other craft would have gone off its course that
-way. And to think we were almost upon him."
-
-"Yes, but I don't see what good it would have done us to have come up
-with him, if it was the man," replied Allan Harding. "We could only have
-taken a look aboard. What else could we have done?"
-
-"I'll tell you what," answered Harvey, emphatically. "It would have done
-a lot of good. I tell you that wherever and whenever I meet that yacht,
-whether it's night or day, I'm going to run alongside, and you fellows
-and I are going aboard. I've been doing things to be ashamed of long
-enough,--not that I'm ashamed of them, either, as I know of. Only they
-have been things that I didn't dare tell of afterward, and I'm sort of
-tired of it. I tell you, I want to do something for once that I can boast
-of and that people won't hate me for. That's why I'm so anxious about
-this, if you must know it."
-
-"Whew!" cried Joe Hinman. "That's something new for you, Jack. I didn't
-suppose your conscience ever troubled you."
-
-"It don't," said Harvey, angrily.
-
-But perhaps it did.
-
-By the end of a few days more, Harvey had given up the search, convinced
-that they had seen the last of the black yacht, if, indeed, they had seen
-it at all.
-
-"I give up," he said. "I'm beaten, and that's all there is to it."
-
-And so the idea of ever seeing the strange yacht again was given up by
-all. The yachts came back to harbour, and the impression became general
-that they had all been fooled; that what they had sought was a delusion.
-
-Tom and Bob were the last to give up. Partly because they liked these
-long paddles together and the long walks along the island roads, and
-partly because they had helped start the renewed hunt for the yacht
-_Eagle_, and did not like to admit that they had made a mistake.
-
-So they did not wholly discontinue their evening paddles nor their lonely
-rambles along the shore. It was good exercise, at all events, they
-argued.
-
-One evening they started right after supper, while it was yet light,
-paddled down along the shore to the Narrows, carried across, and paddled
-down the island for some three miles. Then they landed and hid their
-canoe, as was their custom, and stretched themselves out on the beach to
-rest and enjoy the lights far out on the water.
-
-It was a clear starlight night, with the bay still and restful, save for
-a quick gust of wind that came now and then, only to blur its surface for
-a moment and leave it smooth again.
-
-"I guess we have tried this thing about often enough, haven't we, Bob?"
-asked Tom, finally. "We don't seem to be a success as man-hunters."
-
-"I'm about ready to quit," answered Bob, yawning and stretching. "The
-fact is, we really get enough exercise through the day. Here we've been
-swimming, bicycling, helping the Warrens get up driftwood, paddled over
-to the cape, all in one day,--and here we are at it again at night. Yes,
-I think it's time we gave this up."
-
-"Then supposing we do call it off," said Tom. "I've had paddling enough
-for one day. What do you say to going up along the beach for a mile or
-two, and then taking the shortest cut home and coming down for the canoe
-to-morrow? I think I'm kind of tired, myself, though I didn't notice it
-when we started out."
-
-"All right, that suits me," replied Bob. "I don't mind saying that I'm a
-bit tired, too. That last mile came hard, and no mistake."
-
-So they rose and sauntered along the beach toward the Narrows, till they
-had come to within about half a mile of it, and then sat down once more
-for a brief rest before going home.
-
-"It seems almost too bad to go home to bed such a beautiful night as
-this," said Bob. "These are the kind of nights that make me wish we had
-the old tent back again, so we could lie on our bunks and look out on the
-water, as we used to do before we went to sleep."
-
-The night was indeed singularly calm and peaceful. The bay was still, and
-the water as it came up the beach with the tide made only a small
-rustling, creeping sound, as it covered the sand inch by inch. As for the
-island, it always seemed asleep after nightfall, and to-night there was
-scarcely a sound of life anywhere to break the stillness.
-
-But then, all at once, as they sat there looking out upon the water, out
-of the silence there arose a cry, faint and smothered, but a cry for
-help.
-
-Then all was still again.
-
-They sprang to their feet, startled, almost frightened for a brief moment
-at the strange cry, coming from they knew not where.
-
-Again the cry came, this time more distinctly, from somewhere out on the
-water. They heard the words, "Help! Help!" uttered in a choking voice, as
-of a man drowning.
-
-The boys rushed down to the water's edge and peered out over the bay,
-straining their eyes to see whence the sound came.
-
-"Hulloa! Hulloa! Where are you? What's the matter? Call again!" cried
-Tom.
-
-They listened, and in a moment the voice came again weirdly over the
-water, though they could not distinguish this time the words.
-
-"Why, there it is," cried Bob, all at once, pointing as he spoke. "Don't
-you see it, Tom? I declare, but it's queer we didn't see it before. Look,
-there's something floating only about an eighth of a mile out,--and
-there's something moving a little distance from it. Why, Tom, I'll tell
-you what it is. It's a canoe--it's Jack Harvey--and he's upset--he's
-drowning. Just look, where I am pointing."
-
-"Yes, I see," exclaimed Tom, excitedly. "I just saw a splash. He's upset,
-sure enough, and struggling. I say, Bob, we've got to swim out. Our canoe
-is too far. Keep up! We're coming!" he called, and began hurriedly to
-strip off his clothing.
-
-In a moment the two boys were in the water, striking out wildly toward
-the object that seemed to be a canoe floating in the water.
-
-"Hold on there, Bob," cried Tom, presently. "We mustn't try to be too
-fast. We'll only waste our strength. We'll need it all when we get there.
-Let's calm down, now, and not get excited. We've got to keep our heads."
-
-Then, as they surged ahead, with long, powerful strokes, the voice again
-came, calling chokingly for help. There could be no mistaking it now. It
-was Jack Harvey.
-
-"Quick!" he cried, "quick! I can't hold on long. I'm hurt."
-
-They quickened their strokes, and in a moment more came in plain sight of
-Harvey, struggling feebly to keep above water.
-
-"Hold on for a moment, Jack," said Tom, as they came up to him. "Don't
-grab us, now. Let us do the work. You just keep on paddling, what you
-can, and we'll save you."
-
-"I won't grab you," gasped Harvey. "Just get on each side of me and let
-me put my hands on your shoulders for a moment, till I get my strength
-back. I've swallowed a lot of water."
-
-The two swam up close, and Harvey reached up and rested a hand on each
-shoulder.
-
-"Swim for the canoe now," said Tom. "We'll let him get hold of the end of
-that and cling on for a few moments till he gets his breath. He'll be all
-right, I think."
-
-Reaching the overturned canoe, they helped him to clasp one end of it,
-and then supported him there, as they began to push it toward shore by
-swimming with their feet and with a single hand each.
-
-For a few moments Harvey managed to hold on, but then his strength seemed
-to fail him and his hands slipped their hold.
-
-"I can't hold on," he gasped. "Something's hurting me."
-
-"Then lie over on your back and float," said Tom. "Just lie still and
-we'll swim you in."
-
-Harvey groaned at the effort it cost him, but did as he was told, and
-they left the canoe and struck out with him for the shore.
-
-It was not such a long swim that they had before them, but they had
-exhausted their strength more than they knew in their excitement, and
-Harvey was well-nigh helpless.
-
-Before they had swum a rod farther, their breath began to come hard and
-their shoulders ached until it seemed as though they would crack.
-
-Still they kept on.
-
-"We'll make it all right, Tom?" said Bob, finally, panting the words out.
-
-"We've got to," said Tom. "We're bound to do it. Let's swim on our backs
-for a spell. Jack, we're going to change the stroke. Don't get scared.
-We're going to stick by you."
-
-The words seemed to rouse Harvey, who had apparently almost lost
-consciousness.
-
-"Let me go," he gasped, faintly. "Let me go, I say. I don't want you
-fellows to drown, too. Let me----"
-
-And then he seemed suddenly to lose control of himself, and clutched
-frantically at them, with the frenzy of a drowning man.
-
-They struck themselves loose from him, and he sank under water, but came
-to the surface again, exhausted and helpless. Tom seized him then by the
-hair. He lay motionless, as though dead, and they took hold once more and
-struck out again for the shore.
-
-When they had reached it--they scarcely knew how--and felt the sand again
-under their feet, they had barely strength enough to drag Harvey a little
-ways out of the water, and lay by his side on the beach, groaning with
-every breath they drew.
-
-This was from sheer exhaustion, caused by exerting themselves far beyond
-their natural strength. They were not strangled with swallowing water, so
-that after they had lain there flat on the beach for some five minutes
-they had regained their strength sufficiently to be able to arise and
-lift the half-unconscious Harvey completely out of the water and carry
-him up on the bank. Then they sat down and rested once more, sitting by
-Harvey's side and chafing his hands. They lifted him up, although the
-effort cost them all their strength, held him head downwards for a moment
-to get the water out of him, then doubled his arms upon his breast and
-extended them, over and over again, alternately, as they had learned was
-the way to restore a man rescued from drowning.
-
-Harvey, who had never fully lost consciousness, revived under their
-treatment, till at length they perceived that he was out of danger, and
-needed now as quickly as possible warmth and shelter.
-
-There was no house near by, and it was clear that whatever was done for
-Harvey must be done by them.
-
-"We can't carry him, that's certain," said Bob, finally. "We've got to
-get our canoe and paddle him up as far as the Narrows in that. Then we
-can get his crew over, and we can all carry him up to their camp."
-
-So Bob set out on a weary trot down along the shore to where they had
-hidden their canoe. Tom waited by Harvey, trying to keep him warm, or,
-rather, to restore warmth to him, by rubbing; but Harvey was chilled
-through and through and shivered pitifully. It was fully an hour, and
-seemed ten to Tom, before Bob appeared in sight again.
-
-They lifted Harvey into the canoe and set out for the Narrows. Poor Bob
-was well-nigh exhausted, and it was Tom who did about all the paddling.
-They reached the Narrows, however, after what seemed an endless journey,
-driving their paddles through the water with arms that almost refused to
-obey the wills that forced them to work.
-
-When they had reached the Narrows, Tom set out for Harvey's camp, leaving
-Bob to wait with Harvey. Tom had not gone more than half a mile, however,
-when he ran into the entire crew, who had become alarmed at Harvey's long
-absence, knowing that he had gone out in the canoe, and had started out
-in search of him.
-
-Tom's white face, pallid with weariness, filled them with terror, as he
-rushed up to them and sank down on a knoll, breathless.
-
-"Why, it's Tom Harris," exclaimed Joe Hinman. "For Heaven's sake, what is
-it? Did you see Jack? Is he drowned?"
-
-He rattled off the questions excitedly, before Tom could find breath to
-answer.
-
-"He's all right, I guess," Tom said, in a moment. "He isn't drowned. He's
-over there the other side of the Narrows; Bob's with him. He is most dead
-with cold, though. You better get him over to camp quick or he will die."
-
-They were off like mad, on the run for the Narrows, before he had
-finished.
-
-Tom waited to rest a few moments more, and then set off slowly for
-Harvey's camp. "There's enough of them to bring him," he said. "I guess
-Bob and I have done about all we can to-night."
-
-When he had reached Harvey's camp, however, he waited only to rest and
-warm himself by the brands of a fire which the campers had left, before
-he began to make what preparations he could to receive the boys when they
-should return with Harvey.
-
-There was a big pile of wood at hand, and he started the fire up afresh,
-after having first pushed the brands nearer the tent, so that the fire
-would send a comforting warmth inside. Then he brought out a pair of
-blankets and put them near the fire to warm through. He hung a kettle of
-water on the stick provided for it, and rummaged through the campers'
-stock for the coffee.
-
-Presently the sound of voices told him that the crew were at hand.
-Stepping to the door of the tent, he saw the strange group approaching.
-They had not taken Harvey from the canoe, but had let him lie there,
-while they lifted the canoe and carried it along, two boys at either end,
-bearing the weight with a stick stretched underneath to support it.
-Alongside plodded Bob, holding to the gunwale, to assist in steadying it.
-They approached and set the canoe down, just outside the tent door.
-
-"Get his clothes off quick, now," cried Tom. "I have the hot blankets
-ready to wrap him in, and some coffee when he is able to take it."
-
-In a twinkling Harvey was stripped and rolled snugly in the blankets,
-while Tom busied himself in rushing up with cloths heated hot, and
-applying them to the soles of his feet. After a time he lifted Harvey up
-and poured a few spoonfuls of the coffee down his throat. This seemed to
-revive Harvey, for he opened his eyes, muttered something that was
-unintelligible, and sank back to sleep.
-
-"He's all right now," said Tom, passing his hand over Harvey. "He is
-getting warm again. He'll be all right now when he gets his sleep out."
-
-Tom and Bob were thoroughly tired. They lay stretched out before the fire
-on blankets for a time, too weary to more than barely reply to the
-questions of the crew as to the mishap that had befallen Harvey.
-
-Presently Tom rose up and said: "Well, Bob, it's late, and we've got to
-be getting started or we'll never get back to the cottage."
-
-"We shall be down again to-morrow to see how Harvey is," he added,
-turning to the crew, who sat a little apart, somewhat abashed by the turn
-of affairs and the consciousness of the debt of gratitude they now owed
-to the boys whom they had wronged. "We'll send a doctor down if you want
-us to, but I don't think there's any need of it. He'll be all right by
-morning. Good night."
-
-They were about taking their departure when Harvey struggled for a moment
-with the clothing that enveloped him, lifted his head slightly from the
-ground, and said, weakly, "Hold on."
-
-"What is it?" asked Tom, as they stepped inside the tent again and sat
-down beside him.
-
-"Don't go," said Harvey, huskily. "Please don't go. I want you to stay
-here to-night,--that is, if you will. I've--I've got something--something
-to say to you in the morning. I can't say it now. I'm too weak. But I
-want the crew to hear it in the morning."
-
-Tom and Bob looked at each other in astonishment. Then they nodded, and
-Tom replied to Harvey:
-
-"All right, Jack. We'll stay. Go to sleep now. You're all right."
-
-The crew quickly spread some boughs for them, and brought more blankets
-from the yacht.
-
-"Tom," said Bob, as they stood alone for a moment, while the crew were
-busily engaged, "it looks like our revenge."
-
-And then, before they had the blankets half-wrapped about them, they were
-sinking off to sleep,--to sleep in Harvey's camp, alongside Harvey's
-crew.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
- A TREATY OF FRIENDSHIP
-
-
-It was late the following morning when Tom and Bob awoke. The sun was
-well up, and the light was streaming into the tent. Their eyes opened on
-unfamiliar objects and on strange surroundings.
-
-"It gave me the strangest feeling," said Tom, telling Henry Burns about
-it some time later. "At first, before I was fully awake, I had forgotten
-where I was, and I thought I was back in our own tent upon the point.
-Then it flashed over me that that was gone, and the next moment I
-remembered that I was down there in Harvey's camp, and you can't imagine
-what a queer feeling it gave me."
-
-Harvey and the crew had already arisen, and Tom and Bob could hear the
-crackling of a fire outside, where they were preparing breakfast. Harvey
-had awakened apparently as strong as ever, unharmed by his terrible
-experience of the night before.
-
-"Hello, Bob," said Tom, as they looked across the tent at each other. "Do
-you know where you are? Isn't this a queer scrape? I wonder what will
-come of it."
-
-"Hello," answered Bob, yawning and stretching. "Oh, but how I did sleep.
-I feel as though I had slept about a week. I never was so tired in my
-life. Say, this is queer, isn't it? Who'd ever have thought we would be
-sleeping here, of all places."
-
-They arose and stepped outside.
-
-The crew paused in their work and looked up, while Harvey advanced to
-meet his guests.
-
-"Hello," he said. "We thought we'd let you have your sleep out. You must
-have been played out."
-
-"Hello," answered Tom and Bob. "We thought you were far worse off than
-we," continued Bob, "but you seem to have come out of it all right."
-
-Harvey had by this time come up to them. He paused, hesitatingly, for a
-moment, while his face flushed. Then he put out his hand.
-
-"Will you shake hands with me?" he asked.
-
-Tom and Bob, for answer, extended each his right hand and grasped that of
-Harvey.
-
-"Thank you," said Harvey, simply. "I don't deserve it, I know."
-
-There may have been the faintest suspicion of moisture about his eyes.
-
-"Come over here," he said, and led the way to a big log that lay near the
-fire, close by where the crew now stood. "I want to say something to you,
-and so do the fellows, too."
-
-There was an embarrassing moment as Tom and Bob seated themselves on the
-log, while the crew stood awkwardly by. They seemed uncertain what to do
-or say to these brave young fellows, whom they now knew had risked their
-lives to save their leader. With boy-like reticence, they were too
-ashamed to speak. Harvey broke the silence.
-
-"The fellows and I don't know hardly what to say to you," he said. "The
-crew want to tell you how ashamed we all are for the way we have treated
-you, and they want to thank you for what you did for me; but they can't
-begin to tell what they feel,--and no more can I,--but they want me to
-speak for them, too, as I've been their captain in all we've done, as
-well as aboard the yacht.
-
-"They know what you did for me," continued Harvey. "I told them the whole
-story this morning. There never was anything braver than what you did,
-and they all know it now as well as I do. They know you were as near
-drowning as I was, at the last, and you wouldn't give up and let me go,
-but stuck to me till the end, and couldn't have saved your own lives if
-there had been another rod to go.
-
-"I wouldn't be here now, if it wasn't for you--"
-
-"Well, you would have done the same for us, and so would the crew," said
-Tom, eager to spare the other's mortification as much as possible, and
-feeling his heart kindling toward his late enemy.
-
-"I don't know whether I should or not," replied Harvey. "I don't think
-I'm so much of a coward, even if I _have_ been doing things that look
-that way. But that doesn't make our position any the better. It isn't
-what we would have done for you in the same danger that counts. It's what
-we have been doing to you ever since you landed on the island that makes
-our case so bad."
-
-"I tell you," Harvey exclaimed, vehemently, as he arose from the log,
-"we've been a lot of fools and we've been thinking all the time that we
-were smart. It just came to me like a flash, as I thought I was going
-down out there, all the mean things I've been doing and what a fool I've
-been. I knew it all the time, too, I guess, only I didn't care. But you
-fellows have just brought it home to us hard, and we are going to try to
-square things up all that we can.
-
-"Now, first," continued Harvey, taking a long breath and speaking
-earnestly, "we're sorry we stole that box of yours from off the wharf. We
-knew it was yours all the time, too, though I said we didn't. Of course
-we couldn't help knowing. We don't blame you, either, for blowing up the
-cave--"
-
-"We didn't intend really to blow it up," interrupted Tom. "That was my
-idea, to burn up some of the stuff, just to get even, and we were nearly
-scared to death when the explosion came off. We thought you were all
-killed."
-
-"Well, I believe you now," said Harvey, "although I didn't before. I can
-see just how it happened, too. The fact is, we had some powder and
-kerosene there, hidden away. That's what caused it. Well, anyway, we
-don't blame you for setting the fire, and we shouldn't blame you now, if
-you had meant to blow up the cave, too. We deserved it."
-
-"We're sorry it happened, anyway," said Bob.
-
-"Now," added Harvey, "there's another thing, and that's the tent. Of
-course you knew we took it, although you couldn't prove it. You hadn't
-any doubt about it, had you?"
-
-"Well," replied Tom, "we did kind of think so, although we couldn't be
-sure."
-
-"Of course you thought so," said Harvey, "because nobody else would have
-done it. However, you are going to get the tent back all right."
-
-"Hooray!" cried Bob.
-
-"You're not half so glad as I am," exclaimed Harvey. "You bet I'm glad we
-didn't harm it. It's safe and sound, and you wouldn't guess where it is
-in a hundred years. It's up in the old haunted house, stuffed away in the
-garret, under the eaves. We didn't dare keep it and we didn't want to
-destroy it. In fact, we had decided to put it back on the point some day,
-after we had kept it as long as we wanted to."
-
-"We'll set it up again this afternoon," cried Tom.
-
-"No, you won't," answered Harvey, quickly. "We're going to do that for
-you, that is, if you will let us. We want to put it up in as good shape
-as it was before. We'll feel better about it then, eh, fellows?"
-
-"That's right," responded Joe Hinman. And the others nodded assent.
-
-"Now, one thing more," said Harvey. "You saw what we had in the cave.
-There were some things that belonged to Spencer, and one of the first
-things I do to-day will be to go up there and settle up with him. Then
-I'll feel as though I was ready to start fair again.
-
-"And now if you fellows will sit down and have some breakfast with us,
-then we'll sail up right after it and get the tent and have it up for you
-just as quick as we can. We can't do it any too quick to suit us."
-
-So Tom and Bob seated themselves with their new-found friends. George
-Baker, who had the fry-pan all heated and a big dish of batter mixed,
-proceeded to fry a mess of flapjacks, while Joe Hinman poured the coffee.
-All the old enmity had vanished in a night, and they laughed and joked as
-they sat about the campfire like friends of long standing.
-
-Then, when they had finished, and had shaken hands once more all around,
-and Tom and Bob had departed for the Warren cottage to explain their
-strange absence, and to acquaint the Warrens with the new turn of
-affairs, Harvey and his crew got sail on the _Surprise_ and headed up
-alongshore for the haunted house.
-
-"There," cried George Warren, as the boys appeared in sight a little
-later, "didn't I tell you, mother, not to worry about Tom and Bob? You
-ought to know them by this time. They know how to take care of
-themselves."
-
-"Well, the next time you go off for all night," exclaimed Mrs. Warren, a
-little impatiently for her, "I wish you would let me know about it
-beforehand. I don't like to have to worry about you, and I can't help it
-if you start off in that canoe and don't come back."
-
-"I don't blame you for not liking it," replied Tom, "and we'll try not do
-it again. But we really couldn't help this. We met with an adventure."
-
-"What, you didn't see the _Eagle_, did you?" cried George Warren.
-
-"No, you're wide of the mark," laughed Tom. "We've given up that hunt for
-good. No, we had a different sort of an adventure altogether. Where do
-you suppose we slept last night?"
-
-"With Henry Burns," said young Joe.
-
-"No."
-
-"Down on the beach?" said Arthur.
-
-"No."
-
-"Give it up," said George.
-
-"Well, you wouldn't guess in a hundred times trying," said Tom, "so I'll
-tell you. It was in Jack Harvey's camp."
-
-"Harvey's camp!" exclaimed the three brothers, in chorus.
-
-"Yes, sir, Harvey's camp."
-
-"I didn't know they were off on a cruise," said George. "Oh, I see,
-you've been getting even, have you? And how about the camp? Is it still
-there? What have you done with that?"
-
-"It's still down there," laughed Tom. "We didn't do anything to it at
-all. In fact, the crew were all there, and Harvey, too. We stayed there
-because they invited us. And, what's more, we have just had breakfast
-with them all."
-
-The Warrens stared at Tom in amazement.
-
-"Had breakfast with Harvey and his crew! Oh, say, you fellows, quit
-fooling now, and tell us where you have been."
-
-"Well," said Tom, "listen and we'll tell you the whole story. We've been
-having our revenge."
-
-And Tom related the story of the night's adventures.
-
-Good Mrs. Warren fairly hugged them with delight when they had concluded.
-
-"That's just splendid," she cried. "That's a splendid revenge. That's the
-kind that counts for most. But I want to hear Jack Harvey tell the story
-now. I know you haven't told half about the rescue. I want to hear him
-tell how brave you were."
-
-"He'll exaggerate it," said Bob. "He's our friend, you know, now."
-
-"Well, I'm glad enough you are all friends," exclaimed Mrs. Warren. "You
-must go and tell Henry Burns."
-
-When Jack Harvey and his crew had returned from the haunted house, and
-had anchored off the point and had brought the tent ashore, they found
-assembled there to greet them the entire group of comrades, the Warren
-boys, Henry Burns, and Tom and Bob.
-
-There was a general hand-shaking all around, and then they all set to
-work to pitch the tent. It didn't take long to do it, either, for Tom and
-Bob had saved the poles that had supported the canvas, and there were
-hands enough to jump at every rope and bring it taut into place. And
-everybody went at it in such good spirit, and everybody was so pleased
-and so willing to lend a hand, that the tent was up in its old place
-again almost as quick as it had come down.
-
-Then they rushed off in high spirits to the Warren cottage for the
-camp-kit and the boxes and the blankets and all the camp equipment, and
-packed it down on their shoulders as fast as they had ever done anything
-in all their lives.
-
-And Mrs. Warren did hear the story of the rescue from Jack Harvey's own
-lips, and was prouder than ever of her boys' friends, Tom and Bob.
-
-Then, when everything was shipshape, and Harvey and his crew were about
-to take their departure, he said: "We want all you fellows to come down
-to-morrow evening and take supper with us, the whole of you. You see,
-I've just got my allowance from the governor, and he's mighty generous to
-me, more than I deserve. It comes in just at the right time. You'll be
-sure and come, all of you?"
-
-"We'll be there," answered Henry Burns.
-
-"Indeed we will," said young Joe.
-
-"And remember Joe counts for two when it comes to the supper-table," said
-George.
-
-"We'll have enough," said Harvey.
-
-"We'll go along with you to your camp," said Tom, "and get our canoe.
-That is, unless you'd like to use it awhile," he added, slyly.
-
-"Not much," replied Harvey, with a laugh. "I've had enough canoeing to
-last me for a few days. But I'm glad I took that paddle, though, for all
-the narrow escape I had. It was the best accident I ever had in all my
-life."
-
-"Canoeing isn't always as easy as it looks," said Bob, as they walked
-along. "By the way, we haven't even asked you how you came to upset. It's
-because we have had so much else to talk about and think about."
-
-"Why," said Harvey, "there isn't much to tell. I don't hardly know how it
-happened, myself. I went to change my position in the canoe, as I was
-cramped with kneeling in one position so long. I suppose I lost my
-balance a little, but I was overboard so quick I don't know, myself, just
-how it did happen. I must have wrenched myself as I went over, for the
-minute I tried to swim I felt a pain in my side."
-
-"That's the way with a canoe," said Tom. "It doesn't always tip over.
-Moreover it just slides out from under one, without even capsizing at
-all. That's usually when one is kneeling or sitting up on a thwart, and
-the centre of gravity is high in it. When one is low down in a canoe it
-is rare an accident ever happens. We never have had a bad spill in
-several years of canoeing, except when we got caught in the storm this
-summer, and that was because a paddle broke."
-
-They had now reached the camp, and Tom and Bob launched their canoe and
-paddled away. They did not return to their own camp, however, but headed
-down the island. When they had reached the Narrows they carried across
-into the other bay, and then started down along the shore at a good clip.
-They were in search of Harvey's canoe.
-
-Several miles down they found it, lodged gently on a projecting ledge. It
-was uninjured, beyond a little scraping of paint from the canvas, and
-they took it in tow and returned to the Narrows. They carried both canoes
-across, and then, when they had paddled up toward Harvey's camp a way,
-they took his canoe up on shore and left it.
-
-That night, when Harvey's camp was asleep, they paddled down quietly, got
-the canoe, and towed it out to the yacht _Surprise_. They lifted it
-aboard and left it there, for Harvey to find in the morning.
-
-"There's just as much fun in that kind of a joke, after all, if one only
-looks at it that way," said Tom, as they paddled home to bed.
-
-"My! but it seems good to be back in the old tent once more, eh, Tom?"
-exclaimed Bob, as they turned in.
-
-"Good? Good's no name for it," returned his chum. "The Warren cottage is
-fine, but I like to hear those waves creeping up on the beach as though
-they were coming clear into the tent. It just puts me to sleep."
-
-The next moment bore truth to this assertion.
-
-The next afternoon, as the sun was just sinking down through the trees
-beyond Harvey's camp, a band of six boys marched along the shore and
-through the woods, singing as they went. If they had not known every inch
-of the way as they did know it, a beacon-light on the shore would have
-guided them.
-
-All afternoon Harvey and his crew had worked, making preparations to
-receive them. They had gathered wood, lugged water, brought stuff down
-from the village, brought in the lantern from the yacht to aid in the
-illumination, and had, indeed, laid themselves out to do honour to their
-guests.
-
-Harvey extended a hand to welcome them, one by one, as they came up.
-
-"That was a fine joke you played on us last night," he said, warmly, as
-Tom and Bob appeared. "If you fellows keep piling it on, you'll have me
-buried under a debt of gratitude that I never can attempt to pay."
-
-"Looks as though you had made a good start at it," said Bob, pointing to
-one of the benches, where a huge supply of food lay heaped.
-
-"Well," replied Harvey, "just watch Joe now. He's going to give us a
-treat. If any one knows how to broil a chicken over the coals, it's Joe."
-
-Joe, thus distinguished, had raked over a bed of glowing coals, the
-product of a heap of ship's timbers, nearly consumed, and was preparing
-to lay out the aforesaid chickens, split for broiling, upon a big wire
-broiler.
-
-"There's half a dozen of them," said Harvey, "and they're the best that
-the island affords. You needn't be afraid--we didn't confiscate them,
-either. We're all done with that sort of thing."
-
-"Don't they smell good!" said young Joe, gleefully.
-
-Soon they had a great dish of the chickens on the table, flanked by a
-heaping plate of potatoes, baked in ashes, a pot or two of jelly, several
-loaves of bread, and coffee that filled the woods with fragrance.
-
-Then they fell to and ate like wolves. If young Joe had any the best of
-it, it was hard to see,--and nobody cared, anyway, for every one did his
-level best.
-
-And then, when they had eaten, they sat and sang, roaring away at the top
-of their lungs, for it was a fair place for noise and no one to be
-disturbed; only the fish-hawks high in their nests and the seals away out
-on the ledges to wonder at the unusual disturbance. Then, as the fire
-blazed, they told stories of fishing, of hunting, of the search for the
-strange yacht, and a hundred other things, more than ever fascinating,
-heard under the stars, in the shadow of the woods, in the sight and sound
-of the sea, by the firelight.
-
-It was a night long to be remembered, although as yet they did not dream
-of those events soon to happen, which would be far more memorable, and of
-which this evening by the camp-fire was but the beginning.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII.
- THE FIRE
-
-
-It was nearly midnight when the boys came over the hill, and the
-half-moon was just sinking out of sight. They strolled down past the
-hotel, whistling a college tune in chorus. The hotel stood out, a big,
-black, indefinite object in the enveloping darkness, for the lights had
-been out for nearly two hours, and the guests were supposed to be all
-abed.
-
-"Hulloa!" exclaimed Henry Burns, pointing to a faint gleam that shone
-from a basement window. "John Carr has forgotten to put out his lamps in
-the billiard-room. Old Witham will give him fits when he finds them
-burning in the morning. Wait a moment, and I'll just slip in through this
-window and put them out for him. If the colonel should find them, just as
-likely as not he would discharge John for wasting five cents' worth of
-oil."
-
-So saying, Henry Burns, with the best of intentions, shoved up the sash
-and crawled into the billiard-room in the basement.
-
-The boys stood around the window, waiting for him to return, but one and
-all thrust their heads into the open window as Henry Burns suddenly gave
-a whistle of surprise.
-
-"Say, fellows," he called, turning the lights up stronger instead of
-extinguishing them. "Look what John Carr's done. He's left all the balls
-and cues out, instead of locking them up. Wouldn't the colonel be
-furious? I'll tell you what we'll do. Old Witham always drives us out of
-the billiard-room, so we'll just stop and play one game now and I'll make
-it all right with John Carr. He wouldn't care, and he will be glad enough
-to have things put to rights, so Witham won't find them out in the
-morning."
-
-George Warren, as the eldest of the brothers, demurred at first. "We've
-been up to enough pranks this summer," he said, "and we don't want to get
-into any more trouble."
-
-"But we're not going to do any harm," persisted Henry Burns. "We'll only
-play one game, just for the lark of playing at this time of night, and to
-get ahead of old Witham; and then we'll put everything away shipshape and
-put out the lights, and no harm done."
-
-It did not take much argument to influence them; and in a moment they
-were all inside, each equipped with a cue, and engaged in the forbidden
-game. The time passed faster than they knew, and one o'clock found them
-there still.
-
-But, late as it was, a most unusual hour for any Southport dweller to be
-astir and abroad, there were at least three individuals who were not abed
-and asleep; and with these three we shall have to do in turn.
-
-It so happened on this morning that Squire Brackett had important
-business that took him across to Cape Revere, on the mainland; and, as no
-steamer was due to run across till afternoon, and he must be there in the
-morning, he had arranged to sail over, taking advantage of the ebb-tide,
-which served strongest shortly after midnight. He was sleepy and surly as
-he came down the road, but paused a moment in his haste as he caught the
-gleam of light and heard the sound of subdued voices from the half-opened
-basement window.
-
-Squire Brackett stole up softly and peered inside.
-
-"Aha!" he exclaimed, under his breath. "So that's the way the young
-rascals treat Colonel Witham, is it? I'll just see about that in the
-morning. I fancy Colonel Witham will have something to say about this
-breaking and entering. I'd call him down now and trap them at their game,
-if it wasn't that I'd lose a tide and a twenty-dollar bargain by it."
-
-And the squire tiptoed craftily away, chuckling maliciously to himself at
-the thought of how he would aid in punishing the boys on the morrow.
-
-The second man of the three who were to figure in the night's adventure
-had set out some two hours ago from afar down the island on the obscure
-western side. If any of the boys had seen him rowing in from a yacht
-anchored just off shore, had seen him land on the beach and drag his boat
-well up on it with supreme strength, and had seen him set off through the
-fields and along the strips of beaches of the coves, if any of the boys
-had seen all this and had looked carefully into his forbidding face, with
-its malign, evil expression, it is probable that that boy might and would
-have seen a striking resemblance to that same individual whom he had seen
-in flight on a certain evening, and have wondered and feared what
-business could bring him back to the scene of former danger at this hour.
-
-Not being seen by them, nor by anybody else, the man slunk along, now
-running, as a clear stretch of field opened up before him, now thrusting
-his way through clumps of alders, now skirting the shore of some little
-inlet.
-
-At length he struck fairly across the island, directly toward the very
-town from which, a few weeks ago, he had made so hurried an exit. Coming
-finally in view of the hotel, he squatted down in the grass and surveyed
-the prospect long and carefully before approaching nearer.
-
-Squire Brackett, going on down to the hotel, would not have been so much
-at ease had he felt the presence of this evil figure, crouching within a
-few feet of him as he went by, and following stealthily in his footsteps,
-pausing as he paused, and watching him wonderingly as he peered into the
-window at the boys.
-
-Now, as the squire went on his way, the man, himself, crawled up to the
-window and cast a quick glance within.
-
-What he saw clearly startled him, for he had expected to find the hotel
-in utter darkness. He seemed to hesitate for a moment, then quickly drew
-away from the window.
-
-"So much the better," he muttered. "They won't stop me, and if only some
-one has seen them there they'll get the blame."
-
-Stealing around to the second window distant from where the light came,
-the man took a short piece of iron from a coat pocket and proceeded to
-pry the window open. Its flimsy lock broke easily under the pressure, and
-he sprang inside. He may have known where he should find himself, for in
-the darkness he appeared at home. It was the hotel's storeroom, and was
-crowded with a litter of boxes and barrels; loose straw lay in profusion,
-and a barrel or two of oil stood in one corner.
-
-It was scarce a moment from the time the man had entered till he sprang
-out again. But now his manner was altered. No longer proceeding with
-caution, he started on a run for the fields whence he had come, holding
-his arms hard to his sides as he ran.
-
-Up the long slope of the hill he dashed, breathing hard, rather, it would
-seem, from some deep excitement than from the exertion. So he went on
-without interruption for nearly a mile. Had he seemed less beset by some
-fear that drove him recklessly on, and been more mindful of his road, he
-might have avoided the third person who was abroad this night, and who
-now suddenly loomed large in it.
-
-Plunging desperately along through the rough pasture, following an
-uncertain path as it wound in and among clumps of cedars and alders, the
-man all at once ran full tilt into another man, or, rather, a large,
-heavy-set youth, and, clutching at each other, they both fell sprawling
-upon the ground.
-
-"Hulloa!" exclaimed Jack Harvey, for he it was, "you seem in a confounded
-hurry, my friend, and that's something new on this island, I'll be bound.
-Why don't you--" but, as they scrambled up together, Jack Harvey
-grumbling, but inclined to treat the incident as a rough joke, the man
-lunged out heavily at him with his fist and struck him full in the face.
-
-Jack Harvey was no coward. He clinched with the man, and they reeled for
-a moment in a fierce embrace. But the man had muscles of iron, and,
-nerved to desperation, more than matched Harvey. Presently he threw the
-youth to the ground, and as Harvey struggled to his feet again he dealt
-him a blow between the eyes that stretched him flat, and for a moment
-stunned him.
-
-Before Harvey had regained his feet and collected his senses, the man was
-off, running harder now than ever.
-
-When Harvey finally stood upright, his first impulse was to set out in
-pursuit of his mysterious adversary. On second thought he paused a moment
-to consider the matter.
-
-Who could the stranger be, and where could he be going? There was one
-thing Jack Harvey did know. He knew every living soul on all the island,
-man and boy, and this man was not of them. There was not a fisherman
-along this part of the coast with whom Harvey had not cast a line or
-raced with his yacht, the _Surprise_. He had looked the man fair in the
-face twice in their struggle, and thought for the moment that he had
-never seen him before.
-
-He had come from some other island, or the mainland, then, and, as was
-evident, he was in desperate haste to return. He must, then, have a boat,
-presumably a sailboat, waiting for him, and that boat must be moored
-somewhere along the western shore of the island. The man's haste and fear
-of being delayed argued that he had been up to some bad business,
-"Thieving at the hotel, perhaps," said Harvey.
-
-And then Harvey, knowing every bush and tree and nook and corner, and
-every rock and cove on all the shores of the island, ran over quickly in
-his mind the inlets along the coast, to pick out the most likely spot he
-knew of where a man might choose to moor his yacht and steal ashore; and
-the proof of his accurate knowledge was that the mental picture he drew
-of the place was that very cove toward which the stranger was now
-travelling, and where there lay snugly at anchor the strange yacht.
-
-With this clearly in mind, Jack Harvey resolved to follow in pursuit,
-although the man had now some ten minutes the start. Harvey had the
-advantage, however, that, whereas the man knew only the general direction
-he must take, to Harvey every inch of the way was as familiar as the
-ground around his own camp. For instance, he knew, when the way led
-through Captain Coombs's grove of woods, that through the centre, the
-most direct way, it was boggy and hard travelling, and that one could
-save from one to three minutes by skirting along the end nearest the
-town, and going through there in a smoothly travelled path.
-
-Again, and most profitable of all, there was full five minutes to be
-gained by swimming the narrow opening of Gull Cove, instead of following
-the line of the shore in the way it spread out in the shape of a huge
-pear. At the point which the stem of the pear would represent, the
-passage from the bay into the cove, it was only a matter of two rods
-wide.
-
-Jack Harvey did not even stop to remove his trousers, blue blouse, and
-tennis shoes, but plunged in and swam across.
-
-What he had gained by this was soon apparent, for, as he ascended the top
-of a low bank on the farther shore, he saw running along the beach, not
-many rods distant, the man whom he was pursuing.
-
-Now the chase had become simplified and was easy for the rest of the way.
-There could be no doubt of the man's destination. Jack Harvey, covering
-himself with rock and tree, made no effort to come up with him, but took
-his time in following, knowing where he should ultimately find him.
-
-Presently Harvey left the shore, ascended the bank to a roadway which led
-down the island, followed it for a few rods, cut across a narrow strip of
-field, seated himself deliberately upon a gnarled tree-trunk, and looked
-out upon a tiny inlet that was just discernible through the bushes.
-
-There, of a certainty, lay a pretty sloop at anchor, and presently there
-came to Harvey's ears the creaking of the halyards and of the ropes in
-the blocks as the mainsail fluttered up.
-
-"He's in a tearing rush to get away, sure enough," muttered Harvey. "Now
-he is getting up the anchor, and slatting it up in lively style, too. But
-he is a stronger man than I am, there's no mistake about that," and
-Harvey felt of two lumps on his head that bore witness to the man's
-violence.
-
-"If I only had Joe Hinman and Allan Harding here now he wouldn't sail
-away so easily. But that's neither here nor there. I'll know that elegant
-hull, however, and I'll know that slick-setting suit of sails anywhere in
-all this bay, and I'll get even with him yet. The _Surprise_ couldn't
-catch that boat in a race in a hundred years, but I'll catch him napping
-somewhere between here and Portland, or I have sailed this bay for
-nothing."
-
-The yacht, its sails filling to the light morning airs, sailed slowly out
-from its place of hiding and faded away into the darkness.
-
-Jack Harvey, waiting a moment longer to rest, started off on an easy
-jog-trot back to camp. "For," said he to himself, "the _Surprise_ must up
-anchor and after that fellow before daylight. We'll catch him first, and
-then find out what he has been up to. Perhaps he is another--
-
-"Why, by Jove!" exclaimed Harvey, suddenly, "what a fool I am! How could
-I ever have forgotten for a moment where I saw that face once before? The
-man in the rowboat! Whoop! And that yacht is the _Eagle_, as sure as my
-name is Harvey. And that man is Chambers. And to think I came across the
-bay with him, alone at night!"
-
-The cold drops of perspiration stood out on Harvey's forehead at the very
-thought of it.
-
-Over hills and through woods ran Harvey, his arms pressed close to his
-sides and his head down. He had gone about a mile in this way when, upon
-emerging from a dense clump of bushes and ascending at the same time a
-little hill, he paused to survey the prospect ahead.
-
-The sight that met his eyes astounded him. Up against the black morning
-sky there streamed a broad flaring of red, irregular and uncertain. Now
-it streamed up in a widely diffused glare. Again it darted up in a series
-of sharp streaks of red.
-
-"Heavens!" cried Harvey. "It's the hotel and it's all on fire! Now I know
-it's Chambers, for certain. Now I know why he struck me down. Now I know
-what we'll hunt him for and what we'll catch him for."
-
-Harvey, redoubling his speed, raced for his camp.
-
-While this strange chase of Harvey after the man had been going on, even
-more exciting things had been happening at the hotel.
-
-Shortly before the time the man had run into Harvey in the pasture and
-knocked him down, the boys had finished an absorbing game of billiards,
-had put cues and balls carefully away, extinguished the lights, and left
-the hotel.
-
-They were in high spirits at their harmless adventure, as they walked a
-short distance together, and then separated.
-
-"I think I'll go along with you," said Henry Burns to Tom and Bob, "if
-you'll give me that spare blanket to put down on the floor." And the boys
-locked arms with him in answer, as they said good night to the Warrens.
-They were soon inside the tent, and, too weary to undress, threw
-themselves down with their clothes on to sleep.
-
-But scarcely had they closed their eyes when the sound of persons running
-hard roused them, and they recognized the voices of the Warren boys,
-calling to them in excited tones.
-
-The next moment the tent was burst open, and George and Joe Warren thrust
-their heads inside.
-
-"Get up! Get up, boys, quick!" they cried, and Arthur, appearing the next
-instant, added his voice to the others. "Hurry!" they screamed. "The
-hotel's afire and the flames are pouring out of the basement windows.
-We've got to give the alarm, and there's no time to be lost."
-
-Tom and Bob and Henry Burns groaned in anguish; but the three sprang up
-and darted out of the door.
-
-"Could we have done it? Oh, how could it have happened?" moaned Bob, as
-his teeth fairly chattered with excitement.
-
-"I don't see how," answered Arthur Warren. "I put the lights out myself,
-and we didn't light a match in all the time we were there."
-
-"Never mind," said Henry Burns. "We've got to give the alarm. We've got
-to see that everybody gets out, and let the rest take care of itself."
-
-And they started on the run for the hotel. The fire was already plain to
-be seen, for the flames were gaining the most rapid headway, and a dense
-cloud of smoke mixed with flame poured out of the basement windows.
-
-They rushed madly up the hotel steps, found the doors locked, smashed in
-one of the big front windows opening into the parlour, and one and all
-crawled inside, screaming "Fire!" at the top of their lungs.
-
-Almost the first person they encountered was Colonel Witham, rushing down
-the front stairs to the office, his red face looking apoplectic with
-excitement.
-
-"What's this?" he yelled, as he came down-stairs two steps at a time.
-"Some more of your practical joking, I'll be bound." But then, as he
-breathed a choking cloud of smoke that by this time had begun to pour in
-from the direction of the parlour, he changed his tone.
-
-"Good for you, boys!" he cried. "I guess you've saved us this time.
-Scatter through the halls now, quick. You can do it quicker than I can.
-We mustn't let any one burn to death."
-
-The colonel was, indeed, out of breath and nearly helpless, and could be
-of little assistance.
-
-The boys needed no urging. They ran from one end of the long halls to the
-other, up-stairs and down, pounding on every door and startling the
-inmates of the rooms from sleep.
-
-The guests, rushing out on each floor into darkened halls, and smelling
-the all-pervading smoke, were ready to jump from windows in panic; but
-the boys ran quickly among them, explained just where the fire was, just
-what the particular danger was, and guided them all to escape.
-
-Thanks to them, not a life was lost, although there were several narrow
-escapes. Once when the guests had assembled and a count was taken to see
-that no one was missing, some one exclaimed: "Well, where's Mrs. Newcome?
-Has any one seen her?"
-
-Then there was a rush and a scurrying for the second floor, but the
-guests were met on the stairs by Joe Warren and Tom Harris, carrying the
-little old lady in their arms. They had knocked at her door and had
-received no response, and so, hurling themselves at the flimsy door, had
-burst it in, and found her on the floor in a dead faint.
-
-"Perhaps this will kind of square accounts with the poor old lady," said
-Joe Warren, as they laid her gently down at a safe distance from the
-fire. "She used to complain that we made more noise than a band of wild
-Indians, and were always disturbing her afternoon naps, but I guess she
-won't complain of our disturbing this nap." Then the boys left her in the
-care of the guests, and hurried back to the fire.
-
-The fire had gained rapid headway, and there was no hope of saving the
-new part of the hotel, at least. The old-fashioned town fire-engine came
-rattling up in charge of Captain Sam, but, though the guests and
-villagers and the boys all took turns at the pumps, the machine could do
-little more than throw a feeble stream up as high as the base of the
-second-story windows. The water-supply of the hotel, which was pumped by
-a windmill at a distance, was of more avail, but it was helpless against
-the headway that the flames had gained.
-
-Soon the whole front end of the hotel collapsed, sending up a fierce
-cloud of smoke, ashes, and sparks.
-
-"Lucky we're not in there now," exclaimed one of the guests. "By the way,
-has anybody stopped to think that we should all probably have been burned
-to death if it hadn't been for these boys that we've been complaining of
-all summer? Guess we'll owe them a vote of thanks, at least, when this is
-over."
-
-"We can't be too thankful that everybody's saved," said another.
-
-"That all may be," growled Colonel Witham, "but I can't see so much to be
-thankful for in watching a twenty-five thousand dollar hotel burn to
-pieces, and I've got the lease of it--" But his sentence was interrupted
-by a piercing wail that came from the scene of the fire, and, following
-the sound of the noise, one and all looked up in time to see a large,
-handsome tiger cat leap from a window from which smoke was pouring to a
-narrow ledge which was as yet untouched by the flames. There it crouched,
-crying with fear.
-
-"Oh, it's poor Jerry! It's my poor Jerry!" cried a thin, piping voice,
-and old Mrs. Newcome, roused from her faint, came forward, trembling and
-waving her hands helplessly. "Oh, can't somebody save him?" she cried.
-"He knows more than lots of these boys. Why don't somebody do something?"
-
-"Can't erzactly see as anybody's goin' ter risk his life for a fool cat,"
-muttered one of the villagers. "There ain't no ladder'll reach up there.
-Guess Jerry's a goner, and lucky it ain't a baby."
-
-Waving her hands wildly and moaning, Jerry's old mistress was a pathetic
-sight, as Henry Burns went up and spoke to her.
-
-"I'm afraid I can't do much," he said, "but I'll try. You just wait here,
-and don't take on so. I know some things about climbing around this hotel
-that the others don't." And he gave a quiet smile. Then he suddenly
-darted across to the old hotel, and, before any one could stop him,
-disappeared up the stairs. Wholly unmindful of the fact that a human
-being was risking his life for that of a dumb animal, old Mrs. Newcome
-took fresh hope and screamed shrilly, in words intended to encourage the
-terrified Jerry.
-
-All at once the crowd of guests and villagers saw a boy's slight figure
-at the edge of the hotel roof in relief against the sky.
-
-"Who's that?" they screamed. "I thought every one was safely out," cried
-one to another.
-
-"It's that Burns boy, and he's going to save Jerry," piped old Mrs.
-Newcome. "He's--"
-
-A howl of indignation drowned her voice, and a chorus of voices rose up
-to Henry Burns, demanding that he return.
-
-But, helpless now to prevent, they saw him coolly divest himself of his
-coat, seize hold of a lightning-rod, and go hand over hand quickly to the
-top. Then he stood for a moment on the only remaining wall of the hotel,
-for the rest of the roof, though not yet aflame, had caved in and broken
-partly away from the end wall.
-
-Along this narrow strip of wall crept Henry Burns; but when he had come
-to the end of it there was a sheer drop of ten feet down to the ledge
-where the cat crouched, wailing and lashing its tail.
-
-"Go back! Go back!" screamed those below. "You can't do anything."
-
-But Henry Burns, paying not the least attention, reached one hand into
-his pocket, drew from it a piece of rope, which he proceeded to lower
-till it dangled within reach of the unfortunate Jerry.
-
-"Grab it, Jerry! Grab it!" piped old Mrs. Newcome; and, whether in answer
-to the familiar voice or from an appreciation of the situation, Jerry
-fastened his claws into the rope, clawed at it furiously till all four
-feet were fast, and so, miaowing shrilly, was drawn up to safety by Henry
-Burns.
-
-Back along the wall he crawled, and, sliding down the lightning-rod, was
-once more on the roof of the old hotel. Then, with Mrs. Newcome's cat
-perched on his shoulder, he shortly reappeared below, amid the cheering
-of the crowd.
-
-"I'll never say you boys are bad again and ought to be horsewhipped,"
-sobbed old Mrs. Newcome, as she fondled her pet.
-
-But she got no farther, for a moment later the end wall, on which Henry
-Burns had stood shortly before, was seen to sway violently. Then, with a
-wrenching and tearing, as of beams split apart, and with grinding of
-timbers, it collapsed upon the roof of the old hotel, and a few minutes
-later that, too, was all ablaze, and there was nought to be done by any
-one but to stand helplessly and see the flames devour everything.
-
-When morning lighted up the spot where on the previous day the hotel had
-stood, the pride of the village and the boast of Colonel Witham, the sun
-shone only on a charred and blackened heap of ruins.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII.
- THE FLIGHT
-
-
-Southport, rudely awakened from sleep as it had been, and awake all the
-rest of the night by so unusual and stirring an event as a fire, was too
-much excited to go back to its slumbers, but stayed awake through the
-morning hours to discuss it. A group of villagers hung around the
-grocery-store all day long, adjourning only now and then to journey to
-the spot where the hotel had been, where they stood solemnly
-contemplating the ruins, with all-absorbing interest in the twisted and
-distorted fragments that still bore some resemblance to whatever part
-they had constituted in the structure of the building.
-
-There were dozens of theories advanced as to how the fire had started.
-The oil had exploded from spontaneous combustion; rats had set the blaze
-by gnawing at matches, and so on through the list of ordinary causes of
-fires; but as for Colonel Witham, with his customary suspicion of all
-human nature, he was sure of one theory, because it was his own, and that
-was, that the hotel had been set on fire. This he doggedly asserted and
-as stubbornly maintained. The hotel could not have set itself afire;
-therefore, some one must have done it. This was as plain as daylight to
-the colonel.
-
-He fiercely questioned John Carr as to whether any lights had been left
-burning, but John Carr was loud and persistent in his assurances that the
-hotel had been as dark as Egypt when he had retired for the night.
-
-But throughout all the discussion, that ranged through cottages, along
-the streets, and that spread throughout the length and breadth of the
-island, there were six boys who were silent, who took no part in it, but
-who kept away from wherever a group was gathered.
-
-They were a serious-looking lot of boys as they assembled on the shore in
-front of the tent; so much of anxiety and apprehension showing
-unconcealed in their faces that one happening upon their council might
-have read therein a key to the mystery. It would have been a mistaken
-clue, of course, but it would have sufficed for the village and for
-Colonel Witham.
-
-For a few moments not one of them spoke, though each boyish brain was
-turning the one awful subject over and over, vainly seeking the answer
-for a problem that defied all attempts at solution.
-
-Finally Bob broke the awful silence.
-
-"How could it have happened?" he exclaimed. At which there was a
-universal whistle and a shaking of heads.
-
-"You see," continued Bob, "it's absolutely necessary for us to decide in
-our own minds, the first thing, whether it was our fault or not. Because,
-if it was, I suppose we've got to own up to it sometime or other, and we
-may as well do it first as last."
-
-"Better now, if at all, than later," said Tom. "They might have some
-mercy on us now, being grateful that they didn't burn up."
-
-"All but Colonel Witham," said young Joe. "Catch him being grateful for
-anything, with his hotel in ashes."
-
-"Keep quiet, Joe!" exclaimed George Warren, sharply.
-
-The very mention of Colonel Witham's name was irritating. It was only too
-certain that no mercy could be expected from the colonel.
-
-"But," said Arthur Warren, "we're not to blame, so why should we consider
-that at all? You remember," he continued, turning to Henry Burns, "how we
-waited after I had blown the last lamp out and the room was absolutely
-dark, and we had to stand still a moment till our eyes got accustomed to
-the darkness before we could find our way to the window?"
-
-"I remember that," answered Henry Burns; "and not one of us lighted any
-matches all the time we were there, because the lamps were all burning
-dimly when we went in; but," he added, somewhat desperately for him,
-"that is not going to save us the moment an investigation begins, if they
-have one. The first time they begin to question one of us we're done for.
-The moment they know we were in there last night, that will settle
-everything in their minds."
-
-"And what then?" asked young Joe.
-
-"Well," said Henry Burns, more calmly, "it means that we've got a
-twenty-five thousand dollar hotel to pay for."
-
-The proposition was so absurd that they burst out laughing; but it was a
-short-lived and bitter merriment, and they could just as easily have
-cried.
-
-"What would our fathers say?" said Arthur Warren. "Ours told us we'd have
-to make our pocket-money go a long way this summer, because he rigged the
-boat all over for us. There couldn't any of us pay for the hotel in all
-our lives."
-
-"Perhaps they'd send us to jail," suggested young Joe.
-
-This happy remark was received with howls of indignation, and the
-originator of it was invited to clear out if he couldn't keep quiet.
-
-"They couldn't send us to jail," said Arthur, gravely, "for, at the
-worst, we could convince them that it was accidental. We may be
-nuisances, but we're not criminals. Wouldn't it be better, on the whole,"
-he concluded, "to make a clean breast of it to father, and do whatever he
-says is best?"
-
-"I'd do it in a minute," said George Warren, "but when I know we didn't
-set the fire, even accidentally, I hate to put all that trouble and worry
-on father; because, you see, we might not be able to convince him
-absolutely that we may not, in some way that we don't know of, have been
-responsible. Of course, if it comes to it, we'll tell him all,--and he'll
-believe it, too. That is, he'll believe that we are telling what we think
-is right, for we've always done that way, because he puts confidence in
-us."
-
-"Then," said Bob, "we've got to keep out of the way for awhile till this
-thing blows over some. Everybody that sees us now will stop and ask us
-how we first saw the fire and all about it."
-
-"They've done that already to us," said George Warren. "And, luckily, we
-could say truthfully that we first saw the fire from our cottage piazza.
-And we said we ran down to your camp and roused you boys. Now that is all
-right for a touch-and-go conversation, but suppose they see fit to follow
-it up, we'll soon find ourselves either obliged to lie or to confess."
-
-"Then what are we going to do?" asked Tom.
-
-"Take a fishing-trip," suggested young Joe.
-
-They looked at young Joe savagely, for each knew in his own heart that it
-was running away from danger,--but it was significant that not a boy
-objected.
-
-"We've been planning one for a week or more," urged Joe, in extenuation
-of his plan. "And we needn't stay long. We can come back in a day or two
-and then start right out again, so as not to attract attention by being
-gone too long."
-
-"I suppose a little trip down among the islands wouldn't be so bad for
-our health," said Henry Burns, dryly; but it was clear he had no great
-liking for the plan.
-
-And so, in a vain endeavour to escape from what seemed to them a most
-unfair and cruel predicament, and without realizing that it was the worst
-thing they could do, the boys agreed to start early on the following
-morning in the _Spray_ for a cruise.
-
-Much surprised was Mrs. Warren when informed of their plan.
-
-"And just as everybody is telling what brave boys you were," she said.
-"They all say that half the guests would have lost their lives if it
-hadn't been for you."
-
-This was worse than punishment, and the boys groaned inwardly, for Mrs.
-Warren had taught her boys to respect her, and they valued her good
-opinion more than anything else in the world. They went off to bed soon
-after supper, "so as to get an early start in the morning," they said.
-
-It was early that same evening, while the boys were at tea, that Squire
-Brackett stepped ashore from his sailboat in a perfect fever of
-excitement.
-
-"I knew it and I said it," he muttered to himself, slapping one hard fist
-into the palm of the other hand. "When I saw that blaze across the water
-this morning, and knew that it couldn't be anything else than the hotel,
-I says to myself, 'Those boys have done it, with some of their
-monkey-shines,' and that's just the way of it. By Jingo! but won't
-Colonel Witham jump out of his skin when I tell him what I saw through
-that window.
-
-"P'r'aps them 'ere boys won't be' so much inclined to tying other
-people's dogs to ropes and drowning them when they get caught for setting
-fire to a fine hotel!"
-
-And so, nearly bursting with the magnitude of his secret, and bristling
-with more than his usual importance, Squire Brackett hurried up from the
-landing and lost no time in finding Colonel Witham and escorting him in
-great haste to his own home.
-
-There on the veranda of Squire Brackett's house sat the two worthies,
-while the squire poured out his news into the eager colonel's ear.
-
-"Whew!" exclaimed Colonel Witham, when he had heard it all. "We've got
-them at last and no mistake. What's more," he added, jumping from his
-chair and stamping vigorously on the piazza floor, "I'll prosecute them,
-every mother's son, to the extent of the law. It's breaking and entering,
-too,--forcing their way into my hotel at night,--and the fire was caused
-by their criminal act. That's serious business, as they'll find before I
-get through with them. Blow me if I don't take the boat for Mayville this
-very night, and see Judge Ellis and get the warrants for Captain Sam to
-serve first thing in the morning!"
-
-"I'll go with you, colonel," cried Squire Brackett. "We'll be back here
-before midnight, and be all ready at daylight to arrest them. Reckon
-we'll surprise folks a little."
-
-And so, chuckling maliciously together, the squire and the colonel waited
-eagerly for the whistle of the little bay steamer, upon hearing which
-they walked arm and arm down to the wharf and went aboard, with their
-heads together, in great satisfaction.
-
-Their trip must have been greatly to their liking, for some hours later
-found them coming ashore again, evidently in a most agreeable state of
-mind; and as they bade each other good night on the veranda of the
-squire's cottage, the colonel might have been heard once more to exclaim,
-exultantly: "We've got 'em this time, squire! They can't get away." And
-so strode away, caressing in one hand some crisp, official-looking
-papers, which boded no good in their contents to six boys whose names the
-colonel had given with evil delight to the judge at Mayville.
-
-Very early next morning good-hearted Captain Sam might have been seen at
-the door of his home, his fist clenched and his face burning with
-indignation. Colonel Witham and Squire Brackett stood by the stoop.
-
-"Now look here, colonel," exclaimed Captain Sam, hotly, "you surely ain't
-going to ask me to serve these papers on them innocent young lads?
-There's some mistake, somehow, and the way for us to do is to get them up
-here and just give them a talking to; ask them all the questions you
-want. I've watched them boys for a good many summers now, ever since they
-was little shavers no bigger'n mackerel, and I tell you they wouldn't do
-no wicked thing like setting fire to a hotel full of people, and there
-ain't nobody on this island mean enough to believe it."
-
-"We didn't come here asking you for advice," sneered the squire. "You're
-a constable of this village, sworn to do your duty, and your duty is to
-serve these warrants, the same being legally drawn and signed by the
-judge. That's all your part, and all we ask of you to do. We take all the
-consequences."
-
-"Well, it's a shame. It ain't the right thing to do, squire, as you ought
-to know, having a boy of your own. But, as you say, it's my duty if you
-insist, and I'll do it,--but it's the hardest job I ever done in all my
-life."
-
-"Let's go down to the tent first," said Colonel Witham. "There's always
-two of them down there, and sometimes more. If Henry Burns is there, I
-just want to get my hands on him. I suspect he's been fooling me all
-along and playing his tricks on me, when I thought him in his room
-asleep."
-
-The dew was still heavy on the grass and the sun had not lifted its face
-above the distant cape when the three men walked down to the tent upon
-the point. Not a sound broke the early morning quiet, save the cawing of
-some crows in a group of pines, and the lazy swash of the sluggish
-rollers breaking on the shore.
-
-"They're fast asleep," whispered Squire Brackett. "We'll give them a
-little surprise--just a little surprise." And he gave a hard chuckle.
-
-Captain Sam, at this same instant, casting his eyes offshore and hastily
-surveying the bay with the quick, comprehensive glance of an old sailor,
-gave a sudden start, and, for a moment, an exclamation of surprise
-escaped him.
-
-"What is it?" asked Colonel Witham. "Did you remark anything, Captain
-Sam?"
-
-"Nothing," answered Captain Sam. "I was just a-muttering to myself."
-
-And at this moment the squire threw open the flap of the tent, saying, as
-he did so, "If you boys will--"
-
-But as he and Colonel Witham poked their heads through the opening, the
-sentence was abruptly cut short.
-
-"Empty!" gasped the colonel.
-
-"Gone!" cried the squire.
-
-The tent was, indeed, deserted.
-
-"Where can they be?" asked Colonel Witham.
-
-"I know," answered the squire. "Up at the Warrens, of course. They are
-there half the time. It simply means we capture them all at once and save
-trouble. Come on, Captain Sam, you don't seem to be in much of a hurry to
-do your duty, as you're sworn to do."
-
-Captain Sam was, indeed, in no hurry. He loitered behind, stopped to tie
-his shoes, dragged one foot along after the other slower than he had ever
-done before, while every now and then, as he followed in the footsteps of
-the colonel and the squire, he cast a hasty glance over his shoulder out
-on the bay. What he saw must have pleased him, for on each occasion a
-broad smile spread over his face and a mischievous twinkle kindled in his
-eyes.
-
-The colonel and the squire strode along impatiently, pausing now and then
-for Captain Sam to catch up with them; but as they drew near to the
-Warren cottage Captain Sam quickened his steps and halted them.
-
-"You two will have to stay here," he said, with an authority he had not
-shown before. "I'm commissioned with the serving of these warrants, and
-I'm going to do it; but Mrs. Warren is a nice, motherly little woman, and
-I don't propose to have three of us bursting in on them like a press-gang
-and frightening her to death. I'm just going to break the news to her as
-best I know how, and I don't want no interfering."
-
-So saying, and with face set into a reluctant resolve, the captain walked
-on alone, leaving the colonel and the squire much taken aback, and too
-much astonished by the sudden declaration of authority to attempt to
-dispute it.
-
-What Captain Sam said to Mrs. Warren only she and he knew. There were no
-boys called in to listen to what was said. There were no boys there to
-see how Mrs. Warren's face paled and how the tears rolled down her
-cheeks, nor to hear Captain Sam's words of burning indignation as he
-tried to comfort her. No boys came to gather about her chair, to assure
-her it was all a dreadful mistake. There were no boys to face the colonel
-and the squire and declare their own innocence.
-
-But out on the bay, with all her white sails set to catch the morning
-breeze, the yacht _Spray_ was beating down toward a distant goal among
-the islands. And aboard her were six boys, whose hearts were heavy and
-whose faces were drawn with an ever present anxiety. For a time they cast
-apprehensive looks back at the disappearing village, but as the morning
-wore on and no pursuing sail appeared, they became more cheerful; and to
-forget so far as they could the real cause of their flight, they talked
-hopefully of the fish they expected to catch and the swimming and other
-sport along the white sands of the island beaches.
-
-But although no familiar craft as yet followed where they sailed, there
-was, far in the lead of them and some miles down along the island, a
-yacht they all knew, and in whose mission, had they but known it, their
-deepest interests, their very fate, in fact, lay.
-
-Jack Harvey had lost little time in reaching his camp. While he ran the
-fire blazed brighter and brighter, sending an angry glare over the waters
-of the bay and lighting up the country around. Looking back now and then,
-he could see men and women running about in the light of the fire, and
-the frantic, though unavailing, efforts of the village fire department to
-stay the flames.
-
-"Seems funny," he muttered to himself, "to be running away from a fire,
-and the greatest fire we ever had on this island at that. I never did
-such a thing before, but I guess there'll be something more exciting
-ahead than a fire before we get through."
-
-Harvey found his camp deserted, as he had expected. Not a sign of life
-showed about the place.
-
-"They're all up to the fire," said Harvey; "but I'll bring them soon
-enough, though I reckon they'll be mad at first to have to leave when the
-fire is just at its best."
-
-And he began ransacking the camp, rolling up blankets, tying them into
-compact bundles and hurrying down to the shore with them, where he
-deposited them in a rowboat.
-
-He made a pile of the rude dishes that the camp afforded, a saucepan, a
-fry-pan, tin dippers, and a few tin plates, tying them all together in a
-bundle and rattling them all down to the shore in great haste.
-
-Finally he got a boatload of the stuff, and, jumping in, sculled the
-little craft out to the _Surprise_. Leaping aboard, he rushed down into
-the cabin, threw open a locker, drew forth a big tin horn, which he
-raised to his lips, and blew four loud, long blasts in succession.
-
-"The hurry signal will surprise them, I reckon," he exclaimed; "but
-they've always answered it before, and I guess they'll come,--even from a
-fire." And Harvey began stowing the stuff away aboard the yacht. Then he
-proceeded to untie the stops in the mainsail, and was thus engaged when a
-voice hailed him from the shore.
-
-"Halloo, Jack!" came the call. "What's the matter? Why aren't you up to
-the fire? What's up?"
-
-"Wait a minute," answered Harvey. "I'm coming ashore. Are the others on
-the way?"
-
-"Yes," answered the boy on shore, who proved to be Joe Hinman; "but they
-don't like it a bit. It's a shame to lose this fire, Jack. Why, you ought
-to see Colonel Witham. He's the craziest man I ever saw, running around
-and begging everybody he sees to rush into the blaze and save his old
-office furniture."
-
-"Well, Joe," said Harvey, as he stepped out of the small boat on to the
-beach, beside the other, "we've got some work cut out for us that beats
-watching a fire all to pieces. I'll tell you all about it, but there
-isn't one half-minute to lose now. Believe me, you fellows won't regret
-it,--hello, here are the others!"
-
-The three other members of the crew, George Baker, Allan Harding, and Tim
-Reardon, burst out of the woods into the clearing, gasping from running,
-and amazed beyond expression that Harvey should have called them from the
-fire.
-
-"Fellows," said Harvey, "I'll tell you the whole story just as soon as we
-get aboard and up sail. This is the greatest thing we ever did in all our
-lives; but it's the minutes that count now, and we have got to get under
-way the quickest we ever did yet."
-
-And then, as the boys hesitated, and Joe Hinman ventured the question,
-with something of suspicion in his tone that he could not all conceal,
-"Why, Jack, there's no trouble, is there--no trouble--about the fire?" it
-suddenly dawned on Harvey that this sudden departure did have a queer
-look to it, and that he was, indeed, open to their suspicion.
-
-"Yes," he cried, "there is trouble, and it's about this fire; but it
-isn't our trouble. The trouble is for the man that set it,--and we are
-going to make it for him. We're going to catch him. Now will you hurry?"
-
-"Will we?" exclaimed George Baker. "Just watch us!"
-
-And every boy made a dash for the camp to secure anything he might need
-on a cruise down the bay.
-
-Harvey and Joe Hinman seized two big jugs and made off for the spring,
-whence they returned quickly. Then the entire crew piling into the small
-boat, they were soon aboard the _Surprise_.
-
-The anchor was up in a twinkling. The sails were never spread in such
-time. Almost as quickly as it takes to tell it, the yacht _Surprise_ was
-under way, and with Harvey at the wheel was standing out of the little
-harbour.
-
-Then, as they left the glare of the fire upon the waters astern, but
-still flaming like a giant beacon against the sky, Harvey, with his crew
-about him, narrated his extraordinary adventure with the strange man, and
-asserted his conviction that the man was none other than the same
-Chambers who had fled from the island not long before.
-
-"That is a fast boat, and we can never catch her in plain sailing," said
-Allan Harding. "She is full half again as big as we, and she would sail
-around us a dozen times and then walk away from us without half-trying."
-
-"I know that," said Harvey, "and that is just why I am so anxious to
-catch up with him before he gets out of the western bay into the open
-sea. If we don't get him in the bay we shall lose him. Now let's overhaul
-everything, and be sure that something doesn't break just as we come to
-the pinch."
-
-There was little to be done, however, on that score; for, however
-carelessly they lived ashore, they had the true yachtsman's spirit aboard
-the _Surprise_, and kept her shipshape. Then they set the club and jib
-topsails, for there was not much air stirring, and they drew the tender
-up close astern, so it would drag as little as possible.
-
-"We have one advantage," said Harvey. "We can depend upon it, he knows
-enough not to try the open bay and sail down toward the Gull Islands. The
-first part of the way is clear sailing enough, but when you get down just
-off the islands you come to the shallows, and a man has to follow the
-marks to get clear and safely out to sea. And then, too, the alarm is
-going to be sent out just as soon as a boat from the village can get over
-to the mainland. They won't lose any time about that,--and Chambers is
-sharp enough to know it. He knows the whole bay down below there will be
-alive with boats, just as soon as they get the news wired down to them.
-
-"Depend upon it, Chambers will try to fool them. I think he will come
-through the Thoroughfare at this eastern end of Grand Island, which he
-must have studied out on the charts. He will not dare to try the
-Thoroughfare to-night, however, and if we can only beat down to somewhere
-below the Thoroughfare to-night we shall be well to windward of him in
-the morning, and he will think we are a boat coming in from outside,
-while he will still be beating into the wind, if it holds from the
-south'ard, the way it is blowing now."
-
-"That's right," said Joe Hinman. "He cannot make the passage out through
-the Thoroughfare in the night, unless he knows the way better than I
-think he does. It is a bad run in the dark, even for a man that was born
-around here. We have done it only once or twice ourselves."
-
-"You fellows turn in now, all but Tim," said Harvey, "and get some sleep.
-We two can run her for awhile. I'll call you, Joe, in about an hour or
-two, to handle her while I get forty winks, but, mind, everybody will be
-called sharp the minute we clear Tom's Island, for no knowing what we
-shall see then at any minute. Chambers will lie up in Seal Cove for an
-hour or two, I reckon, if he has got down that far. I only wish I was
-sure of it. We'd go ashore and take a run across the island and catch him
-napping--
-
-"By the way, George," exclaimed Harvey, "how do you feel? It's mighty
-lucky you happened to be taken with that colic in the night, just at the
-right time, and that I started out to rouse up old Sanborn to get some
-ginger for you. All this would never have happened if it hadn't been for
-you."
-
-"Why, I'm all right," answered George Baker. "I could hardly walk when we
-first saw the fire, but I just made up my mind I wasn't going to miss it,
-and so I started out. When the sparks began to fly I forgot all about the
-pain, and I hadn't thought of it since. It's all gone now, anyway."
-
-Two hours later they were nearing the southern end of Grand Island and
-coming in sight of a chain, or cluster, of smaller islands, through which
-an obscure and little used passage ran from the western bay to the outer
-sea. Jack Harvey had sent young Tim into the cabin to snatch a wink of
-sleep, and Joe had come up, heavy and dull.
-
-"I'll go without my sleep this once," said Harvey. "Here, Joe, hold her a
-minute. I'll get a bit of rest right here on deck, with one eye open."
-
-It was growing light fast now, and they strained their eyes for a sail.
-
-"I guess we are in time," said Harvey, as they came abreast of Tom's
-Island. "He is not in sight. We'll head out to sea a bit more, and cut
-into the Thoroughfare farther down, for the tide will be high in an hour,
-and we can cross Pine Island Bar. Then, if he has taken the channel on
-the other side of Tom's Island, we can still head him off,--unless he
-went through in the night."
-
-And Harvey, having relinquished the tiller to Joe, stretched himself out
-at full length on the seat to rest.
-
-Thus they sailed for a short cut into the Thoroughfare at a point where
-they could command the farther of the two channels.
-
-And, as they sailed, so sailed another and a larger sloop, beating its
-way out to sea through the farther channel. A man, powerfully built, and
-with a hard, desperate look in his eyes, sat at the wheel,--and he was
-all alone. The yacht cut a clean path through the smooth waters of the
-Thoroughfare, and, as the man looked at the coast-line along which he was
-passing rapidly, he muttered: "It's a clear passage; a safe run to sea.
-And, once there, who's to say I was ever in these waters? I said I'd have
-revenge on this town for what I've lost, if it took all summer, and I've
-done it. The blaze did me good as it lit the sky. Twenty minutes more and
-I'll be clear of this, and good-bye to this coast for ever."
-
-But even as he said it a smaller sloop turned the head of an island half
-a mile ahead, and came down the Thoroughfare, running off the wind.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX.
- THE PURSUIT
-
-
-Great was the rage of Colonel Witham and Squire Brackett when they
-discovered that the boys had escaped.
-
-"But it will be only so much the worse for them in the end," said the
-squire. "The fact of their running away is a confession of guilt, and
-will count hard against them when we once get them into court.
-
-"Colonel," he continued, gazing off on to the bay, "I believe that's them
-now, about two miles down along the shore. Cap'n Sam, you're a sure judge
-of a sail. Isn't that the _Spray_ beating down along the island, just off
-Billy Jones's beach?"
-
-Captain Sam took a most deliberate observation, turned a chew of tobacco
-twice in his cheek, and then remarked, laconically:
-
-"That's the _Spray_, sure's a gun. There is no mistaking the queer set of
-that gaff-topsail. It always was a bad fit, and it sticks out just as
-crooked like, two miles away, as it does close on. Y-a-a-s, there's the
-youngsters, and no mistake."
-
-Captain Sam did not see fit, however, though a constable, sworn to do his
-duty, as the others had suggested, to explain that he had seen the
-_Spray_ for the last hour or more, and that he had been conscious all
-along of the precious time they were losing. But a sharp observer might
-have detected him chuckling down deep in his throat as the colonel and
-the squire stormed and raged.
-
-"Well, what are we going to do?" cried Squire Brackett. "We're losing
-valuable time here. That little boat eats fast into the wind, they say,
-and we have got to get started pretty quick if we expect to overhaul her
-between now and dark.
-
-"Come! What do you say, Cap'n Sam? You know the boats in the harbour
-better than I do. Whose is the best one to go after them with?"
-
-"Wa-al," drawled Cap'n Sam, "if I do say it, I suppose the _Nancy Jane_
-is about as good as any in a long thrash to windward,--if she does belong
-to me. She's big and she's roomy, and there's a comfortable cabin in her
-for you and the colonel--for I suppose you'll want to go along."
-
-"Go along!" exclaimed Colonel Witham. "I should say we did--eh, squire?
-When these 'ere warrants are served I want to be there to see it done,
-and so does the squire, I reckon."
-
-"That's what I do," responded Squire Brackett. "We'll go along with you,
-sure enough."
-
-"Then you want to be getting some grub aboard right away," said Captain
-Sam, with a fine show of energy and haste, "while I break the news to my
-wife. She'll put me up a bite to last a day or two. You can't tell, you
-know, when you start off on one of these 'ere cruises, where you'll end
-up nor how long you'll be out,--so you want to come prepared to stay."
-
-And then, as the colonel and the squire hurried off down the road, he
-turned back for a moment to Mrs. Warren, who stood weeping, and said,
-with rough good-heartedness:
-
-"Now, don't you go to taking on, Mrs. Warren. There's some mistake here.
-Depend upon it. I've known them youngsters ever since they was no
-bigger'n short lobsters, and I know they ain't got nothing bad enough in
-'em to go to setting a hotel afire.
-
-"P'r'aps there might have been some little accident," he added, more
-conservatively. "Accidents always is happening, you know, and we're all
-of us liable to 'em. I've got to do my duty, Mrs. Warren, bein' as I am a
-constable of this town, sworn to obey my orders as I get 'em, signed and
-sealed from the court; but I'm goin' to stand by them boys, all the same.
-
-"So you just go and get your husband down here, quick as ever you
-can,--and we'll settle this 'ere difficulty pretty soon, I reckon.
-
-"And see here," he said, in conclusion, "if Mr. Warren gets here by
-to-morrow noon, that'll be time enough. And that gives you a chance to
-take the boat up to-day if you hurry, and bring Mr. Warren back with you.
-I'll sorter guarantee we don't fetch up here again till to-morrow
-afternoon, so don't you worry." And with a sly twinkle in his gray eyes
-the captain took his leave, and rolled along lazily toward his home.
-
-He was still eating a hearty breakfast when the colonel and the squire
-burst in upon him, hot with impatience. But the captain was provokingly
-deliberate, and finished a few more huge slices of bread and a biscuit or
-two, and two cups of coffee and a few of his wife's doughnuts, before he
-would budge an inch.
-
-"The boys can't escape," he said, by way of assurance to the impatient
-pair. "They can't go across the Atlantic in a little sardine-box like
-that, if it has got a mast and a bowsprit and a cabin to it. We're bound
-to fetch up with them quick enough. Have a cup of coffee, colonel!
-Squire, sit down and drink a cup of coffee! Mrs. Curtis knows how to make
-it, if anybody does."
-
-But the colonel and the squire refused impatiently, and by dint of
-nagging and voluble persuasion they got Captain Sam started, and the
-three went down to the shore.
-
-The news had spread abroad by this time,--thanks to the colonel and the
-squire,--and quite a number of villagers and cottagers had gathered to
-see them off.
-
-What they said was not complimentary to the worthy two, for the boys, in
-spite of their pranks, were universally liked, and the whole village had
-not done with praising them for their bravery at the fire.
-
-"Why don't you go and arrest Jack Harvey and his crew?" cried one of the
-villagers. "Looks mighty queer to have them clear out, every one of them,
-the morning of the blaze. Dan French, he saw them standing out by his
-point early that morning while the fire was blazing its hardest. Reckon
-that looks a sight queerer than it does to wait a whole day."
-
-"Well! Well! I guess they had a hand in it," cried Colonel Witham, as he
-stepped into the yacht's tender. "We'll hunt them up, too, later on. They
-are all mixed up in it, I've no doubt. Wait till we get the boys we are
-after now, and we'll make them confess the whole thing."
-
-It certainly did look suspicious, this flight from both camps and from
-the Warren cottage, just after the fire; and the villagers, however well
-disposed they might be in the boys' favour, or however much inclined to
-show leniency, could not explain it away.
-
-"They must have been up to some of their pranks," they said to one
-another, "and somehow got the hotel on fire. Colonel Witham must be
-right,--and, besides, Squire Brackett says he's got the proof. He must
-know something bad, or he would not be so certain."
-
-And to this conclusion, reluctant as they might be to come to it, there
-fitted, in startling corroboration, the coincidence of their being the
-first to discover the fire,--the first to give the alarm.
-
-And the villagers sympathized all the more, for this conclusion, with
-Mrs. Warren, as she took the boat for home that morning, bravely keeping
-back her tears, and receiving courageously their kindly assurances,
-though her heart was breaking.
-
-The _Nancy Jane_ was a heavy fishing-boat, of the centreboard type, big
-and beamy and shallow of build, able to "carry sail" in the worst of
-weather, but not so marvellously fast as one might have been led to
-believe by the recommendation of her owner. However, it was quite true
-that she could overhaul the _Spray_--only give her time enough, and
-provided no accident should happen.
-
-"She's got a bit of water in her," said Captain Sam. "So make yourselves
-comfortable, gentlemen, make yourselves comfortable, while I pump her
-out. She'll sail faster and point up better with the water out of her,
-and we'll all be more comfortable."
-
-And the colonel and the squire made themselves anything but comfortable,
-fretting and fuming at the delay.
-
-The captain took it leisurely, however, yanked the pump for ten minutes
-or more, to the accompaniment of short puffs of his pipe, and then
-pronounced her dry as "Dry Ledge at low tide."
-
-The colonel and the squire were neither of them sailors; so they could
-only wait on Captain Sam's pleasure. He finally made sail on the _Nancy
-Jane_, got up anchor, brought her "full and by," and they began the long
-zigzag chase down the bay in the teeth of the wind.
-
-The breeze freshened as they drew out of the shelter of the island shore,
-and down between the nearer islands Captain Sam could see the line of
-breeze show black upon the water.
-
-"Looks like a right smart blow by afternoon," he said.
-
-Colonel Witham looked up apprehensively.
-
-"It doesn't get dangerous, does it?" he asked.
-
-Captain Sam laughed dryly.
-
-"Guess you're not much on sailing, colonel, are you?" he asked, by way of
-reply. "Bless you! We don't get a dangerous blow in the bay once in a
-summer. No, you need not worry about that. There's no danger; but I
-wouldn't wonder if we had a bit of a chop-sea when the wind freshens."
-
-The colonel looked more at ease.
-
-"No," he said, "I'm no sailor. I manage to make the voyage down the river
-to the island, but that is as much seagoing as I have ever wanted, and
-this will be my first real ocean experience."
-
-"Not what you'd hardly call an ocean experience, either," said Captain
-Sam, grinning from ear to ear. "No," and he said the words over to
-himself as though they afforded him no end of amusement, "a slat to
-windward from the point to Gull Island ain't just what one would call an
-ocean experience, though it does shake a body up now and then in a blow."
-
-Dinner-hour came, and they had the _Spray_ well in sight, some miles
-ahead and pitching hard.
-
-"We'll eat a snack," said Captain Sam, who was never so happy and hearty
-as when he had his hand on the wheel of the _Nancy Jane_. "Colonel, have
-one of Mrs. Curtis's fresh doughnuts, just fried this morning, make you
-feel like a schoolboy."
-
-But the colonel, pale of face, declined.
-
-"I--I don't seem to feel very hungry just this moment," he stammered.
-"Late breakfast, you know. Er--by the way, is it going to blow much
-harder, do you think?"
-
-"No great shakes," responded the captain. "Guess there may be another
-capful or two of wind in them 'ere light clouds out yonder. It may
-freshen a bit, but that's all right. That's just what we want. The harder
-it blows the more the _Spray_ will pitch and get knocked back. It's the
-kind of a breeze that the _Nancy Jane_ likes, plenty of wind and a rough
-sea. The wind is bound to go down by sunset. It's the way these
-southerlies act."
-
-"By sundown!" groaned the colonel. "That's hours yet, and I'm sure we'll
-tip clear over if this boat leans much more."
-
-"Built to sail on her beam," explained Captain Sam. But at this moment
-the _Nancy Jane's_ bow snipped off the whitecap of a roller somewhat
-larger than its predecessor, and the spray flew in, drenching the colonel
-from head to foot.
-
-He yelled with terror. "We're upsetting, sure!" he cried. "Let's turn her
-about, Captain Sam, while there is time, and start again when it's
-lighter."
-
-"Nonsense!" said Captain Sam, with a grin. "You're a bit shaken up, but
-you'll feel better by and by. Just go into the cabin and lie down a
-little while. That may make you feel better."
-
-Perhaps it had been so many years since Captain Sam had experienced the
-awful misery of seasickness that he did not realize that the worst thing
-the colonel could do was to go down into the dark, damp, musty-smelling
-cabin of the old fishing-sloop. Perhaps he really did think that the
-colonel would feel better for it. But whatever his motive was, it had a
-sudden and deadly effect on Colonel Witham. Indeed, he had scarcely stuck
-his head into the stuffy cabin, had certainly no more than gotten fully
-within, before he staggered out again, with an agonized expression on his
-face, and sank, limp and shivering, to a seat, with his head over the
-rail.
-
-"Oh! Oh!" he groaned. "I think I'm going to die. I'm awfully sick; never
-felt so bad in all my life. Can't you put me ashore, Captain
-Sam--anywhere, anywhere? I don't care where, even if it is a deserted
-island. I'd wait there a week if I could only get on shore." And the
-colonel groaned and shivered.
-
-It was obvious there was no way of going ashore, however, as they were
-some miles distant from it. There was nothing for the unhappy colonel to
-do but to make the best--or the worst--of it.
-
-"Cheer up, colonel," said Captain Sam, pulling out the stub of a black
-clay pipe, lighting it, and puffing away enjoyably. "I've seen 'em just
-as sick as you are one hour, and chipper enough to eat raw pork and climb
-the mast the next. You will be feeling fine before long,--won't he,
-squire?"
-
-But as the squire evidently had his doubts in the matter, owing
-particularly to the fact that he was not too much at ease himself, his
-response was rather faint; and the captain was left to the entertainment
-of his own society. He enjoyed himself for the next hour or two with a
-sort of monologue, in which he proceeded to analyze audibly the relative
-chances of the little yacht ahead and the _Nancy Jane_.
-
-"They are doing surprisingly well for a small craft in windward work," he
-muttered. "They handle her well. Still, the _Nancy Jane_ is eating up on
-them. I say about sundown we shall be able to run alongside--Hulloa! If
-they are not changing their course to run down the Little Reach! Thought
-they knew better than that. Why, it's what they call a 'blind alley' in
-the cities. Well, I'm surprised. They know the bay pretty well, too; and,
-only to think, they go to running in to a thoroughfare which really is
-nothing more than a long cove. They'll fetch up at the end of it in an
-hour or two, and there's no way out."
-
-The captain's voice almost seemed to express disappointment that the
-chase should end so tamely.
-
-"Colonel," he cried. "Squire. It will be all over in a few hours now.
-They're running into a trap."
-
-But the colonel and the squire were beyond interest in the pursuit.
-
-The yacht _Spray_ had, indeed, started its sheets, and now, with the wind
-on its beam, was running off toward a group of small islands, or ledges,
-on a course nearly at right angles with that which it had been taking.
-
-The boys had watched the _Nancy Jane_ anxiously for the last few hours.
-
-"They are steadily coming up on us," George Warren had said. "Too bad we
-could not have got a few hours more start. We might have given them the
-slip then when night shut down."
-
-"But we are not sure that they are after us, are we?" asked young Joe.
-
-"No, but it looks pretty certain," replied his brother George. "There's
-nothing particular to start the _Nancy Jane_ down here, and she is
-Captain Sam's boat and he is the town constable."
-
-"Then what had we better do?" queried Tom. "There is not much use running
-away, if we are sure to be caught inside of a few hours. We'd a sight
-better turn about and start back, as though we had finished our sail.
-That would look less like running away."
-
-It was noticeable that, having once set out to escape, they accepted the
-situation now fully, without more pretence.
-
-"We have got to decide before long," said Henry Burns. "The _Nancy Jane_
-is overhauling us fast."
-
-"George," said Arthur Warren, "I know one chance, if you want to try it,
-and if you are willing to risk the _Spray_,--and I think it would save
-us."
-
-"What is it, Arthur?" asked George. "If it is any good, I'm for trying
-it. I can't see as we have anything great to risk, with a twenty-five
-thousand dollar fire charged to us."
-
-"What is it, Arthur?" exclaimed the others, excitedly. It did not seem
-possible there could be any chance of escape open, but they jumped
-eagerly at anything that offered a faint hope.
-
-"Well," said Arthur, in his deliberate manner, "you know the small
-opening between Spring and Heron Islands at the foot of Little Reach?
-Nobody ever ran a sailboat through there because it's choked up with
-ledges. But you remember when the mackerel struck in to the Reach there
-last August, we all went down in the _Spray_ for a week's fishing. Well,
-one day Joe and I took the tender and worked our way clear through
-between Spring and Heron Islands to the bay outside. Now the _Spray_,
-with the centreboard up, does not draw very much more water than the
-tender, and by dropping the sails and all poling through, I think we can
-work her in clear to the other side."
-
-"We'll try it," said George Warren. "It is the only chance we have, so
-we've really no choice."
-
-And he put the tiller up and threw the _Spray_ off the wind, while Arthur
-and Joe started the sheets. It was this sudden manoeuvre which had
-startled Captain Sam.
-
-They soon passed the entrance to Little Reach, two barren ledges shelving
-down into the water, and were well down the Reach when Captain Sam and
-the _Nancy Jane_ headed into it.
-
-"There they go," cried Captain Sam, "like an ostrich sticking its head
-into the sand. Well, what can you expect of boys, anyway? We'll overhaul
-them faster than ever now, because this big mainsail draws two to their
-one this way of the wind, and the jibs aren't doing anything to speak of,
-the wind varies so in here."
-
-It was smooth water inside Little Reach, and, as there was now scarcely
-any motion to the _Nancy Jane_ as she skimmed along by the quiet shores,
-the colonel and the squire began to revive a little, sufficient at least
-to regain their interest in the pursuit.
-
-They were about a mile and a half down the Reach, and the _Spray_, not
-quite half a mile ahead, was apparently at the end of her cruise.
-
-"They are at the end now," cried Captain Sam, whose blood was up when it
-came to a race between the _Nancy Jane_ and another, though smaller,
-craft. "We've got 'em like mice in a box."
-
-"By George! look there, colonel--look, squire!" he exclaimed, excitedly.
-"They have given it up. There go the sails. It's all over. They may scoot
-ashore, but the island on either side is nothing more than a rock. Well,
-I vow! But I didn't think they would quit so tamely after a game race."
-
-"We'll make 'em smart for what we have suffered to-day, eh, colonel?"
-growled the squire.
-
-The colonel grunted assent. He was not yet sufficiently himself to be
-very aggressive.
-
-"What on earth are they doing?" said Captain Sam, a few moments later.
-"Looks as though they were trying to hide away among the rocks, like a
-mink in a hole. They'll have the _Spray_ aground if they jam her in among
-those ledges."
-
-The _Spray_, however, slipped in among the rocks, and was shut out from
-the view of the pursuers.
-
-"Let 'em hide," said Captain Sam, contemptuously. "That is a boyish
-trick. We'll be up with them now in fifteen minutes."
-
-But the _Spray_, hidden from view of Captain Sam and the colonel and the
-squire, was not running itself upon the rocks nor poking its nose,
-ostrich-like, among the ledges.
-
-The instant the sails were dropped young Joe sprang out on the bowsprit
-and lay flat, holding a pole, with which he took soundings as the others
-pushed and poled with the sweeps of the yacht.
-
-They ran the bow gently on to rocks a dozen times, but a warning yell
-from Joe stopped them, and they turned and twisted and wormed and worried
-their way in among the ledges, turning about where a larger craft would
-have had no room to turn, and slipping over reefs that just grazed the
-bottom of the little _Spray_, and which with two inches lower tide would
-have held them fast.
-
-"It's just the right depth of water," said Arthur, exultantly. "Luck is
-with us this time, for certain. An hour later and we could not have done
-it. But we're going through. There is only the bar ahead now. If we clear
-that we are free of everything."
-
-Just ahead, where two thin spits of sand ran off on either end of the two
-islands into shoal water, was a narrow, shallow passage, where the water
-was so clear that it looked scarcely more than a few inches in depth, as
-it rippled over the bar.
-
-"All out!" cried Arthur, as the _Spray_ grated gently on the bottom, "We
-will lighten her all we can," and they sprang overboard into water
-scarcely above their knees.
-
-"Now, Joe," said Arthur, "you and Henry take the head-line out over the
-bows and go ahead and pull for all you are worth. George and I will get
-alongside and push, and keep her in the channel, and Tom and Bob can get
-aft and push. We have got to rush her over that shallow place, and we
-must not let her stop, for if she once hangs in the centre we cannot
-budge her. The _Spray_ is not a ninety-footer, but she's got enough pig
-iron in her for ballast to hold her high and dry if she once sticks."
-
-The boys seized hold quickly, and the _Spray_, lightened of her load,
-slid along, at first sluggishly, and then gathering speed, as the twelve
-strong, brown, boyish arms pulled and tugged and pushed.
-
-"Jump her, now, boys! Jump her!" cried Arthur, as they neared the shoal.
-"We're doing it. Don't let her stop, now! Oh, she mustn't stop! We've got
-to put her over or die."
-
-And the little _Spray_ seemed to feel the thrill and joy of freedom
-throughout its timbers; for at the words it surged forward with a rush,
-as though it would take the bar at a flying leap. The white sands reached
-up from the bottom, and the whole bar seemed to be rising up to hold the
-boat prisoner, as the water shoaled. But the little _Spray_ kept on.
-
-It hung for one brief, breathless moment almost balanced on the middle of
-the bar, and the white sands thought they had it fast; but the next
-moment it slid gently from their grasp, gave a sort of spring as it felt
-itself slipping free, and the next moment rode easily in clear water,
-just over the bar.
-
-The next instant six exultant boys, their faces blazing with excitement
-and exertion, had scrambled aboard, falling over one another in their
-eagerness to seize the halyards.
-
-They hoisted the sails on the _Spray_ again in a way that would have made
-Captain Sam himself sing their praises, and now, with evening coming on,
-there was just enough breeze left in among the rocks to waft them gently
-along out of the inlet.
-
-They watched breathlessly, as they neared the entrance to the outer bay,
-for a glimpse of the _Nancy Jane_; but the _Nancy Jane_, good boat though
-she was, was just a moment too late. Scarcely had they turned the little
-bluff and were hidden behind it, on their way whither they might choose,
-when the _Nancy Jane_ rounded to at the entrance to the channel.
-
-"It's all done," Captain Sam had exclaimed, as he threw the wheel of the
-_Nancy Jane_ over and came up into the wind, but when he looked to see
-the _Spray_, she was not there. Not so much as a scrap of a sail nor the
-merest fragment of a hull, absolutely nothing.
-
-Captain Sam was so dumfounded he could only gasp and stare vacantly at
-the place where, by all rights, the _Spray_ ought to be.
-
-The colonel and the squire, who had no preconceived ideas about the
-passage between the islands, solved the problem at once; but not so the
-captain.
-
-"They've gone through there, you idiot," exclaimed the squire, growing
-red in the face. "Where else can they be? They can't fly, can they?"
-
-The captain groaned, as one whose pride had been cruelly smitten.
-
-"To think," he muttered, "that I've sailed these waters, man and boy, for
-forty years, only to be fooled by a parcel of schoolboys from the city.
-Why, every boy in Southport knows you can't run a sailboat through
-between Heron and Spring Islands. There ain't enough water there at high
-tide to drown a sheep."
-
-"Well, it seems they got through easy enough," answered the colonel.
-
-"That's it! That's it!" responded the captain, warmly. "They do say as
-how fools rush in where angels don't durst to go, and sometimes the fools
-blunder through all right. And here's these boys gone and done what I'd a
-sworn a million times couldn't be done."
-
-"Yes, and we probably can get through, too, if we only go ahead and try,
-instead of lying here like jellyfish," exclaimed the squire. "Cap'n Sam,
-seems as though you weren't so dreadful anxious to catch up with them
-youngsters as you might be. P'r'aps you might have told Mrs. Warren back
-there a few things that might explain this 'ere delay."
-
-"Yes, and if them boys can go through there, I, for one, don't see what's
-to hinder us," chimed in the colonel. "Cap'n Sam, I don't see what we're
-a-hanging back for."
-
-And so, his pride humbled, and too mortified to stand by his own better
-judgment, Captain Sam reluctantly yielded to their importunities, and
-pointed the nose of the _Nancy Jane_ in toward the opening amid the
-rocks.
-
-"It can't be done," he said, doggedly, "but if you say that I am not
-trying to do my duty as a sworn officer of the town, I'll just show you.
-Only don't blame me if we're hung up here hard and fast for twelve
-hours."
-
-The _Nancy Jane_, like a horse that is being driven into danger that it
-somehow apprehends, seemed almost intelligent in its reluctance to enter
-the stretch of reef-strewn water. It bumped and scraped its way from one
-rock to another, balked at this ledge and that, and, finally, after an
-extra amount of pushing and pulling by the three men, jammed itself fast
-on a reef studded with barnacles and snail-shells, and refused to budge
-one way or another. In vain they tried to bulldoze and cajole, to push
-and to pull, to plead with and to denounce the obstinate _Nancy Jane_.
-Stolid and deaf alike to entreaty and expostulation, the boat squatted
-down upon the reef like an ugly fat duck, comfortably disposed for the
-night and refusing to be disturbed.
-
-"I told you so!" roared the captain, now aroused to his rights as
-skipper, and finding himself thus exasperatingly vindicated as to the
-impassability of the channel. "We're hung up fast for the night, for the
-next twelve hours, till next flood. Then, if Lem Cobb is living in his
-fishing-shack on Spring Island, and will lend us a hand and a few pieces
-of joist to pry with, mebbe we'll get off, and mebbe we won't."
-
-The colonel and the squire boiled inwardly; but as it was apparent they
-had only themselves to blame, they felt it useless to engage in
-discussion with the indignant captain. So they wisely remained silent,
-and left him to consume his wrath alone.
-
-"Well," he said, finally, "I for one am curious to see just where those
-young rascals are; and if you're of the same mind you can satisfy your
-curiosity by coming ashore with me." And the captain waded off to the
-rocks of Spring Island and clambered up the bank, closely followed by the
-colonel and the squire.
-
-"There they go, slipping along as slick as eels," exclaimed the captain,
-as he and his panting companions achieved the ascent of the highest bit
-of rock on Spring Island and looked down the bay. "They're off down among
-the islands," he continued, "and here we stand like natural-born idiots
-and bite our fingers. If ever I get into a mess like this again, I'll
-resign my office of constable and hire out to Noddy Perkins for a
-clam-digger." But the colonel and the squire, too angry and chagrined for
-words, stayed not to listen to the captain's denunciation.
-
-They turned and walked rapidly in the direction of the fishing-shack, the
-only shelter the island afforded; while the captain, standing out in
-relief upon the rock, like some disappointed Napoleon, was the last
-solitary object that the boys saw as, looking astern from the _Spray_,
-the little island faded from their view into the twilight.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX.
- AMONG THE ISLANDS
-
-
-The yacht _Spray_, with six jubilant boys aboard, sailed slowly away from
-Heron and Spring Islands, shaping its course for a group of outer islands
-of some considerable size, about two miles away. It was nearly seven
-o'clock, but the southerly breeze had not wholly died with the going down
-of the sun, and the tide, which had just begun to ebb, was favourable.
-
-"I think we can get across to-night," said George Warren. "This wind is
-going to hold for some hours yet and maybe all night; and we know our way
-into Cold Harbour at any hour of the twenty-four. I don't think Captain
-Sam will start to run out of the Little Reach at all to-night, for when
-the tide drops there are some bad ledges all along that thoroughfare,
-and, besides, he won't want to run the risk of drifting out here in the
-bay, in case the wind should drop. We shall have twelve hours start of
-him, anyway, and once among the islands we can keep out of sight for
-days."
-
-"I'd have given something to see the colonel and the squire when they
-found we had slipped away from them at the very moment they thought they
-had us," said young Joe. "Didn't they look funny, standing up there on
-the rock, watching us sail away?"
-
-"Captain Sam has my sympathy," said Henry Burns, dryly, and the very
-thought of the disappointed trio arguing it out together sent the boys
-into fits of laughter. They fairly rolled over on the seats and hugged
-one another.
-
-"It's the richest joke of the season," said young Joe.
-
-And so, for the time being, in their elation, the consciousness that they
-were runaways, fleeing from possible arrest, was forgotten. The stars
-came out, and a lighthouse far and near gave them their course. The water
-gleamed with phosphorescence, and the yacht _Spray_ left a wake of
-gleaming silver and gold and flashing jewels. By and by the moon came up
-out of the sea and threw a radiant path across the waters, and the
-islands ahead stood out in huge black shadow.
-
-It was glorious sailing, with the soft summer night air blowing in their
-faces; and they sang as they sailed, and yo-hoed all the sea choruses
-they knew, and felt so free and irresponsible that the yacht _Spray_, as
-though it absorbed some of their spirit, rolled along in a merry,
-swinging fashion, rocking gently from billow to billow, dipping and
-tossing in time to the music.
-
-The still shores of Eagle Island rang with their songs as they rounded to
-in Cold Harbour somewhere near midnight, and came to anchor close to
-shore in the deep water, within the shadow of the hemlocks that rose up,
-tall and black, almost from the water's edge, where the tide swashed
-gently against the rocks. High up in the thick branches of the great
-trees some fish-hawks, startled by the unwonted noise, rose up from their
-nests and uttered shrill, piercing screams of fright. And this was their
-only welcome, for on all the island there was no other sign of life.
-
-"It's fairly certain they won't pursue us to-night," said George. "But it
-won't do to be caught napping. We've got to set watch regularly every
-night now, and we might as well begin to-night. Somebody's got to walk
-out on the point of rocks yonder and look out for sails. Two will be
-enough till morning. We will split the time from now till six into two
-three-hour watches."
-
-"I'll begin it," said Bob.
-
-"My next," said Tom, not to be outdone by his chum.
-
-Bob rowed ashore in the little tender, and set off at once for a point of
-rocks some half-mile distant, which commanded a view of the bay. The
-others were sound asleep by the time he was half-way there.
-
-When Tom awoke, about seven hours later, it was broad daylight and the
-sun was streaming into the hatchway. He scrambled out in a hurry as Bob's
-voice hailed him from the deck.
-
-"Hulloa! Hulloa!" came the voice. "Are you fellows going to sleep all
-day?"
-
-"Why didn't you come back and rouse me to take my turn?" asked Tom,
-reproachfully.
-
-"Well, I wasn't sleepy," answered Bob, "and it grew light soon, and I got
-to watching a mink fishing for his family, and carrying cunners to them
-along the rocks, and I thought I'd let you sleep. It's tough to wake up,
-you know, when one has just dropped off. Come on, we'll take a swim now.
-The water is fine."
-
-Tom bared a muscular young form, and he and Bob dived off the rail of the
-_Spray_, making such a splashing and commotion in the water and bellowing
-so like young sea-lions, that the others gave up trying to turn over for
-another nap, and came sprawling out of the cabin, diving overboard, one
-after another, to join them. Then they had a race ashore, which was won
-by Tom, with Bob and Henry Burns a close second; after which they lay on
-the beach sunning themselves, and then swam back to the yacht for
-breakfast.
-
-"There's not a sail in sight, and the whole bay is as smooth as glass,"
-Bob had announced on his arrival; and, as not a breath of wind was yet
-stirring, there was no need of setting watch for the present. So they all
-sat down to hot coffee and griddle-cakes, and ate like wolves.
-
-After breakfast they went ashore to explore the island, roaming about
-like young savages, leaving their clothing piled in a heap in the tender.
-Every now and then, as the humour seized them, they raced down to the
-shore, wherever they were, ran along on the fine white beaches, and
-cooled themselves in the clear, still water.
-
-They had it all to themselves, for nobody lived on this small island, the
-fishermen on the mainland or neighbouring larger islands coming over in
-the late summer only, to cut the grass and make the hay.
-
-Then they went back to the tender and dressed, and Henry Burns, daunted
-at nothing, tried to climb one of the giant hemlocks to a fish-hawk's
-nest, but gave it up when the birds screamed in his ears and beat at him
-with their powerful wings.
-
-They had dug some clams at the low tide in the forenoon and put them
-away, covered with wet seaweed. Now, shortly after their noon luncheon,
-as the tide flooded, they got out the lines from a locker in the _Spray_
-and tried the fishing in Cold Harbour. There were plenty of small harbour
-fish, flounders out in the middle where the water was muddy, and cunners
-and small rock-cod in among the ledges. They soon caught a basket of
-these, cleaned them, and put them away, covered with seaweed, like the
-clams.
-
-Then, toward the end of the afternoon, as the bay was still calm, they
-set out along the shore and gathered driftwood, which they threw in a
-great pile on a flat, clean ledge. As supper-time came, they set this
-heap afire and let it burn for an hour or two, until the great flat ledge
-was at a white heat. Then they made a broom of some branches of hemlock,
-and swept the ledge clean of ashes, and brought the clams and poured them
-out on the ledge, covering them all with clean, damp seaweed till there
-rose clouds of steam, and, after a time, an appetizing odour.
-
-The fish they cooked in much the same way, wrapping them in big green
-leaves and setting them upon the hot stones to bake.
-
-Then, as evening came on, they built the fire anew close by, for a fire
-is the cheeriest of companions in a strange place, and sat feasting on
-steamed clams and fish, with a great pot of coffee filling all the air
-with a most delicious fragrance. They lolled about the fire and ate, till
-even slim Henry Burns said he felt like an alderman. They told stories by
-the firelight, and stretched out at ease till sleep nearly overtook them
-as they lay there; for the day had been brimful of exertion. By and by,
-long after the stars were out, and a gentle breeze from the south, coming
-up softly from among the islands, just rippled the water, they rowed out
-to the _Spray_, Tom returning ashore again to begin the night's watch.
-
-Then, later in the night, came George Warren's turn to watch, and he
-stayed it out till morning, for, with all the fun of the day, there was
-something that would keep turning over and over in his brain, and which
-took away the sleepy feeling and left in its stead a feeling of
-unhappiness; a sense of something wrong. His father would have said it
-was conscience, but George wrestled long and hard through the morning
-hours to avoid recognizing it as that, for conscience would say, if
-recognized, that it was all wrong, what they were doing,--and George
-Warren wanted to think he was having a good time.
-
-These moody thoughts began to dissipate, however, with the coming of the
-warm golden glow in the east; and when the sun was at length up, and the
-boys had had their morning swim, and sat about a fire awaiting breakfast,
-George Warren seemed himself again.
-
-But the breakfast was rudely interrupted by a series of whoops from young
-Joe, who had taken his brother's place on guard at the end of the point
-of rocks, and who now came running down alongshore, crying out that there
-was a sail that looked like the _Nancy Jane_ coming out from around the
-islands across the bay, and they all raced back to have a look at it.
-
-"It's the _Nancy Jane_, sure enough," said Henry Burns. "It's her big
-mainsail, with the high peak. She's making slow headway, though, with
-this breath of wind. However, we shall have to be off at once, if we are
-going to try to escape."
-
-It was noticeable that Henry Burns said "if."
-
-However, as no one felt like proposing to give up, they lost no time in
-getting aboard the _Spray_, and had sail on and the anchor up in what
-Captain Sam would have called a jiffy. Heading out into the open bay that
-lay between them and the outer islands, they bade good-bye to Cold
-Harbour and began a long, slow beat to windward, in the light breeze.
-
-"There's more wind coming, down between the islands," said Bob. "There's
-a line of breeze about two miles to the southward, and we shall catch it
-a good half-hour before the _Nancy Jane_."
-
-"That's so; it will give us a fine start," said Arthur.
-
-But, somehow, no one seemed wildly enthusiastic over their prospects.
-However, as they caught the fresher breeze, and the little _Spray_ stood
-stiffly up into it and ate away to windward, their spirits rose. Then, as
-the islands came plainly into view and they drew nearer and nearer to the
-first, big Saddle Island, with its low range of little hills dropping
-down in the centre in the shape of a horse's back, the excitement became
-intense; for the _Nancy Jane_ had not rounded the point of Eagle Island,
-and it seemed as though they might be out of sight behind Saddle Island
-before they could be seen by those aboard the pursuing yacht.
-
-"Go it, old _Spray_! Good little boat!" cried young Joe, as the yacht
-glided swiftly up into the shadow of the island. "We're going to make it,
-and, once behind old Saddle, who's to know which way we have gone?"
-
-"Five minutes more of this sailing, and we shall fool Captain Sam once
-more," said Bob.
-
-The five minutes were nearly up. They had but another leg to run to round
-the head of Saddle Island. They stood out till they had one and all
-declared that they could clear it on the next tack; they were all ready
-to go about. George Warren stood with one hand on the tiller and the
-other ready to grasp the main-sheet. Joe and Arthur Warren were waiting
-impatiently to trim the jib-sheets, and then--and then George Warren took
-their breaths away.
-
-All at once he jammed the tiller over, threw the _Spray_ clear off the
-wind, let the main-sheet run, and before they scarcely knew what had
-happened, instead of standing in to round the head of Saddle Island, the
-little _Spray_ was running dead before the wind and heading squarely back
-for the point around which the _Nancy Jane_ must soon come in sight.
-
-It was so quickly done that at first they thought there was some mistake,
-and Arthur and Joe and Bob rushed to the stern to help bring her around
-again; but George Warren, with a firm, set look on his face, stood them
-off.
-
-"Oh, I say, George, you're not going to give it up now, are you?" cried
-young Joe, who had been in high spirits not a moment before.
-
-"That's what," responded his brother, quietly. "I've thought it all out
-at last, and I've come to the conclusion we are doing the cowardly thing
-to run away. We have got to face the thing, and we may as well do it
-first as last. Besides, we didn't set out to run away when we started."
-
-"That's a fact," said Tom. "We have sort of drifted into this running
-away business without realizing what we were doing. Now the best thing we
-can do is to go back and have it out with Colonel Witham."
-
-"It's not Colonel Witham that I hate to face," said George. "It's father
-and mother. And the part they'll feel worst about is that we did not stay
-and talk it over with them."
-
-"That's so," added Arthur. "What a lot of loons we were to come down
-here."
-
-"Shall I pull the centreboard up?" asked Henry Burns.
-
-"You bet!" answered George Warren. "And we'll take a leaf out of your
-book, Henry, and we won't worry over what cannot be helped. We're doing
-the right thing now, anyway, so there's that much to feel good about."
-
-"There's the _Nancy Jane_," said Henry Burns.
-
-Sure enough, Captain Sam's pride was just turning the point, and Captain
-Sam, looking at the _Spray_ coming down free and pointing its nose right
-at him, could hardly believe his eyes.
-
-"It's them, all right," he assured the squire and the colonel. "They are
-coming back; tired of being runaways, I guess. Well, I thought they would
-get sick of it after a night or two away from home. They ain't the kind
-of boys to enjoy running away."
-
-"Humph!" snorted the colonel.
-
-"They're a lot of young scamps and scapegraces," snarled the squire.
-
-Getting aground and spending a night in a bed that the colonel swore was
-stuffed with pig iron and seaweed had not improved their tempers.
-
-"Well, anyhow," responded Captain Sam, "they are coming back of their own
-accord, and that is something in their favour."
-
-The colonel and the squire only sneered.
-
-Meanwhile the little _Spray_ came running down the wind in merry style,
-and the end of the next hour found her swinging up into the wind, with
-sails flapping, while the _Nancy Jane_ ran alongside.
-
-The colonel and the squire were at last avenged.
-
-Full of wrath was the one, and brimming with wrathful satisfaction was
-the other.
-
-"So we have caught you at last, have we?" exclaimed Squire Brackett.
-
-"We seem to have sort of caught ourselves, squire," answered George
-Warren.
-
-"Well, never mind about being smart," said the colonel, hotly. "You are
-under arrest for burning my hotel down. Perhaps that will take some of
-the smartness out of you."
-
-"Under arrest!" George Warren's face paled. "It isn't right," he added.
-"We didn't do it nor have any hand in it."
-
-"Guess you won't attempt to deny that you were in the billiard-room, will
-you?" broke in Squire Brackett. "Because, bein' as I saw you all in
-there, it might not do you any good to swear as how you wasn't."
-
-"Don't you dare accuse us of trying--" But young Joe got no further.
-
-"Be quiet, Joe," said George Warren, calmly. And then, turning to the
-colonel, he said:
-
-"We are not going to deny anything, Colonel Witham. That is why we are
-coming back of our own accord. We have got nothing to conceal, and we are
-going to tell everything just as it happened."
-
-"That is just about what we are arresting you for," said the squire,
-sneeringly. "We calculate you'll have to tell everything."
-
-"Hold on there a minute, squire," cried Captain Sam. "Let's not be too
-hard on these boys. There may be some mistake, as they say. I hold these
-'ere warrants, and I don't see as there is any necessity of serving of
-'em just yet. If these boys will give me their word to go along straight
-as they can sail for Mayville, and agree to appear when wanted before
-Judge Ellis, why, I guess maybe the warrants will keep till--say, just as
-we go in the door. Or perhaps Judge Ellis will consent that they come
-before him of their own accord, without serving these warrants at all,
-considering as they are only boys."
-
-It is needless to say that Captain Sam's legal experience was of the most
-limited sort.
-
-"Bully for you, Captain Sam!" cried Bob. "You're a brick,--and you won't
-regret it." And a yell of thanks from the others gave Captain Sam a warm
-glow under his blue shirt.
-
-The squire and the colonel were loud and furious in their denunciation of
-such a course.
-
-"It's against the law," cried the colonel; and he vowed he would make it
-hot for Captain Sam when Judge Ellis found his orders were not obeyed.
-But Captain Sam knew better than they of the warm corner in the judge's
-heart, and knew, moreover, that his old friend of years, the judge, would
-never reprimand him for a breach of duty of this sort. So he shut his
-lips firmly and let the squire and the colonel boil away as best they
-might between themselves.
-
-The captain shortened sail on the _Nancy Jane_, so that the two boats
-kept along near together, heading back for Southport.
-
-It was a sorry crew aboard the _Spray_ as the little craft silently
-followed in the wake of the _Nancy Jane_. They might have been in
-dreamland as they sailed all that day, for scarcely a word was spoken;
-and when night dropped down and the boys, all but George Warren, piled
-into the cabin to sleep, it was scarcely more quiet than by day.
-
-Very late that night, as the _Spray_ and the _Nancy Jane_ ran into
-Southport harbour and brought up for a few moments alongside the wharf,
-to let a serious-looking man, and a tearful woman aboard, the boys were
-still sleeping soundly; and George Warren and his father and mother sat
-alone together till the sun rose, while the _Spray_, following the _Nancy
-Jane_, ran along up the island and then stood across to Mayville, where
-Judge Ellis would hold his court that morning.
-
-"I don't need you to make any denial about the fire," Mr. Warren had
-said, when he stepped aboard the _Spray_ and put his hand on his eldest
-son's shoulder. "I know you boys would not do such a thing as that; but I
-fear your recklessness has gotten you into serious trouble, and Colonel
-Witham seems inclined to press the matter to the extreme. So I want to
-hear everything from beginning to end."
-
-And George Warren told him all.
-
-
-There was another boat coming sluggishly up the bay that night, far
-astern of the _Spray_, a handsome big sloop, beautifully modelled and
-with finely tapered, shining yellow spars. But she carried little sail,
-was reefed, in fact, though the breeze was very light; and she moved
-through the water so like a dead thing, or like a creature crippled by a
-wound, that a sailor would have seen at once that there had been some
-mishap aboard, some injury to hull or spars that held her back.
-
-The youth at the wheel of this strange, big sloop bore a striking
-resemblance to Jack Harvey, though the yacht was not the _Surprise_, but
-bigger and far more elegant. And the crew--yes, they were surely Harvey's
-crew--George and Allan and Tim and Joe,--and they addressed the boy at
-the wheel as "Jack."
-
-And the _Surprise_--where was she?
-
-Four days had passed since, on that morning following the fire, the
-_Surprise_ had turned the point of the island that marked an entrance to
-the thoroughfare where, a half-mile to leeward, a big black sloop was
-coming fast up the wind.
-
-"There he is!" Harvey had cried. "Come, boys, get into shape now; but
-stay below till I give the word,--all but you, Joe,--and when I yell you
-pile out and get aboard that sloop the quickest you ever did anything in
-all your lives. He will fight, and we have got to act quick."
-
-If the thick-set, ill-visaged man who sat at the wheel of the black sloop
-felt any concern at the sudden appearance of this new craft, dead ahead
-and coming down the narrow thoroughfare toward him, his alarm must have
-abated as on its near approach the apparent number of its occupants
-became disclosed.
-
-"She looks harmless enough," he muttered, between his teeth. "Pshaw!
-There's only a couple of boys aboard. But it did give me a start for a
-moment." And he slapped a hand at his jacket pocket.
-
-"He's taking long chances, if he did but know it," said Harvey, as the
-big sloop came about after a tack close in shore. "That boat cannot more
-than clear those ledges by an inch, if it does that. It's a regular stone
-field where he's sailing. The channel here winds like a cow-path in a
-pasture. However, if he can clear there, we can, so we'll begin to crowd
-him."
-
-It was no easy matter now to close in on a boat beating across the
-thoroughfare and not arouse suspicion. To follow him, tack by tack, and
-point so as to head him off every time he went about, must inevitably put
-him on his guard long before the time came to strike, and might even
-allow him, by clever sailing, to slip by.
-
-With his cap pulled down over his eyes, so that the stranger could not by
-any chance identify him as the youth he had knocked down in the pasture
-the night of the fire, and his head bent low, Jack Harvey watched the
-man's every move, and calculated every inch of the way.
-
-"Three more tacks will bring him up to us," he said. "And there's shoal
-water to starboard and some ledges just beyond them. He's got to meet us
-about in that spot," and Harvey laid his own course according to his
-calculation and held to it steadily.
-
-It must have served to allay the man's suspicions, if he still had any,
-but now, as he came about on the third tack, he viewed the oncoming
-_Surprise_ with anger.
-
-"Keep away, there!" he cried, in a fierce, violent tone. "Keep off! Can't
-you see you're going to foul me if you don't keep off?"
-
-"Ready to jump, now, Joe," said Harvey, in a low voice. "I'm going to run
-him down. It's the only way to be sure, though it may wreck us.
-
-"Fellows," he called, softly, to the boys below, "all ready, now. You
-know what you've got to do the moment she strikes."
-
-The man at the wheel had risen to his feet, and he shook one fist
-threateningly, while his other hand clutched the wheel, throwing his
-sloop off as far as he could.
-
-"Curse you!" he cried. "You're running me down. Keep off, I say, or I'll
-blow your stupid head off your shoulders."
-
-The next moment Harvey, with a sudden turn of the tiller, threw the
-_Surprise_ full tilt at the oncoming sloop. There was a sharp crash of
-splintering wood, the tearing of head-sails, and a shock that shook the
-yachts from keel to topmast, as the _Surprise_ rammed the big black sloop
-just by the foremast stays, snapping her own bowsprit short off and
-making an ugly hole in her own planking.
-
-Leaping just as the boats crashed, and holding a coil of rope on his arm,
-Joe Hinman landed on the top of the big sloop's cabin in the very midst
-of the confusion. A moment more and he had made a few quick turns about
-the mast, lashing the two yachts fast together at the moment when Harvey,
-followed by the rest of his crew, who came swarming out of the cabin,
-sprang aboard the strange sloop.
-
-"I'll shoot the first boy that steps a foot on this boat," cried the man;
-but the words were scarce out of his mouth before they were upon him. He
-had been in danger before and knew how to make the most of his chances,
-and he stood, desperate but cool, as they made their rush.
-
-There was a shot, and Jack Harvey, who was leading, gave a cry of pain,
-for a bullet just grazed his left shoulder. He stumbled and fell full at
-the feet of the man as another shot was fired and young Tim thought his
-right hand was gone.
-
-The next moment Harvey had the man by the legs, while Allan Harding and
-George Baker and Joe made a rush for him. The man fell heavily, Joe
-Hinman clinging with both hands to one wrist, so that he could not fire
-again. They rolled over and over in the cockpit for a moment, the boys
-and he. Twice the man got to his knees and twice they dragged him down
-again; till, at length, young Tim, whose hand was not shot away, but only
-slightly wounded, managed to run in and deal the man a blow with the end
-of an oar, which stunned him for a moment, so that they got him flat and
-had bound the loose end of a halyard about him before he came fully to
-his senses. Then, as they proceeded to complete the job and tie him fast,
-hand and foot, he recognized Harvey for the first time.
-
-"Hulloa!" he exclaimed. "Why, where have I seen you before? You're not
-the chap in the pasture, are you?"
-
-"The same," said Harvey.
-
-"Well, the game's up," said the man, coolly. "'Twas a mistake, and I knew
-it the moment after I had done it. I was a fool to hit you that night.
-It's my temper, that's what has beat me. It gets away from me sometimes.
-I dare say if I had gone along about my business you wouldn't have
-followed me, eh?"
-
-"Probably not," answered Harvey. "That is why I am glad you knocked me
-down," and then, taking a quick glance over the side of the boat, he
-cried:
-
-"Joe! Allan! George! Out with the sweeps, lively! We're going aground."
-
-Harvey sprang to the wheel, hauling in on the main-sheet as he did so.
-
-But it was too late. There was a gentle shock that shook the sloop from
-end to end, a dull, grating sound, and the next moment the big sloop
-rested firmly on a jagged rock of the reach, listing as she hung, and
-wrenching the bilge so that she made water rapidly.
-
-"Whew!" cried Harvey. "Here's a mess. We're wrecked, and badly, too. How
-in the world are we ever going to get out of this?"
-
-It was, indeed, a serious problem. The _Surprise_, her bow planks ripped
-open by the collision, had sunk within a few minutes, and now lay on
-bottom, with her deck covered. The big sloop, hard aground and full of
-iron ballast, was not a thing to be moved easily.
-
-"This is a scrape and no mistake," said Harvey. "Here we are, where a
-boat may pick us up in a day or a week, but more likely not for a week.
-We've got our man, but the reefs have got us. Well, we have got to figure
-out some way to get out of it ourselves."
-
-But first they took account of their wounds, which had, now that the
-excitement was over, begun to sting and smart. They found that neither
-Harvey's nor Tim's wound was at all serious, mere surface flesh-wounds.
-The back of young Tim's hand was bare of skin for the length of three
-inches across, and Harvey's shoulder bled badly till it was cleansed and
-bandaged, but it was the price of victory, and they accounted it cheap.
-All of them had honourable scars of battle, bruises and scratches without
-number, and every one of them was proud of his, and wouldn't have had one
-less for the world.
-
-Taking their prisoner, securely bound, they all rowed ashore to survey
-their surroundings, build a fire and get breakfast, and make plans for
-getting away.
-
-"There's only one thing to be done," said Harvey, after they had finished
-breakfast and sat by the shore, surveying the wrecks of the yachts. "The
-_Surprise_ is done for. We can't raise her. But the big sloop is not so
-badly hurt but what we can repair her, if we can only float her. The
-first thing we have got to do, when the tide goes out, is to get all that
-pig iron out of her, and that's a day's job, at the least. Then we may
-beach her at high tide and patch her up. It's a big contract, though."
-
-That day they brought the spare sails of the sloop ashore and pitched a
-tent with them; and, when the tide was low enough for them to work, they
-began the hard labour of lightening the big sloop of its ballast.
-
-They worked all that tide like beavers, and by night the yacht was light.
-They camped on shore that night, standing watch by turns over their
-prisoner.
-
-The next day at low water they found the worst of the leaks in the sloop,
-and made shift to patch them up temporarily with strips of canvas tacked
-on and daubed with paint, which they found in the sloop's locker, and by
-recaulking some of the seams with oakum. By the next high tide, with hard
-pumping, she was sufficiently lightened to float clear of the reef,
-though still leaking badly, and they got her around to a clear, steeply
-shelving strip of beach, where they rested her more easily when the tide
-fell, and so could work on the repairs to better advantage.
-
-Another night in camp ashore, and the next day they floated the sloop off
-again at high tide and loaded about half of her ballast in again.
-
-"That will keep her right side up till we can get back to Southport,"
-said Harvey. "I think we can make it, if we carry short sail, so as not
-to strain her and open up those places where we have patched her. We will
-try it, anyway, for I have half an idea that our running off so soon
-after the fire may have made talk about us, and the quicker we get back
-and put an end to that the better."
-
-So that afternoon they began their voyage home again, looking very
-serious as the mast of the yacht _Surprise_, sticking out of water, faded
-from their view, but swelling with pride and satisfaction as they peered
-in now and then at a form that lay secure on one of the cabin bunks.
-
-They sailed all that night, for the breeze held fair and light, and by
-daybreak of the following morning they came into the harbour of
-Southport.
-
-Harvey and Joe Hinman rowed ashore, soon after they came to their old
-moorings off the camp, to see how the land lay; but came back on the run
-in about twenty minutes, and made the water boil as they rowed out to the
-yacht.
-
-"We're off for Mayville," cried Harvey. "We'll put on more sail, too, if
-it pulls the bottom out of her. Why, what do you think! Who's arrested
-for the fire?"
-
-And he told the news, to the amazement of young Tim and George Baker and
-Allan Harding.
-
-"I've got a score to pay to Tom Harris and Bob White," he exclaimed.
-
-"Why, they saved your life, Jack," said young Tim.
-
-"That's what," said Harvey. "I owe them one for that. Here's a chance to
-get square, if we can only make it in time."
-
-"And only to think," muttered the man in the cabin, as he looked out at
-the stalwart but boyish figure at the wheel, "that I had that young
-fellow in the same boat with me at night in the middle of Samoset Bay!
-Well, if I had only done as I set out to, then, I wouldn't be here now,
-that's all. But how is a man to look ahead so far?"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI.
- THE TRIAL
-
-
-What one man knew in Mayville was every man's property. Gossip always
-spread through the town like wildfire. So it happened that on the morning
-of the arrival of the _Nancy Jane_ and the _Spray_ there was a buzzing
-and a shaking of heads and a wagging of tongues; and before long the
-whole town knew that something of vast importance was about to take place
-up at Squire Ellis's court.
-
-"It's those young fellows that set the hotel afire over across at
-Southport," said a certain tall, gaunt individual, who happened to be the
-centre of an excited group on one of the street corners, near the town
-pump. "I hear as how Squire Barker is going to defend them, but they do
-say he's got no case, because I heard Lem Stevens say as he heard Squire
-Brackett declare he saw them young chaps down in the billiard-room of the
-hotel along about midnight, and the fire started pretty quick after
-that."
-
-"Well, guess they'll catch it if Squire Brackett is on their trail,"
-volunteered another of the group. "He ain't given to showing kindness to
-anybody, much less to a lot of firebugs."
-
-"I don't believe they ever done it, anyway," ventured a third. "They
-don't seem like that kind, from all I can learn, and they do say as how
-they pitched in and saved a lot of Colonel Witham's boarders from being
-burned in their beds, when the flames was a-spreadin' fast."
-
-And so the gossip waged, this way and that, while impatient knots of
-idlers hung around the entrance to Squire Ellis's court, waiting for ten
-o'clock, when proceedings should begin.
-
-Shortly before the old town clock beat out the ten solemn strokes that
-proclaimed the formal sitting of justice, a whisper ran along the line of
-loiterers, "Here he comes. It's the judge." And that person of great
-importance, a short, thick-set man, with a quick, nervous step, an
-energetic, sharp manner, but, withal, a kindly eye, entered the
-court-room. The next moment the clock announced his punctuality.
-
-The crowd swarmed into the court-room, stuffy and hot enough already, and
-the air vibrated with expectancy.
-
-Proceeding up the long village street at this moment was a little group,
-headed by Captain Sam, not wholly unimpressed with the importance of his
-own part in the affair, the boys and Mrs. Warren following, and, not far
-in the rear, the colonel and the squire. Just as they reached the
-court-room door, Captain Sam halted the little party for a moment, and,
-not without reluctance, said: "Well, boys, I suppose I'll have to serve
-these 'ere warrants before we go inside. I'm free to say I'm sorry to do
-it, but they're the orders of this 'ere honourable court, and they must
-be obeyed by me, a sworn officer of the law."
-
-And having disposed of this somewhat painful formality, Captain Sam
-opened the door and the party were in court.
-
-Presently they were joined by Squire Barker, a sober, elderly,
-clerical-looking lawyer, dressed in a somewhat rusty suit of black,
-serious-minded, whose lugubrious manner was not calculated to infuse a
-spirit of cheer into hearts that were sinking.
-
-The county attorney, who was to conduct the case for the people of the
-State, a youthful attorney, of comparatively recent admission to
-practice, bustled about as became a functionary with the burden of an
-important matter upon his shoulders.
-
-The court-room, save for the buzzing of innumerable flies upon the
-uncleaned window-panes, was still as a church when His Honour announced
-that the court was now open for whatsoever matters the county attorney
-had to bring before it.
-
-After the usual formality of acquainting His Honour officially of the
-matter in hand, which matter His Honour was already as much acquainted
-with as a thousand and one busy tongues of gossip could make him, the
-likewise formal answer of "Not guilty" was returned, and, without further
-delay, Colonel Witham was called to the stand.
-
-The colonel, fully awake to his opportunity, took the stand rather
-pompously, thrust a well-filled, expansive waistband to the front, whence
-there dangled from a waistcoat pocket a ponderous gold chain, plentifully
-adorned with trinkets, in the handling of which, as he testified, a large
-seal ring on a finger of his right hand was ostentatiously displayed.
-
-Yes,--in answer to questions,--he was the lessee of the Bayview Hotel on
-the 10th of September last, on which day it was burned to the ground;
-and, if he did say it, there was no better conducted hotel along the
-shores of Samoset Bay.
-
-Suggestion by His Honour that he please answer the questions as put, and
-reserve his own personal opinions and convictions to himself, received by
-the colonel with evident surprise and some little loss of dignity.
-
-Then the colonel detailed, so far as he knew them, the events of the
-night of the fire; how he was first aroused by the cry of "Fire!" and how
-the first persons he encountered--within his very hotel, in fact--were
-the accused; how the smoke was even then pouring up from the basement
-windows, and that upon investigation he had found the whole basement
-floor to be on fire, so that it was already far beyond control.
-
-Then there followed a detailed account of the fire, of the destruction of
-this section and that, and, finally, the utter collapse and ruin of the
-entire structure, with all that it had contained. The colonel did the
-scene full justice in his description, making an unmistakable impression
-on the minds of the assembled townsfolk.
-
-Asked if he had seen any suspicious characters in or about the hotel on
-the day or night of the fire, the colonel said he had not; nor had any
-stranger who had not been subsequently accounted for come ashore from the
-steamers on that day.
-
-Leaving at length the subject of the fire, County Attorney Perkins came
-down to the subject of the attempt to serve the warrants upon the boys at
-the camp and at the Warren cottage, the failure, the subsequent pursuit
-of the boys down the bay in the _Nancy Jane_, and the final surrender of
-the yacht _Spray_ in the middle of the bay.
-
-It was clear that this part of the evidence would have great weight with
-the court. After the attorney's questions he put several of his own,
-regarding the escape from Little Reach, and whether it must have been
-clear to the boys in the yacht that they were being pursued.
-
-It was this testimony that made Mr. Warren breathe hardest, and put his
-hand to his head with a troubled look.
-
-Squire Barker's cross-examination was brief, but he made two telling
-points, which might have their influence. One was, that the boys had been
-very brave on the night of the fire, and had undoubtedly saved many
-lives. This the colonel reluctantly had to admit. The other, and far more
-important point, was the bringing out that early on the morning of the
-fire the colonel had seen that the yacht _Surprise_ was absent from her
-moorings, whereas the colonel had seen her lying there the afternoon
-preceding.
-
-"Was it not common talk in the village that Harvey and his crew were
-missing the very morning after the fire?" inquired Squire Barker.
-
-"It was," answered the colonel.
-
-"And did you not see all of the accused about the village for the entire
-day following the fire?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-There was a buzz in the court-room, which indicated that this point had
-told.
-
-"And is it not true," continued Squire Barker, "that this Jack Harvey and
-his crew have not yet returned, are still missing?"
-
-The colonel said he believed such was the case.
-
-Asked why he had not secured their arrest, he responded that he felt sure
-he was on the right track, as he would prove by his witness, Squire
-Brackett.
-
-And Squire Brackett, nothing loath, was the next witness. Having brought
-out, what everybody knew, that the squire was a property owner and a man
-of importance in his own village, the county attorney asked:
-
-"And where were you shortly after midnight on the night of September
-10th?"
-
-"I was passing the Hotel Bayview on my way to the shore."
-
-"What did you see as you neared the hotel?"
-
-"I saw a light in the billiard-room window, and went to the window and
-looked in."
-
-"Did you see any one in there?"
-
-"I did."
-
-"And who were they?"
-
-"These accused," and the squire named in turn each of the six boys and
-pointed them out in court.
-
-They, feeling the eyes of all turned toward them, the awful stillness of
-the court-room for the moment following the squire's declaration, and
-oppressed more than ever by the hot, choking atmosphere of the stuffy
-little court, turned white and red by turns, wished that the floor would
-open beneath their feet and swallow them, and felt a burning sensation in
-their throats as though they were stifling.
-
-"And how soon did you see flames coming up from the location of the
-hotel?"
-
-"I could not say exactly; it might have been half an hour. I was out in
-the bay in my sloop."
-
-"Had you seen any suspicious characters in the village on that day?"
-
-"I had not."
-
-Then the squire also recounted the events of the pursuit of the yacht
-_Spray_, the escape through Little Reach, and the subsequent surrender of
-the boys.
-
-From Squire Barker it was brought out, as in the testimony of the
-colonel, the fact that after Harvey and his crew in the yacht _Surprise_
-had suddenly set sail on the very morning of the fire, they had not been
-seen nor heard of since. This, the squire admitted, was common knowledge
-throughout the village.
-
-Then there came to the stand Captain Sam, standing awkwardly, with a hard
-clutch on the rail in front of him, as if he were afraid of the
-court-house suddenly dipping and rolling on a breaker and spilling him
-overboard.
-
-No, he had no objection to removing his tobacco in deference to the
-Court, and did so; but forgot that august presence before he had been
-testifying long, and took another and a bigger chew.
-
-Did he know the accused?
-
-Reckoned he did, with a haw-haw that shook the court-room.
-
-Had he pursued them in his sloop the _Nancy Jane_, in an endeavour to
-serve the warrants?
-
-He had, and they worked their boat like sailors, if he did say it.
-
-"And were you assisted in your pursuit by Colonel Witham and Squire
-Brackett?"
-
-"Assisted!" drawled Captain Sam, and grinning from ear to ear. "Well, I
-dunno how much assisting you'd be pleased to call it, being as they were
-sick as a boy that had eaten a peck of green apples, and was sprawling
-around in the bottom of the boat like a couple of halibut just catched."
-
-Which, being pronounced by Captain Sam with the utmost gravity, produced
-such a decided impression on the audience of fisher-people and
-sailor-folk, that there was a roar throughout the court-room, at which
-His Honour announced that any such further interruption would be followed
-by the clearing of the room.
-
-The squire and the colonel turned red in the face and looked rather
-foolish, inwardly wishing that Captain Sam was at the bottom of the bay.
-
-Captain Sam, under further questioning, told again the story of that
-afternoon's sailing, mentioning casually that the colonel had requested
-to be set ashore when the _Nancy Jane_ was out in the middle of the bay,
-which request, as Captain Sam explained, there being no land near by
-excepting that straight down under water, he was unable to grant.
-
-Another titter through the court-room, the colonel and the squire
-blushing redder than ever.
-
-It was embarrassing enough to Captain Sam to tell how he had put the
-_Nancy Jane_ aground in Little Reach, for he knew there was scarce a man
-or boy within the sound of his voice who wouldn't vow to himself that, if
-he had been in Captain Sam's place, he would have known better. It was
-really mortifying.
-
-Squire Barker made the most of this, not because it could help his
-clients, but because it served in its way to put one of the people's
-witnesses in a ridiculous light, and because it gave him a chance to show
-how smart a cross-examiner he could be, thereby elevating himself in the
-eyes and admiration of his townsfolk.
-
-"So you got aground where these young men took their boat through all
-right, did you?" queried Squire Barker.
-
-"I got aground," snapped Captain Sam, sharply.
-
-"And these young men took their boat through safe and sound?"
-
-"I don't know," roared Captain Sam. "I didn't see them."
-
-"But you saw them just a few minutes before that, didn't you?"
-
-"Guess I did."
-
-"And when you got to the entrance they were nowhere in sight, and
-therefore must have sailed through; they couldn't have dragged the
-_Spray_ over the rocks?"
-
-"Suppose not."
-
-The colonel and the squire were rather enjoying this, and had plucked up
-spirits enough to titter with the rest at the discomfiture of Captain
-Sam.
-
-"Then you tried to imitate these young men and go through as they did,
-but you didn't seem to know the channel, and so got aground?"
-
-"Channel!" roared Captain Sam, bellowing out the word in a rage and
-shaking a fist at the squire. "Channel, did you say? Haven't I told you
-there wasn't enough channel there to wash a sheep in? Didn't I tell these
-two thick-headed numskulls"--pointing to the colonel and the
-squire--"that we'd get aground if we went in there? And didn't they snarl
-at me like two old women, and accuse me of letting them 'ere boys get
-away? Didn't I know we'd get aground in there, and didn't these two
-seasick old pussy-cats make me go ahead and do it?"
-
-Captain Sam, beside himself with indignation, roared this out so his
-voice could be heard far out in the street. In vain the court rapped for
-order. The whole court-room was convulsed, and, finally, His Honour,
-overcome with the situation, leaned back in his chair and laughed too.
-
-Only the colonel and the squire, the butt of all the merriment, looked
-alternately at the floor and the ceiling, and mopped their faces with
-handkerchiefs as red as their cheeks.
-
-At length, when order was restored, Judge Ellis said: "Captain Sam, you
-are excused. You are in contempt of court. The case will proceed without
-testimony from you."
-
-At which Captain Sam, feeling that he had in a measure vindicated his
-name and reputation, got down from the stand in a somewhat better frame
-of mind.
-
-There followed several of the hotel guests, who had been duly summonsed
-to tell what they knew of the early stages of the fire, and whether they
-had seen any suspicious characters about the hotel or the village on that
-day. They made it very clear, together with the testimony of some of the
-villagers, that there had been no strange person seen in the town either
-on that day or the preceding or the following day, all of which argued,
-of course, that, if the fire was set, it was set by some one in the town,
-who was more or less known to every one.
-
-On the other hand, it was definitely established by Squire Barker that
-Harvey and his crew had set sail in the _Surprise_ while the hotel was
-still blazing furiously, for there were two of the villagers who lived
-down the island several miles from the hotel who testified to seeing the
-_Surprise_ beating down alongshore about daylight.
-
-This was highly important, and yet the one essential thing was lacking,
-nor could it be supplied by any evidence at hand, that Harvey or any one
-of his crew had been seen about the hotel that night.
-
-It was noon now, and time for recess. So His Honour announced an
-adjournment to half-past two that afternoon, and the crowd swarmed
-out-of-doors, leaving the flies in undisputed possession of the unclean
-windows.
-
-It was hard for the boys to realize that at last they were under
-restraint; that they were not free to follow the crowd of villagers and
-their friends. The seriousness of the situation assumed an even more
-depressing aspect.
-
-"Do you think he will hold them?" asked Mr. Warren, anxiously, of Squire
-Barker, as the little party, under the nominal charge of Captain Sam, sat
-in the anteroom of the court-house, trying to partake of a luncheon which
-had been provided, but for which nobody seemed to have any appetite.
-
-"Well, I can't say," answered the squire, wisely. "But I'm a little
-afraid of it. I'm just a little afraid. You see, their getting into the
-hotel and being there just before the fire can't be denied. And I suppose
-that His Honour will hold that it was really breaking and entering to get
-into the hotel in the night-time in the way they did. And then, even
-though it may have been accidental, the setting the fire, still, as it
-followed and grew out of their unlawful act, they can be held for setting
-the hotel on fire."
-
-This sentence, somewhat involved as it was, but delivered with sageness
-and an ominous shake of the head, set the boys to breathing hard, and
-more than one of them found himself swallowing a lump in his throat.
-
-"But there isn't the slightest evidence that we set the fire," said young
-Joe.
-
-"Yes," answered the squire; "there's what they call circumstantial
-evidence, and that is, the fact of your being in there just before it was
-discovered. It may not be enough to convict on, but the question that's
-bothering now is, will it be enough to hold you over on, and I'm bound to
-say it does look just a little bad. However, we won't give up. We'll
-fight it out to the last."
-
-But just what there was to fight it out on, not one of them could for the
-life of him suggest.
-
-The minutes, which seemed like hours, dragged wearily on, and the air in
-the stuffy little court-house seemed to grow denser and more unendurably
-stifling. One o'clock. Two o'clock. The hum of returning villagers became
-more loud. The hour for the resumption of the session was only thirty
-minutes away.
-
-Suddenly there was the sound of light, quick, nervous footsteps along the
-hallway, the door was pushed open, and in there bounced a little old
-lady, whose thin face beamed and flushed with excitement under a bonnet,
-fashionably but rather youthfully trimmed with bright flowers, dressed in
-a gown quaintly cut, but giving evidence of the means of the wearer, and
-bearing on one arm a small basket and in the other hand a chatelaine-bag.
-
-"Why, it's Mrs. Newcome!" exclaimed Mrs. Warren, jumping up excitedly,
-and glad even of this interruption. "What can have brought you here?"
-
-"Isn't this a wicked shame!" cried the little old lady, paying no
-attention to Mrs. Warren's question. "It's just the cruellest thing I
-ever heard of, bringing these boys here. I'll tell the judge that, too,
-if they'll let me. Where is that old scamp, Colonel Witham, and that old
-mischief-maker, Squire Brackett? If I don't give them a piece of my mind!
-I told Jerry about it all the way over, and you ought to have heard him
-growl. Here he is; just listen how angry he is."
-
-And Mrs. Newcome, unfastening the cover of the basket which she had been
-carrying, disclosed to view the aforesaid Jerry, lying within on a
-cushion. The cat, in corroboration of his mistress's declaration,
-certainly did growl and snarl and then yowl dolorously; but whether as an
-endorsement of old Mrs. Newcome's indignation, or whether giving vent to
-his own at being whisked about in a basket on a boiling hot day, no one
-but he could say positively.
-
-"These boys didn't set that fire," snapped the old lady, decisively; "and
-I just want to do what I can for them. I couldn't leave Jerry behind. He
-gets so lonesome without me. So I brought him along. And now, Mr. Warren,
-I suppose you know I'm not the poorest person that comes down here to
-spend summers, and I've got some property around these parts, too--some
-land in this very town. And if there's any what-do-you-call-it to pay--"
-
-"Any bail?" suggested the squire.
-
-"That's it--bail. That's the word. If there's any of that to pay, I've
-got the securities right here," and Mrs. Newcome shook the chatelaine-bag
-vigorously.
-
-"You are very kind," said Mr. Warren, amused in spite of himself. "But
-I'm hoping we shall not have need of bail."
-
-But in the midst of it there came the ringing voice of the crier in the
-court-room adjoining, and the little party all filed into court again,
-old Mrs. Newcome bringing up the rear, with the basket on her arm, whence
-there emerged now and then a stifled wail, in spite of her whispered
-admonitions.
-
-"We have closed our case," said the prosecuting attorney. And the defence
-was begun.
-
-"George Warren!" called Squire Barker, and George, paling slightly at the
-ordeal, but doing his best to keep up a stout heart, took the stand.
-
-He told his story with a frankness that was convincing, keeping nothing
-back; and at the close Squire Barker asked: "And did you, or did you see
-anybody else set a fire that night?"
-
-"Certainly not," he answered. And there was no doubt that he had made a
-good impression.
-
-But there were certain ugly facts that were made to stick out more
-embarrassingly on the prosecuting attorney's cross-examination.
-
-"You will admit," he asked, "that you left on the second day following
-the fire, because you did not care to be questioned about it?"
-
-"Yes, because we knew that our being in the hotel that night would look
-suspicious, if it were known," answered George Warren.
-
-"Then you were going to conceal that fact, if you could?"
-
-"Yes--I think we were--for awhile, at least."
-
-"And so you ran away?"
-
-"We didn't start out with the idea of running away."
-
-"But you did run from the _Nancy Jane_ when you found she was following
-and pursuing you?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"I really can't tell you," said George Warren. "I realize now it was a
-foolish thing to do. But it was not because we were guilty."
-
-"But you were all in the basement of the hotel a few moments before the
-fire started?"
-
-"Yes, we were."
-
-"That is all," said the prosecuting attorney, and George left the stand.
-
-Henry Burns, called next, did the best he could for his comrades.
-
-"If it's anybody's fault, it's mine," he said. "You see, it was my
-suggestion that got us in there. I was the first to go inside, and the
-others came only after I had urged them."
-
-But Squire Barker knew that this avowal, honest as it was, could not help
-them in the eyes of the law. So, having asked a few perfunctory
-questions, he turned the witness over to the prosecuting attorney. The
-latter brought out about the same points that he had made in the
-testimony of George Warren, and that was all.
-
-It was quite clear that Squire Barker was only calling the boys from a
-sense of duty to them, to let them make the best impression they might
-upon the mind of the judge. It was the only suit he had to play.
-
-Then followed Arthur and Joe, and at length Tom and Bob.
-
-The squire was at the end of his resources now, as far as evidence could
-go. It remained but for him to do his duty in the minds of his clients
-and his townsmen, and he did it--to his own satisfaction, at least, in
-his address to the court. He painted the heroism of the boys at the fire
-in colours glowing as the flames. He enlarged upon the probability and
-the presumption of innocence. And he paid his respects to the colonel and
-the squire in a few stinging sentences that turned the eyes of the
-assembled audience upon them in indignation.
-
-And when he was all done and the court-room turned with expectancy toward
-the prosecuting attorney, the latter simply said:
-
-"Your Honour, the people will submit their case without argument."
-
-And so, with startling abruptness, the case had come to its crisis. There
-was nothing left but for the law to act.
-
-There succeeded a deathlike stillness in the court-room. His Honour sat
-for some moments, with his eyes cast down upon his desk. He seemed loath
-to speak. Finally he arose and, with some effort, said, gently:
-
-"In all my experience as attorney and as judge I have never before been
-placed in a position so distasteful to me nor so distressing. The case of
-these young men is most unfortunate. Their stories impress me as honestly
-told. Their characters are clearly such as are opposed to any such wanton
-destruction as is here alleged. And yet the circumstances are such that I
-should be blind to the duty of my office if I failed to hold them for
-trial. I hope that when their case shall come to trial this fall that
-they will have gathered evidence that shall show conclusively their
-innocence. In the meantime, deeply as I regret it, it becomes my painful
-duty to order that they be held."
-
-Again an utter stillness in the court-room, broken only by the sobbing of
-a woman. The entire court-room waited silently for the next move, amazed
-at the suddenness of the conclusion. Six boys set their teeth hard and
-tried to look undismayed, but the face of each spoke only too plainly of
-his distress.
-
-Then all at once the patter of feet broke the silence in the court-room,
-and a slight boyish figure, poorly dressed and unkempt, darted up the
-aisle, into the august presence of the court, and sought refuge in the
-seat next to that occupied by Mr. Warren.
-
-A court officer, who had been stationed at the door, lumbered in after
-the boyish figure.
-
-"Officer," cried Squire Ellis, irritably, "how came you to let this lad
-into the court-room? What does this mean? Put him out."
-
-"If you please, Your Honour," said the officer, very red in the face, "I
-drove him away from the door once, but he dodged in past me again before
-I could stop him."
-
-"Remove him from the room at once," said the court, sharply.
-
-The officer advanced.
-
-But Tim Reardon--for it was he--had in the meantime seized upon Mr.
-Warren, and, though labouring under an excitement so intense as almost to
-deprive him wholly of the power of speech, communicated something to him
-of the greatest importance. Mr. Warren, in turn, having repeated this
-communication to Squire Barker, the latter hastily arose.
-
-"Your Honour," he began, "this young man brings evidence of the most
-startling character, and which will, I am sure, reverse Your Honour's
-decision. He--"
-
-But here a sound from the street outside was borne in upon the
-court-room, which caused the squire to pause for a moment, while he and
-every person in the room listened in amazement.
-
-The noise outside increased, and now there came the sound of many voices,
-men and women and boys and girls shouting out some piece of news, and
-then a loud cheering. The tumult rapidly grew, until it seemed as if all
-in a moment the entire village was marching upon the court-house.
-
-Despite the loud rapping for order of the court officers and the sharp
-order of the court for silence, many in the court-room rushed to the
-windows and looked out. A strange sight met their eyes. A procession was
-coming up the street, in the midst of which, his hands bound behind his
-back, a man was walking, while, grasping him by either arm as they walked
-beside him, were Jack Harvey and Joe Hinman.
-
-Into the court-room the procession burst like an avalanche. The room had
-seemed somewhat crowded before, but now at least fifty or sixty more men
-wedged themselves in, with Harvey and his crew and the strange man still
-in the centre of them. The rest of the crowd that followed, not being
-able to force themselves into the court-room, seated themselves on the
-stairs just outside, and formed a long line out into the street.
-
-His Honour, powerless to stay this astonishing inrush of the townspeople,
-waited till the crowd had resolved itself into something like order, and
-then, rapping for silence, demanded to know the cause of this invasion of
-and assault upon the dignity of the court.
-
-There was a moment's silence and delay, and then a broad-shouldered youth
-pushed his way through the crowd and walked toward the witness-stand.
-
-"Here!" cried His Honour. "Officer, stop that young man. Let the business
-of this court proceed in its regular order. Mr. Barker, does the court
-understand that you ask to have the case reopened on the ground of newly
-discovered evidence?"
-
-"Yes, Your Honour," replied the squire, gravely.
-
-"And this young man, do you wish to make him your witness?"
-
-"I do, Your Honour," answered Squire Barker. "Although I am not certain
-as to just what he has to testify to, I wish to have him made our
-witness."
-
-"State your name to the court," said Squire Barker, as the youth ascended
-the witness-stand.
-
-"Jack Harvey."
-
-"And am I correctly informed that you have important testimony to give
-before this court in this case?"
-
-"I have the man that set the fire," replied Harvey.
-
-"And can you produce him?"
-
-"He is here in this room," answered Harvey.
-
-And at this moment the crowd parted and allowed to pass a man who walked
-doggedly forward, with eyes downcast, hands firmly bound behind his back,
-while with him walked the remaining members of Harvey's crew.
-
-"Is this the man whom you say set the fire?" queried Squire Barker.
-
-"Yes," said Harvey.
-
-"And how do you know he set the fire?"
-
-"He's confessed it, because he knew there was no way out of it for him.
-Haven't you?" demanded Harvey, turning to the man.
-
-The other nodded his head sullenly.
-
-The uproar that greeted this acknowledgment was deafening. It was several
-moments before order could be restored in the court-room, and then the
-news borne rapidly to those outside gave rise to a second tumult, which
-again stopped the proceedings of the court.
-
-Then, when order had been finally restored, Harvey narrated the
-extraordinary events that had followed the meeting of the man in the
-pasture, down to his capture and confession; a confession that included
-the admission that he was none other than the man Chambers, and that he
-had set fire to the hotel for revenge.
-
-There never was anything like the scene that followed in all the history
-of court procedure in the county from time out of mind. It did not take
-the court long, however, to declare that the youthful prisoners, whom he
-had felt it his solemn duty to hold for trial, were honourably cleared,
-and were free to go at liberty. It did not take long, considering the
-fact that the prisoner pleaded guilty, to hold him for trial. Nor did it
-take long for good-hearted Judge Ellis to descend from the bench and
-shake hands with the boys, each and every one of them, and congratulate
-them upon their complete exoneration.
-
-Once outside the court-room, however, what a storm and tumult of
-congratulation awaited them. The first thing they knew there was a rush
-for them, and up on the shoulders of a crowd of excited fishermen they
-went, and were borne along, amid cheering. And Harvey, too, though he
-struggled against it, was borne aloft, while the news of his brave
-capture of the man Chambers was shouted out to all in the town.
-
-In the midst of it all two figures were espied, slinking along toward the
-boat-landing, anxious to escape notice. A din of yells and catcalls and
-hisses told them they were discovered, and the colonel and the squire,
-sorry pictures of dismay and humiliation, quickened their steps and made
-their escape, thankful enough to escape unharmed from the indignant
-villagers.
-
-"Harvey," said George Warren, as he stood grasping the other's hand about
-two hours later, as the boys formed a little group on the deck of the
-steamer that was heading for Southport, "you have more than evened the
-thing up. Tom and Bob saved you from drowning; but you have saved us all
-from disgrace, and I'm not sure but what I'd rather drown than go through
-a disgraceful ordeal like this again."
-
-"No," said Harvey, clasping the hand of the other warmly. "I'm still the
-one that's in debt. They saved me from more than drowning. They saved me
-from disgrace, too."
-
-"Let's call it even, anyway," said Henry Burns, "and shake hands all
-around."
-
-Some weeks later, as Henry Burns and George Warren sat on the veranda of
-the Warren cottage, looking out across the cove, a graceful yacht turned
-the headland and came up into the harbour.
-
-"She looks familiar," said Henry Burns. "Where have we seen her before?
-Why, it's the _Eagle_, or the _Sprite_, or whatever her real name may be.
-I wonder what she's doing here. She was seized by the county and her
-owners advertised for. I wonder if they can have been discovered."
-
-"Let's go down and take a look at her," said George Warren. "She is the
-prettiest thing that ever came into this harbour."
-
-As they walked down to the shore a boat put off from the yacht and a man
-pulled in to land.
-
-"Can you tell me where I can find either Henry Burns or Jack Harvey?" he
-inquired, addressing the two boys.
-
-"I don't know about Harvey," answered Henry Bums, "but I can inform you
-about the other person. What do you want of him?"
-
-"Here's a note for you, if you mean that you're Henry Burns," said the
-man.
-
-"That's funny," said Henry Burns. "It's the first note I've got since
-I've been here. I wonder who can have written it."
-
-Henry Burns deliberately tore open the envelope and unfolded a letter. He
-glanced hastily at the contents, stopped short, and gave a cry of
-surprise.
-
-"George," he said, solemnly, "will you hit me once, good and hard, so I
-can tell whether I am dreaming or not?"
-
-"I hardly think there's any need of that," answered the other, laughing.
-"You seem to be about as wide-awake as usual."
-
-"Well," said Henry Burns, "if you won't hit me, just read that letter to
-me aloud, anyway. Perhaps I'll believe it if I hear you read it."
-
-"It seems to be addressed to you and Jack Harvey both," said George
-Warren. "Perhaps I need his permission, too, to read it."
-
-"No you don't. Go ahead," demanded Henry Burns.
-
-The letter read as follows:
-
- "Mayville.
-
- "Henry Burns and Jack Harvey,
-
- "_My dear Young Men:_--You have each of you proved yourselves heroes in
- the events of the last few weeks. To you, Henry Burns, I am indebted
- for the rescue of my devoted Jerry, my pet and companion of many years.
- To you and your companions, I am, indeed, indebted for my own life. To
- you, Jack Harvey, I am indebted for the saving from disgrace of these
- young friends of mine. As you may know, the yacht captured from the man
- Chambers was condemned by the county officials, advertised, and finally
- put up at auction and sold, her former owner, if there ever was another
- besides Chambers, not having claimed her. She was, I am informed, a
- very expensive boat; but as there were few bidders among the fishermen,
- I was enabled to bid off the boat at a figure easily within my means.
- This letter is to inform you that I have presented the yacht to you, to
- be owned equally by you two. The papers will be made out later and sent
- to your parents or guardians. Hoping that you will enjoy many happy
- days aboard her, I remain,
-
- "Sincerely yours,
- "Anna Newcome.
-
- "P. S. Don't upset her and get drowned."
-
-"Henry, old fellow," cried George Warren. "Let me congratulate you. You
-are the two luckiest--"
-
-But Henry Burns was running as fast as his legs could carry him in the
-direction of Harvey's camp.
-
-
- THE END.
-
-
-
-
- BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
-
-
- THE LITTLE COLONEL BOOKS
- (Trade Mark)
-
- _By ANNIE FELLOWS JOHNSTON_
-
- Each, 1 vol., large 12mo, cloth decorative, per vol. $1.50
-
-
- The Little Colonel Stories.
- (Trade Mark)
-
-
- Illustrated.
-
-Being three "Little Colonel" stories in the Cosy Corner Series, "The
-Little Colonel," "Two Little Knights of Kentucky," and "The Giant
-Scissors," put into a single volume.
-
-
- The Little Colonel's House Party.
- (Trade Mark)
-
-Illustrated by Louis Meynell.
-
-
- The Little Colonel's Holidays.
- (Trade Mark)
-
-Illustrated by L. J. Bridgman.
-
-
- The Little Colonel's Hero.
- (Trade Mark)
-
-Illustrated by E. B. Barry.
-
-
- The Little Colonel at Boarding School.
- (Trade Mark)
-
-Illustrated by E. B. Barry.
-
-
- The Little Colonel in Arizona.
- (Trade Mark)
-
-Illustrated by E. B. Barry.
-
-
- The Little Colonel's Christmas Vacation.
- (Trade Mark)
-
-Illustrated by E. B. Barry.
-
-Since the time of "Little Women," no juvenile heroine has been better
-beloved of her child readers than Mrs. Johnston's "Little Colonel."
-
-
- Joel: a Boy of Galilee.
-
-By Annie Fellows Johnston. Illustrated by L. J. Bridgman.
-
-New illustrated edition, uniform with the Little Colonel Books, 1 vol.,
- large 12mo, cloth decorative $1.50
-
-A story of the time of Christ, which is one of the author's best-known
-books, and which has been translated into many languages, the last being
-Italian.
-
-
- Asa Holmes; or, At the Cross-Roads. A sketch of Country Life and
- Country Humor. By Annie Fellows Johnston. With a frontispiece
- by Ernest Fosbery.
-
- Large 16mo, cloth, gilt top $1.00
-
-"'Asa Holmes; or, At the Cross-Roads' is the most delightful, most
-sympathetic and wholesome book that has been published in a long while.
-The lovable, cheerful, touching incidents, the descriptions of persons
-and things are wonderfully true to nature."--_Boston Times._
-
-
- In the Desert of Waiting: The Legend of Camelback Mountain.
- The Three Weavers: A Fairy Tale for Fathers and Mothers as Well as for
- Their Daughters. By Annie Fellows Johnston.
-
- Each one volume, tall 16mo, cloth decorative $0.60
-
-There has been a constant demand for publication in separate form of
-these two stories, which were originally included in two of the "Little
-Colonel" books, and the present editions, which are very charmingly
-gotten up, will be delightful and valued gift-books for both old and
-young.
-
-"'The Three Weavers' is the daintiest fairy-story I ever read," wrote one
-critic, and the _Louisville Post_ calls "In the Desert of Waiting" a
-"gem, an exquisite bit of work. Mrs. Johnston is at her best in this web
-of delicate fancy, woven about the deep centre truth." Those who have
-read the stories as they originally appeared will be glad to find them
-published individually.
-
-
- Asa Holmes; or, At the Cross-Roads. A sketch of Country Life and
- Country Humor. By Annie Fellows Johnston. With a frontispiece
- by Ernest Fosbery.
-
- Large 16mo, cloth, gilt top $1.00
-
-"'Asa Holmes; or, At the Cross-Roads' is the most delightful, most
-sympathetic and wholesome book that has been published in a long while.
-The lovable, cheerful, touching incidents, the descriptions of persons
-and things, are wonderfully true to nature."--_Boston Times._
-
-
- The Rival Campers; or, The Adventures of Henry Burns. By Ruel P. Smith.
-
- Square 12mo, cloth decorative, illustrated by A. B. Shute $1.50
-
-Here is a book which will grip and enthuse every boy reader. It is the
-story of a party of typical American lads, courageous, alert, and
-athletic, who spend a summer camping on an island off the Maine coast.
-
-"The best boys' book since 'Tom Sawyer.'"--_San Francisco Examiner._
-
-"Henry Burns, the hero, is the 'Tom Brown' of America."--_N. Y. Sun._
-
-
- The Rival Campers Afloat; or, The Prize Yacht Viking. By Ruel P. Smith,
- author of "The Rival Campers."
-
- Square 12mo, cloth decorative, illustrated $1.50
-
-This book is a continuation of the adventures of "The Rival Campers" on
-their prize yacht _Viking_. Every reader will be enthusiastic over the
-adventures of Henry Burns and his friends on their sailing trip. They
-have a splendid time, fishing, racing, and sailing, until an accidental
-collision results in a series of exciting adventures, culminating in a
-mysterious chase, the loss of their prize yacht, and its recapture by
-means of their old yacht, _Surprise_, which they raise from its watery
-grave.
-
-
- The Young Section-hand; or, The Adventures of Allan West. By Burton E.
- Stevenson, author of "The Marathon Mystery," etc.
-
- 12mo, cloth, illustrated by L. J. Bridgman $1.50
-
-Mr. Stevenson's hero is a manly lad of sixteen, who is given a chance as
-a section-hand on a big Western railroad, and whose experiences are as
-real as they are thrilling.
-
-"It appeals to every boy of enterprising spirit, and at the same time
-teaches him some valuable lessons in honor, pluck, and
-perseverance."--_Cleveland Plain Dealer._
-
-
- The Young Train Despatcher. By Burton E. Stevenson, author of "The
- Young Section-hand," etc.
-
- Square 12mo, cloth decorative, illustrated $1.50
-
-A new volume in the "Railroad Series," in which the young section-hand is
-promoted to a train despatcher. Another branch of railroading is
-presented, in which the young hero has many chances to prove his
-manliness and courage in the exciting adventures which befall him in the
-discharge of his duty.
-
-
- Jack Lorimer. By Winn Standish.
-
- Square 12mo, cloth decorative. Illustrated by A. B. Shute $1.50
-
-Jack Lorimer, whose adventures have for some time been one of the leading
-features of the Boston Sunday _Herald_, is the popular favorite of
-fiction with the boys and girls of New England, and, now that Mr.
-Standish has made him the hero of his book, he will soon be a favorite
-throughout the country.
-
-Jack is a fine example of the all-around American high-school boy. He has
-the sturdy qualities boys admire, and his fondness for clean, honest
-sport of all kinds will strike a chord of sympathy among athletic youths.
-
-
- The Roses of Saint Elizabeth. By Jane Scott Woodruff, author of "The
- Little Christmas Shoe."
-
- Small quarto, cloth decorative, illustrated and decorated in color by
- Adelaide Everhart. $1.00
-
-This is a charming little story of a child whose father was caretaker of
-the great castle of the Wartburg, where Saint Elizabeth once had her
-home, with a fairy-tale interwoven, in which the roses and the ivy in the
-castle yard tell to the child and her playmate quaint old legends of the
-saint and the castle.
-
-
- Gabriel and the Hour Book. By Evaleen Stein.
-
- Small quarto, cloth decorative, illustrated and decorated
- in colors by Adelaide Everhart $1.00
-
-Gabriel was a loving, patient, little French lad, who assisted the monks
-in the long ago days, when all the books were written and illuminated by
-hand, in the monasteries. It is a dear little story, and will appeal to
-every child who is fortunate enough to read it.
-
-
- The Enchanted Automobile. Translated from the French by Mary J.
- Safford.
-
- Small quarto, cloth decorative, illustrated and decorated in colors by
- Edna M. Sawyer $1.00
-
-The enchanted automobile was sent by the fairy godmother of a lazy,
-discontented little prince and princess to take them to fairyland, where
-they might visit their old story-book favorites.
-
-Here they find that Sleeping Beauty has become a famously busy queen;
-Princess Charming keeps a jewelry shop; where she sells the jewels that
-drop from her lips; Hop-o'-My-Thumb is a farmer, too busy even to see the
-children, and Little Red Riding Hood has trained the wolf into a trick
-animal, who performs in the city squares.
-
-They learn the lesson that happy people are the busy people, and they
-return home cured of their discontent and laziness.
-
-
- Beautiful Joe's Paradise; or, The Island of Brotherly Love. A sequel to
- "Beautiful Joe." By Marshall Saunders, author of "Beautiful
- Joe," "For His Country," etc. With fifteen full-page plates and
- many decorations from drawings by Charles Livingston Bull.
-
- One vol., library 12mo, cloth decorative $1.50
-
-"Will be immensely enjoyed by the boys and girls who read
-it."--_Pittsburg Gazette._
-
-"Miss Saunders has put life, humor, action, and tenderness into her
-story. The book deserves to be a favorite."--_Chicago Record-Herald._
-
-"This book revives the spirit of 'Beautiful Joe' capitally. It is fairly
-riotous with fun, and as a whole is about as unusual as anything in the
-animal book line that has seen the light. It is a book for juveniles--old
-and young."--_Philadelphia Item._
-
-
- 'Tilda Jane. By Marshall Saunders, author of "Beautiful Joe," etc.
-
- One vol., 12mo, fully illustrated, cloth, decorative cover, $1.50
-
-"No more amusing and attractive child's story has appeared for a long
-time than this quaint and curious recital of the adventures of that
-pitiful and charming little runaway.
-
-"It is one of those exquisitely simple and truthful books that win and
-charm the reader, and I did not put it down until I had finished
-it--honest! And I am sure that every one, young or old, who reads will be
-proud and happy to make the acquaintance of the delicious waif.
-
-"I cannot think of any better book for children than this. I commend it
-unreservedly."--_Cyrus Townsend Brady._
-
-
- The Story of the Graveleys. By Marshall Saunders, author of "Beautiful
- Joe's Paradise," "'Tilda Jane," etc.
-
- Library 12mo, cloth decorative, illustrated by E. B. Barry $1.50
-
-Here we have the haps and mishaps, the trials and triumphs, of a
-delightful New England family, of whose devotion and sturdiness it will
-do the reader good to hear. From the kindly, serene-souled grandmother to
-the buoyant madcap, Berty, these Graveleys are folk of fibre and
-blood--genuine human beings.
-
-
- PHYLLIS' FIELD FRIENDS SERIES
-
- _By LENORE E. MULETS_
-
- Six vols., cloth decorative, illustrated by Sophie Schneider.
- Sold separately, or as a set.
- Per volume $1.00
- Per set 6.00
-
-
- Insect Stories.
- Stories of Little Animals.
- Flower Stories.
- Bird Stories.
- Tree Stories.
- Stories of Little Fishes.
-
- In this series of six little Nature books, it is the author's intention
- so to present to the child reader the facts about each particular
- flower, insect, bird, or animal, in story form, as to make delightful
- reading. Classical legends, myths, poems, and songs are so introduced
- as to correlate fully with these lessons, to which the excellent
- illustrations are no little help.
-
-
- THE WOODRANGER TALES
-
- _By G. WALDO BROWNE_
-
-
- The Woodranger.
- The Young Gunbearer.
- The Hero of the Hills.
- With Rogers' Rangers.
-
- Each 1 vol., large 12mo, cloth, decorative cover, illustrated,
- per volume $1.25
- Four vols., boxed, per set 5.00
-
- "The Woodranger Tales," like the "Pathfinder Tales" of J. Fenimore
- Cooper, combine historical information relating to early pioneer days
- in America with interesting adventures in the backwoods. Although the
- same characters are continued throughout the series, each book is
- complete in itself, and, while based strictly on historical facts, is
- an interesting and exciting tale of adventure.
-
-
- Born to the Blue. By Florence Kimball Russel.
-
- 12mo, cloth decorative, illustrated $1.25
-
-The atmosphere of army life on the plains breathes on every page of this
-delightful tale. The boy is the son of a captain of U. S. cavalry
-stationed at a frontier post in the days when our regulars earned the
-gratitude of a nation.
-
-The author is herself "of the army," and knows every detail of the life.
-Her descriptions are accurate, which adds to the value and interest of
-the book.
-
-
- Pussy-Cat Town. By Marion Ames Taggart.
-
-Small quarto, cloth decorative, illustrated and decorated in colors $1.00
-
-"Pussy-Cat Town" is a most unusual, delightful cat story. Ban-Ban, a pure
-Maltese who belonged to Rob, Kiku-san, Lois's beautiful snow-white pet,
-and their neighbors Bedelia the tortoise-shell, Madame Laura the widow,
-Wutz Butz the warrior, and wise old Tommy Traddles, were really and truly
-cats, and Miss Taggart has here explained the reason for their mysterious
-disappearance all one long summer.
-
-
- The Sandman: His Farm Stories. By William J. Hopkins. With fifty
- illustrations by Ada Clendenin Williamson.
-
- Large 12mo, decorative cover $1.50
-
- "An amusing, original book, written for the benefit of very small
- children. It should be one of the most popular of the year's books for
- reading to small children."--_Buffalo Express._
-
- "Mothers and fathers and kind elder sisters who take the little ones to
- bed and rack their brains for stories will find this book a
- treasure."--_Cleveland Leader._
-
-
- The Sandman: More Farm Stories. By William J. Hopkins.
-
- Large 12mo, decorative cover, fully illustrated $1.50
-
-Mr. Hopkins's first essay at bedtime stories has met with such approval
-that this second book of "Sandman" tales has been issued for scores of
-eager children. Life on the farm, and out-of-doors, is portrayed in his
-inimitable manner, and many a little one will hail the bedtime season as
-one of delight.
-
-
- THE LITTLE COUSIN SERIES
-
- The most delightful and interesting accounts possible of
- child-life in other lands, filled with quaint sayings, doings,
- and adventures.
-
- Each 1 vol., 12mo, decorative cover, cloth, with six or
- more full-page illustrations in color.
-
- Price per volume $0.60
-
- _By MARY HAZELTON WADE (unless otherwise indicated)_
-
-
- Our Little African Cousin
- Our Little Armenian Cousin
- Our Little Brown Cousin
- Our Little Canadian Cousin By Elizabeth R. Macdonald
- Our Little Chinese Cousin By Isaac Taylor Headland
- Our Little Cuban Cousin
- Our Little Dutch Cousin By Blanche McManus
- Our Little English Cousin By Blanche McManus
- Our Little Eskimo Cousin
- Our Little French Cousin By Blanche McManus
- Our Little German Cousin
- Our Little Hawaiian Cousin
- Our Little Indian Cousin
- Our Little Irish Cousin
- Our Little Italian Cousin
- Our Little Japanese Cousin
- Our Little Jewish Cousin
- Our Little Korean Cousin By H. Lee M. Pike
- Our Little Mexican Cousin By Edward C. Butler
- Our Little Norwegian Cousin
- Our Little Panama Cousin By H. Lee M. Pike
- Our Little Philippine Cousin
- Our Little Porto Rican Cousin
- Our Little Russian Cousin
- Our Little Scotch Cousin By Blanche McManus
- Our Little Siamese Cousin
- Our Little Spanish Cousin By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
- Our Little Swedish Cousin By Claire M. Coburn
- Our Little Swiss Cousin
- Our Little Turkish Cousin
-
-
- THE GOLDENROD LIBRARY
-
-The Goldenrod Library contains only the highest and purest
-literature,--stories which appeal alike both to children and to their
-parents and guardians.
-
-Each volume is well illustrated from drawings by competent artists,
-which, together with their handsomely decorated uniform binding, showing
-the goldenrod, usually considered the emblem of America, is a feature of
-their manufacture.
-
- Each one volume, small 12mo, illustrated, decorated cover,
- paper wrapper $0.35
-
-
- LIST OF TITLES
-
-
- Aunt Nabby's Children. By Frances Hodges White.
- Child's Dream of a Star, The. By Charles Dickens.
- Flight of Rosy Dawn, The. By Pauline Bradford Mackie.
- Findelkind. By Ouida.
- Fairy of the Rhone, The. By A. Comyns Carr.
- Gatty and I. By Frances E. Crompton.
- Great Emergency, A. By Juliana Horatia Ewing.
- Helena's Wonderworld. By Frances Hodges White.
- Jackanapes. By Juliana Horatia Ewing.
- Jerry's Reward. By Evelyn Snead Barnett.
- La Belle Nivernaise. By Alphonse Daudet.
- Little King Davie. By Nellie Hellis.
- Little Peterkin Vandike. By Charles Stuart Pratt.
- Little Professor, The. By Ida Horton Cash.
- Peggy's Trial. By Mary Knight Potter.
- Prince Yellowtop. By Kate Whiting Patch.
- Provence Rose, A. By Ouida.
- Rab and His Friends. By Dr. John Brown.
- Seventh Daughter, A. By Grace Wickham Curran.
- Sleeping Beauty, The. By Martha Baker Dunn.
- Small, Small Child, A. By E. Livingston Prescott.
- Story of a Short Life, The. By Juliana Horatia Ewing.
- Susanne. By Frances J. Delano.
- Water People, The. By Charles Lee Sleight.
- Young Archer, The. By Charles E. Brimblecom.
-
-
- COSY CORNER SERIES
-
- It is the intention of the publishers that this series shall contain
- only the very highest and purest literature,--stories that shall not
- only appeal to the children themselves, but be appreciated by all those
- who feel with them in their joys and sorrows.
-
- The numerous illustrations in each book are by well-known artists, and
- each volume has a separate attractive cover design.
-
- Each 1 vol., 16mo, cloth $0.50
-
- _By ANNIE FELLOWS JOHNSTON_
-
-
- The Little Colonel. (Trade Mark)
-
-The scene of this story is laid in Kentucky. Its heroine is a small girl,
-who is known as the Little Colonel, on account of her fancied resemblance
-to an old-school Southern gentleman, whose fine estate and old family are
-famous in the region.
-
-
- The Giant Scissors.
-
-This is the story of Joyce and of her adventures in France. Joyce is a
-great friend of the Little Colonel, and in later volumes shares with her
-the delightful experiences of the "House Party" and the "Holidays."
-
-
- Two Little Knights of Kentucky. Who Were the Little Colonel's
- Neighbors.
-
-In this volume the Little Colonel returns to us like an old friend, but
-with added grace and charm. She is not, however, the central figure of
-the story, that place being taken by the "two little knights."
-
-
- Mildred's Inheritance.
-
-A delightful little story of a lonely English girl who comes to America
-and is befriended by a sympathetic American family who are attracted by
-her beautiful speaking voice. By means of this one gift she is enabled to
-help a school-girl who has temporarily lost the use of her eyes, and thus
-finally her life becomes a busy, happy one.
-
-
- Cicely and Other Stories for Girls.
-
-The readers of Mrs. Johnston's charming juveniles will be glad to learn
-of the issue of this volume for young people.
-
-
- Aunt 'Liza's Hero and Other Stories.
-
-A collection of six bright little stories, which will appeal to all boys
-and most girls.
-
-
- Big Brother.
-
-A story of two boys. The devotion and care of Steven, himself a small
-boy, for his baby brother, is the theme of the simple tale.
-
-
- Ole Mammy's Torment.
-
-"Ole Mammy's Torment" has been fitly called "a classic of Southern life."
-It relates the haps and mishaps of a small negro lad, and tells how he
-was led by love and kindness to a knowledge of the right.
-
-
- The Story of Dago.
-
-In this story Mrs. Johnston relates the story of Dago, a pet monkey,
-owned jointly by two brothers. Dago tells his own story, and the account
-of his haps and mishaps is both interesting and amusing.
-
-
- The Quilt That Jack Built.
-
-A pleasant little story of a boy's labor of love, and how it changed the
-course of his life many years after it was accomplished.
-
-
- Flip's Islands of Providence.
-
-A story of a boy's life battle, his early defeat, and his final triumph,
-well worth the reading.
-
-
- _By EDITH ROBINSON_
-
-
- A Little Puritan's First Christmas.
-
-A story of Colonial times in Boston, telling how Christmas was invented
-by Betty Sewall, a typical child of the Puritans, aided by her brother
-Sam.
-
-
- A Little Daughter of Liberty.
-
-The author's motive for this story is well indicated by a quotation from
-her introduction, as follows:
-
-"One ride is memorable in the early history of the American Revolution,
-the well-known ride of Paul Revere. Equally deserving of commendation is
-another ride,--the ride of Anthony Severn,--which was no less historic in
-its action or memorable in its consequences."
-
-
- A Loyal Little Maid.
-
-A delightful and interesting story of Revolutionary days, in which the
-child heroine, Betsey Schuyler, renders important services to George
-Washington.
-
-
- A Little Puritan Rebel.
-
-This is an historical tale of a real girl, during the time when the
-gallant Sir Harry Vane was governor of Massachusetts.
-
-
- A Little Puritan Pioneer.
-
-The scene of this story is laid in the Puritan settlement at Charlestown.
-The little girl heroine adds another to the list of favorites so well
-known to the young people.
-
-
- A Little Puritan Bound Girl.
-
-A story of Boston in Puritan days, which is of great interest to youthful
-readers.
-
-
- A Little Puritan Cavalier.
-
-The story of a "Little Puritan Cavalier" who tried with all his boyish
-enthusiasm to emulate the spirit and ideals of the dead Crusaders.
-
-
- _By OUIDA (Louise de la Ramee)_
-
-
- A Dog of Flanders: A Christmas Story.
-
-Too well and favorably known to require description.
-
-
- The Nurnberg Stove.
-
-This beautiful story has never before been published at a popular price.
-
-
- _By FRANCES MARGARET FOX_
-
-
- The Little Giant's Neighbours.
-
-A charming nature story of a "little giant" whose neighbours were the
-creatures of the field and garden.
-
-
- Farmer Brown and the Birds.
-
-A little story which teaches children that the birds are man's best
-friends.
-
-
- Betty of Old Mackinaw.
-
-A charming story of child-life, appealing especially to the little
-readers who like stories of "real people."
-
-
- Brother Billy.
-
-The story of Betty's brother, and some further adventures of Betty
-herself.
-
-
- Mother Nature's Little Ones.
-
-Curious little sketches describing the early lifetime, or "childhood," of
-the little creatures out-of-doors.
-
-
- How Christmas Came to the Mulvaneys.
-
-A bright, lifelike little story of a family of poor children, with an
-unlimited capacity for fun and mischief. The wonderful never-to-be
-forgotten Christmas that came to them is the climax of a series of
-exciting incidents.
-
-
- _By MISS MULOCK_
-
-
- The Little Lame Prince.
-
-A delightful story of a little boy who has many adventures by means of
-the magic gifts of his fairy godmother.
-
-
- Adventures of a Brownie.
-
-The story of a household elf who torments the cook and gardener, but is a
-constant joy and delight to the children who love and trust him.
-
-
- His Little Mother.
-
-Miss Mulock's short stories for children are a constant source of delight
-to them, and "His Little Mother," in this new and attractive dress, will
-be welcomed by hosts of youthful readers.
-
-
- Little Sunshine's Holiday.
-
-An attractive story of a summer outing. "Little Sunshine" is another of
-those beautiful child-characters for which Miss Mulock is so justly
-famous.
-
-
- _By MARSHALL SAUNDERS_
-
-
- For His Country.
-
-A sweet and graceful story of a little boy who loved his country; written
-with that charm which has endeared Miss Saunders to hosts of readers.
-
-
- Nita, the Story of an Irish Setter.
-
-In this touching little book, Miss Saunders shows how dear to her heart
-are all of God's dumb creatures.
-
-
- Alpatok, the Story of an Eskimo Dog.
-
-Alpatok, an Eskimo dog from the far north, was stolen from his master and
-left to starve in a strange city, but was befriended and cared for, until
-he was able to return to his owner. Miss Saunders's story is based on
-truth, and the pictures in the book of "Alpatok" are based on a
-photograph of the real Eskimo dog who had such a strange experience.
-
-
- _By WILL ALLEN DROMGOOLE_
-
-
- The Farrier's Dog and His Fellow.
-
-This story, written by the gifted young Southern woman, will appeal to
-all that is best in the natures of the many admirers of her graceful and
-piquant style.
-
-
- The Fortunes of the Fellow.
-
-Those who read and enjoyed the pathos and charm of "The Farrier's Dog and
-His Fellow" will welcome the further account of the adventures of Baydaw
-and the Fellow at the home of the kindly smith.
-
-
- The Best of Friends.
-
-This continues the experiences of the Farrier's dog and his Fellow,
-written in Miss Dromgoole's well-known charming style.
-
-
- Down in Dixie.
-
-A fascinating story for boys and girls, of a family of Alabama children
-who move to Florida and grow up in the South.
-
-
- _By MARIAN W. WILDMAN_
-
-
- Loyalty Island.
-
-An account of the adventures of four children and their pet dog on an
-island, and how they cleared their brother from the suspicion of
-dishonesty.
-
-
- Theodore and Theodora.
-
-This is a story of the exploits and mishaps of two mischievous twins, and
-continues the adventures of the interesting group of children in "Loyalty
-Island."
-
-
- _By CHARLES G. D. ROBERTS_
-
-
- The Cruise of the Yacht Dido.
-
-The story of two boys who turned their yacht into a fishing boat to earn
-money to pay for a college course, and of their adventures while
-exploring in search of hidden treasure.
-
-
- The Lord of the Air
- The Story of the Eagle
- The King of the Mamozekel
- The Story of the Moose
- The Watchers of the Camp-fire
- The Story of the Panther
- The Haunter of the Pine Gloom
- The Story of the Lynx
- The Return to the Trails
- The Story of the Bear
- The Little People of the Sycamore
- The Story of the Raccoon
-
-
- _By OTHER AUTHORS_
-
-
- The Great Scoop.
-
-_By MOLLY ELLIOT SEAWELL_
-
-A capital tale of newspaper life in a big city, and of a bright,
-enterprising, likable youngster employed thereon.
-
-
- John Whopper.
-
-The late Bishop Clark's popular story of the boy who fell through the
-earth and came out in China, with a new introduction by Bishop Potter.
-
-
- The Dole Twins.
-
-_By KATE UPSON CLARK_
-
-The adventures of two little people who tried to earn money to buy
-crutches for a lame aunt. An excellent description of child-life about
-1812, which will greatly interest and amuse the children of to-day, whose
-life is widely different.
-
-
- Larry Hudson's Ambition.
-
-_By JAMES OTIS_, author of "Toby Tyler," etc.
-
-Larry Hudson is a typical American boy, whose hard work and enterprise
-gain him his ambition,--an education and a start in the world.
-
-
- The Little Christmas Shoe.
-
-_By JANE P. SCOTT WOODRUFF_
-
-A touching story of Yule-tide.
-
-
- Wee Dorothy.
-
-_By LAURA UPDEGRAFF_
-
-A story of two orphan children, the tender devotion of the eldest, a boy,
-for his sister being its theme and setting. With a bit of sadness at the
-beginning, the story is otherwise bright and sunny, and altogether
-wholesome in every way.
-
-
- The King of the Golden River: A Legend of Stiria. By JOHN RUSKIN
-
-Written fifty years or more ago, and not originally intended for
-publication, this little fairy-tale soon became known and made a place
-for itself.
-
-
- A Child's Garden of Verses.
-
-_By R. L. STEVENSON_
-
-Mr. Stevenson's little volume is too well known to need description. It
-will be heartily welcomed in this new and attractive edition.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Notes
-
-
---Silently corrected a few typos (but left nonstandard spelling and
- dialect as is).
-
---Rearranged front matter (and moved illustrations) to a more-logical
- streaming order.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Rival Campers, by Ruel Perley Smith
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RIVAL CAMPERS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 40548.txt or 40548.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/4/0/5/4/40548/
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Rod Crawford, Dave Morgan
-and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
-will be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
-one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
-(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
-permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
-set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
-copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
-protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
-Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
-charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
-do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
-rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
-such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
-research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
-practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
-subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
-redistribution.
-
-
-
-*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
- www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
-all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
-If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
-terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
-entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
-and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
-or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
-collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
-individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
-located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
-copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
-works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
-are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
-Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
-freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
-this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
-the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
-keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
-a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
-the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
-before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
-creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
-Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
-the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
-States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
-access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
-whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
-copied or distributed:
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
-from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
-posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
-and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
-or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
-with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
-work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
-through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
-Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
-1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
-terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
-to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
-permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
-word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
-distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
-"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
-posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
-you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
-copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
-request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
-form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
-that
-
-- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
- owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
- has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
- Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
- must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
- prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
- returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
- sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
- address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
- the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or
- destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
- and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
- Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
- money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
- of receipt of the work.
-
-- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
-forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
-both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
-Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
-Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
-collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
-"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
-corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
-property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
-computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
-your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
-your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
-the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
-refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
-providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
-receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
-is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
-opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
-WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
-WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
-If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
-law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
-interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
-the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
-provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
-with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
-promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
-harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
-that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
-or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
-work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
-Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
-
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
-including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
-because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
-people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
-To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
-and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
-Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
-permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
-Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
-throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at 809
-North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email
-contact links and up to date contact information can be found at the
-Foundation's web site and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
-SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
-particular state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
-To donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
-with anyone. For forty years, he produced and distributed Project
-Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
-unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
-keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
-
- www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/40548.zip b/40548.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index fd239a9..0000000
--- a/40548.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ