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+<h1>The Project Gutenberg EBook of True to Himself, by Edward Stratemeyer
+</h1>
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
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+Title: True to Himself
+
+Author: Edward Stratemeyer
+
+Release Date: January, 2004 [EBook #4995]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on April 7, 2002]
+
+Edition: 10
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+Language: English
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+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, TRUE TO HIMSELF ***
+
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+This eBook was produced by Jim Weiler, xooqi.com
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+</pre>
+
+
+<h1>TRUE TO HIMSELF</h1>
+<h4>ROGER STRONG'S STRUGGLE FOR PLACE</h4>
+<h4>BY</h4>
+<h2>EDWARD STRATEMEYER</h2>
+<HR>
+<h4>COPYRIGHT 1891 by Frank A Munsey.</h4>
+<h4>Copyright 1900 by Lee and Shepard.</h4>
+<h3>PREFACE</h3>
+<P>
+"True to himself," while a complete story in itself, forms
+the third volume of the "Ship and Shore Series," tales of adventure on land
+and sea, written for both boys and girls.
+<P>
+In this story we are introduced to Roger Strong, a typical
+American country lad, and his sister Kate, who, by an unhappy combination
+of events, are thrown upon their own resources and compelled to make their
+own way in the world.
+<P>
+To make one's way in the world is, ordinarily, difficult
+enough; but when one is handicapped by a cloud on the family name, the difficulty
+becomes far greater. With his father thrown into prison on a serious charge,
+Roger finds that few people will have anything to do with either himself
+or his sister, and the jeers flung at him are at times almost more than he
+can bear. But he is "true to himself" in the best meaning of that saying,
+rising above those who would pull him down, and, in the end, not only succeeds
+in making a place for himself in the world, but also scores a worthy triumph
+over those who had caused his parents' downfall.
+<P>
+When this story was first printed as a serial, the author
+has every reason to believe it was well received by the boys and girls for
+whom it was written. In its present revised form he hopes it will meet with
+equal commendation.
+<P ALIGN=RIGHT class=right>
+Edward Stratemeyer. &nbsp; &nbsp;
+<P ALIGN=LEFT class=left>
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;Newark, N.J.,<BR>
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; April 15, 1900.
+
+<HR>
+<h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
+<h4>THE TROUBLE IN THE ORCHARD</h4>
+<P>
+"Hi, there, Duncan Woodward!" I called
+out. "What are you doing in Widow Canby's orchard?"
+<P>
+"None of your business, Roger Strong," replied the only
+son of the wealthiest merchant in Darbyville.
+<P>
+"You are stealing her pears," I went on. "Your pockets
+are full of them."
+<P>
+"See here, Roger Strong, just you mind your own business
+and leave me alone."
+<P>
+"I am minding my business," I rejoined warmly.
+<P>
+"Indeed!" And Duncan put as much of a sneer as was possible
+in the word.
+<P>
+"Yes, indeed. Widow Canby pays me for taking care of her
+orchard, and that includes keeping an eye on these pear trees," and I approached
+the tree upon the lowest branch of which Duncan was standing.
+<P>
+"Humph! You think you're mighty big!" he blustered, as
+he jumped to the ground. "What right has a fellow like you to talk to me
+in this manner? You are getting too big for your boots."
+<P>
+"I don't think so. I'm guarding this property, and I want
+you to hand over what you've taken and leave the premises," I retorted, for
+I did not fancy the style in which I was being addressed.
+<P>
+"Pooh! Do you expect me to pay any attention to that?"
+<P>
+"You had better, Duncan. If you don't you may get into
+trouble."
+<P>
+"I suppose you intend to tell the widow what I've done."
+<P>
+"I certainly shall; unless you do as I've told you to."
+<P>
+Duncan bit his lip. "How do you know but what the widow
+said I could have the pears?" he ventured.
+<P>
+"If she did, it's all right," I returned, astonished,
+not so much over the fact that Widow Canby had granted the permission, as
+that such a high-toned young gentleman as Duncan Woodward should desire that
+privilege.
+<P>
+"You've no business to jump at conclusions," he added
+sharply.
+<P>
+"If I judged you wrongly, I beg your pardon, Duncan. I'll
+speak to the widow about it."
+<P>
+I began to move off toward the house. Duncan hurried after
+me and caught me by the arm.
+<P>
+"You fool you, what do you mean?" he demanded.
+<P>
+"I'm going to find out if you are telling the truth."
+<P>
+"Isn't my word enough?"
+<P>
+"It will do no harm to ask," I replied evasively, not
+caring to pick a quarrel, and yet morally sure that he was prevaricating.
+<P>
+"So you think I'm telling you a falsehood? I've a good
+mind to give you a sound drubbing," he cried angrily.
+<P>
+Duncan Woodward had many of the traits of a bully about
+him. He was the only son of a widower who nearly idolized him, and, lacking
+a mother's guiding influence, he had grown up wayward in the extreme.
+<P>
+He was a tall, well-built fellow, strong from constant
+athletic exercise, and given, on this account, to having his way among his
+associates.
+<P>
+Yet I was not afraid of him. Indeed, to tell the truth,
+I was not afraid of any one. For eight years I had been shoved in life from
+pillar to post, until now threats had no terrors for me.
+<P>
+Both of my parents were dead to me. My mother died when
+I was but five years old. She was of a delicate nature, and, strange as it
+may seem, I am inclined to believe that it was for the best that her death
+occurred when it did. The reason I believe this is, because she was thus
+spared the disgrace that came upon our family several years later.
+<P>
+At her death my father was employed as head clerk by the
+firm of Holland &amp; Mack, wholesale provision merchants of Newville, a
+thriving city which was but a few miles from Darbyville, a pretty village
+located on the Pass River.
+<P>
+We occupied a handsome house in the centre of the village.
+Our family, besides my parents and myself, contained but one other member&#151; my
+sister Kate, who was several years my senior.
+<P>
+When our beloved mother died, Kate took the management
+of our home upon her shoulders, and as she had learned, during my mother's
+long illness, how everything should be done, our domestic affairs ran smoothly.
+All this time I attended the Darbyville school, and was laying the foundation
+for a commercial education, intending at some later day to follow in the
+footsteps of my father.
+<P>
+Two years passed, and then my father's manner changed.
+From being bright and cheerful toward us he became moody and silent. What
+the cause was I could not guess, and it did not help matters to be told by
+Duncan Woodward, whose father was also employed by Holland &amp; Mack, that
+"some folks would soon learn what was what, and no mistake."
+<P>
+At length the thunderbolt fell. Returning from school
+one day, I found Kate in tears.
+<P>
+"Oh, Roger!" she burst out. "They say father has stolen
+money from Holland &amp; Mack, and they have just arrested him for a thief!"
+<P>
+The blow was a terrible one. I was but a boy of fourteen,
+and the news completely bewildered me. I put on my cap, and together with
+Kate, took the first horse car to Newville to find out what it all meant.
+<P>
+We found my father in jail, where he had been placed to
+await the action of the grand jury. It was with difficulty that we obtained
+permission to see him, and ascertained the facts of the case.
+<P>
+The charge against him was for raising money upon forged
+cheeks, eight in number, the total amount being nearly twelve thousand dollars.
+The name of the firm had been forged, and the money collected in New York
+and Brooklyn. I was not old enough to understand the particulars.
+<P>
+My father protested his innocence, but it was of no avail.
+The forgery was declared to be his work, and, though it was said that he
+must have had an accomplice to obtain the money, he was adjudged the guilty
+party.
+<P>
+"Ten years in the State's prison." That was the penalty.
+My father grew deadly white, while as for me, my very heart seemed to stop
+beating. Kate fainted, and two days later the doctor announced that she had
+an attack of brain fever.
+<P>
+Two months dragged slowly by. Then my sister was declared
+to be out of danger. Next the house was sold over our heads, and we were
+turned out upon the world, branded as the children of a thief, to get a living
+as best we could.
+<P>
+Both of us would willingly have left Darbyville, but where
+should we go? The only relation we had was an uncle,&#151; Captain Enos Moss,&#151; and
+he was on an extended trip to South America, and when he would return no
+one knew.
+<P>
+All the friends we had had before deserted us. The girls
+"turned up their noses" at Kate,&#151; which made my blood boil,&#151; and the boys
+fought shy of me.
+<P>
+I tried to find work, but without success. Even in places
+where help was wanted excuses were made to me&#151; trivial excuses that meant
+but one thing&#151; that they did not desire any one in their employ who had a
+stain upon his name.
+<P>
+Kate was equally unsuccessful; and we might have starved
+but for a lucky incident that happened just as we were ready to give up in
+despair.
+<P>
+Walking along the road one day, I saw Farmer Tilford's
+bull tearing across the field toward a gate which had been accidentally left
+open. The Widow Canby, absorbed in thought and quite unconscious of the danger
+that threatened her, was just passing this gate, when I darted forward and
+closed it just a second before the bull reached it. I did not consider my
+act an heroic one, but the Widow Canby declared it otherwise.
+<P>
+"You are a brave boy," she said. "Who are you?"
+<P>
+I told her, coloring as I spoke. But she laid a kindly
+hand upon my shoulder.
+<P>
+"Even if your father was guilty, you are not to blame,"
+she said, and she made me tell her all about myself, and about Kate, and
+the hard luck we were having.
+<P>
+The Widow Canby lived in an old-fashioned house, surrounded
+on three sides by orchards several acres in extent. She was well to do, but
+made no pretence to style. Many thought her extremely eccentric but that
+was only because they did not know her.
+<P>
+The day I came to her assistance she made me stay to supper,
+and when I left it was under promise to call the next day and bring my sister
+along.
+<P>
+This I did, and a long conversation took place, which
+resulted in Kate and myself going to live with the widow&#151; I to take care
+of the garden and the orchards, and my sister to help with the housekeeping,
+for which we received our board and joint wages of fifteen dollars per month.
+<P>
+We could not have fallen into better hands. Mrs. Canby
+was as considerate as one would wish, and had it not been for the cloud upon
+our name we would have been content.
+<P>
+But the stain upon our family was a source of unpleasantness
+to us. I fully believed my father innocent, and I wondered if the time would
+ever come when his character would be cleared.
+<P>
+My duties around Widow Canby's place were not onerous,
+and I had plenty of chance for self-improvement. I had finished my course
+at the village school in spite of the calumny that was cast upon me, and
+now I continued my studies in private whenever the opportunity offered.
+<P>
+I was looked down upon by nearly every one in the village.
+To strangers I was pointed out as the convict's son, and people reckoned
+that the "Widder Canby wasn't right sharp when she took in them as wasn't
+to be trusted."
+<P>
+I was not over-sensitive, but these remarks, which generally
+reached my ears sooner or later, made me very angry. What right had people
+to look down on my sister and myself? It was not fair to Kate and me, and
+I proposed to stand it no longer.
+<P>
+It was a lovely morning in September, but I was in no
+mood to enjoy the bright sunshine and clear air that flooded the orchard.
+I had just come from the depot with the mail for Mrs. Canby, and down there
+I had heard two men pass opinions on my father's case that were not only
+uncharitable but unjust.
+<P>
+I was therefore in no frame of mind to put up with Duncan
+Woodward's actions, and when he spoke of giving me a good drubbing I prepared
+to defend myself.
+<P>
+"Two can play at that game, Duncan," I replied.
+<P>
+"Ho! ho! Do you mean to say you can stand up against me?"
+he asked derisively.
+<P>
+"I can try," I returned stoutly. "I'm sure now that you
+have no business here."
+<P>
+"Why, you miserable little thief&#151;"
+<P>
+"Stop that! I'm no thief, if you please."
+<P>
+"Well, you're the son of one, and that's the same thing."
+<P>
+"My father is innocent, and I won't allow any one, big
+or little, to call him a thief," I burst out. "Some day he will be cleared."
+<P>
+"Not much!" laughed Duncan. "My father knows all about
+the case. I can tell you that."
+<P>
+"Then perhaps he knows where the money went to," I replied
+quickly. "I know he was very intimate with my father at that time."
+<P>
+Had I stopped to think I would not have spoken as I did.
+My remark made the young man furious, and I had hardly spoken before Duncan
+hit me a stinging blow on the forehead, and, springing upon me, bore me to
+the ground.
+<h3>CHAPTER II</h3>
+<h4>AN ASSAULT ON THE ROAD</h4>
+<P>
+I knew Duncan Woodward would not
+hesitate to attack me. He was a much larger fellow than myself, and always
+ready to fight any one he thought he could whip.
+<P>
+Yet I was not prepared for the sudden onslaught that had
+been made. Had I been, I might have parried his blow.
+<P>
+But I did not intend to be subdued as easily as he imagined.
+The blow on my forehead pained not a little, and it made me mad "clear through."
+<P>
+"Get off of me!" I cried, as Duncan brought his full weight
+down upon my chest.
+<P>
+"Not much! Not until you promise to keep quiet about this
+affair," he replied.
+<P>
+"If you don't get off, you'll be mighty sorry;" was my
+reply, as I squirmed around in an effort to throw him aside.
+<P>
+Suddenly he caught me by the ear, and gave that member
+a twist that caused me to cry out with pain.
+<P>
+"Now will you do as I say?" he demanded.
+<P>
+"No"
+<P>
+Again he caught my ear. But now I was ready for him. It
+was useless to try to shake him off. He was too heavy and powerful for that.
+So I brought a small, but effective weapon into play. The weapon was nothing
+more than a pin that held together a rent in my trousers made the day previous.
+Without hesitation I pulled it out and ran it a good half-inch into his leg.
+<P>
+The yell be gave would have done credit to a wild Indian,
+and he bounded a distance of several feet. I was not slow to take advantage
+of this movement, and in an instant I was on my feet and several yards away.
+<P>
+Duncan's rage knew no bounds. He was mad enough to "chew
+me up," and with a loud exclamation he sprang after me, aiming a blow at
+my head as he did so.
+<P>
+I dodged his arm, and then, gathering myself together,
+landed my fist fairly and squarely upon the tip of his nose, a blow that
+knocked him off his feet and sent him rolling to the ground.
+<P>
+To say that I was astonished at what I had done would
+not express my entire feelings. I was amazed, and could hardly credit my
+own eyesight. Yet there he lay, the blood flowing from the end of his nasal
+organ. He was completely knocked out, and I had done the deed. I did not
+fear for consequences. I felt justified in what I had done. But I wondered
+how Duncan would stand the punishment.
+<P>
+With a look of intense bitterness on his face he rose
+slowly to his feet. The blood was running down his chin, and there were several
+stains upon his white collar and his shirt front. If a look could have crushed
+me I would have been instantly annihilated.
+<P>
+"I'll fix you for that!" he roared. "Roger Strong, I'll
+get even with you, if it takes ten years!"
+<P>
+"Do what you please, Duncan Woodward," I rejoined. "I
+don't fear you. Only beware how you address me in the future. You will get
+yourself into trouble."
+<P>
+"I imagine you will be the one to get into trouble," he
+returned insinuatingly.
+<P>
+"I'm not afraid. But&#151; hold up there!" I added, for Duncan
+had begun to move off toward the fence.
+<P>
+"What for?"
+<P>
+"I want you to hand over the pears you picked."
+<P>
+"I won't."
+<P>
+"Very well. Then I'll report the case to Mrs. Canby."
+<P>
+Duncan grew white.
+<P>
+"Take your confounded fruit," he howled, throwing a dozen
+or more of the luscious pears at my feet. "If I don't get even with you,
+my name isn't Duncan Woodward!"
+<P>
+And with this parting threat he turned to the fence, jumped
+over, and strode down the road.
+<P>
+In spite of the seriousness of the affair I could not
+help but laugh. Duncan had no doubt thought it a great lark to rob the widow's
+orchard, never dreaming of the wrong he was doing or of the injury to the
+trees. Now his nose was swollen, his clothes soiled, and he had suffered
+defeat in every way.
+<P>
+I had no doubt that he would do all in his power to get
+even with me. He hated me and always had. At school I had surpassed him in
+our studies, and on the ball field I had proved myself a superior player.
+I do not wish to brag about what I did, but it is necessary to show why Duncan
+disliked me.
+<P>
+Nor was there much love lost on my side, though I always
+treated him fairly. The reason for this was plain.
+<P>
+As I have stated, his father, Aaron Woodward, was at one
+tune a fellow-clerk with my father. At the time my father was arrested, Woodward
+was one of his principal accusers. Duncan had, of course, taken up the matter.
+Since then Mr. Woodward had received a large legacy from a dead relative
+in Chicago, or its suburbs, and started the finest general store in Darbyville.
+But his bitterness toward us still continued.
+<P>
+That the man knew something about the money that had been
+stolen I did not doubt, but how to prove it was a difficult problem that
+I had pondered many times without arriving at any satisfactory conclusion.
+<P>
+I watched Duncan out of sight and then turned and walked
+slowly toward the house.
+<P>
+"Roger!"
+<P>
+It was Mrs. Canby who called me. She stood on the side
+porch with a letter in her hand.
+<P>
+"You want me?"
+<P>
+"Yes, I have quite important news," she continued. "My
+sister in Norfolk is very ill, and I must go to her at once. I have spoken
+to Kate about it. Do you think you can get along while I am gone?"
+<P>
+"Yes, ma'am. How long do you expect to be away?"
+<P>
+"If she is not seriously ill I shall be back by day after
+to-morrow. You can hitch up Jerry at once. The train leaves in an hour."
+<P>
+"I'll have him at the door in five minutes."
+<P>
+"And, Roger, you and Kate must take good care of things
+while I am gone. There are several hundred dollars locked up in my desk.
+I would take the money to the bank in Newville, only I hate to lose the time."
+<P>
+"I reckon it will be safe," I replied; "I'll keep good
+watch against burglars."
+<P>
+"Do you think you can handle a pistol?" she went on.
+<P>
+"I think I could," I replied, with all the interest of
+the average American boy in firearms.
+<P>
+"There is a pistol upstairs in my bureau that belonged
+to Mr. Canby. I will let you have that, though of course I trust you won't
+need it."
+<P>
+"Is it loaded?"
+<P>
+"Yes; I loaded it last week. I will lay it out before
+I go. Be very careful with it."
+<P>
+"I will," I promised her.
+<P>
+I hurried down to the barn, and in a few moments had Jerry
+hooked up to the family turnout. As I was about to jump in and drive to the
+house, a man confronted me.
+<P>
+He was a stranger, about forty years of age, with black
+hair and shaggy beard and eyebrows. He was seedily dressed, and altogether
+looked to be a disreputable character.
+<P>
+"Say, young man, can you help a fellow as is down on his
+luck?" he asked in a hoarse tone.
+<P>
+"Who are you?" I responded.
+<P>
+"I'm a moulder from Factoryville. The shop's shut down,
+and I'm out of money and out of work."
+<P>
+"How long have you been out?"
+<P>
+"Two weeks."
+<P>
+"And you haven't found work anywhere?"
+<P>
+"Not a stroke."
+<P>
+"Been to Newville?"
+<P>
+"All through it, and everything full."
+<P>
+I thought this was queer. I had glanced at the Want column
+of a Newville newspaper and had noted that moulders were wanted in several
+places.
+<P>
+The man's appearance did not strike me favorably, and
+when he came closer to me I noted that his breath smelt strongly of liquor.
+<P>
+"I don't think I can help you," said I. "I have nothing
+for you to do."
+<P>
+"Give me a quarter, then, will you? I ain't had nothing
+to eat since yesterday."
+<P>
+"But you've had something to drink," I could not help
+remark.
+<P>
+The man scowled, "How do you know?"
+<P>
+"I can smell it on you."
+<P>
+"I only had one glass,&#151; just to knock out a cold I caught.
+Come, make it half a dollar. I'll pay you back when I get work."
+<P>
+"I don't care to lend."
+<P>
+"Make it ten cents."
+<P>
+"Not a cent."
+<P>
+"You're mighty independent about it," he sneered.
+<P>
+"I have to be when such fellows as you tackle me," I returned
+with spirit.
+<P>
+"You're mighty high toned for a boy of your age."
+<P>
+"I'm too high toned to let you talk to me in this fashion.
+I want you to leave at once."
+<P>
+The tramp&#151; for the man was nothing else&#151; scowled worse
+than before.
+<P>
+"I'll leave when I please," he returned coolly.
+<P>
+I was nonplussed. I was in a hurry to get away to drive
+Widow Canby to the station. To leave the man hanging about the house with
+no one but my sister Kate home was simply out of the question.
+<P>
+Suddenly an idea struck me. Like most people who live
+in the country, Mrs. Canby kept a watch-dog&#151; a large and powerful mastiff
+called Major. He was tied up near the back stoop out of sight, but could
+be pressed into service on short notice.
+<P>
+"If you don't go at once, I'll set the dog on you."
+<P>
+"Huh! You can't fool me!"
+<P>
+"No fooling about it. Major! Major!" I called.
+<P>
+There was a rattling of chain as the animal tried to break
+away, and then a loud barking. The noise seemed to strike terror to the tramp's
+heart.
+<P>
+"I'll get even with you, young fellow!" he growled, and
+running to the fence he scrambled over and out of sight. I did not wait to
+see in what direction he went.
+<P>
+When I reached the porch I found Mrs. Canby bidding my
+sister good-by. A moment more and she was on the seat. I touched up Jerry
+and we were off.
+<P>
+"It took you a long time to hitch up," the widow remarked
+as we drove along.
+<P>
+"It wasn't that," I replied, and told her about the tramp.
+<P>
+"You must be very careful of those men," she said anxiously.
+"Some of them will not stop at anything."
+<P>
+"I'll be wide awake," I rejoined reassuringly.
+<P>
+It was not a long drive to the station. When we arrived
+there, Mrs. Canby had over five minutes to spare, and this time was spent
+in buying a ticket and giving me final instructions.
+<P>
+At length the train came along and she was off. I waited
+a few moments longer and then drove away.
+<P>
+I had several purchases to make in the village&#151; a
+pruning-knife, a bag of feed, and some groceries, and these took some time
+to buy, so it was nearly noon when I started home.
+<P>
+Several times I imagined that a couple of the village
+young men noticed me very closely, but I paid no attention and went on my
+way, never dreaming of what was in store for me.
+<P>
+The road to the widow's house ran for half a mile or more
+through a heavy belt of timber land. We were jogging along at a fair pace,
+and I was looking over a newspaper I had picked up on the station platform.
+Suddenly some one sprang out from the bushes and seized Jerry by the bridle.
+<P>
+Astonished and alarmed, I sprang up to see what was the
+matter. As I did so I received a stinging blow on the side of the head, and
+the next instant was dragged rudely from the carriage.
+<h3>CHAPTER III</h3>
+<h4>THE MODELS</h4>
+<P>
+I had been taken completely off my
+guard, but by instinct I tried to ward off my assailants. My effort was a
+useless one. In a trice I found myself on the ground, surrounded by half
+a dozen of the fastest young men to be found in Darbyville.
+<P>
+Prominent among them was Duncan Woodward, and I rightfully
+guessed that it was he who had organized the attack.
+<P>
+"Take it easy, Strong," exclaimed a fellow named Moran,
+"unless you want to be all broke up."
+<P>
+"What do you mean by treating me in this way?" I cried
+indignantly.
+<P>
+"You'll find out soon enough," said Phillips, another
+of the young men. "Come, stop your struggling."
+<P>
+"I'll do nothing of the kind. You have no right to molest
+me."
+<P>
+"Pooh!" sniffed Duncan. "The Models have a right to do
+anything."
+<P>
+"The Models?" I queried, in perplexity. "Who are they?"
+<P>
+"The Models are a band of young gentlemen organized for
+the purpose of social enjoyment and to teach cads lessons that they are not
+likely to forget," replied Moran.
+<P>
+"I suppose you are the members," I said, surveying the
+half-dozen.
+<P>
+"We have that honor," rejoined a boy named Barton, who
+had not yet spoken.
+<P>
+"And we intend to teach you a lesson," added Pultzer,
+a short, stout chap, whose father had once been a butcher.
+<P>
+"What for?"
+<P>
+"For your unwarranted attack upon our illustrious president."
+<P>
+"Your president? You mean Duncan?"
+<P>
+"Mr. Woodward, if you please," interrupted Duncan, loftily.
+"I won't have such a low-bred fellow as you calling me by my first name."
+<P>
+"I'm no lower bred than you are," I retorted.
+<P>
+"Come, none of that!"cried Moran. "We all know you well.
+We shall at once proceed to teach you a lesson."
+<P>
+I could not help smile&#151; the whole affair seemed so ridiculous
+that had it not been for the rough handling I had received when pulled from
+the carriage, I would have considered it a joke.
+<P>
+"You'll find it no laughing matter," said Duncan, savagely,
+angry, no doubt, because I did not show more signs of fear. "Just wait till
+we are through with you. You'll grin on the other side of your face."
+<P>
+"What do you intend to do with me?"
+<P>
+"You'll see soon enough."
+<P>
+I began to think the affair might be more serious than
+I had imagined. Six to one was heavy odds, and who could tell what these
+wild fellows would not do?
+<P>
+"I want you to let me go at once," I said decidedly. "If
+you don't, it will be the worse for you."
+<P>
+"Not a bit of it. We intend that you shall remember this
+occasion as long as you live," returned Moran. "Come, march along with us."
+<P>
+"Where to?"
+<P>
+"Never mind. March!"
+<P>
+For reply I turned, and made a hasty jump for the carriage,
+intending to utilize Jerry in a bold dash for liberty. I had just placed
+my foot upon the step and called to the horse when Moran caught me by the
+jacket and dragged me to the ground.
+<P>
+"No you don't!" he ejaculated roughly.
+<P>
+"There, Dunc, catch hold of him; and you too, Ellery.
+We mustn't let him escape after we've watched two hours to catch him!"
+<P>
+In an instant, I was surrounded. Now that Duncan had his
+friends to back him he was brave enough and held my arm in a grip of iron.
+<P>
+"Any one bring a rope?" went on Moran.
+<P>
+"Here's one," replied Ellery Blake.
+<P>
+"Hand it over. We had better bind his hands."
+<P>
+Knowing that it would be folly to resist, I allowed them
+to do as Moran had advised. My wrists were knotted together behind my back,
+and then the cord was drawn tightly about my waist.
+<P>
+"Now march!"
+<P>
+"How about the horse and carriage?"
+<P>
+"They'll be O. K."
+<P>
+There seemed to be no help for it, so I walked along with
+them. Had there been the slightest chance offered to escape I would have
+taken it, but warned by experience, all six kept close watch over me.
+<P>
+Away we went through the woods that lined the east side
+of the road. It was bad walking, and with both my hands behind me I was several
+times in danger of stumbling. Indeed, once I did go down, but the firm grasp
+of my captors saved me from injury.
+<P>
+Presently we came to a long clearing, where it had once
+been the intention of some capitalists to build a railroad. But the matter
+had drifted into litigation, and nothing was done but to build a tool house
+and cut away the trees and brush.
+<P>
+The building had often been the resort of tramps, and
+was in a dilapidated condition. It was probably fifteen feet square, having
+a door at one end and a window at the other. The roof was flat and full of
+holes, but otherwise the building was fairly strong.
+<P>
+"Here we are, fellows," said Duncan, as we stopped in
+front of the door. "Just let go of him."
+<P>
+The others did as he requested. But they formed a small
+circle around me that I might not escape.
+<P>
+"Now that I have got you in a place free from interruption
+I intend to square up accounts with you," continued the president of the
+Models. "You hit me a foul blow this morning."
+<P>
+"You brought it on yourself, Duncan," I replied, as coolly
+as I could, though I was keenly interested.
+<P>
+"Stop! How many times must I tell you not to call me by
+my first name."
+<P>
+"Well, then, Woodward, if that suits you better."
+<P>
+<I>"Mr.</I> Woodward, if you please."
+<P>
+"Oh, come, Dunc, hurry up," interrupted Moran. "We don't
+want to stay here all day."
+<P>
+"I'm only teaching this fellow a lesson in politeness."
+<P>
+"All right; only cut it short."
+<P>
+"See here, Moran, who's the president of this club?"
+<P>
+"You are."
+<P>
+"Well, then, I'll take my own time," replied Duncan, loftily.
+<P>
+"Go ahead then. But you'll have to do without me," rejoined
+Moran, considerably provoked by the other's domineering tone.
+<P>
+"I will?"
+<P>
+"Yes. I've got other things to do besides standing here
+gassing all day."
+<P>
+"Indeed!" sneered Duncan.
+<P>
+"Yes, indeed!"
+<P>
+I enjoyed the scene. It looked very much as if there would
+be lively times without my aid.
+<P>
+"You're getting up on your dignity mighty quick, Dan Moran."
+<P>
+"I don't intend to play servant-in-waiting for any one,
+Duncan Woodward."
+<P>
+"Who asked you to?"
+<P>
+"&nbsp;'Actions speak louder than words.'&nbsp;"
+<P>
+"I'm the president of the Models, am I not?"
+<P>
+"Yes, but you're not a model president."
+<P>
+I could not help smiling at Moran's pun. He was not a
+bad chap, and had he not been to a great extent under Duncan's influence
+he might have been a first-rate fellow.
+<P>
+Of course, as is the fashion among men as well as boys,
+all the others groaned at the pun; and then Ellery broke in:&#151;
+<P>
+"Come, come, this will never do. Go ahead with Strong,
+Dunc."
+<P>
+"I intend to," was the president's rejoinder. "But you
+all promised to stick by me, and I don't want any one to back out."
+<P>
+"I'm not backing out," put in Moran. "I only want to hurry
+matters up."
+<P>
+There was a pause after this speech, then Duncan addressed
+me:&#151;
+<P>
+"Perhaps you are anxious to know why I brought you here?"
+<P>
+"Not particularly," I returned coldly.
+<P>
+Duncan gave a sniff.
+<P>
+"I guess that's all put on."
+<P>
+"Not at all. What I am anxious to know is, what you intend
+to do with me."
+<P>
+"Well, first of all I want you to get down on your knees
+and apologize for your conduct toward me this morning."
+<P>
+"Not much!" I cried.
+<P>
+"You are in my power."
+<P>
+"I don't care. Go ahead and do your worst," I replied
+recklessly, willing to suffer almost anything rather than apologize to such
+a chap as Duncan Woodward.
+<P>
+Besides, what had I done to call for an apology? I had
+certainly treated him no worse than he deserved. He was a spoilt boy and
+a bully, and I would die rather than go down on my knees to him.
+<P>
+"You don't know what's in store for you," said Dunce,
+nonplussed by my manner.
+<P>
+"As I said before, I'll risk it."
+<P>
+"Very well. Where is the rope, boys?"
+<P>
+"Here you are," answered Pultzer. "Plenty of it."
+<P>
+As he spoke he produced a stout clothes line, five or
+six yards in length.
+<P>
+"We'll bind his hands a little tighter first," instructed
+Duncan, "and then his legs. Be sure and make the knots strong, so they won't
+slip. He must not escape us."
+<P>
+I tried to protest against these proceedings, but with
+my hands already bound it was useless.
+<P>
+In five minutes the clothes line had been passed around
+my body from head to feet, and I was almost as stiff as an Egyptian mummy.
+<P>
+"Now catch hold, and we'll carry him into the tool house,"
+said Duncan. "I guess after he has spent twenty-four hours in that place
+without food or water he'll be mighty anxious to come to terms."
+<P>
+I was half dragged and half carried to the tool house
+and dropped upon the floor. Then the door was closed upon me, and I was left
+to my fate.
+<h3>CHAPTER IV</h3>
+<h4>THE TRAMP AGAIN</h4>
+<P>
+I am sure that all will admit that
+the prospect before me was not a particularly bright one. I was bound hand
+and foot and left without food or water.
+<P>
+Yet as I lay upon the hard floor of the tool house I was
+not so much concerned about myself as I was about matters at Widow Canby's
+house. It would be a hardship to pass the night where I was, to say nothing
+of how I might be treated when Duncan Woodward and his followers returned.
+But in the meantime, how would Kate fare?
+<P>
+I knew that my sister would be greatly alarmed at my continued
+absence. She fully expected me to be home long before this. As near as I
+could judge it was now an hour or so after noon, and she would have dinner
+kept warm on the kitchen stove, expecting every minute to see me drive up
+the lane.
+<P>
+Then again I was worried over the fact that the widow
+had left the house and her money in my charge. To be sure, the latter was
+locked up in her private secretary; but I felt it to be as much in my care
+as if it had been placed in my shirt bosom or the bottom of my trunk.
+<P>
+I concluded that it was my duty, then, to free myself
+as quickly as possible from the bonds which the members of the Model Club
+had placed upon me. But this idea was more easily conceived than carried
+out.
+<P>
+In vain I tugged at the clothes line that held my arms
+and hands fast to my body. Duncan and the others had done their work well,
+and the only result of my efforts was to make the cord cut so deep into my
+flesh that several times I was ready to cry out from pain.
+<P>
+In my attempts I tried to rise to my feet, but found it
+an impossibility, and only succeeded in bumping my head severely against
+the wall.
+<P>
+There was no use in calling for help, and though I halloed
+several times I soon gave it up. I was fully three-quarters of a mile from
+any house and half that distance from the road, and who would be likely to
+hear me so far off?
+<P>
+The afternoon dragged slowly along, and finally the sun
+went down and the evening shadows crept up. By this time I was quite hungry
+and tremendously thirsty. But with nothing at hand to satisfy the one or
+allay the other I resolutely put all thoughts of both out of my head.
+<P>
+In the old tool house there had been left several empty
+barrels, behind which was a quantity of shavings that I found far more
+comfortable to rest upon than the bare floor.
+<P>
+As the evening wore on I wondered if I would be able to
+sleep. There was no use worrying about matters, as it would do no good, so
+I was inclined to treat the affair philosophically and make the best of it.
+<P>
+An hour passed, and I was just dropping into a light doze
+when a noise outside attracted my attention. I listened intently and heard
+a man's footsteps.
+<P>
+I was inclined to call out, and, in fact, was on the point
+of so doing, when the door of the tool house opened and in the dim light
+I recognized the form of the tramp moulder who earlier in the day had so
+impudently asked me for help.
+<P>
+I was not greatly surprised to see him, for, as mentioned
+before, the old tool house was frequently used by men of his stamp. He had
+as much right there as I had, and though I was chagrined to see him enter
+I was in no position to protest.
+<P>
+On the contrary, I deemed it advisable to keep quiet.
+If he did not see me, so much the better. If he did, who could tell what
+indignities he might visit upon me?
+<P>
+So I crouched down behind the empty barrels, hardly daring
+to breathe. The man stumbled into the building, leaving the door wide open.
+<P>
+By his manner I was certain that he had been drinking
+heavily, and his rambling soliloquy proved it.
+<P>
+"The same old shebang," he mumbled to himself, as he swayed
+around in the middle of the floor, "the same old shebang where Aaron Woodward
+and I parted company four years ago. He's took care of his money, and I've
+gone to the dogs," and he gave a yawn and sat down on top of a barrel.
+<P>
+I was thoroughly surprised at his words. Was it possible
+that this seedy-looking individual had once been intimate with Duncan Woodward's
+father? It hardly seemed reasonable. I made a rapid calculation and concluded
+that the meeting must have had something to do with the proposed railroad
+in which I knew Mr. Woodward had held an interest. Perhaps this tramp had
+once been a prosperous contractor.
+<P>
+"Great times them were. Plenty of money and nothing to
+do," continued the man. "Wonder if any one in Darbyville would recognize&#151; hold
+up, Stumpy, you mustn't repeat that name too often or you'll be mentioning
+it in public when it ain't no interest for you to do it. Stumpy, John Stumpy,
+is good enough for the likes of you."
+<P>
+And with great deliberation Mr. John Stumpy brought forth
+a short clay pipe which he proceeded to fill and light with evident satisfaction.
+<P>
+During the brief period of lighting up I caught a good
+glance at his face, and fancied that I saw beneath the surface of dirt and
+dissipation a look of shrewdness and intelligence. Evidently he was one of
+the unfortunates who allowed drink to make off with their brains.
+<P>
+Mr. John Stumpy puffed on in silence for several minutes.
+I wondered what he intended to do, and was not prepared for the surprises
+that were to follow.
+<P>
+"Times are changed and no mistake," he went on. "Here
+I am, down at the bottom, Nick Weaver dead, Woodward a rich man, and Carson
+Strong in jail. Humph! but times do change!"
+<P>
+Carson Strong! My heart gave a bound. This man was speaking
+of my father. What did it mean? What did the tramp know of the events of
+the past? As I lay behind the barrels, I earnestly hoped he would go on with
+his talk. I had heard just enough to arouse my curiosity.
+<P>
+I was certain that I had never, until that day, seen the
+man. What, then, could he have in common with my father?
+<P>
+Instinctively I connected the man with the cause of my
+father's imprisonment&#151; I will not say downfall, because I firmly believed
+him innocent. Why I should do so I cannot to this day explain, but from the
+instant he mentioned my parent's name the man was firmly fixed in my memory.
+<P>
+In a few moments Mr. John Stumpy had puffed his pipe out,
+leaving the place filled with a heavy and vile smoke which gave me all I
+could do to keep from coughing. Then he slowly knocked the ashes from the
+bowl and restored the pipe to his pocket.
+<P>
+"Now I reckon I'm in pretty good trim to go ahead," he
+muttered as he arose. "No use of talking; there ain't anything like a good
+puff to steady a man's nerves. Was a time when I didn't need it, but them
+times are gone, and the least little job on hand upsets me. Wonder how much
+that old woman left behind."
+<P>
+I nearly uttered an ejaculation of astonishment. Was this
+man speaking of Mrs. Canby? What was the job that he contemplated?
+<P>
+Clearly there could be but one answer to that question.
+He knew the widow had gone away, and in her absence he contemplated robbing
+her house. Perhaps he had overheard her make mention of the money locked
+up in her desk, and the temptation to obtain possession of it was too strong
+to resist.
+<P>
+"I'll have to get rid of that boy and the dog, I suppose,"
+he went on. "If it wasn't for the noise I'd shoot the dog; but it won't do
+to arouse the neighborhood. As for the lad, I reckon the sight of a pistol
+will scare him to death."
+<P>
+I was not so sure of that, and I grated my teeth at the
+thought of my present helplessness. Had I been free, I am sure I could have
+escaped easily, and perhaps have had the tramp arrested.
+<P>
+It was an alarming prospect. Kate was the only occupant
+of the house, and the nearest neighbor lived a full five hundred feet away.
+If attacked in the middle of the night, what would my sister do?
+<P>
+For a moment I felt like exposing myself, but then I reflected
+that such a course would not liberate me, and he would know that he had nothing
+to fear from me at the house, whereas, if I kept quiet, he might, by some
+lucky incident, be kept at bay.
+<P>
+So I lay still, wondering when he would start on his criminal
+quest.
+<P>
+"Now, one more drink and then I'll be off," he continued,
+and, producing a bottle, he took a deep draught. "Ha! That's the stuff to
+brace a man's nerves! But you mustn't drink too much, John Stumpy, or you'll
+be no good at all. If you'd only let liquor alone you might be as rich as
+Aaron Woodward, remember that." He gave something like a sigh. "Oh, well;
+let it pass. I'll get the tools and be on the way. The money in my pocket,
+I'll take the first train in the morning for the West." He paused a moment.
+"But no; I won't go until I've seen Woodward. He owes me a little on the
+old score, and I'll not go until he has settled up."
+<P>
+There was an interval of silence, during which Stumpy
+must have been feeling around in his pockets for a match; for a moment later
+there were several slight scratches, and then a tiny flame lit up the interior
+of the tool house.
+<P>
+"Let's see, where did I leave them tools? Ah, yes; I remember
+now. Behind those barrels."
+<P>
+And Stumpy moved over to where I was in hiding.
+<h3>CHAPTER V</h3>
+<h4>FOLLOWING JOHN STUMPY</h4>
+<P>
+I expected to be discovered. I could
+not see how it could possibly be avoided. John Stumpy was but a few feet
+away. In a second more he would be in full sight of me.
+<P>
+What the outcome of the discovery would be I could not
+imagine. I was at the man's mercy, and I was inclined to think that, our
+interview of the morning would not tend to soften his feelings toward me.
+<P>
+But at that instant a small, yet extremely lucky incident
+occurred. A draught of wind came in at the partly open door and blew out
+the match, leaving the place in darkness.
+<P>
+"Confound the luck!" ejaculated John Stumpy, in high
+irritation. "There goes the light, and it's the last match I've got, too."
+<P>
+This bit of information was gratifying to me, and, without
+making any noise, I rolled back into the corner as far as possible.
+<P>
+"Well, I'll have to find them tools in the dark, that's
+all." He groped around for several seconds, during which I held my breath.
+"Ah, here they are, just as I left 'em last night. Reckon no one visits this
+shanty, and maybe it will be a good place to bring the booty, especially
+if I happen to be closely pushed."
+<P>
+I sincerely hoped that he would be closely pushed, and
+in fact so closely pushed that he would have no booty to bring. But if he
+did succeed in his nefarious plans, I was glad that I would know where to
+look for him.
+<P>
+No sooner had the man found the bag of tools,&#151; which was
+nothing more nor less than a burglar's kit,&#151; than he quitted the place, and
+I was left to my own reflections.
+<P>
+My thoughts alarmed me. Beyond a doubt John Stumpy intended
+to rob the Widow Canby's house. The only one at home was Kate, and I groaned
+as I thought of the alarm and terror that she might be called upon to suffer.
+As it was, I was sure she was worried about my continued absence. In my anguish
+I strove with all my might to burst asunder the bonds that held me. At the
+end of five minutes' struggle I remained as securely tied as ever.
+<P>
+What was to be done? It was a puzzling, but pertinent
+question. By hook or by crook I must get free. At great risk of hurting my
+head I rolled to the door of the tool house, which Stumpy had left wide open.
+Outside, the stars were shining brightly, and in the southwest the pale crescent
+of the new moon was falling behind the tree-tops, casting ghostly shadows
+that would have made a timid person shiver. But as the reader may by this
+time know, I was not of a timid nature, and I gave the shadows scant attention
+until a sudden movement among the trees attracted my notice. It was the figure
+of some person coming rapidly toward me.
+<P>
+At first I judged it must be Stumpy returning, and I was
+on the point of rolling back to my hiding-place when I saw that the newcomer
+was a boy.
+<P>
+When he reached the edge of the clearing he paused, and
+approached slowly.
+<P>
+"Roger Strong!" he called out. I instantly recognized
+the voice of Dick Blair, one of the youngest members of the Models, who,
+during my capture, had had little to say or do. He was the son of a wealthy
+farmer who lived but a short distance down the road from the Widow Canby's
+place.
+<P>
+I had always considered Dick a pretty good chap, and had
+been disagreeably surprised to see him in company with Duncan Woodward's
+crowd. How Duncan had ever taken up with him I could not imagine, except
+it might have been on account of the money Dick's father allowed him to have.
+<P>
+"Roger Strong!" he repeated. "Are you still here?"
+<P>
+I could, not imagine what had brought him to this place
+at such an hour of the night. Yet I answered at once.
+<P>
+"Yes, I am, Dick Blair."
+<P>
+"I thought maybe you had managed to get away," he continued,
+as he came closer.
+<P>
+"No; you fellows did your work pretty well," I replied
+as lightly as I could, for I did not want to show the white feather.
+<P>
+"Precious little I had to do with it," he went on, as
+he struck a match and lit a lantern that he carried.
+<P>
+"You were with the crowd."
+<P>
+"I know it; but I wouldn't have been if I'd known what
+they were up to. I hope you will not think too badly of me, Roger."
+<P>
+"I thought it was strange you would go into anything of
+this kind, Dick. What brings you back to-night?"
+<P>
+"I am ashamed of the whole thing," he answered earnestly,
+"and I came to release you&#151; that is, on certain conditions."
+<P>
+My heart gave a bound. "What conditions, Dick?"
+<P>
+"I want you to promise that you won't tell who set you
+free," he explained. "If Dunc or the rest heard of it, they would never forgive
+me."
+<P>
+"What of it, Dick? Their opinion isn't worth anything."
+<P>
+"I know it&#151; now. But they could tell mighty mean stories
+about me if they wanted to." And Dick Blair turned away and shuffled his
+foot on the ground to hide his shame.
+<P>
+"Don't mind them, Dick. If they start any bad report about
+you, do as I'm doing with the stain on our name&#151; live it down."
+<P>
+"I'll try it. But you'll promise, won't you?"
+<P>
+"If you wish it, yes."
+<P>
+"All right; I know I can trust you," said Dick. Producing
+his pocket knife, he quickly cut the cords that bound me. Somewhat stiff
+from the position in which I had been forced to remain, I rose slowly to
+my feet.
+<P>
+"I don't know whether to thank you or not for what you've
+done for me, Dick," I began. "But I appreciate your actions."
+<P>
+"I don't deserve any thanks. It was a mean trick, and
+I guess legally I was as guilty as any one. Just keep quiet about it and
+don't think too hard of me."
+<P>
+"I'll do both," I responded quickly.
+<P>
+"It's a mighty lonely place to spend the night in," he
+went on. "I'm no coward, but I wouldn't care to do it, all alone."
+<P>
+"I haven't been alone."
+<P>
+"No." And Dick looked intensely surprised. "Who has been
+here?"
+<P>
+I hesitated. Should I tell him?
+<P>
+"A tramp," I began.
+<P>
+"Why didn't he untie you?"
+<P>
+"He didn't see me."
+<P>
+"Oh, I suppose you hid away. What did he want, I wonder?"
+<P>
+"He was after some tools."
+<P>
+"Tools! There are none here, any more."
+<P>
+"But there were."
+<P>
+"What kind of tools?"
+<P>
+I hesitated again. Should I tell Dick the secret? Perhaps
+he might give me some timely assistance.
+<P>
+"Will you promise to keep silent if I tell?"
+<P>
+"Why, what do you mean, Roger?"
+<P>
+"It is very important."
+<P>
+"All right. Fire away."
+<P>
+"He came after some burglar's tools."
+<P>
+Dick stepped back in astonishment. "You surely don't mean
+it!" he gasped "Who was he going to rob?"
+<P>
+"The widow's house. He knows she is away and has left
+considerable money in her desk."
+<P>
+And in a rapid manner I told Dick of what I had overheard,
+omitting the mentioning of my father's and Mr. Woodward's names. Of course
+he was tremendously excited. What healthy country boy would not be?
+<P>
+"What are you going to do about it?" he questioned.
+<P>
+"Now I'm free I'm going to catch the fellow," I returned
+decidedly. "He shall not rob Mrs. Canby's house if I can help it."
+<P>
+"Aren't you afraid?"
+<P>
+"I intend to be cautious."
+<P>
+"He may have a pistol."
+<P>
+"The widow left one in the house. Maybe I can secure it.
+Then we'll be on an equal footing."
+<P>
+"I've got a pistol, Roger."
+<P>
+"You!"
+<P>
+"Yes, the Models all carry them. Dunc always insisted
+that it was the proper thing."
+<P>
+As Dick spoke, he produced a highly polished nickel-plated
+five-shooter.
+<P>
+"It looks like a good one," I said, after examining it.
+"Is it loaded?"
+<P>
+"Oh, yes; and I've got a box of cartridges in my pocket
+besides."
+<P>
+"Lend it to me, Dick."
+<P>
+"If you don't mind I'll&#151; I'll go along with you, Roger,"
+he returned. "You won't find me such a terrible coward."
+<P>
+"All right. But we must hurry. That fellow has got a good
+start, and he may even now be in the house."
+<P>
+"Hardly. He'll want to take a look around first."
+<P>
+Nevertheless, we lost no time in getting away from the
+tool house. We walked side by side, I with the pistol in the pocket of my
+jacket, and Dick with the lantern held aloft, that we might see to make rapid
+progress over the unaccustomed road.
+<P>
+It was a good walk to the widow's, and once Dick stumbled
+down in a heap, while the lantern rolled several yards away. But he picked
+himself up without grumbling and went along faster than ever.
+<P>
+"If I'm not mistaken, I saw that tramp down at the depot
+this morning," said he, as we drew near to the main road. "He was hanging
+around, and I thought he looked like a suspicious character."
+<P>
+"Did you see him yesterday?"
+<P>
+"No."
+<P>
+"Did you ever hear of him before?"
+<P>
+"I guess not. He was near the baggage room when I saw
+him. Then Mr. Woodward came up to see about a trunk, and the tramp made right
+off."
+<P>
+I was interested. John Stumpy had intimately that he intended
+to have an interview with Duncan Woodward's father, and if this was so, why
+had he not taken advantage of the opportunity thus offered?
+<P>
+I could arrive at but one conclusion. The tramp wished
+their meeting to be a strictly private one. He did not care to be seen in
+Mr. Woodward's presence, or else the wealthy merchant would not tolerate
+such a thing.
+<P>
+If the meeting was to be of a private nature, it would
+no doubt be of importance. Had my father's name not been mentioned I would
+not have cared; but as it was, I was deeply interested.
+<P>
+Perhaps it would be better to merely scare the fellow
+off. If he was captured, all chance of finding out his secrets might be lost.
+<P>
+By this time the reader may be aware that I thought John
+Stumpy's secrets important. Such was a fact. Try as hard as I was able, I
+could not but imagine that they concerned my father and his alleged downfall.
+<P>
+In five minutes Dick and I came within sight of Widow
+Canby's house. There was a light burning in the kitchen and another in the
+dining-room.
+<P>
+"Everything seems to be all right," said Dick, as we stood
+near a corner of the front fence. "I guess the fellow hasn't put in an appearance
+yet."
+<P>
+"I don't know. See I the side porch door is open. We generally
+keep it closed, and Kate would certainly have it shut if she was alone."
+<P>
+"What do you intend to do? Go into the house?"
+<P>
+"Guess we had better. I'd like to know where that fellow
+is," I replied. "Likely as not he is prowling about here somewhere. If we
+can only catch sight of him, we can&#151; Hark!"
+<P>
+As I uttered the last word, a shrill cry reached our ears.
+It was Kate's voice; and with my heart jumping wildly I made a dash for the
+house, with Dick Blair following me.
+<h3>CHAPTER VI</h3>
+<h4>A STRANGE ENVELOPE</h4>
+<P>
+I was sure that my sister's cry could
+mean but one thing&#151; that the tramp had made a raid on the house. I was thoroughly
+alarmed, and ran with all possible speed in the direction of the dining-room,
+from whence the sound proceeded.
+<P>
+As I tore across the lawn, regardless of the bed of flowers
+which was Mrs. Canby's pride, Kate's cry was repeated, this time in a more
+intense tone. An instant later I dashed across the porch and into the room
+through the door that, as I have said, stood wide open.
+<P>
+I found my sister standing in the middle of the floor,
+holding in her hand a heavy umbrella with which she had evidently been defending
+herself. She was pale, and trembled from head to foot.
+<P>
+"What is it, Kate?" I exclaimed. "Where is the fellow?"
+<P>
+"Oh, Roger!" she gasped. "I'm so glad you've come. A tramp
+was here&#151; he robbed&#151; robbed the desk&#151; the window&#151;"
+<P>
+She pointed to the open window on the opposite side of
+the room. Then her breast heaved, the umbrella slipped from her grasp, and
+she sank into a chair.
+<P>
+"Are you hurt?" I cried anxiously.
+<P>
+"No, no&#151; but the money&#151; it is gone! What will Mrs. Canby
+say?"
+<P>
+And overcome with the dreadful thought, my sister fainted
+dead away.
+<P>
+As for myself I felt sick at heart. John Stumpy had been
+there&#151; the widow's money had been stolen. What could be done?
+<P>
+Meanwhile, Dick Blair had come in. His common sense told
+him what had happened, and he set to work to restore my sister to consciousness.
+<P>
+"Will you stay here with Kate?" I asked.
+<P>
+"Certainly," he returned promptly. "But where are you
+going? After that tramp?"
+<P>
+"Yes."
+<P>
+"Be careful, for he may be a desperate character."
+<P>
+"I'm not afraid of him. I'm going to get that money back
+or know the reason why," was my determined reply; and I meant every word
+I said.
+<P>
+To my mind it was absolutely necessary that I recover
+the stolen property. It would have been bad enough to have had it taken when
+the Widow Canby was at home, but it had been stolen when left in my charge,
+and that was enough to make me turn Darbyville district up side down before
+letting the matter drop.
+<P>
+Besides, there was still another important factor in the
+case. I knew well enough that if the money was not recovered, there would
+be plenty of people mean enough to intimate that I had had something to do
+with its disappearance. The Strong honor was considered low by many, and
+they would not hesitate to declare that I was only following in my father's
+footsteps.
+<P>
+To a person already suffering under an unjust accusation
+such an intimation is doubly stinging, and when I told Dick that I was not
+afraid of Mr. John Stumpy, I meant that I would rather face the robber now
+than the Darbyville people later on.
+<P>
+"I want to take the pistol," I added.
+<P>
+"All right. There is the box of extra cartridges. Do you
+want the lantern?"
+<P>
+"Yes; I may want to use it before I return. I'll blow
+it out now."
+<P>
+Our conversation had lasted but a few seconds, and an
+instant after I was on my way, the lantern on my left arm and the pistol
+in my right hand.
+<P>
+"Take good care of Kate," I called back as I passed out.
+<P>
+"I will," replied Dick. "Don't stay away too long, if
+you don't find the fellow."
+<P>
+I passed around to the other side of the garden, where
+an open gateway led to the pear orchard. I felt pretty certain that John
+Stumpy had pursued this course, and I entered the orchard on a run.
+<P>
+The thief, I reckoned, was not over five minutes ahead
+of me. To be sure, he could easily hide, but it was not likely that he would
+care to remain in the neighborhood, unless it was really necessary for him
+to see Mr. Aaron Woodward.
+<P>
+When I got well into the orchard, where it was darker
+than in the garden, I listened intently, hoping that I might hear some sound
+that would guide me.
+<P>
+But all was silent. Occasionally a night bird fluttered
+through the trees and a frog gave a dismal croak, but otherwise not a sound
+broke the stillness.
+<P>
+I continued on my way toward the road, and reaching the
+fence, paused again.
+<P>
+Had the thief jumped over? If so, which way had he gone,
+up, down, or into the woods beyond? It was a perplexing question. Perhaps
+if I had been in a story book I might have found some clew to direct me.
+But I was not that kind of a hero. I was only an everyday boy, and consequently
+no clew presented itself.
+<P>
+I stood by the fence for several minutes, my eyes and
+ears on the alert to catch anything worthy of notice. I judged it was near
+midnight, and hardly had I thought of the matter before the distant town
+bells tolled the hour of twelve.
+<P>
+As the echo of the last stroke died away, two figures
+came slowly up the road. As they drew nearer, I recognized Moran and Pultzer,
+the two Models members who had assisted at my capture.
+<P>
+I was astonished at their appearance. What on earth could
+they be doing out at this time of night?
+<P>
+As they drew near I thought for many reasons that it would
+not be advisable to show myself, and I stepped behind a tree.
+<P>
+"I don't care what you say," said Pultzer, "Dunc was half
+scared to death when we came away."
+<P>
+"I guess he didn't think what a serious matter it was
+when he asked us to go into it," returned Moran. "It's the worst affair I
+ever got into."
+<P>
+"Ditto myself," responded Pultzer.
+<P>
+"And if we get out without being caught, you'll never
+find me in another such," continued the other earnestly.
+<P>
+"I wonder what Dunc's father will say when he hears of
+it?"
+<P>
+"And all the rest of the Darbyville people? Of course
+they've got to lay it to some one."
+<P>
+I surmised that they must be speaking of what they had
+done to me. I never dreamed that they were discussing a subject much more
+serious.
+<P>
+"I'm glad Dick Blair wasn't along to-night," went on Moran.
+"Dick is not to be trusted any more. He kicked awfully at the idea of tying
+up Strong this noon."
+<P>
+I was gratified to hear this bit of news. I liked Dick
+in many respects, and now I was almost ready to look upon him as a friend.
+<P>
+"Strong didn't give in quite as much as Dunc thought he
+would. Hang it, if I didn't admire his grit."
+<P>
+"So did I. Wonder how he's getting along in the old tool
+house. We must release him first thing in the morning."
+<P>
+"No need of doing that, gentlemen," I put in, stepping
+out from behind the tree. "I am&#151;"
+<P>
+But it would have been useless for me to say more, as
+no one would have heard me.
+<P>
+At the first sound of my voice both of the Models had
+started in alarm, and then, led by Pultzer, they dashed up the road as fast
+as their feet could carry them.
+<P>
+At first I was amazed at their actions, and then, as the
+ridiculousness of the situation presented itself, I smiled. "A guilty conscience
+needeth no accuser," it is said, and this truth was verified to the letter.
+<P>
+Yet I was sorry that I had not had a chance to speak to
+them. I wanted to question them in regard to the thief. Perhaps they had
+seen him, and if so, I did not want to miss my chance of getting upon his
+track.
+<P>
+Jumping over the fence, I walked slowly down the road,
+but not in hopes of meeting John Stumpy. If he was anywhere near, the approach
+of the two boys had certainly driven him into hiding.
+<P>
+Suddenly I thought of the tool house. The tramp had spoken
+of returning to the place. He evidently knew the road. I determined to go
+to the spot and make a search at once.
+<P>
+It was no easy matter to find my way back to the tool
+house, and at the risk of being seen I lit the lantern.
+<P>
+As I walked along I wondered how my sister and Dick were
+faring. No doubt Kate had been much surprised to see who was with her on
+her recovery, and I sincerely hoped that the shock Stumpy had given her would
+not have any evil effects. She was a sensitive girl, and such happenings
+were calculated to try her nerves severely.
+<P>
+At length I came within sight of the clearing. Here I
+hesitated for an instant, and then, pistol in hand, approached the tool house
+boldly.
+<P>
+The door was still open, and I entered, only to find the
+place empty.
+<P>
+With a sigh I realized that my journey thither was a useless
+one. Nothing remained but to go back to the road, and I was about to leave
+again when the rays of the lantern fell upon a white object lying on the
+floor.
+<P>
+I picked it up. It was a common square envelope. Thinking
+it contained a letter I turned it over to read the address. Judge of my
+astonishment when I read the following:&#151;
+<P>
+Dying Statement of Nicholas Weaver Concerning the Forgeries
+for which Carson Strong Was Sent to State's Prison.
+<h3>CHAPTER VII</h3>
+<h4>A WAR OF WORDS</h4>
+<P>
+No words of mine can express the
+feeling that came over me as I read the superscription written on the envelope
+I had picked up in the old tool house.
+<P>
+Was it possible that this envelope contained the solution
+of the mystery that had taken away our good name and sent my father to prison?
+The very thought made me tremble.
+<P>
+The packet was not a thick one. In fact, it was so thin
+that for an instant I imagined the envelope was empty. But a hasty examination
+proved my fears groundless.
+<P>
+In nervous excitement I put the lantern down on the top
+of a barrel, and then drew from the envelope the single shoot of foolscap
+that it contained. A glance showed me that the pages were closely written
+in a cramped hand extremely difficult to read.
+<P>
+For the moment I forgot everything else&#151; forgot that the
+Widow Canby's house had been robbed and that I was on the track of the
+robber&#151; and drawing close to the feeble light the lantern afforded, strove
+with straining eyes and palpitating heart to decipher the contents of the
+written pages.
+<BLOCKQUOTE>
+"I, Nicholas Weaver, being on the point of death from pneumonia, do make
+ this my last statement, which I hereby swear is true in every particular."
+</BLOCKQUOTE>
+<P>
+This was the beginning of the document which I hoped would
+in some way free my father's character from the stain that now rested on
+it.
+<P>
+Exactly who Nicholas Weaver was I did not know, though
+it ran in my mind that I had heard this name mentioned by my father during
+the trial.
+<P>
+Beyond the opening paragraph I have quoted the handwriting
+was almost illegible, and in the dim light it was only here and there that
+I could pick out such words as "bank," "assumed," "risk," "name," and so
+forth, which gave but an inkling of the real contents of the precious document.
+<P>
+"It's too bad," was my thought. "I'd give all I possess
+to be able to read this right off, word for word."
+<P>
+Hardly had the reflection crossed my mind when a noise
+outside startled me. I had just time enough to thrust the paper into my pocket
+when the door was swung open and the tramp appeared.
+<P>
+He was evidently as much surprised as I was, for he stopped
+short in amazement, while the short pipe he carried between his lips fell
+unnoticed to the floor.
+<P>
+I rightly conjectured he had not noticed the light of
+the lantern and fully believed the tool house tenantless.
+<P>
+"You here!" he cried.
+<P>
+"It looks like it, doesn't it?" was all I could find to
+reply, and as I spoke my hand sought the pistol I carried.
+<P>
+"What brought you here?" he demanded roughly.
+<P>
+"I came after you," I returned as coolly as I could; and
+by this time I had the pistol where it could be brought into instant use.
+<P>
+"What do you want of me?"
+<P>
+"I want you to hand over the money you stole awhile ago."
+<P>
+"What are you talking about? I never stole any money."
+<P>
+"You did. You broke into the Widow Canby's house less
+than an hour ago. Come, hand over that money."
+<P>
+The fellow gave a coarse laugh. "Ha! ha! do you think
+I'm to be bluffed by a boy? Get home with you, before I hammer you for calling
+me a thief."
+<P>
+"That's just what you are, and I don't intend to go until
+you hand over the money, John Stumpy," I returned decidedly.
+<P>
+"Ha! you know my name?"
+<P>
+I bit my lip. I was sorry for the slip I had made. But
+I put on a bold front. "I know what you are called," I replied.
+<P>
+"What I am called?"
+<P>
+"Yes."
+<P>
+"What do you mean? Come, out with it."
+<P>
+"I will when I please. In the meantime hand over that
+money."
+<P>
+"You talk like a fool!" he cried.
+<P>
+"Never mind. You'll find I won't act like one."
+<P>
+"What do you know about me?" he went on curiously, believing,
+no doubt, that he was perfectly safe from attack.
+<P>
+"I know more than you think. I know you are a burglar,
+and may be worse."
+<P>
+"I'll kill you!" he cried, rushing forward.
+<P>
+"Stand where you are!" I returned, pulling out the pistol.
+"Don't stir a step."
+<P>
+He did not see the weapon until he was fairly upon me.
+The glint of the nickeled steel made him shiver.
+<P>
+"Don't shoot!" he cried in sudden terror, that showed
+he was a coward at heart. "Don't&#151; don't shoot."
+<P>
+"I won't if you do as I tell you."
+<P>
+"Do what?"
+<P>
+"Give up the widow's money."
+<P>
+"See here, young fellow, you've made a mistake. I never
+was near the widow's house, 'cepting this morning."
+<P>
+"I know better. You just broke open her desk and stole
+over two hundred dollars."
+<P>
+"It's a mistake. Put down the pistol and I'll tell you
+all about it."
+<P>
+"I'm not such a fool, Mr. John Stumpy, or whatever your
+name is," was my decided reply.
+<P>
+The tone of my voice disconcerted the man, for he paused
+as if not knowing what to say next.
+<P>
+"Say, young feller, do you want to make some money?" he
+asked suddenly, after a short pause.
+<P>
+The change in his manner surprised me.
+<P>
+"How?" I asked, although I knew about what was coming.
+<P>
+"I've got nearly three hundred dollars in cash with me.
+I'll give you fifty of it if you'll go home and say you couldn't find me."
+<P>
+"Thank you; I'm not doing business that way," I rejoined
+coldly.
+<P>
+"Fifty dollars ain't to be sneezed at," he went on
+insinuatingly.
+<P>
+"I wouldn't care if you offered me fifty thousand," I
+cried sharply. "I'm no thief."
+<P>
+"Humph; don't you suppose I know who you are?" he went
+on. "You're the son of a thief. Do you hear that?&#151; the son of a thief! What
+right have you got to set yourself up to be any better than your father was
+afore you?"
+<P>
+"Take care!" I cried, my blood fairly boiling as I spoke.
+He saw his mistake.
+<P>
+"I didn't mean no harm, partner. But what's the use of
+being high toned when it don't pay?"
+<P>
+"It always pays to be honest," I said firmly.
+<P>
+"There are those who don't think so any more than I,"
+he replied.
+<P>
+"My father never was a thief. They may say all they please,
+I will always think him innocent."
+<P>
+"Humph!"
+<P>
+"If it hadn't been for men like you and Nicholas Weaver,
+my father would never be in prison."
+<P>
+The words were out before I knew it. They were most
+injudicious ones.
+<P>
+"What do you mean?" gasped the man. "What do you know
+about Nick Weaver?"
+<P>
+"More than you imagine. When he died he made a confession&#151;"
+<P>
+"It's false. Nick Weaver wasn't in his right mind when
+he died, anyhow."
+<P>
+"Perhaps he was."
+<P>
+"What you&#151;" began the man. Then he paused and began a
+rapid search in his pockets. "You've got that paper," he cried hoarsely.
+"Give it up," and as he spoke, John Stumpy took a threatening step toward
+me.
+<P>
+"Stand back!" and I raised the pistol.
+<P>
+I was trembling in every limb, but I actually believe
+I would have fired it if he had rushed upon me.
+<P>
+"I won't. Give up that paper."
+<P>
+"Never. I'll die first."
+<P>
+And die I would. His earnestness convinced me of the letter's
+worth. If it contained that which could clear my father's name, only death
+would be the means of parting me from it.
+<P>
+"Give it up, I say! Do you think I'm to be defeated by
+a boy?"
+<P>
+"Stand back!"
+<P>
+I raised the pistol on a level with his head. As I did
+so, he made a dash forward and caught up a stick which was lying near.
+<P>
+"I'll fix you!" he roared, and swinging the billet over
+his head, he brought it down with all his force on my arm, causing the pistol
+to fly from my hand into a corner beyond.
+<P>
+"Now we'll see who's master here," he cried exultingly.
+"You're a smart boy, but you don't know everything!" Rushing over to the
+corner, he secured the pistol and aimed it at me. "Now, we'll settle this
+matter according to my notions," he went on triumphantly.
+<h3>CHAPTER VIII</h3>
+<h4>THE STRUGGLE</h4>
+<P>
+I was deeply chagrined at the unexpected
+turn affairs had taken, and I felt decidedly uncomfortable as John Stumpy
+levelled the weapon at my head. I could readily see that the battle of words
+was at an end. Action was now the order of the day. I wondered what the fellow
+would do next; but I was not kept long in suspense.
+<P>
+"Now, it's my turn, young fellow," he remarked, with a
+shrewd grin, as I fell back.
+<P>
+"Well, what do you want?" I asked, as coolly as I could
+recognizing the fact that nothing was to be gained by "stirring him up."
+<P>
+"You'll see fast enough. In the first place, hand over
+that paper."
+<P>
+I was silent. I did not intend to tell a falsehood by
+saying I did not have it, nor did I intend to give it up if it could possibly
+be avoided.
+<P>
+"Did you hear what I said?" continued Stumpy, after a
+pause.
+<P>
+"I thought you said the paper wasn't valuable," I returned,
+more to gain time than anything else.
+<P>
+"Neither it ain't, but, just the same, I want it. Come,
+hand it over."
+<P>
+He was getting ugly now, and no mistake. What was to be
+done?
+<P>
+As I have mentioned before, it would have been useless
+to call for help, as no one would have heard the calls.
+<P>
+Suddenly the thought struck me to try a bit of deception.
+I put my hand in my pocket and drew out the empty envelope.
+<P>
+"Is that what you want?" I asked, holding it up.
+<P>
+"Reckon it is," he returned eagerly. "Just toss it over."
+<P>
+Somewhat disappointed that he did not approach me and
+thus give me a chance of attacking him, I did as requested. It fell at his
+feet, and he was not long in transferring it to his pocket.
+<P>
+"Next time don't try to walk over a man like me," he said
+sharply. "I know a thing or two, and I'm not to be downed by a boy."
+<P>
+"Are you satisfied?" I asked calmly, though secretly exultant
+that he had not discovered my trick.
+<P>
+"Not yet. You followed me when you had no business to,
+and now you've got to take the consequences."
+<P>
+"What are you going to do?"
+<P>
+"You'll see soon enough. I ain't the one to make many
+mistakes. Years ago I made a few, but I ain't making no more."
+<P>
+"You knew my father quite well, didn't you?" I inquired
+in deep curiosity.
+<P>
+"As the old saying goes, 'Ask me no questions and I'll
+tell you no lies.' Maybe I didn't; maybe I did."
+<P>
+"I know you did."
+<P>
+"Well, what of it? So did lots of other people."
+<P>
+"But not quite as well as you and Nicholas Weaver and
+Mr. Aaron Woodward," I continued, determined to learn all I could.
+<P>
+"Ha! What do you know of them?" He scowled at me. "Reckon
+you've been reading that paper of Nick's putty closely. I was a fool for
+not tearing it up long ago."
+<P>
+"Why did you keep it&#151; to deliver it to Mr. Wentworth?"
+<P>
+It was a bold stroke and it told. Stumpy grew pale in
+spite of the dirt that covered his face, and the hand that held the pistol
+trembled.
+<P>
+"Say, young fellow, you know too much, you do. I suppose
+you read that paper clear through, did you?"
+<P>
+"As you say: Maybe I didn't; maybe I did."
+<P>
+"Perhaps you wasn't careful of it. Maybe I'd better examine
+it," he added.
+<P>
+My heart sank within me. In another moment the deception
+I had practised would be known&#151; and then?
+<P>
+He fumbled in his pocket and drew forth the envelope.
+He could not extract the letter he supposed it contained with one hand very
+well, and so lowered the pistol for a moment.
+<P>
+This was my chance. Unarmed I was evidently in his power.
+If I could only escape from the tool house!
+<P>
+The door still stood partly open, and the darkness of
+night&#151; for the moon had gone down&#151; was beyond. A dash and I would be outside.
+Still the tramp stood between me and liberty. Should I attack him or endeavor
+to slip to one side?
+<P>
+I had but an instant to think; another, and it would be
+too late. John Stumpy was fumbling in the envelope. His eyes were searching
+for the precious document.
+<P>
+With a single bound I sprang against him, knocking him
+completely off his feet. Then I made another jump for the door.
+<P>
+But he was too quick for me. Dropping the envelope and
+the pistol, he caught me by the foot, and in an instant both of us were rolling
+on the floor.
+<P>
+It was an unequal struggle. Strong as I was for a boy
+of my age, I was no match for this burly man. Turn and twist all I could,
+he held me in his grip while he heaped loud imprecations upon my head.
+<P>
+In our movements on the floor we came in contact with
+the lantern and upset it, smashing the frame as well as the glass.
+<P>
+For a moment darkness reigned. Then a tiny light from
+the corner lit up the place. The flames had caught the shavings.
+<P>
+"The place is on fire!" I cried in horror.
+<P>
+"Yes, and you did it," replied the tramp.
+<P>
+"It was you!" I returned stoutly, and, as a matter of
+fact, it may be as well to state that John Stumpy's foot had caused the accident.
+<P>
+"Not much; it was your fault, and you've got to take the
+blame."
+<P>
+As the rascal spoke, he caught me by the throat, squeezing
+it so tightly that I was in great danger of being choked to death.
+<P>
+"Let&#151; let up!" I gasped.
+<P>
+The choking continued. My head began to grow dizzy, and
+strange lights danced before my eyes. I protested against this proceeding
+as vigorously as I could by kicking the man sharply and rapidly.
+<P>
+But Stumpy now meant to do me real injury. He realized
+that I knew too much for his future welfare. In fact, he, no doubt, imagined
+I knew far more than I really did. If I was out of the way for all time so
+much the better for him.
+<P>
+"Take that!" he suddenly cried, and springing up he brought
+his heel down with great force on my head.
+<P>
+I cannot describe the sensation that followed. It was
+as if a sharp, blinding pain had stung me to the very heart. Then my senses
+forsook me.
+<P>
+How long I lay in a comatose state I do not know. Certainly
+it could not have been a very long time&#151; probably not over five or six minutes.
+<P>
+In the meantime the fire rapidly spread igniting the barrels
+that were stored in the tool house, and climbing up the walls of the building
+to the roof.
+<P>
+When I recovered my senses, my face was fairly scorched,
+and no sooner had I opened my eyes than they were blinded by smoke and flame.
+<P>
+By instinct rather than reason I staggered to my feet.
+I was so weak I could hardly stand, and my head spun around like a top. Where
+was the door?
+<P>
+I tottered to one side and felt around. There was the
+window tightly closed. The door I knew was opposite.
+<P>
+Reeling, I made my way through the smoke that now seemed
+to fill my lungs, to where I knew the door to be. Oh, horror! it was closed
+and secured!
+<P>
+"Heaven help me now!" burst from my parched lips. "Am
+I to be roasted alive?"
+<P>
+With all my remaining strength I threw myself against
+the door. Once, and again, and still it did not budge.
+<P>
+"Help! help!" I called at the top of my voice.
+<P>
+No answer came to my cry. The fire behind me became hotter
+and hotter. The roof had now caught, and the sparks fell down upon me in
+a perfect shower.
+<P>
+Another moment and it would be all over. With a brief
+prayer to God for help in my dire need, I attacked the door for the last
+time.
+<P>
+At first it did not budge. Then there was a creaking,
+a sharp crack, and at last it flew wide open.
+<P>
+Oh, how grateful was the breath of fresh air that struck
+me! I stumbled out into the clearing and opened wide my throat to take in
+the pure draught.
+<P>
+Then for the first time I realized how nearly I had been
+overcome. I could no longer stand, and swooning, sank in a heap to the ground.
+<h3>CHAPTER IX</h3>
+<h4>NEW TROUBLE</h4>
+<P>
+"He's alive, boys."
+<P>
+These were the words that greeted my ears on recovering
+my senses. I opened my eyes and saw that I was surrounded by a number of
+boys and men.
+<P>
+"How did you come here?" asked Henry Morse, a sturdy farmer
+who lived in the neighborhood.
+<P>
+I was too much confused to make any intelligent reply.
+Rising to a sitting position, I gazed around.
+<P>
+The tool house had burned to the ground, there being no
+means at hand to extinguish the fire. The glare of the conflagration had
+called out several dozens of people from Darbyville and the vicinity, several
+of whom had stumbled upon me as I lay in the clearing.
+<P>
+"What's the matter, Roger?" asked Larry Simpson, a young
+man who kept a bookstore in the town.
+<P>
+"The matter is that I nearly lost my life in that fire,"
+I replied.
+<P>
+"How did you come here?"
+<P>
+As briefly as I could I related my story, leaving out
+all references to my personal affairs and the finding of Nicholas Weaver's
+statement. At present I considered it would do no good to disclose what I
+knew on those points.
+<P>
+"I think I saw that tramp yesterday," said Larry after
+I had finished. "He bought a sheet of paper and an envelope in my store,
+and then asked if he could write a letter there."
+<P>
+"And did he?" I asked in curiosity.
+<P>
+"Yes. At first I hated to let him do it,&#151; he looked so
+disreputable,&#151; but then I thought it might be an application for a position,
+and so told him to go ahead."
+<P>
+"Who did he write to? do you know?"
+<P>
+"Somebody in Chicago, I think."
+<P>
+"Do you remember the name?"
+<P>
+"He tried the pen on a slip of paper first. It wouldn't
+work very well. But I think the name was Holtzmann, or something similar."
+<P>
+I determined to remember the name, thinking it might prove
+of value sometime.
+<P>
+"The thing of it is," broke in Henry Morse, "what has
+become of this Stumpy? If he stole the Widow Canby's money, it's high time
+somebody was after him."
+<P>
+"That's true," ejaculated another. "Have you any idea
+which way the fellow went?"
+<P>
+Of course I had not. Indeed, I was hardly in condition
+to do any rational thinking, much less form an opinion. The thief might be
+in hiding close at hand, or he might be miles away.
+<P>
+"Some of us had better make a search," put in another.
+"Come, boys, we'll spread out and scour the woods."
+<P>
+"That's a good idea," said Tony Parsons, the constable
+of the town. "Meanwhile, Roger Strong, let us go to Judge Penfold's house
+and put the case in his hands. He'll get out a warrant, and perhaps a reward."
+<P>
+I thought this was a good idea, and readily assented,
+first, however, getting one of the boys to promise that he would call at
+the widow's house and quiet Kate's fears concerning my whereabouts.
+<P>
+It was now early morning, and we had no difficulty in
+making our way through the woods to the main road.
+<P>
+"Guess we won't find the judge up yet," remarked Tony
+Parsons as we hurried along. "I've never yet found him out of bed afore seven
+o'clock. It will make him mighty mad to get up afore this time."
+<P>
+"I'm sorry to disturb him," I replied, with something
+of awe at the thought of rousing a magistrate of the law.
+<P>
+"But it's got to be done," went on Parsons, with a grave
+shake of his head, "unless we all want to be murdered and robbed in our beds!"
+<P>
+"That's true. I'd give all I'm worth to catch that tramp."
+<P>
+"Reckon Widow Canby'll be dreadfully cut up when she hears
+about the robbery."
+<P>
+"I suppose so."
+<P>
+"She may blame you, Roger. You see if it was anybody else,
+it would be different. But being as it's you, why&#151;"
+<P>
+"I know what you mean," I returned bitterly. "No one in
+Darbyville believes I can be honest."
+<P>
+"I ain't saying nothing against you, Roger," returned
+Parsons, hastily. "I reckon you ain't no worse than any other boy. But you
+know what public sentiment is."
+<P>
+"So I do; but public sentiment isn't always right," was
+my spirited answer.
+<P>
+"Who did you say those boys were that tied you up?" went
+on the constable, to change the subject.
+<P>
+"Duncan Woodward was the principal one."
+<P>
+"Phew! Reckon he didn't think tying you up would prove
+such a serious matter."
+<P>
+"If it hadn't been for that, the robbery might have been
+prevented. I would have been home guarding the widow's property, as she expected
+me to do."
+<P>
+"Reckon so you would."
+<P>
+"In a certain sense I hold Duncan Woodward and his followers
+responsible for what has occurred."
+<P>
+"Phew! What will Mr. Woodward say to that, I wonder?"
+<P>
+"I can't help what he says. I'm not going to bear all
+the blame when it isn't my fault."
+<P>
+"No, neither would I."
+<P>
+At length we reached the outskirts of the town. Judge
+Penfold lived at the top of what was termed the Hill, the aristocratic district
+of the place, and thither we made our way.
+<P>
+"Indeed, but the judge ain't stirring yet!" exclaimed
+the Irish girl who came to answer our summons at the door.
+<P>
+"Then wake him at once," said Parsons. "Tell him there
+has been a most atrocious robbery and assault committed."
+<P>
+"Mercy on us!" said the girl, lifting up her hands in
+horror. "And who was it, Mr. Parsons?"
+<P>
+"Never mind who it was. Go at once."
+<P>
+"I will that! Robbery and assault. Mercy on us!"
+<P>
+And leaving us standing in the hall, the hired girl sped
+up the front stairway.
+<P>
+"The judge will be down as soon as he can," she reported
+on her return.
+<P>
+We waited as patiently as we could. While doing so I revolved
+what had occurred over in my mind, and came to the conclusion that the crime
+would be a difficult one to trace. John Stumpy had probably made good use
+of his time, knowing that even if I had lost my life in the fire my sister
+would still recognize him as the thief.
+<P>
+Suddenly I thought of the written confession that must
+yet remain in my pocket, and I was on the point of assuring myself that it
+was still safe when a heavy foot-step sounded overhead, and Judge Penfold
+came down.
+<P>
+The judge was a tall, slender men of fifty, with hollow
+cheeks, a pointed nose, and a sharp chin. His voice was of a peculiarly high
+and rasping tone, and his manner far from agreeable.
+<P>
+"What's the trouble?" he demanded, and it was plain to
+see that he did not relish having his early morning sleep broken.
+<P>
+"Widow Canby's house was robbed last night," replied the
+constable; and he gave the particulars.
+<P>
+Judge Penfold was all ears at once. Indeed, it may be
+as well to state that he was a widower and had paid Widow Canby much attention,
+which, however, I well knew that good lady heartily resented. No doubt he
+thought if he could render her any assistance it would help along his suit.
+<P>
+"We must catch the fellow at once," he said. "Parsons,
+you must catch him without fail."
+<P>
+"Easier said than done, judge," replied the constable,
+doubtfully. "Where am I to look for him? The country around here is pretty
+large."
+<P>
+"No matter. You are constable, and it is your duty to
+seek him out. I will sign the warrant for his arrest, and you must have him
+in jail by to-night, without fail."
+<P>
+"I'll do what I can, judge," returns Parsons, meekly.
+<P>
+"Strong, I'll have to bind you over as a witness."
+<P>
+"Bind me over?" I queried in perplexity. "What do you
+mean?"
+<P>
+"Hold you, unless you can give a bond to appear when wanted."
+<P>
+"But I had nothing to do with the burglary."
+<P>
+"You are principal accuser of this John Stumpy."
+<P>
+"Well, I'll promise to be on hand whenever wanted."
+<P>
+"That is not sufficient. Your character is&#151; is not&#151; ahem!
+of the best, and&#151;"
+<P>
+"Why is my character not of the best?" I demanded.
+<P>
+"Well, ahem! Your father, you see&#151;"
+<P>
+"Is innocent."
+<P>
+"Perhaps&#151; perhaps, but, nevertheless, I will have to hold
+you. Parsons, I will leave him in your charge."
+<P>
+"You have no right to arrest me," I cried, for I knew
+very little of the law.
+<P>
+"What's that?" demanded Judge Penfold, pompously. "You
+forget I am the judge of that."
+<P>
+"I don't care," I burst out. "I have done no wrong."
+<P>
+"It ain't that, Roger. Many innocent men are held as
+witnesses," put in Parsons.
+<P>
+"But I've got to attend to Mrs. Canby's business," I
+explained.
+<P>
+"I fancy Mrs. Canby would rather get on the track of her
+money," said Judge Penfold severely. "Can you furnish bail?"
+<P>
+I did not know that I could. The woman who had been robbed
+was my only friend, and she was away.
+<P>
+"Then you'll have to take him to the lockup, Parsons."
+<P>
+This news was far from agreeable. It would be no pleasant
+thing to be confined in the Darbyville jail, not to say anything of the anxiety
+it might cause Kate. Besides, I wanted to follow up John Stumpy. I was certain
+I could do it fully as well as the constable.
+<P>
+"Come, Roger, there is no help for it," said Parsons,
+as I still lingered. "It's the law, and it won't do any good to kick."
+<P>
+"Maybe not, but, nevertheless, it isn't fair."
+<P>
+We walked out into the front hall, the judge following
+us.
+<P>
+"Of course if you can get bail any time during the day
+I will let you go," he said; "I will be down in my office from nine to twelve
+and two to four."
+<P>
+"Will you offer a reward for the capture of the man?"
+I asked.
+<P>
+"I cannot do that. The freeholders of the county attend
+to all such matters. Parsons, no doubt, will find the scoundrel."
+<P>
+As the judge finished there was a violent ringing of the
+door bell. Judge Penfold opened the door and was confronted by Mr. Aaron
+Woodward, who looked pale and excited.
+<P>
+"Judge, I want you&#151; hello! that boy! Judge, I want that
+boy arrested at once! Don't you let him escape!"
+<P>
+"Want me arrested?" I ejaculated in astonishment. "What
+for?"
+<P>
+"You know well enough. You thought to hide your tracks,
+but I have found you out. Parsons, don't let him get out of the door. He's
+a worse villain than his father was!"
+<h3>CHAPTER X</h3>
+<h4>UNDER ARREST</h4>
+<P>
+I will not hesitate to state that
+I was nearly stunned by Mr. Aaron Woodward's unexpected statement. I knew
+that when he announced that I was a worse villain than my father he meant
+a good deal.
+<P>
+Yet try as hard as I could it was impossible for me to
+discover what he really did mean. I was not conscious of having done him
+any injury, either bodily or otherwise. Indeed, of late I had hardly seen
+the man. The Widow Canby was not partial to dealings with him, and I never
+went near him on my own account.
+<P>
+It was plain to see that the merchant was thoroughly aroused.
+His face was pale with anger, and the look he cast upon me was one of bitter
+resentment. For the instant he eyed me as if he intended to spring upon me
+and choke the life out of my body, and involuntarily I shrank back. But then
+I recollected that the minions of the law who stood beside me would not allow
+such a course of procedure, and this made me breathe more freely.
+<P>
+"Yes, sir; he's a worse villain than his father!" repeated
+Mr. Aaron Woodward, turning to Judge Penfold; "a most accomplished villain,
+sir." And he shook his fist within an inch of my nose.
+<P>
+"What have I done to you, Mr. Woodward?" I demanded, as
+soon as I could speak.
+<P>
+"Done, sir? You know very well what you've done, you young
+rascal!" puffed the merchant. "Oh, but I'll make you pay dearly for your
+villainy."
+<P>
+"I've committed no villainy," I returned warmly. "If you
+refer to the way I treated Duncan this morning, why all I've got to say is
+that it was his own fault, and I can prove it."
+<P>
+"Treated Duncan? Oh, pshaw! This is far more serious affair
+than a boy's quarrel. Don't let him escape, Parsons"&#151; the last to the constable,
+who had his hand on my shoulder.
+<P>
+"No fear, sir," was Parson's reply. "He's already under
+arrest."
+<P>
+"Under arrest?" repeated the merchant quickly. "Then you've
+already heard&#151;"
+<P>
+"He is ahem&#151; only under detention as a witness," spoke
+up Judge Penfold. "I do not think he had anything to do with the theft of
+the widow's money."
+<P>
+"Widow's money! What do you mean?"
+<P>
+In a few words Judge Penfold explained the situation.
+"Isn't this what you came about?" he asked then.
+<P>
+"Indeed, no, sir. My affair is far more important&#151; at
+least to me. But you can make up your mind that Strong's story is purely
+fiction. He is undoubtedly the real culprit, undoubtedly. Takes after his
+father."
+<P>
+"My father was an honest man!" I cried out. "I don't care
+what you or any one may say! Some day he will be cleared of the stain on
+his name."
+<P>
+"Oh, undoubtedly," sneered Mr. Woodward. "Mean while,
+however, the community at large had better keep a sharp eye on his son. Whom
+do you assert stole the Widow Canby's money?"
+<P>
+"A tramp."
+<P>
+"Humph! A likely story."
+<P>
+"It's true. His name was John Stumpy."
+<P>
+"John Stumpy!"
+<P>
+As Mr. Aaron Woodwind uttered the name, all the color
+forsook his face.
+<P>
+"Yes, sir. And he claimed to know you," I went on, my
+curiosity amused over the merchant's show of feeling.
+<P>
+"It's a falsehood! I never heard of such a man," cried
+Mr. Woodward, but his face belied his words.
+<P>
+"Well, what is your charge against Strong?" asked Judge
+Penfold, impatiently, probably tired of being so utterly ignored in the
+discussion.
+<P>
+The merchant hesitated.
+<P>
+"I prefer to speak to you about the matter in private,"
+he said sourly.
+<P>
+"That isn't fair. He ought to tell me what I am accused
+of," I cried, "Every one who is arrested has a right to know that. I have
+done no wrong and I am not afraid."
+<P>
+"All assumed bravery, Judge Penfold; quite assumed, sir."
+<P>
+"No, sir. Tell me why you want me locked up," I repeated.
+<P>
+But instead of replying Mr. Woodward drew Judge Penfold
+to the rear end of the hall and began to speak in so low a tone that I could
+not catch a word.
+<P>
+"You don't mean it!" I heard the judge say presently.
+"Come into the library and give me the particulars."
+<P>
+The two men passed into the room, closing the door tightly
+behind them. They were gone nearly quarter of an hour&#151; a long wait for me.
+I wondered what could be the nature of Mr. Woodward's accusation against
+me, but failed to solve the mystery.
+<P>
+At length they came out. Judge Penfold's face was a trifle
+sterner than before. Mr. Woodward looked pleased, as if his argument had
+proven conclusive.
+<P>
+"You will take Strong to the jail at once," said the judge
+to Parsons "and tell Booth to be careful of his prisoner."
+<P>
+"Yes, sir."
+<P>
+"Don't let him escape," added Aaron Woodward, anxiously.
+"Don't let him escape, sir, under any circumstances."
+<P>
+"No fear," was Parsons's ready answer. "I never had one
+of 'em give me the slip yet."
+<P>
+And with great gravity he drew from his pocket a pair
+of ancient handcuffs, one of which he attached to my wrist and the other
+to his own.
+<P>
+"Come, Roger. Better take it easy," he said. "No use of
+kicking. March!"
+<P>
+"But I'd like to know something about this," I protested.
+"What right&#151;"
+<P>
+"It is all quite legal," put in Judge Penfold, pompously.
+"I understand the law perfectly."
+<P>
+"But&#151;"
+<P>
+"Say no more. Parsons, take him away."
+<P>
+"I shall see you later," whispered Mr. Woodward in my
+ear as the constable hurried me off.
+<P>
+The next instant we were on the street. Arrests in Darbyville
+were rare, and by the time we reached the jail we had a goodly following
+of boys and idle men, all anxious to know what was up.
+<P>
+"He stole the Widow Canby's money," I heard one man whisper,
+to which another replied:&#151;
+<P>
+"Light fingered, eh? Must take after his father. I always
+knew the Strongs couldn't be trusted."
+<P>
+The jail was a small affair, being nothing more than the
+loft over a carpenter shop. The jailer was a round-faced man named Booth,
+who filled in his spare time by doing odd jobs of carpentering in the shop
+downstairs. We found him hard at work glueing some doors together. I knew
+him tolerably well, and he evinced considerable surprise at seeing me in
+custody.
+<P>
+"What, Roger; arrested! What for?"
+<P>
+"That's what I would like to know," I returned.
+<P>
+In a few words Parsons told him what was to be done, and
+Booth led the way upstairs.
+<P>
+"&nbsp;'Tain't a very secure place," he returned. "Reckon
+I'll have to nail down some of the windows unless you'll give me your word
+not to run away."
+<P>
+"I'll promise nothing," was my reply. "I'm being treated
+unfairly, and I shall do as I think best."
+<P>
+"Then I'll fasten everything as tight as a drum," returned
+Booth.
+<P>
+Going below, he secured a hammer and some nails, with
+which he secured the windows and the scuttle on the roof.
+<P>
+"Reckon it's tight enough now," he said. "Just wait, Parsons,
+till I get him a bucket of water."
+<P>
+This was done, and then the two men left me, closing and
+locking the door of the enclosed staircase behind them.
+<P>
+The loft was empty, saving a nail keg that stood in one
+corner of the floor. Pulling this out, I sat down to think matters over.
+<P>
+Try my best I could not imagine what charge Mr. Aaron
+Woodward had brought against me. Yet such had been his earnestness that for
+the nonce everything else was driven from my mind.
+<P>
+The sounds of talking below interrupted my meditations.
+I recognized Kate's voice, and the next moment my sister stood beside me.
+<P>
+"Oh, Roger!" was all she could say, and catching me by
+the arm she burst into tears.
+<P>
+"Don't take it so hard, Kate," I said. "Make sure it will
+all come out right in the end."
+<P>
+"But to be arrested like&#151; like a thief! Oh, Roger, it
+is dreadful!"
+<P>
+"Never mind. I have done no wrong, and I'm not afraid
+of the result. Have they heard anything of John Stumpy yet?"
+<P>
+"Dick Blair says not. Mr. Parsons and the rest are after
+him, but he seems to have disappeared for good&#151; and Mrs. Canby's money with
+him."
+<P>
+"Have you heard from her yet?"
+<P>
+"No; but I've written her a letter and just posted it
+to Norfolk."
+<P>
+"She won't get it till day after to-morrow."
+<P>
+"What will she say? Oh, Roger, do you think&#151;"
+<P>
+"No, I don't. The widow always trusted me, and I know
+she'll take my word now. She is not so narrow-minded as the very folks who
+look down on her."
+<P>
+"But it is awful! Over two hundred dollars! We can never
+make it up. We've only got twenty-eight!"
+<P>
+"We can't exactly be called upon to make it up&#151;" I began.
+<P>
+"But we'll want to," put in Kate, hastily.
+<P>
+"I'd feel better if we did. The widow has always been
+so kind to us."
+<P>
+"How long must you stay here?"
+<P>
+"I don't know. As long as Judge Penfold sees fit, I suppose."
+<P>
+"If only they could catch this John Stumpy."
+<P>
+"I hope so&#151; for other reasons than those you know, Kate."
+<P>
+"Other reasons?"
+<P>
+"Yes; very important ones, too. John Stumpy knew father
+well. And he was mixed up in that&#151; that miserable affair."
+<P>
+"Oh, Roger, how do you know?"
+<P>
+"I heard him say so. Besides, he dropped a letter that
+proved it. I have the letter in my pocket now. It's the dying statement of
+one Nicholas Weaver&#151;"
+<P>
+"Nicholas Weaver! He was a clerk with father!"
+<P>
+"So I thought. Who Stumpy is, though, I don't know. Do
+you?"
+<P>
+"No; but his face I'm sure I've seen before. Let me see
+the letter. Have you read it?"
+<P>
+"No; I hadn't time to spell it out, it is so badly written.
+Maybe you can read it."
+<P>
+"I'll try," replied Kate. "Hand it over."
+<P>
+I put my hand in my pocket to do so. The statement was
+gone!
+<h3>CHAPTER XI</h3>
+<h4>AARON WOODWARD'S VISIT</h4>
+<P>
+Puzzled and dismayed, I made a rapid
+search of my clothes&#151; first one pocket and then another. It was useless.
+Beyond a doubt the statement was nowhere about my person.
+<P>
+I was quite sure it had not been taken from me. Strange
+as it may seem, neither Parsons nor Booth had searched me. Perhaps they deemed
+it useless to take away the possessions of a poor country boy. My jack-knife
+and other odds and ends were still in their accustomed places.
+<P>
+"It's gone!" I gasped, when I was certain that such was
+a fact.
+<P>
+"Gone?" repeated Kate.
+<P>
+"Yes, gone, and I don't know where. They didn't take it
+from me. I must have lost it."
+<P>
+"Oh, Roger, and it was so important!"
+<P>
+"I know it, Kate. It must have dropped from my pocket
+down at the tool house. Perhaps if I go down I can find it."
+<P>
+"Go down?" she queried.
+<P>
+"Oh, I forgot I was a prisoner."
+<P>
+"Never mind, Roger. I'll go down myself."
+<P>
+"Aren't you afraid?"
+<P>
+"Not now. I wouldn't have been of this Stumpy only he
+came on me so suddenly. I'll go at once."
+<P>
+"You'd better," said a voice behind her. "Your five minutes
+is up, Miss Kate." And Booth appeared at the head of the stairs and motioned
+her down.
+<P>
+"Good-by, Roger. I'm so sorry to leave you here alone."
+<P>
+"It's not such a dreadful place," I rejoined lightly.
+"If you discover anything, let me know at once."
+<P>
+"Be sure I will." And with this assurance Kate was gone.
+<P>
+I was as sorry for her as I was for myself. I knew all
+she would have to face in public&#151; the mean things people would say to her,
+the snubbing she would be called on to bear.
+<P>
+The loss of the statement rendered me doubly downhearted.
+Oh, how much I had counted on it, assuring myself over and over again that
+it would surely clear my father's name!
+<P>
+Hardly had my sister left me than there were more voices
+below, and I heard Mr. Woodward tell Booth that he had an order from Judge
+Penfold for a private interview with me.
+<P>
+"Better go right upstairs then, Mr. Woodward," was the
+jailer's reply. "He's all alone."
+<P>
+I wondered what the merchant's visit could portend, but
+had little time for speculation.
+<P>
+"So, sir, they've got you fast," said Mr. Woodward sharply
+as he faced me. "Fast, and no mistake."
+<P>
+"What do you want?" I demanded boldly, coming at once
+to the front.
+<P>
+"What do I want?" repeated the merchant, looking behind
+him to make sure that Booth had not followed him. "What do I want? Why, I
+want to help you, Strong, that's what I want."
+<P>
+I could not help but smile. The idea of Mr. Woodward helping
+any one, least of all myself!
+<P>
+"The only way you can help me is to set me free," I returned.
+<P>
+"Oh, I can't do that. You are held on the Canby charge
+solely."
+<P>
+"But you told me you wanted me arrested."
+<P>
+"So I did, but I intend to give you a chance&#151; that is,
+if you will do what I want."
+<P>
+"But why did you want me arrested?"
+<P>
+"You know well enough, Strong."
+<P>
+"On the contrary, I haven't the least idea."
+<P>
+"Stuff and nonsense. See here, if you want to get off
+without further trouble, hand over those papers."
+<P>
+"What papers?"
+<P>
+"The papers you took last night," replied Mr. Woodward,
+sharply.
+<P>
+I was truly astonished. How in the world had he found
+out about the statement dropped by Stumpy? Was it possible there had been
+a meeting between the two? It looked like it.
+<P>
+"I haven't got the papers," I rejoined.
+<P>
+"Don't tell me a falsehood sir," he thundered.
+<P>
+"It's true."
+<P>
+"Do you deny you have the packet?"
+<P>
+"I do."
+<P>
+"Come, Strong, that story won't answer. Hand it over."
+<P>
+"I haven't it."
+<P>
+"Where is it?"
+<P>
+"I lost it," I replied, before I had time to think.
+<P>
+"Lost it!" he cried anxiously.
+<P>
+"Yes, sir," I returned boldly, resolved to make the best
+of it, now the cat was out of the bag. "Either that or it was stolen from
+me."
+<P>
+He looked at me in silence for a moment.
+<P>
+"Do you expect me to believe all your lies?" he demanded
+finally.
+<P>
+"I don't care what you believe," I answered. "I tell the
+truth. And one question I want to ask you, Aaron Woodward. Why are you so
+anxious to gain possession of Nicholas Weaver's dying statement?"
+<P>
+The merchant gave a cry of astonishment, nay, horror.
+He turned pale and glared at me fiercely.
+<P>
+"Nicholas Weaver's dying statement!" he ejaculated. "What
+do you know of Nicholas Weaver?"
+<P>
+Now I had spoken I was almost sorry I had said what I
+had. Yet I could not but notice the tremendous effect my words had produced.
+<P>
+"Never mind what I know," I replied. "Why do you take
+an interest in it?"
+<P>
+"I? I don't know anything about it," he faltered. "I hardly
+knew Nicholas Weaver."
+<P>
+"Indeed? Yet you want his statement."
+<P>
+"No, I don't. I don't know anything about his statement,"
+he continued doggedly. "I want my papers. I don't care a rap about any one
+else's."
+<P>
+It was now my turn to be astonished. Evidently I had been
+on the wrong track from the beginning.
+<P>
+"If you don't want his statement, I'm sure I don't know
+what you do want," I rejoined, and I spoke the exact truth.
+<P>
+"Don't tell lies, Strong. You know well enough. Hand them
+over."
+<P>
+"Hand what over?"
+<P>
+"The packet of papers."
+<P>
+"I haven't any packet."
+<P>
+"Strong, if you don't do as I demand, I'll send you to
+prison after your father."
+<P>
+"I can't help it. I haven't any papers. If you don't believe
+me, search me."
+<P>
+"Where have you hidden them?"
+<P>
+"I never had them to hide."
+<P>
+"I know better, sir, I know better," he fumed.
+<P>
+I made no reply. What could I say?
+<P>
+"Do you hear me, Strong?"
+<P>
+For reply I walked over to the slatted window and began
+to whistle. My action only increased the merchant's anger.
+<P>
+"For the last time, Strong, will you give up the papers?"
+he cried.
+<P>
+"For the last time, Mr. Woodward, let me say I haven't
+got them, never had them, and, therefore, cannot possibly give them up."
+<P>
+"Then you shall go to prison, sir. Mark my word,&#151; you
+shall go to prison!"
+<P>
+And with this parting threat the merchant hurried down
+the loft steps and rapped loudly for Booth to come and let him out.
+<P>
+When he was gone, I sat down again to think over the demand
+he had made upon me. To what papers did he refer? In vain I cudgelled my
+brain to elicit an answer.
+<P>
+He spoke about sending me to prison, and in such tones
+as if it were an easy matter to do. Assuredly he must have some grounds upon
+which to base so positive an assertion.
+<P>
+No doubt he was now on his way to Judge Penfold's office
+to swear out the necessary papers. I did not know much about the law, but
+I objected strongly to going to prison. Once in a regular lockup, the chances
+of getting out would be indeed slim.
+<P>
+I reasoned that the best thing to do was to escape while
+there was a chance. Perhaps I was wrong in this conclusion, but I was only
+a country boy, and I had a horror of stone walls and iron bars.
+<P>
+Escape! No sooner had the thought entered my mind than
+I was wrapped up in it. Undoubtedly it was the best thing to do. Freedom
+meant not only liberty, but also a chance to hunt down John Stumpy and clear
+my father's name.
+<P>
+I looked about the loft for the best means of accomplishing
+my purpose. As I have said, the place was over a carpenter shop. The roof
+was sloping to the floor, and at each end was a small window heavily slatted.
+<P>
+The distance to the ground from the window was not less
+than fifteen feet, rather a long drop even if I could manage to get the slats
+loose, which I doubted, for I had no tools at hand.
+<P>
+I resolved to try the door, and was about to do so when
+I heard the bolts shoot back and Booth appeared.
+<P>
+For an instant I thought to trip him up and rush past
+him, but he stood on the steps completely blocking the way.
+<P>
+"All right, Roger?" he asked.
+<P>
+"Yes, sir."
+<P>
+"Quite com'table, boy?"
+<P>
+"As comfortable as any one could be in such a place,"
+I rejoined lightly.
+<P>
+"&nbsp;'Tain't exactly a parlor," he chuckled. "No easy
+chairs or sofys; but the food's good. I'm a-going to get it for you now.
+Then after that maybe the judge will call around. I'll bring the dinner in
+a minute."
+<P>
+He climbed downstairs, bolting the door after him.
+<P>
+In five minutes&#151; or ten at the most&#151; I knew he would be
+back. After that there was no telling how long he would stay.
+<P>
+Now, therefore, was the proper time to escape, now or
+never!
+<h3>CHAPTER XII</h3>
+<h4>A SURPRISE</h4>
+<P>
+No time must be lost. Booth lived
+but a short hundred feet from the jail, if such it might be called, and if
+his wife had dinner ready it would not take him long to bring it.
+<P>
+I surveyed the room in which I was incarcerated critically.
+Escape by either window was, as I have intimated, out of the question. On
+account of its height, the scuttle was also not to be considered.
+<P>
+Apparently nothing remained to try but the door. Running
+down the steps, I looked it over. It was of solid oak planking, an inch thick,
+and fastened at both top and bottom.
+<P>
+It was a hard thing to tackle, especially with no tools,
+and, after surveying it, I went upstairs again to search for something that
+might do as a pry.
+<P>
+I could see nothing but the empty nail keg, and I could
+discover no use at first in this until the idea struck me of wedging it between
+one of the lower steps and the door, and, by jumping upon it, forcing the
+bottom bolt.
+<P>
+With some difficulty I placed the keg in position and
+brought down my full weight upon it. The first time the bolt merely creaked,
+but the second there was a snap, and the lower part of the door burst outward
+several inches.
+<P>
+The bottom bolt had yielded, and now only the top one
+remained. But to reach this was a difficult matter, as no purchase could
+be had against it.
+<P>
+While considering the situation, I imagined I heard my
+jailer returning, and my heart jumped into my throat. What if Booth should
+see the damage I had done? I reckoned that things would go hard with me if
+it became known that I had attempted to break jail. Judge Penfold would surely
+give me the full penalty of the law.
+<P>
+But the approach of Booth was only imaginary, and, after
+a brief interval of silence, I breathed freer.
+<P>
+I ascends the stairs once more to see if I could not find
+something besides the keg to assist me. If only I had a plank or a beam,
+I might use it as a battering-ram.
+<P>
+The thought of a plank led me to examine the floor, and,
+going over it carefully, I soon came to a short board, one end of which was
+loose. Raising it, I pulled with all my might, and the board came up.
+<P>
+I was astonished to see that it made an opening into the
+shop below. I had imagined that the floor or ceiling was of double thickness.
+<P>
+This gave me a new idea. Why not escape through the floor?
+To pry up another board would perhaps be easier than to force the door.
+<P>
+I tried the board next to the opening. The end was somewhat
+rotted, and it came up with hardly an effort.
+<P>
+In another moment the opening would be large enough to
+allow the passage of my body. Putting the first board under the edge of the
+second, I bore down upon it.
+<P>
+As I did so I heard a noise that alarmed me greatly. It
+was the sound of Booth returning, and the next instant the carpenter had
+opened the outer door and entered.
+<P>
+In one hand he carried a tray containing my dinner. He
+crossed the floor directly under me without looking up. Then his eyes caught
+the shattered door and he gave a loud exclamation.
+<P>
+"By ginger! If that boy ain't gone and escaped!"
+<P>
+He set down the tray with a rattle and tried to pull the
+door open. But the top bolt had become displaced, and it was several seconds
+before it could be shot back.
+<P>
+Meanwhile I was not idle. As quietly as I could I tore
+up the second board. The deed was done just as Booth stumbled over the keg
+on his way up the stairs.
+<P>
+As my jailer appeared at the top, I let my body through
+the opening. It was a tight squeeze, especially when accomplished in a hurry.
+I landed in a heap on a pile of shavings.
+<P>
+"Stop! stop!" called out Booth. "Roger, don't you hear
+me?"
+<P>
+I certainly did hear him, but paid no attention to his
+words. My one thought was to get away as quickly as possible.
+<P>
+"If you don't stop, I'll shoot you," went on Booth at
+the top of his voice. "Don't you know breaking jail is a&#151; a felony?"
+<P>
+I did not know what kind of a crime it was. I had made
+up my mind to escape, and intended to do so, even if such a deed constituted
+manslaughter. I made a break for the door and passed out just as Booth came
+tramping down the stairs.
+<P>
+I ran across the yard that separated the carpenter shop
+from the house. As I did so, Mrs. Booth appeared at the back door. Upon seeing
+me she held up her hands in horror.
+<P>
+"Mercy on us! Roger Strong! Where be you a-running to?
+'Zekel! 'Zekel! the prisoner's broke loose!"
+<P>
+"I know it, Mandy!" I heard Ezekiel Booth answer. "Dunno
+how he did it, though. Stop, Roger, it's best now; jest you mark my word!"
+<P>
+I heard no more. Jumping the side fence, I ran through
+a bit of orchard and across a stony lot until I reached the Pass River.
+<P>
+At this point this body of water was several hundred feet
+wide. The bank sloped directly to the water's edge. Near at hand were several
+private boat-houses, one belonging to Mr. Aaron Woodward, he having built
+it to please Duncan.
+<P>
+At the end of the boat-house pier lay a skiff, the oars
+resting upon the seats. I knew it was wrong to make use of the craft, but
+"necessity knows no law," and my need was great.
+<P>
+Running down to the end of the pier, I dropped into the
+boat and shoved off. As I did so, Duncan Woodward, accompanied by Pultzer,
+came out of the boat-house.
+<P>
+"Hi, there, what are you doing in my boat?" he sang out.
+"What, Roger Strong!" he continued as he came nearer.
+<P>
+"You must lend me the boat, Duncan," I returned. "I've
+got to cross the river in a hurry."
+<P>
+"Not much! I thought you were in jail."
+<P>
+"Not just now," I replied. "You can get your boat on the
+other side."
+<P>
+"Hold up! You shan't have her. Come back!"
+<P>
+But I was already pulling out into the stream. He continued
+to shout after me, and presently I saw the two joined by Booth, and all watched
+me in dismay as I made for the opposite shore.
+<P>
+Reaching the bank, I beached the boat high up and then
+climbed to the roadway that ran beside the stream. Trees and bushes were
+thick here, and I had but little difficulty in hiding from the view of those
+opposite.
+<P>
+For a moment I hesitated as to which way to proceed. A
+number of miles down the stream lay Newville, of which I have already spoken.
+Probably my pursuers would think I had gone in that direction. If so, they
+would hasten to the bridge below, with the intention of cutting me off.
+<P>
+I therefore started immediately on my way up the river
+road, resolved to put as much ground as possible between myself and my pursuers.
+I had no definite destination in view, but thought to gain some hiding-place
+where I might rest secure and think things over.
+<P>
+It was now going on to two o'clock in the afternoon, and
+as I had not had anything to eat since the noon previous, I began to feel
+decidedly hungry. I felt in my pocket and discovered that I was the possessor
+of sixty-five cents, and with this amount of cash I did not see any reason
+for my remaining hungry any longer.
+<P>
+Presently I came to a small, white cottage, upon the front
+porch of which was displayed the sign
+<P ALIGN=CENTER class=center>
+BOARDING
+<P>
+Ascending the steps, I knocked at the door, and a comely,
+middle-aged woman answered my summons.
+<P>
+"I see that you take boarders here," I said, "I am hungry,
+and several miles from any restaurant. Can you furnish me with dinner?"
+<P>
+She looked me over rather sharply before replying. Then
+I realize for the first time that my appearance was not of the best. My clothes
+were considerably the worse for having rolled over and over in the old tool
+house, and in escaping from my prison I had made several rents in my coat.
+<P>
+"I will pay you whatever you charge," I added hastily,
+"and I would like to wash and brush up, too; I have had a tumble," which
+was literally true.
+<P>
+"I can let you have dinner for twenty-five cent," she
+said finally. "I won't charge you anything for cleaning up," she added, with
+something like a smile. "Will you mind paying in advance?"
+<P>
+"No, ma'am," and I handed over the money. "I suppose I
+won't have to wait very long."
+<P>
+"Oh, no, the regular boarders have just finished. You
+can sit right down."
+<P>
+"If you don't mind, I'll take a wash first."
+<P>
+The woman led the way to an ante-room, in which were placed
+a bowl of water, towel, and soap, as well as a dust brush. It did not take
+me long to fix myself up, and then I flattered myself I did not present an
+unbecoming appearance.
+<P>
+The dinner that the woman served was not as good as that
+which my sister Kate helped to prepare at the Widow Canby's, but it was wholesome
+food, and my sharpened appetite made it disappear rapidly.
+<P>
+As I ate I reflected upon my situation. For the life of
+me I did not know what to do next. I longed to see my sister and tell her
+that I was safe. This done, I intended to devote my time to hunting up the
+man who I firmly believed held my father's reputation in his hand. I was
+sure I would discover him sooner or later, and this accomplished, I would
+not let him out of my sight until he had confessed his secret. I wondered
+if Kate had succeeded in finding that precious statement I had lost. Heartily
+did I reproach myself for not having taken better care of it.
+<P>
+Having satisfied myself upon the substantial things set
+before me, I finished my meal with a small cut of apple pie.
+<P>
+As I was swallowing the last mouthful I glanced out of
+the window up the road, and gave a cry of surprise. And no wonder, for coming
+toward the house was Mr. Aaron Woodward, and beside him walked John Stumpy!
+<h3>CHAPTER XIII</h3>
+<h4>AN INTERESTING CONVERSATION</h4>
+<P>
+I could hardly believe the evidence
+of my senses when I saw Mr. Aaron Woodward coming up the road with John Stumpy
+beside him. It would have astonished me to have seen the merchant alone,
+but to see him in company with the very man I was looking for was more than
+I had thought possible.
+<P>
+Yet I reflected that the tramp&#151; or whatever the man was&#151; had
+evinced a determination to secure an interview with Mr. Woodward before quitting
+Darbyville. There was important business to be transacted between them. Mr.
+John Stumpy intended to have his say, whatever that might mean.
+<P>
+What was to be done? It would never do for me to be seen.
+Nothing short of arrest would follow. I must get out of the way as quickly
+as possible.
+<P>
+During the time I had been eating, the sky had become
+overcast as if a shower was imminent. Taking advantage of this fact I rose
+quickly and reached for my hat.
+<P>
+"Guess we're going to have a thunder shower," I remarked.
+"Hope it holds off. I don't want to get wet."
+<P>
+"Then you'll have to hurry," rejoined the woman as she
+looked out of the door. "Looks as if it would be here in less than quarter
+of an hour."
+<P>
+"Then I'm off. Good day."
+<P>
+"Good day. Come again."
+<P>
+I slipped out of the door, and passing behind a hedge,
+made my way to the road. As I did so, Mr. Woodward and Stumpy turned from
+the highway and walked directly up the gravel path that led to the house!
+<P>
+I was dumfounded by this movement. What did they mean
+by going to the very place I had just vacated? Was it possible they had seen
+me?
+<P>
+I earnestly hoped not; for if so, it would spoil a little
+plan that had just come to me, which was to follow them, see what they were
+up to, and, if possible, overhear whatever might be said.
+<P>
+I was soon convinced that neither of the men was aware
+of my presence. They were talking earnestly and stepped up on the porch just
+as ordinary visitors would have done. In a moment the woman let them in and
+the door closed behind them.
+<P>
+My curiosity was aroused to its highest pitch, and at
+the risk of being discovered by any one who might chance to be passing by
+I walked cautiously back along the hedge until I reached a clump of rose
+bushes that grew directly under one of the dining-room windows.
+<P>
+The window was open, and by a little manoeuvring I easily
+managed to see and hear what was going on within.
+<P>
+"You came for the rent, I suppose, Mr. Woodward," the
+woman was saying. "Joel was going to bring it up to-night. He would have
+brought it over this morning, only he thought it was going to rain and he
+had some hay he wanted to get in."
+<P>
+"Yes, I did come for the rent, Mrs. Decker," replied the
+merchant. "It's due several days now."
+<P>
+"I have it here&#151; thirty dollars. Here is the receipt book."
+<P>
+There was the rustle of bills and the scratching of a
+pen.
+<P>
+"Here you are, Mrs. Decker."
+<P>
+"Thank you, sir. Now we'll be worry free for another month."
+<P>
+"So you are. Nothing like being prompt."
+<P>
+"My husband was going to speak to you about the roof.
+It leaks dreadfully."
+<P>
+"Pooh! That can't be. Why, it was patched only two years
+ago."
+<P>
+"You are wrong, Mr. Woodward. It is four years, and then
+but very little was done to it."
+<P>
+"It cost near twelve dollars," growled the merchant. "You
+can't expect me to be fixing up the house all the time."
+<P>
+"It leaks very badly."
+<P>
+"Then your husband will have to attend to it. I can't
+spend any more money this year."
+<P>
+"I don't know what we'll do. I wish you would just step
+outside and look up at the shingles. Nearly all of them are ready to fall
+off."
+<P>
+I was alarmed by Mrs. Decker's request. Suppose the trio
+should come out? I would surely be discovered. But my fears were groundless,
+as the next words of Mr. Woodward proved.
+<P>
+"I can't go out now, madam, not now. I haven't time. I
+have a little business to transact with this man, and then I must return
+to Darbyville."
+<P>
+"I'm sorry&#151;" began the woman.
+<P>
+"So am I; but it cannot be helped. Can I use this room
+for a while?"
+<P>
+By the look upon Mrs. Decker's face it was plain to see
+she wanted to say, "No, you can't," but she hardly dared to speak the words,
+so she gave an icy assent and withdrew.
+<P>
+The merchant followed her to the door and saw that it
+was closed tightly behind her. Then he strode across the room and faced John
+Stumpy.
+<P>
+"Wall, sir, now we'll have an accounting," he began in
+an authoritative voice.
+<P>
+"So we will, Woody," returned John Stumpy, in no wise
+abashed by the other's manner.
+<P>
+The merchant winced at the use of a nickname, but after
+an instant's hesitation passed it over.
+<P>
+"What do you mean by coming to Darbyville, sir, when I
+have repeatedly written you to stay away?"
+<P>
+"Oh, come, Woody, don't get on your high horse," was Stumpy's
+response, as he swung back in the rocker he occupied. "You know I never could
+stand your high-toned ways."
+<P>
+"I flatter myself I am a trifle above common people,"
+returned Mr. Woodward, and it was plain to see where Duncan got his arrogant
+manner.
+<P>
+"Oh, pshaw! don't make me tired," yawned Stumpy. "Come,
+let's to business."
+<P>
+"I am at business. Why did you come here?"
+<P>
+"You know well enough. Didn't I write to you?"
+<P>
+"Yes, and got my answer. We've squared up accounts, sir."
+<P>
+"Don't 'sir' me,&#151; it don't go down," cried Stumpy, angrily.
+"We haven't squared up, not by a jugful,&#151; not till you hand over some more
+cash."
+<P>
+"I've handed over enough now."
+<P>
+"No, you hain't. Do you think I'm going to do all your
+work for nothing?"
+<P>
+"You were well paid."
+<P>
+"It's only you as thinks so; I don't."
+<P>
+"How much more do you want?"
+<P>
+"A thousand dollars."
+<P>
+The largeness of the demand fairly took away my breath.
+As for Mr. Aaron Woodward, he was beside himself.
+<P>
+"A thousand dollars!" he said. "Why, you're crazy, sir."
+<P>
+"No, I ain't; I mean just what I say."
+<P>
+"You expect me to pay you a thousand dollars?"
+<P>
+"Of course I do. I wouldn't ask it if I didn't."
+<P>
+"See here, Fer&#151;"
+<P>
+"Sh!&#151; John Stumpy, if you please."
+<P>
+"That's so, I forgot. But see here, a thousand dollars!
+Why, I've already paid you that."
+<P>
+"So you have. Now I want another thousand and then we'll
+cry quits."
+<P>
+Mr. Aaron Woodward grew white with rage. "I never heard
+of such an outrageous demand," he cried. "I'll never pay it."
+<P>
+"Oh, yes, you will," rejoined the other, coolly. "Aaron
+Woodward never yet acted rashly."
+<P>
+"Suppose I refuse to pay?"
+<P>
+"Better not; I'm a bad man when I am aroused."
+<P>
+"I don't fear you. You can do nothing to me."
+<P>
+"Oh, yes, I can. I can tell ugly stories about Mr. Aaron
+Woodward; stories concerning his doings when he was collector for Holland
+&amp; Mack."
+<P>
+"And who would believe you?" sneered the merchant. "You,
+a common tramp&#151;"
+<P>
+"Tramp, am I&#151;" interrupted John Stumpy, with a scowl.
+"If I am, who made me so?"
+<P>
+"Your own self and the bottle. Do you think you can hurt
+me? Nonsense!"
+<P>
+"I can try."
+<P>
+"And who will believe you, I repeat? A common tramp&#151; whom
+the police are now hunting for, because of a robbery that occurred only last
+night."
+<P>
+"&nbsp;'Tain't so!"
+<P>
+"It is. You broke into the Widow Canby's house and stole
+over two hundred dollars."
+<P>
+In spite of the dirt on his face, John Stumpy grew pale.
+<P>
+"Who can prove it?"
+<P>
+"Several people. Carson Strong's son, for one."
+<P>
+Stumpy sprang to his feet. Then almost as suddenly sat
+down.
+<P>
+"Didn't know he had a son," he said, as carelessly as
+he could.
+<P>
+"Yes, you did," returned the merchant, flatly. "I think,
+Fer&#151; Stumpy, I know a little more about you than you do about me."
+<P>
+Bitter hatred spread itself over the tramp's face.
+<P>
+"Oh, ho, you do, do you? Well, we'll see. 'Them laughs
+best as laughs last.' If you won't pay, I'm off."
+<P>
+He rose to his feet and reached for his hat, Mr. Woodward
+intercepted him.
+<P>
+"Where are you going?"
+<P>
+"That's my business. I want you to know I didn't come
+on all the way from Chicago for nothing."
+<P>
+"Are you hard up?"
+<P>
+"Yes, I am. I want money, and I'm going to have it."
+<P>
+"How about the two hundred dollars you stole last night?"
+<P>
+Stumpy hesitated.
+<P>
+"Well, if you want to know the truth, I lost the money,"
+he said.
+<h3>CHAPTER XIV</h3>
+<h4>THE PRICE OF SILENCE</h4>
+<P>
+For a moment I was staggered by John
+Stumpy's announcement. Was it possible he was telling the truth? If so, the
+chances of recovering the Widow Canby's money would assume a different shape.
+To arrest him would prove a moral satisfaction, but it would not restore
+the stolen dollars.
+<P>
+Occupying the position I did, I was more interested in
+restoring the stolen money than I was in having the tramp incarcerated.
+<P>
+Nothing would have given me greater satisfaction than
+to have met the Widow Canby at the depot with the two hundred odd dollars
+in my pocket. It would have silenced the public tongue and made my breaking
+jail of no consequence.
+<P>
+But perhaps John Stumpy was telling a falsehood. He was
+not above such a thing, and would not hesitate if he thought anything could
+be gained thereby. That Mr. Aaron Woodward also guessed such to be a fact
+was proven by the words that followed Stumpy's statement.
+<P>
+"Lost the money?" he ejaculated. "Do you expect me to
+believe you, sir?"
+<P>
+"It's true."
+<P>
+"Nonsense, sir. Jack Fer&#151;"
+<P>
+"Sh!"
+<P>
+"John Stumpy isn't the one to lose over two hundred dollars!"
+<P>
+"Just what I always said myself, partner, and&#151;"
+<P>
+"Don't 'partner ' me, sir!"
+<P>
+"Well, wasn't we all partners in the good times gone by?"
+<P>
+"No, sir!"
+<P>
+<I>"I</I> reckon we were. Howsomever, let it pass. Well,
+as I was saying, I reckoned I'd never lose any money, leasewise a small pile,
+but that's what I have done, and that's why I want you to come down."
+<P>
+And John Stumpy leaned back in the rocker in a defiant
+fashion.
+<P>
+The merchant eyed him sharply in silence for a moment.
+<P>
+"Where did you lose the money?" he asked at length.
+<P>
+"How do I know? If I did, don't you suppose I'd go back
+and pick it up?"
+<P>
+"I thought perhaps you were afraid of discovery."
+<P>
+"Humph! I'm not skeered of any such constables as they
+have in Darbyville."
+<P>
+"But you must have some idea where you dropped it," went
+on Mr. Woodward, and I was astonished to see how coolly this man, who always
+pretended to be so straightforward, could inquire about stolen money.
+<P>
+"Not the least," responded John Stumpy. "There was two
+hundred and sixty dollars in all. I took out ten and left the rest in the
+pocketbook it was in. I've got the ten dollars, and that's all. And that's
+why you've got to come down," he went on deliberately. "I'm off for Chicago
+to-night, and I'm not going back empty handed."
+<P>
+"You think I ought to pay you for your own carelessness,"
+returned Mr. Woodward, coolly.
+<P>
+"Not a bit of it. You owe me every cent I ask."
+<P>
+"I don't owe you a penny."
+<P>
+"You owe me a thousand dollars, and for the last time
+let me tell you, you've got to pay or take the consequences." And John Stumpy
+brought his fist down on the table with a bang.
+<P>
+"Hold on; don't make so much noise," cried Mr. Aaron Woodward
+in alarm. "There is no use of rousing the household."
+<P>
+"I don't care. Either you'll come down or I'll rouse the
+whole of Darbyville," cried the tramp, vehemently.
+<P>
+"I haven't any money."
+<P>
+"You can't tell me that."
+<P>
+"It's true. Times are getting worse every day."
+<P>
+"Didn't the woman who lives here just pay you?"
+<P>
+"Yes; thirty dollars&#151;"
+<P>
+"And didn't you put the bills in with a big roll in your
+vest pocket?" went on Stumpy, triumphantly.
+<P>
+The merchant bit his lip.
+<P>
+"That money is to pay a bill that falls due to-morrow,"
+he replied.
+<P>
+"Well, my 'bill' falls due to-day, and it's got to be
+met. So come; no more beating about the bush. We've talked long enough. Now
+to business. Do you intend to pay or not?"
+<P>
+The merchant hesitated. Evidently he was afraid to oppose
+the other too strongly.
+<P>
+"Well, I don't want to let you go without anything," he
+began. "I'll let you have twenty-five dollars&#151;"
+<P>
+John Stumpy jumped up in a passion. "That settles it.
+I'm done with you. To-night I'll send a letter to Chris Holtzmann, 897 Sherman
+Street, Chicago, and tell him a few things he wants to know, and&#151;"
+<P>
+"You dare!" almost shrieked Mr. Woodward. "Write a single
+word to him and I'll&#151; I'll&#151;"
+<P>
+"So! ho! You're afraid of him, are you?"
+<P>
+"No, I'm not, but what's the use of letting him know
+anything?"
+<P>
+"Humph! Do you suppose I'd tell him without pay? Not much!
+I can easily get him to fork over fifty or a hundred dollars. And he'll make
+you pay it back, ten times over."
+<P>
+Mr. Aaron Woodward sank back in a chair without a word.
+Evidently he was completely baffled, and knew not which way to turn.
+<P>
+As for myself, I was very much in the dark as to what
+all this was about. I was certain the past events spoken of pertained to
+my father's affairs, but failed to "make connections."
+<P>
+One thing, however, I did do, and that was to make a note
+of Mr. Chris Holtzmann's address. He was the man Stumpy had written to just
+previous to the robbery, and he was perhaps one of the persons concerned
+in my father's downfall.
+<P>
+"See here," said the merchant at last. "It's too late
+for us to quarrel. What good would an exposure to Holtzmann do?"
+<P>
+"Never mind. If you won't come to time, I shall do as
+I please," growled Stumpy.
+<P>
+"But a thousand dollars! I haven't got it in cash."
+<P>
+"You can easily get it."
+<P>
+"Not so easily as you think. Tell you what I will do.
+I'll give you a hundred. But you must give up all evidence you have against
+me."
+<P>
+Stumpy gave a short, contemptuous laugh. "You must think
+me as green as grass," he sneered. "I'm not giving up any evidence. I'm holding
+on to all I've got and gathering more."
+<P>
+"You have Nicholas Weaver's statement," went on Mr. Woodward,
+with interest.
+<P>
+"So I have. Nick told the truth in it, too."
+<P>
+"I would like to see it"
+<P>
+"Of course you would. So would some other people,&#151; Carson
+Strong's boy, for instance."
+<P>
+"Sh!&#151; not so loud."
+<P>
+"Well, then, don't bring the subject up."
+<P>
+"Have you the statement with you?"
+<P>
+"Maybe I haven't; maybe I have."
+<P>
+"Perhaps it was taken from you," went on Mr. Woodward,
+curiously.
+<P>
+"What do you know about that?" Stumpy again jumped to
+his feet. "You've been talking to that Strong boy," he cried.
+<P>
+"Supposing I have?"
+<P>
+"Well, it didn't do you no good. Say, how much does the
+young cub know?"
+<P>
+"He knows too much for the good of either of us," responded
+the merchant.
+<P>
+"Sorry he wasn't found in the ruins of that tool house,"
+growled the tramp, savagely.
+<P>
+This was certainly a fine assertion for me to hear. Yet
+it was no more than I would expect from John Stumpy. He was a villain through
+and through.
+<P>
+"You meant to burn him up, did you?" asked Mr. Woodward.
+<P>
+"And if I had, Mr. Aaron Woodward would never have shed
+a tear," laughed John Stumpy.
+<P>
+"Let me see the statement."
+<P>
+John Stumpy hesitated. "Hand over the money first, and
+maybe I will."
+<P>
+"The hundred dollars?"
+<P>
+"No, a thousand."
+<P>
+"Do you suppose I carry so much money with me?"
+<P>
+"Give me what you have in that roll, and I'll take your
+word for the rest."
+<P>
+The merchant gave something that sounded very much like
+a groan.
+<P>
+"Well, I suppose if you insist on it, I must," he said.
+"I'll give you what I have, but I won't promise you any more."
+<P>
+"Hand it over," was Stumpy's laconic reply. He probably
+thought half a loaf better than no bread, at all.
+<P>
+With a heavy sigh Mr. Woodward drew the roll of bills
+from his pocket and began to count them over. I was eager to catch sight
+of them. I stood on tiptoe and peered into the window. It was an interesting
+scene; the sour look upon the merchant's face; the look of greed in the tramp's
+eye. In a moment the counting was finished.
+<P>
+"A hundred and seventy dollars," said Mr. Aaron Woodward.
+"Here you are." And he held them out. Stumpy almost snatched them from his
+hand.
+<P>
+"There, now that's settled," he said. "Now about&#151; What
+was that?"
+<P>
+A noise had disturbed him. While absorbed in what the
+two were doing I had given an involuntary cough.
+<P>
+"Somebody listening," he declared as he thrust the money
+into his pocket.
+<P>
+"We ought to be more careful."
+<P>
+"Only some one coughing in the next room," returned Mr.
+Woodward. "Don't get scared."
+<P>
+"I ain't scared, but I don't want other folks to know
+my business. Reckon you don't either."
+<P>
+"No, indeed. It's bad enough for me to be seen in your
+company," returned Mr. Aaron Woodward, with just a trace of his former lofty
+manner.
+<P>
+"No insinuations, please," was the ready reply. "My hands
+ain't any dirtier than yours."
+<P>
+"Well, well, let's stop quarrelling. Let me see the
+statement."
+<P>
+"Will you promise to hand it back if I do?"
+<P>
+"Why not let me have it?"
+<P>
+"Never mind why. Will you give it back?"
+<P>
+"If you insist on it, you shall have it back," was Mr.
+Woodward's final reply, seeing that he could gain nothing by parleying.
+<P>
+Stumpy drew forth the envelope. I anticipated what was
+coming.
+<P>
+"Here it is," he said, and handed it over, as he supposed.
+<P>
+"The envelope is empty," said Mr. Woodward.
+<P>
+Stumpy looked dumfounded.
+<h3>CHAPTER XV</h3>
+<h4>AN ODD STATEMENT</h4>
+<P>
+Before Mr. Woodward made the announcement
+just recorded he had walked close up to the window, probably to get into
+the light, for the sky was now darkening rapidly, portending the near breaking
+out of the storm I have mentioned.
+<P>
+In doing this the merchant's back was turned upon his
+companion, and for an instant Stumpy had been unable to see what the other
+was doing.
+<P>
+When therefore Mr. Woodward declared the envelope to be
+empty every action of the tramp indicated that he did not believe the statement.
+<P>
+"Empty?" he cried hoarsely.
+<P>
+"Yes, empty," replied the merchant; "and you knew it,"
+he added.
+<P>
+"No such thing. The statement was inside. Woody, you're
+trying to play a sharp game, but it won't work."
+<P>
+"What do you mean, sir?"
+<P>
+"You're trying to rob me."
+<P>
+"Nonsense. I say the envelope was empty."
+<P>
+"And I say it wasn't. Come, hand over my property."
+<P>
+"I tell you, Fer&#151; Stumpy, I haven't it."
+<P>
+"I don't care what you say. You can't play any such game
+off on me," rejoined John Stumpy, with increasing anger.
+<P>
+"I'm only speaking the truth."
+<P>
+"You ain't. Hand it over, or I'll&#151;"
+<P>
+John Stumpy caught the merchant by the coat collar.
+<P>
+"What would you do?" cried Mr. Woodward in alarm, and
+it was plain to see he was a coward at heart.
+<P>
+"I'll choke the life out of you; that's what I'll do.
+Hand over the statement."
+<P>
+"I haven't it, upon my honor."
+<P>
+"Your honor? Bah! What does that amount to?"
+<P>
+John Stumpy suddenly shifted his hand from its grasp on
+the collar to the merchant's throat. For a moment I thought Mr. Woodward
+was in danger of being choked to death.
+<P>
+"Stop! Stop! Se&#151; search me if you&#151; you want to," he gasped.
+<P>
+But John Stumpy's passion seemed to have got the better
+of his reason. He did not relax his hold in the least.
+<P>
+A short struggle ensued. The two backed up against the
+table, and presently a chair was upset. Of course all this made considerable
+noise. Yet neither of the men heeded it.
+<P>
+Presently the door from the other room swung open, and
+the two had hardly time to separate before a tall, lank farmer entered.
+<P>
+"Hello, what's up?" he asked in a loud, drawling tone.
+<P>
+For an instant neither spoke, evidently not knowing what
+to say.
+<P>
+"We were&#151; were&#151; ahem&#151; trying to&#151; to catch a rat," replied
+Mr. Woodward, with an effort.
+<P>
+"A rat?"
+<P>
+"Exactly, sir. Had a terrible time with him, Mr. Decker."
+<P>
+The farmer looked surprised. "So I supposed by the row
+that was going on," he said. "Curious. I knew there were rats down to the
+barn, but I didn't suppose they came up to the house. What became of him?"
+<P>
+"Slipped out of the door just now," put in John Stumpy.
+"There he goes!" he added, pointing out into the hall.
+<P>
+Mr. Decker made a spring out of the room.
+<P>
+"I must ketch him, by gopher!" he cried. "There's enough
+eat up here now without having the vermin taking a hand in."
+<P>
+Mr. Woodward closed the door after the man.
+<P>
+"Now see to what your actions have brought us," he exclaimed.
+"If it hadn't been for my quick wit we'd been in a pretty mess."
+<P>
+"Not my fault," growled John Stumpy. "Why don't you give
+up the statement?"
+<P>
+I could not help but feel amused at his persistency. His
+demands upon the merchant were about on a footing with those Mr. Woodward
+had made upon me.
+<P>
+"If you'll only listen to reason," began the merchant,
+"I will prove&#151;"
+<P>
+The rest of his remark was drowned out in a clap of thunder.
+Somewhat startled, I looked up at the sky.
+<P>
+The black clouds in the south had rolled up rapidly, until
+now the entire horizon was covered. The first burst of thunder was succeeded
+directly by several others, and then large drops of rain began to fall.
+<P>
+The wind blew the drops directly into the window. I crouched
+down out of sight, and the next moment Mr. Woodward said:&#151;
+<P>
+"It's raining in the window. We'd better close it up."
+<P>
+Of course directly the window was closed I could hear
+no longer. I remained in my position for half a minute or more, and then
+as the rain began to pour down rapidly I made a break for better shelter.
+<P>
+I sought the barn. It was a low, rambling structure, with
+great wide doors. No one seemed to be around, and I rushed in without ceremony.
+I was pretty fairly soaked, but as it was warm I did not mind the ducking.
+I shook out my hat and coat and then sat down to think matters over.
+<P>
+What I had heard had not given me much satisfaction. To
+be sure, it had proved beyond a doubt that Mr. Aaron Woodward was a thorough
+scoundrel, but of this I had been already satisfied in my own mind.
+<P>
+What was I to do? I had asked myself that question several times, and now
+I asked it again.
+<P>
+If only I could get John Stumpy arrested, perhaps it would
+be possible to force him to make a confession. But how was this to be done?
+<P>
+While I sat on the edge of a feed box, a form darkened
+the doorway, and Farmer Decker appeared.
+<P>
+"Hello!" he exclaimed. "What are you doing here?"
+<P>
+"I took the liberty to come in out of the rain," I replied.
+"Have you any objections to my remaining until the shower is over?"
+<P>
+"No, guess not. It's a mighty heavy one. Where're you
+from? Newville?"
+<P>
+"No, sir, Darbyville."
+<P>
+"Yes? Had quite a robbery down there, I understand."
+<P>
+"Is that so?"
+<P>
+"Yes, a chap named Strong robbed an old woman of nearly
+five hundred dollars. Do you know him or the woman?"
+<P>
+"I know the woman quite well," was my reply, and I hoped
+he would not question me further.
+<P>
+"They've got him in jail, I believe. The fellow and his
+sister tried to make out that a tramp had taken the money, but I understand
+no one would listen to the story."
+<P>
+"No?"
+<P>
+"No. It seems this Strong boy's father is in jail now
+for stealing, so it ain't strange the boy's a thief."
+<P>
+"But maybe he isn't guilty," I put in, by way of a mild
+protest.
+<P>
+"Maybe. Of course it's rather tough on him if he isn't.
+But you can't tell nowadays; boys is so all-fired high toned, and want to
+play big fiddle."
+<P>
+"Some boys are, but not all of them."
+<P>
+"Some of them. Now there's our landlord, who is in the
+house now, he's got a son as extravagant as can be, and if it wasn't for
+Mr. Woodward keeping him in funds I don't know what that boy might not do.
+He&#151; whoa, there, Billy, whoa!"
+<P>
+The last remark was addressed to a horse standing in one
+of the stalls. A clap of thunder had set the animal to prancing.
+<P>
+"Your horse feels rather uneasy," I remarked, glad of
+a chance to change the subject.
+<P>
+"Allers acts that way when there's a storm going on. Too
+bad, too, for I want to hitch him up and take Mr. Woodward and another man
+that's with him over to Darbyville."
+<P>
+As Mr. Decker spoke he led the horse from the stall and
+backed him up between the shafts of the carriage that stood near the rear
+of the barn.
+<P>
+While he was hitching up I set myself to thinking. While
+I was perfectly willing that Mr. Woodward should return to Darbyville, I
+did not wish to allow John Stumpy out of my sight. Once away, and I might
+not be able to lay hands on him.
+<P>
+Had I been sure that Kate had succeeded in finding the
+lost statement, I would not have cared, but the chances in her favor were
+slim, and I did not wish to run any risks.
+<P>
+"Are you going to drive around to the house for them?"
+I asked as the farmer finished the job.
+<P>
+"Guess I'll have to. It will be a beastly drive. Sorry
+I can't offer you a seat&#151; it would be better than walking."
+<P>
+"I think I'll wait till it clears off," I returned. "I'm
+not on business, and&#151;"
+<P>
+"Say, Decker, how long is it going to take you to hitch
+up?" interrupted a voice from the doorway, and the next instant Mr. Woodward
+strode into the barn, followed by John Stumpy.
+<P>
+I did not have time to conceal myself. I tried to step
+behind a partition, but before I could do so the merchant's eye was on me.
+<P>
+"Roger Strong!" he exclaimed.
+<P>
+"Yes, sir," I replied, as boldly as I could.
+<P>
+"How did you get here?" he demanded.
+<P>
+"Walked, just as you did."
+<P>
+"Thought you were in jail."
+<P>
+"So do most people."
+<P>
+"Who is this chap?" asked the farmer, staring at me with
+open eyes.
+<P>
+"It's the boy who was arrested for that robbery last night,"
+explained the merchant.
+<P>
+"Shoo&#151; you don't say? And I was talking to him about that
+very thing. You rascal, you!"
+<P>
+"How did you get out?" put in John Stumpy.
+<P>
+"None of your business," I replied briskly. "If you'd
+had your way I'd been burnt up in the tool house last night."
+<P>
+"No such thing," was the tramp's reply. "Never saw you
+before."
+<P>
+"You're the fellow who stole the Widow Canby's money."
+<P>
+"You must be crazy, young fellow. I don't know anything
+about the Widow Canby or her money."
+<P>
+"I can prove it. My sister can prove it, too."
+<P>
+"Then your sister must be as crazy as yourself."
+<P>
+"Stop there! You're the thief and you know it."
+<P>
+"I know nothing of the kind."
+<P>
+"Your story is nonsensical, Strong," broke in Mr. Woodward.
+"Gentlemen like Mr. Stumpy here do not break into people's houses and commit
+robberies."
+<P>
+"Gentlemen! He's nothing but a tramp, and you know it."
+<P>
+"Tramp? How dare you?" cried Stumpy, in suddenly assumed
+dignity, put on for the farmer's benefit. "I am a ranchero from Texas and
+an honest man. I am visiting Mr. Woodward, and know nothing more of the robbery
+excepting having heard that it occurred&#151; ahem!" And John Stumpy drew himself
+up.
+<P>
+Under other circumstances I would have laughed at his
+effrontery. But the situation was too serious to indulge in any humor.
+<P>
+"Being placed under arrest has turned your head, Strong,"
+said the merchant. "You seem to be quite out of your mind."
+<P>
+"When was the robbery committed?" put in John Stumpy,
+suddenly.
+<P>
+"You know well enough," I cried.
+<P>
+"I heard it was about two o'clock in the morning," vouchsafed
+Farmer Decker.
+<P>
+"Then I can easily prove an alibi," said the tramp,
+triumphantly. "I can prove I was with my esteemed friend Mr. Woodward at
+that hour. Isn't it so, Aaron?"
+<P>
+The merchant hesitated. I fairly held my breath to catch
+his answer. Would he commit deliberate perjury?
+<P>
+"Quite true," he replied slowly. "Mr. Stumpy was with
+me last night. We sat up in the library, smoking, and playing cards until
+after midnight, and then I showed him to bed. He could not possibly have
+committed the crime of which Strong speaks."
+<P>
+"Then the boy must be the guilty one hisself," said the
+farmer. "And so young, too. Who would a-thought it! What shall we do with
+him, Mr. Woodward?"
+<P>
+"You had better help me take him back to Darbyville jail,"
+responded the merchant.
+<h3>CHAPTER XVI</h3>
+<h4>MY UNCLE ENOS</h4>
+<P>
+John Stumpy gave a smile of triumph. As for myself, I stood aghast. Mr. Aaron Woodward
+had committed deliberate perjury, or at least, something that amounted to
+the same thing. He had positively declared that John Stumpy was at his house
+at the time of the robbery of Widow Canby's house, and could not, therefore,
+be the guilty party.
+<P>
+It was easy to guess that in this statement it was his
+intention to screen his partner in iniquity. To be sure, he had been forced
+to take the position by Stumpy himself, but once having taken it, I was morally
+certain he would not back down.
+<P>
+His action would make it harder than ever for me to clear
+myself and bring the tramp to justice. His word in a court of law would carry
+more weight than mine or my sister's, and consequently our case would fall
+to the ground.
+<P>
+I was glad that Dick Blair could testify concerning my
+whereabouts and the scene in the dining room directly after the robbery.
+The merchant knew nothing of Blair's presence on the occasion&#151; at least I
+imagined so from his conversation&#151; and might, by saying too much, "put his
+foot in it."
+<P>
+But now my mind was filled with only one thought. The
+three men intended to take me to the Darbyville jail. I was to be ignominiously
+dragged back to the prison from which I had escaped.
+<P>
+Once again in Ezekiel Booth's custody I was certain he
+would keep so strict a guard over me that further breaking away would be
+out of the question. Perhaps Judge Penfold would consider me so dangerous
+a prisoner as to send me to the county jail for safe keeping, in which case
+it would be harder than ever for me to clear myself or see Kate.
+<P>
+For an instant I meditated taking to my legs and running
+my chances, but this idea was knocked in the head by Farmer Decker grasping
+me by the collar.
+<P>
+"Maybe he might take a notion and run away," he explained.
+"He did it once, you say."
+<P>
+"A good idea to hold him," said Mr. Woodward. "Have you
+finished hitching up?"
+<P>
+"Yes, sir."
+<P>
+"Have you room for him?"
+<P>
+"I might put in another seat."
+<P>
+"Do so. And hurry; the rain has slackened up a bit, and
+we may reach Darbyville before it starts again."
+<P>
+The extra seat was soon placed in the carriage. Then the
+farmer procured a couple of rubber blankets.
+<P>
+"All ready now," he said. "How shall we sit?"
+<P>
+"You and Mr. Stumpy sit in front. I and the boy will occupy
+the back seat. Come, Strong, get in."
+<P>
+For an instant I thought of refusing. The merchant had
+no right to order me. But then I reflected that a refusal would do no good,
+and might do harm, so without a word I entered the carriage.
+<P>
+The others were not slow to follow. Then Farmer Decker
+chirruped to Billy, and we rolled out of the farm yard and down the road.
+<P>
+But little was said on the way. I was busy with my own
+thoughts, and so were Mr. Woodward and Stumpy. The farmer asked several
+questions, but the merchant said he would learn all he wished to know at
+the judge's office, and this quieted him.
+<P>
+About five o'clock in the afternoon we rolled into Darbyville.
+While crossing the Pass River the sun had burst through the clouds, and now
+all was as bright and fresh as ever.
+<P>
+Judge Penfold's office was situated in the centre of the
+principal business block. When we arrived there we found a number of men
+standing about the door, no doubt discussing my escape, for they uttered
+many exclamations of surprise on seeing me.
+<P>
+Chief among them was Parsons, who looked pale and worried.
+<P>
+"Roger Strong!" he exclaimed. "Where have you been?"
+<P>
+"Took a walk for my health," I replied as lightly as I
+could, though my heart was heavy.
+<P>
+"Well, I guess we'll make sure it shan't happen again,"
+he returned. "Hi, there, Booth! Here's your prisoner come back!"
+<P>
+In a moment the carpenter appeared upon the scene.
+<P>
+"You rascal, you!" he cried in angry tones. "A fine peck
+of trouble you've got yourself into!"
+<P>
+"What's all this about?" asked a heavy voice from the
+stairs, and Judge Penfold stood before me.
+<P>
+"I have brought your prisoner back, judge," replied Mr.
+Woodward.
+<P>
+"So I see. Well, Strong, what have you to say for yourself?
+Do you know breaking jail is a serious offence?"
+<P>
+"I don't know anything about it. I know I was locked up
+for nothing at all, and I escaped at the first chance offered."
+<P>
+"There was no chance offered at all, judge," broke in
+Booth, fearful of having a reflection cast upon his character. "He just went
+and ripped the hull floor up, that's what he did."
+<P>
+"Silence, Booth! Come upstairs and we will hear the
+particulars."
+<P>
+In a moment we were in Judge Penfold's office. I was told
+to take a seat on a bench, with Booth on one side of me and Parsons on the
+other.
+<P>
+Then Mr. Woodward introduced John Stumpy as a friend from
+San Antonio, Texas, and the two told their story, corroborated at its end
+by Farmer Decker, who trembled from head to foot at the idea of addressing
+as high a dignitary as Judge Penfold.
+<P>
+"What have you to say to this, Strong?" I was asked.
+<P>
+In a plain, straightforward way I told my story from beginning
+to end, told it in a manner that did not fail to impress nearly every one
+in the court-room but the judge and my accusers.
+<P>
+Of course Mr. Woodward and John Stumpy stoutly denied
+all I said, and their denial carried the day.
+<P>
+"Until we can have a real trial I will send you back to
+jail," said Judge Penfold.
+<P>
+"Why don't you send John Stumpy to jail, too?" I asked.
+"He is as much accused as I."
+<P>
+"We have only your word for that."
+<P>
+"Then let me send for my sister Kate and Dick Blair."
+<P>
+Judge Penfold rubbed his chin reflectively.
+<P>
+"I think I'll have to put you under bonds," he said to
+John Stumpy.
+<P>
+"Why so? The boy's word doesn't amount to anything," put
+in Mr. Woodward.
+<P>
+"Only a matter of form, Mr. Woodward. I will make it a
+thousand dollars. Will you go his bondsman?"
+<P>
+"Of course he will," said John Stumpy, hastily. "Won't
+you?"
+<P>
+The merchant winced. "I&#151; I guess so," he stammered. "But
+it's a strange proceeding."
+<P>
+In a few moments, by the aid of two other men, the bond
+was made out.
+<P>
+"I will make your bail a thousand dollars also," said
+Judge Penfold, turning to me. "I suppose it's quite useless though," he added
+sarcastically.
+<P>
+"Not quite so useless as you might think," exclaimed a
+hearty voice from the rear of the court-room.
+<P>
+I thought I recognized the tones, and turned hastily.
+There beside my sister Kate stood my uncle, Enos Moss, of whom I have already
+spoken.
+<P>
+He was a grizzly bearded sea-captain of seventy, with
+manner and speech suggestive of the brine.
+<P>
+Breaking from Parsons and Booth, I ran to meet him. He
+shook both my hands and then clapped me on the shoulder.
+<P>
+"Cast up on a lee shore, are you, Roger?" he exclaimed.
+"And the wind a-blowing a hurricane."
+<P>
+"Yes, I am," I replied, "and I'm mighty glad you've come,
+Uncle Enos."
+<P>
+"Just dropped anchor in time," he went on. "Judge Penfold,
+do you remember me?"
+<P>
+"You are Carson Strong's brother-in-law, I believe?" replied
+the judge.
+<P>
+"You've hit it. Captain Enos Moss, part owner and sailing
+master of the <I>Hattie Baker, </I> as trim a craft as ever rounded the Horn.
+Been away for three years, and now on shore to stay."
+<P>
+"You're not going on any more voyages?" I queried.
+<P>
+"No, my hearty. I've made enough to keep me, and I'm getting
+too old to walk the quarter-deck. Besides, I've heard of your father's troubles
+from Kate, and I reckon they need sounding."
+<P>
+"Indeed they do."
+<P>
+"Well, now about your difficulty. A thousand-dollar bond,
+eh. It's pretty stiff, but I guess I can stand it."
+<P>
+"Thank you, sir," was all I could say.
+<P>
+"Don't say a word. Didn't your father put in a good word
+for me when I was a-courting your aunt that's dead and gone&#151; God bless her!
+Indeed, he did! And I'll stand by you, Roger, no matter how hard the gale
+blows."
+<P>
+"Then <I>you</I> don't think I'm guilty?"
+<P>
+"What! a lad with your bearing a thief? Not much. The
+people in this village must be asleep&#151; not to know better'n that?"
+<P>
+"Ahem!" coughed Judge Penfold, sternly. He considered
+my uncle's remarks decidedly impertinent. "Are you able to go his bail?"
+he asked.
+<P>
+"Reckon I am. I've just deposited ten thousand dollars
+in the bank here, and I've got twenty and more in New York. How will you
+have it&#151; in cash?"
+<P>
+"A conditional check, certified, will do," replied Judge
+Penfold, shortly.
+<P>
+What he meant had to be explained, and then we all went
+to the banker's office. My uncle's account was found to be as he had stated,
+and about ten minutes later my bond was signed and I was at liberty to go
+where I pleased until called upon to appear.
+<P>
+Mr. Aaron Woodward and John Stumpy apparently did not
+relish the turn affairs had taken. But I paid no attention to them, and the
+business over, I hurried off with my sister and my newly arrived uncle.
+<P>
+"Did you find the statement?" I asked of Kate, as soon
+as we were out of hearing of the crowd.
+<P>
+"No, Roger, I looked and looked, but it wasn't anywhere,
+either at the tool house or on the way to Judge Penfold's."
+<P>
+"Have you heard from Mrs. Canby yet?"
+<P>
+"Yes, she is coming home."
+<P>
+"Does she blame me for what has happened?"
+<P>
+"She doesn't say."
+<P>
+"Never mind, Roger. We'll stick up for you," put in Uncle
+Enos, kindly.
+<P>
+I was considerably disturbed. What if Mrs. Canby should
+consider me at fault?
+<P>
+As we drew near to the cottage, I saw a lady standing
+by the gate, watching our approach. It was the Widow Canby.
+<h3>CHAPTER XVII</h3>
+<h4>A SUDDEN RESOLVE</h4>
+<P>
+My heart beat rapidly as I walked
+up to the gate. How would the good lady who had done so much for Kate and
+myself receive me?
+<P>
+An unkind word or an unfavorable insinuation from her
+would have hurt me worse than a thousand from any one else. She had been
+so generous that to have her turn would have made me feel as if I had lost
+my last friend on earth.
+<P>
+But as she had taken me in before when others had cast
+me out, so she now proved the friend in need.
+<P>
+"So they've thought better of it and set you free, Roger?"
+she said as I hurried up.
+<P>
+"Yes, Mrs. Canby," I returned. "I hope&#151; I hope&#151;" I began,
+and then came to a full stop.
+<P>
+"What?" and she caught my hand.
+<P>
+"I hope you don't think I had anything to do with the
+robbery," I stammered.
+<P>
+"No, Roger, I don't. I think you're an honest boy, and
+I've got to have more proof against you than I've heard yet before I'll believe
+otherwise."
+<P>
+"Thank you, ma'am, oh, thank you!" I blurted out, and
+the tears started to my eyes and rolled down my cheeks.
+<P>
+The events of which I am writing occurred several years
+ago, but I am not ashamed of those tears. They were the outcome of long-pent-up
+feelings, and I could not hold them back. My sister cried, too, and the Widow
+Canby and Uncle Enos looked very much as if they wished to join in.
+<P>
+"I knew you wouldn't think Roger did it," cried Kate.
+"I said all along you wouldn't, though everybody said you would."
+<P>
+"Folks don't appear to know me very well," returned Widow
+Canby, with a bit of grim humor in her tone. "I don't always think as others
+do. Come into the house and give me full particulars. Who is this man? Why,
+really! Captain Moss, I believe?"
+<P>
+"Yes, ma'am, Captain Moss&#151; Roger's uncle, at your service,"
+replied he, taking off his cap and bowing low. "I thought you'd remember
+me. Your husband as was once sailed to Boston with me."
+<P>
+"Oh, yes, I remember you. Will you come in?"
+<P>
+"Thank you, reckon I will. I have no home now, and hotels
+is scarce in Darbyville. I only arrived this noon, and I've been with Kate
+ever since. I must hunt up a boarding-house to stay at. Do you know of any
+close at hand?"
+<P>
+"Perhaps I do. Let us talk of that later on. I want to
+hear Roger's story first."
+<P>
+"Just as you say, ma'am. Only I must get a place to stop
+at to-night."
+<P>
+"You shall be provided for, Captain Moss. I have a spare
+room."
+<P>
+"You are very kind to an old sea-dog like myself, Mrs.
+Canby," said Uncle Enos.
+<P>
+The widow led the way into the dining room. The lamp was
+already lighted, and while my sister Kate busied herself with preparing supper,
+Mrs. Canby and my uncle sat down to listen to my story.
+<P>
+For the first time I told it with all the details that
+concerned myself,&#151; how I had been waylaid by the Models, how Dick Blair had
+released me, what Stumpy had done at the tool house, and all, not forgetting
+about the statement Kate and I wished so much to find.
+<P>
+The Widow Canby and my uncle listened with close attention
+until I had finished.
+<P>
+"It's a strange story, Roger," said the widow, at its
+conclusion. "One hard to believe. But I know you tell the truth."
+<P>
+"What a rascal this Woodward must be!" broke in my uncle
+"He's a far greater villain in his way than this John Stumpy. I am strongly
+inclined to figure that you're right, and he is the one that ran your father
+up on a lee shore."
+<P>
+"I don't think father did a single thing that was wrong&#151; that
+is, knowingly," I returned. "If he did do wrong, I'm sure Mr. Woodward made
+it appear as if it was all right."
+<P>
+"No doubt, no doubt. If you could only get to the bottom
+of this Weaver's statement."
+<P>
+"And when is this trial to come off?" put in Mrs. Canby.
+"Really I don't see what good it will do me if this man has lost the money."
+<P>
+"I'd like to find that, too," I returned.
+<P>
+Presently Kate announced that supper was ready, and we
+all sat down. The widow said that she had found her sister much better, and
+on receiving Kate's letter had started for her home at once. The loss of
+the money did not disturb her as much as I had anticipated, and as every
+one was hungry, the meal passed off tolerably well.
+<P>
+When we had nearly finished there was a knock on the door,
+and Kate admitted Mr. Woodward's errand boy. He had a note for me. It contained
+but a single sentence:&#151;
+<P>
+"Please call at my house this evening about nine o'clock."
+<P>
+I read the note over with interest, and then informed
+the others of what it contained.
+<P>
+"Shall you go?" asked Kate, anxiously.
+<P>
+"I suppose I might."
+<P>
+"Maybe it's a plot," suggested the widow.
+<P>
+"Might waylay you," added Uncle Enos. "A man like him
+is liable to do 'most anything."
+<P>
+"I don't think he would dare do me any bodily injury,"
+I replied. "He would know I had told some one where I was going, and that
+my absence would be noticed."
+<P>
+"If you go, take me in tow," said my uncle. "I needn't
+go in with you, but I can hang around outside, and if anything goes wrong,
+all you've got to do is to holler like all creation, and I'll come to the
+rescue."
+<P>
+"Oh, if Roger runs any risk, I'd rather he wouldn't go,"
+exclaimed Kate, in alarm.
+<P>
+"I don't think the risk is very great," I returned. "Besides,
+I may find the missing statement. That is worth trying for."
+<P>
+"I shall be in dread until you return," she replied, with
+a grave shake of her head.
+<P>
+"When will you start?" asked Uncle Enos.
+<P>
+"About half past eight. It won't take over half an hour
+to reach his house."
+<P>
+We continued to discuss Mr. Woodward for some time, and
+also the action of the Models and what I should do on their score. My Uncle
+Enos was for prosecuting them, but the Widow Canby said that the future would
+bring its own punishment, and on this we rested.
+<P>
+"And now about my board," began Uncle Enos, during a dull
+in the conversation. "I must find a boarding-house for after to-night."
+<P>
+"Wouldn't you like to stay with the children?" asked Mrs.
+Canby.
+<P>
+"Yes, ma'am; indeed I would. To tell the truth, it's my
+intention sooner or later to offer them a home with me."
+<P>
+"I should hate to have them leave me," returned the widow,
+quickly.
+<P>
+"I suppose so."
+<P>
+"How would you like to board with me? As I have said,
+there is lots of room, and you have just eaten a sample meal. We do not live
+in style&#151; but&#151;"
+<P>
+"Plenty good enough style," interrupted Captain Enos,
+"and better grub then we had on the <I>Hattie Baker,</I> I'll be bound. I'd
+like it first rate here if the terms wasn't too high."
+<P>
+"What do you think fair?"
+<P>
+"I'm sure I don't know, ma'am. I haven't paid a week's
+board in three years."
+<P>
+"Would five dollars a week be too much?"
+<P>
+"No, ma'am. Are you sure it's enough? I don't want to
+crowd your hospitality."
+<P>
+"I'd be satisfied with five dollars. Of course boarders
+are out of my line, but there are exceptions to all cases. Besides, I'll
+feel safer with another man about the house. No reflection on you, Roger,
+but you won't always be here together."
+<P>
+"No, ma'am," replied my uncle. "I must visit my brother-in-law
+at the prison&#151; that will take several days."
+<P>
+"Will you take me with you?" asked Kate, eagerly.
+<P>
+"Certainly, and you, too, Roger, if you want to go."
+<P>
+"I would like to very much," was my reply. "But I want
+to ask even a bigger favor than that, Uncle Enos."
+<P>
+"Yes?"
+<P>
+"Yes, sir. You may think it a good deal, but you've been
+so kind, and I haven't any one else to go to."
+<P>
+"Well, what is it, my boy? I'll do it if I can."
+<P>
+"Lend me about fifty dollars."
+<P>
+My Uncle Enos raised his eyebrows in surprise.
+<P>
+"Fifty dollars?" he repeated.
+<P>
+"Yes, sir. That is, if you can spare it. I'll promise
+to pay it back some day."
+<P>
+"And what do you intend to do with it?"
+<P>
+"I want to go to Chicago, sir."
+<P>
+"To Chicago?"
+<P>
+All three of my listeners repeated the words in chorus;
+then Captain Enos continued:&#151;
+<P>
+"And what are you going to do there?"
+<P>
+"I want to hunt up this Holtzmann, and find out what he
+knows about my father's affairs. I'm satisfied that he is as deep in it as
+Mr. Woodward or John Stumpy, and if I can only by some means get him to tell
+what he knows, I may accomplish a good deal."
+<P>
+My Uncle Enos put his hand upon my shoulder; "Well, Roger,
+you're a brave boy, and I'll trust you. You shall have fifty dollars, and
+a hundred, if you want it, to do as you think best. Only don't get into trouble."
+<P>
+"Thank you Uncle Enos, thank you!" I cried heartily. "Some
+day I'll pay you back."
+<P>
+"I don't want it back, my lad. If you can catch any proofs
+that will help clear your father, I shall be more than satisfied."
+<P>
+"And when shall you go?" asked Kate.
+<P>
+"I don't know. It will depend on my interview with Mr.
+Woodward and also on what John Stumpy does. Not inside of several days, at
+least. Besides, we want to see father first, you know."
+<P>
+"Of course."
+<P>
+"We can go to Trenton tomorrow," said Uncle Enos. At Trenton
+was located the State prison. After consulting a time table printed in the
+Darbyville Record, we found we could catch a train for that city at 8.25
+from Newville the next morning, and this we decided to take.
+<P>
+Having settled this matter, we returned again to the
+discussion of the incidents surrounding the robbery, and what would probably
+be the next movements of those fighting against me. Uncle Enos grew greatly
+interested, and said he knew a lawyer in New York who might secure some good
+private detective who could take the case in hand.
+<P>
+Finally it came half past eight, and putting on my hat,
+I started for Mr. Woodward's residence.
+<h3>CHAPTER XVIII</h3>
+<h4>IN MR. WOODWARD'S LIBRARY</h4>
+<P>
+Though outwardly calm, I was considerably
+agitated as I walked to Darbyville. Why the merchant had sent for me I could
+not surmise. Of course it was on account of the robbery, but so far as I
+knew both of us had taken a separate stand, and neither would turn back.
+I thought it barely possible that he wished to intimidate me into receding
+from my position. He was as much of a bully in his way as Duncan, and would
+not hesitate to use every means in his power to bring me to terms.
+<P>
+Arriving at Mr. Woodward's house, I ascended the steps
+and rang the bell.
+<P>
+"Is Mr. Woodward in?" I asked of the girl who answered
+the summons.
+<P>
+"I'll see, sir," she replied. "Who shall I say it is?"
+<P>
+"Roger Strong."
+<P>
+The girl left me standing in the hall. While waiting for
+her return I could not help but remember the old lines:&#151;
+<BLOCKQUOTE>
+ <P ALIGN=LEFT class=left>
+ "&nbsp;'Will you walk into my parlor?'<BR>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Said the spider to the fly."
+</BLOCKQUOTE>
+<P>
+But if I was walking into the spider's parlor, it would
+be my own fault if I got hurt, for I was entering with my eyes open. I determined
+to be on my guard, and take nothing for granted.
+<P>
+"Mr. Woodward will be pleased to see you in his library,"
+said the girl upon her return, and then, having indicated the door, she vanished
+down the back hall.
+<P>
+As I put my hand upon the door-knob, I heard steps upon
+the stairs, and looking up saw Duncan Woodward descending.
+<P>
+His face was still swollen from the punishment I had inflicted
+upon him. Nevertheless, he was faultlessly dressed in full evening costume,
+and I rightly conjectured he was going to spend the night in some fashionable
+dissipation such as dancing or card-playing.
+<P>
+"Hello! how did you get in here?" he exclaimed.
+<P>
+"Was let in," was my mild reply, not caring to pick a
+quarrel with him.
+<P>
+"Was, eh? And what for, I'd like to know?"
+<P>
+"That's your father's business, Duncan."
+<P>
+"Don't Duncan me any more, Roger Strong. What's my father's
+business?"
+<P>
+"What I came for. He sent for me."
+<P>
+"Oh, he did. Reckon he's going to square accounts with
+you."
+<P>
+"I don't know what accounts he's going to square," I went
+on in curiosity.
+<P>
+"Didn't you as much as try to intimate he was lying&#151; down
+in Judge Penfold's court this afternoon?"
+<P>
+"I only told what I knew to be the truth," I replied calmly.
+<P>
+"The truth. Humph! I believe you took the widow's money
+yourself."
+<P>
+"Take care what you're saying," I replied angrily. "I
+don't propose to stand any such talk from you."
+<P>
+Duncan grew speechless. "Why, you&#151; you&#151;" he began.
+<P>
+"Hold up now before you say something that you'll be sorry
+for. This is your house, but you have no right to insult me in it."
+<P>
+"Quite right, Strong, quite right." The library door had
+opened, and Mr. Woodward stood upon the threshold, gazing sharply at his
+son. "Strong is here upon my invitation, Duncan; you ought to treat him with
+more politeness," he added.
+<P>
+If Duncan was amazed at this speech, so was I. The merchant
+taking my part? What did it mean?
+<P>
+"Why, I&#151; I&#151;" began Duncan, but he could really get no
+further.
+<P>
+"No explanation is necessary," interrupted his father,
+coolly.
+<P>
+"Strong, please step in, will you?"
+<P>
+"Yes, sir," and I suited the action to the word.
+<P>
+As I did so Duncan passed on to the front door.
+<P>
+"I'll get even with you yet, you cad!" he muttered under
+his breath; but I paid no attention to his words. I had "bigger fish to fry."
+<P>
+Once inside of Mr. Woodward's library, the merchant closed
+the door behind me and then invited me to take a seat beside his desk, at
+the same time throwing himself back in his easy chair.
+<P>
+"I suppose you thought it rather singular that I should
+send for you," he said by way of an opening.
+<P>
+"Yes, sir, I did," was all I could reply.
+<P>
+"I thought as much. It was only an impulse of mine, sir,
+only an impulse. I wished to see if we cannot arrange this&#151; this little
+difficulty without publicity. I would rather lose a good deal, yes, sir,
+a good deal, than have my name dragged into court."
+<P>
+"All I ask is for justice," I replied calmly. "I am under
+arrest for a crime of which I am innocent. On the other hand, you are trying
+to shield a man I know is guilty."
+<P>
+I expected a storm of indignation from Mr. Woodward because
+of the last remark. Yet he showed no sign of resentment.
+<P>
+"Don't you think you might be mistaken in your identification
+of Mr. Stumpy?" he replied, and I noticed that again he nearly stumbled in
+pronouncing the tramp's name.
+<P>
+"No, sir," I replied promptly.
+<P>
+"Remember that you saw him only by lantern light, and
+then but for a few minutes."
+<P>
+"I saw him by daylight as well."
+<P>
+"When?"
+<P>
+"In the morning. He came as a beggar."
+<P>
+"A beggar? Impossible!" The merchant held, up his hands
+in assumed amazement. "Why, Strong, the idea of Mr. Stumpy begging is
+ridiculous."
+<P>
+"Just the same it is true, Mr. Woodward. And what is more,
+he is the thief, and you know it."
+<P>
+"That's a strong assertion to make, sir, a very strong
+assertion."
+<P>
+"Nevertheless, I believe I can prove my words."
+<P>
+Mr. Woodward turned slightly pale.
+<P>
+"You can prove no such thing," he cried.
+<P>
+"Yes, I can. Didn't Stumpy admit he had taken the money?"
+<P>
+"Never, sir."
+<P>
+"He did."
+<P>
+"When?"
+<P>
+"This afternoon while you were at Decker's place."
+<P>
+Had I slapped the merchant in the face he would not have
+been more surprised. He sprang to his feet and glared at me.
+<P>
+"You&#151; you&#151; Who says he made such an admission?"
+<P>
+"I say so."
+<P>
+"Ah! I see, you were spying on us. You rascal!"
+<P>
+"It strikes me that you are the rascal," I returned. "You
+try deliberately to shield a thief."
+<P>
+"What!"
+<P>
+"Yes, it's true."
+<P>
+"Can you prove it?"
+<P>
+Mr. Woodward asked the question sneeringly, but there
+was much of curiosity in his tones.
+<P>
+"Perhaps I can."
+<P>
+The merchant pulled his mustache nervously.
+<P>
+"Strong, you are greatly mistaken. But don't let us quarrel
+any more."
+<P>
+"I don't want to quarrel."
+<P>
+"I feel badly over the whole affair, and Mr. Stumpy is
+fairly sick. I suppose you think you are right, but you are mistaken. Now
+I have a proposition to make to you." Mr. Woodward leaned forward in his
+chair. "Suppose you admit that you are mistaken&#151; that Mr. Stumpy is not the
+man? Do this, and I will not prosecute you for having taken my papers."
+<P>
+I was surprised and indignant; surprised that Mr. Woodward
+should still insist upon my having taken his papers, and indignant because
+of his outrageous offer.
+<P>
+"Mr. Woodward," I began firmly, "you can prosecute me
+or not; Stumpy is the guilty man, and I shall always stick to it."
+<P>
+"Then you will go to jail, too."
+<P>
+"For the last time let me say I have not seen your papers."
+<P>
+"It is false. You took them from this room last night.
+At the very time you pretend you were after the robber at Mrs. Canby's house
+you were here ransacking my desk."
+<P>
+"Mr. Woodward&#151;"
+<P>
+"There is no use in denying it. I have abundant proofs.
+The girl who cleaned up here this morning found a handkerchief with your
+name on it lying on the floor. If you weren't here, how did that come here?"
+<P>
+"My handkerchief?"
+<P>
+"Yes, sir, your handkerchief; and Mary O'Brien can identify
+it and tell where she found it."
+<P>
+"Some one else must have had it," I stammered, and then
+suddenly: "I know who the party is&#151; Duncan."
+<P>
+"Duncan!"
+<P>
+"Yes, sir. He took that handkerchief away from me when
+the Models waylaid me!"
+<P>
+"My son! Really, Strong, you are mad! But I will take
+you in hand, sir; yes, indeed, I will."
+<P>
+"No, you won't, Aaron Woodward!" I cried, for once letting
+my temper get the better of me. "You are awfully cunning, but I am not afraid
+of you. I am willing to have all these matters sifted to the bottom, and
+the sooner the better. What papers have you missed? Were they the ones that
+Holtzmann of Chicago is after? How is it that my father is in prison while
+you live in style on money you never earned? Who is the relative that left
+it to you? Did you ever make a clear statement concerning the transactions
+that took away my father's honest name?"
+<P>
+"Stop! Stop!"
+<P>
+"I will not stop! You want an investigation; so do I.
+Luckily my uncle, Captain Enos Moss, has just returned from a voyage. He
+has quite some money, and I know he will use it to bring the guilty parties
+to justice. And then&#151;"
+<P>
+I did not finish. Mr. Woodward had strode over to the
+door and locked it, putting the key in his pocket.
+<P>
+"You know too much, Strong," he muttered between his set
+teeth, as he caught me by the collar; "too much entirely. We must come to
+a settlement before you leave this room."
+<h3>CHAPTER XIX</h3>
+<h4>A CLEVER RUSE</h4>
+<P>
+I must confess I was frightened when
+Mr. Woodward locked the door of his library and caught me by the collar.
+Was it possible that he contemplated doing me physical harm? It looked that
+way.
+<P>
+I was not accustomed to such rough treatment, and I resented
+it instantly. I was not very large for my age, but I was strong, and ducking
+my head I wrenched myself free from his grasp and sprang to the other side
+of the small table that stood in the centre of the room.
+<P>
+"What do you mean by treating me in this manner!" I cried.
+"Unlock that door at once!"
+<P>
+"Not much, sir," replied Mr. Woodward, vehemently. "You've
+made some remarkable statements, young man, and I demand a clear explanation
+before you leave."
+<P>
+"Well, you demand too much, Aaron Woodward," I replied
+firmly. "Unlock that door."
+<P>
+"Not just yet. I want to know what you know of Holtzmann
+of Chicago?"
+<P>
+"You won't learn by treating me in this manner," was my
+determined reply. "Unlock that door, or, take my word for it, I'll arouse
+the whole neighborhood."
+<P>
+"You'll do nothing of the kind, young man," he rejoined.
+<P>
+"I will."
+<P>
+"Make the least disturbance and you shall pay dearly for
+it. Understand, sir, I'm not to be trifled with."
+<P>
+"And I'm not to be frightened into submission," I returned
+with spirit. "I have a right to leave when I please and I shall do so."
+<P>
+"Not till I am ready," said he, coolly.
+<P>
+I was nonplussed and alarmed&#151; nonplussed over the question
+of how to get away, and alarmed at the thought of what might happen if I
+was compelled to remain.
+<P>
+I began to understand Mr. Aaron Woodward's true character.
+Like Duncan, he was not only a bully, but also a brute. Words having failed,
+he was now evidently going to see what physical force could accomplish.
+<P>
+"Forewarned is forearmed" is an old saying, and now I
+applied it to myself. In other words, I prepared for an encounter. On the
+centre table lay a photograph album. It was thick and heavy and capable of
+proving quite a formidable article of defence. I picked it up, and stepping
+behind a large easy chair, stood on my guard.
+<P>
+Seeing the action, the merchant paused.
+<P>
+"What are going to do with that?" he asked.
+<P>
+"You'll see if you keep on," I replied. "I don't intend
+to stand this much longer. You had better open the door."
+<P>
+"You think you're a brainy boy, Strong," he sneered.
+<P>
+"I've got too much brain to let you ride over me."
+<P>
+"You think you have a case against me and Mr. Stumpy,
+and you intend to drag it into court and make a great fuss over it," he went
+on.
+<P>
+"I'm going to get back my father's honest name."
+<P>
+"What you mean is that you intend to drag my name in the
+mire," he stormed.
+<P>
+"You can have it so, if you please."
+<P>
+"I shall not allow it. You, a young upstart!"
+<P>
+"Take care, Mr. Woodward!"
+<P>
+"Do you think I will submit to it?" He glared at me and
+threw a hasty glance around the room. "Not much!"
+<P>
+Suddenly he stepped to the windows and pulled down the
+shades. Then he took out his watch and looked at the time. I wondered what
+he was up to now. I was not long in finding out.
+<P>
+"Listen to me," he said in a low, intense tone, "We are
+alone in this house&#151; you and I&#151; and will be for half an hour or more. You
+are in my power. What will you do? Give up all the papers you possess and
+promise to keep silent about what you know or take the consequences."
+<P>
+It would be telling an untruth to say I was not thoroughly
+startled by the merchant's sudden change of manner. He was about to assault
+me, that was plain to see, and he wished me to understand that no one was
+near either to assist me or to bear witness against his dark doings.
+<P>
+I must fight my own battles, not only in a war of words,
+but also in a war of blows. I was not afraid after the first shock was over.
+My cause was a just one, and I would stand by it, no matter what the consequences
+might be.
+<P>
+"I don't fear you, Aaron Woodward," I replied, as steadily
+as I could. "I am in the right and shall stick up for it, no matter what
+comes."
+<P>
+"You defy me?" he cried in a rage.
+<P>
+"Yes, I do."
+<P>
+I had hardly uttered the words before he caught up a heavy
+cane standing beside his desk and made for me. There was a wicked determination
+in his eyes, and I could see that all the evil passions within him were aroused.
+<P>
+"We'll see who is master here," he went on.
+<P>
+"Stand back!" I cried. "Don't come a step nearer! If you
+do, you'll be sorry for it!"
+<P>
+He paid no attention to my warning, but kept on advancing,
+raising the cane over his head as he did so.
+<P>
+When he was within three feet of me he aimed a blow at
+my head. Had he hit me, I am certain he would have cracked my skull open.
+<P>
+But I was too quick for him, I dodged, and the cane struck
+the back of the chair.
+<P>
+Before he could recover from his onslaught I hurled the
+album at him with all force. It struck him full in the face, and must have
+loosened several of his teeth, for he put his hand up to his mouth as he
+reeled over backward.
+<P>
+I was not astonished. I had accomplished just what I had
+set out to do. My one thought now was to make my escape. How was it to be
+done?
+<P>
+The key to the door was in the merchant's pocket, and
+this I could, not obtain. The windows were closed, and the blinds drawn down.
+<P>
+I had but an instant to think. Spluttering to himself,
+my assailant was endeavoring to rise to his feet.
+<P>
+A hasty glance around the room revealed a door partly
+hidden by a curtain next the mantelpiece. Where it led to I did not know,
+but concluding that any place would be better than to remain in the library,
+I tried the door, found it open, and slipped out.
+<P>
+"Stop, stop!" roared Mr. Woodward. "Stop, this instant!"
+<P>
+But I did not stop. I found myself in the dining room,
+and at once put the long table between us.
+<P>
+"Don't you come any nearer," I called out sharply. "If
+you do, it may be at the cost of your life."
+<P>
+As I spoke I picked up a fancy silver knife that lay on
+the table. It had a rough resemblance to a pocket pistol, and gave me the
+idea of palming it off as such.
+<P>
+"Would you shoot me?" cried the merchant, in sudden terror,
+as he saw what he supposed was the barrel of a revolver pointed at his head.
+<P>
+"Why shouldn't I?" was the reply. "You have no right to
+detain me."
+<P>
+"I don't want to detain you. I only want to come to a
+settlement," he returned lamely.
+<P>
+"And I want nothing more to do with you. I'll give you
+one minute to show me the way to the front door."
+<P>
+"Yes, but, Strong&#151;"
+<P>
+"No more talk, if you please. Do you intend to show me
+the way out, or shall I fire?"
+<P>
+Then Mr. Aaron Woodward showed what a coward he really
+was. He gave a cry of horror and sank completely out of sight.
+<P>
+"Don't shoot, Strong. I pray you, take care. I'll show
+you the way out, indeed I will!"
+<P>
+"Well, hurry about it. I don't intend to stand any more
+nonsense."
+<P>
+"Here, this way. Please stop pointing that pistol at me;
+it might go off, you know."
+<P>
+"Then the sooner you show me the way out, the better for
+you," I returned coolly, inwardly amused at his sudden change of manner
+<P>
+"This way, then. I&#151; I trust you will keep this&#151; this little
+meeting of ours a secret."
+<P>
+"Why should I?"
+<P>
+"Because it&#151; it would do no good to have it made public."
+<P>
+"I'll see about it," was my reply.
+<P>
+By this time we had reached the front door, and with unwilling
+hands the merchant opened it.
+<P >
+"Now stand aside and let me pass," I commanded.
+<P>
+"I will. But, Strong&#151;"
+<P>
+"No more words are needed," I returned. "I have had enough
+of you, Mr. Aaron Woodward. The next time you hear from me it will be in
+quite a different shape."
+<P>
+"What do you mean?" he cried, in sudden alarm.
+<P>
+"You will find out soon enough. In the meantime let me
+return your fancy knife. I have no further use for it."
+<P>
+I tossed the article over. He looked at it and then at
+me. Clearly he was mad enough to "chew me up." Bidding him a mocking good
+night, I ran down the steps and hurried away.
+<h3>CHAPTER XX</h3>
+<h4>AT THE PRISON</h4>
+<P>
+Mr. Woodward's
+actions had aroused me as I had never been aroused before. My eyes were wide
+open at last. I realized that if I ever expected to gain our family rights
+I must fight for them&#151; and fight unflinchingly to the bitter end.
+<P>
+It was nearly ten o'clock when I reached the Widow Canby's
+house. I met my Uncle Enos on the porch. He had grown impatient, and was
+about to start for Darbyville in search of me.
+<P>
+In the dining room I told my story. All laughed heartily
+at the ruse I had played upon the merchant, but were indignant at the treatment
+I had received.
+<P>
+"Wish I'd been with you," remarked my uncle, with a vigorous
+shake of his head. "I'd a-smashed in his figurehead, keelhaul me if I wouldn't!"
+<P>
+"What do you intend to do now?" asked Kate.
+<P>
+"Let's see; to-day is Friday. If you will take us to Trenton
+to-morrow, Uncle Enos, I'll start for Chicago on Monday."
+<P>
+"Don't you think you had better have this Woodward arrested
+first?" asked Captain Enos.
+<P>
+"No; I would rather let him think that for the present
+I had dropped the whole matter. It may throw him off his guard and enable
+me to pick up more clews against him."
+<P>
+"That's an idea. Roger, you've got a level head on your
+shoulders, and we can't do any better than follow your advice," returned
+my uncle.
+<P>
+I did but little sleeping that night. For a long time
+I lay awake thinking over my future actions. Then when I did fall into a
+doze my rest was broken by dreams of the fire at the tool house and Mr.
+Woodward's attack.
+<P>
+I was up at five o'clock in the morning, attending to
+the regular chores. I did not know who would do them during my absence, and
+as soon as the widow appeared I spoke to her on the subject.
+<P>
+"Your uncle mentioned the matter last night," said Mrs.
+Canby. "He said he would do all that was required until you came back. He
+doesn't want to remain idle all day, and thought the work would just suit
+him."
+<P>
+This was kind of Uncle Enos, and I told him so when an
+hour later he appeared, dressed in his best, his trunk having arrived the
+evening before.
+<P>
+"Yes, Roger, I'd rather do it than sit twirling my thumbs,
+a-waiting for you to come back," said he. "I used to do such work years ago,
+before I shipped on the Anna Siegel, and to do it again will make me feel
+like a boy once more. But come; let's go to mess and then hoist anchor and
+away."
+<P>
+A few minutes later we were at breakfast. Then I put on
+my good clothes and brought around the horse and carriage, for the Widow
+Canby insisted upon driving us down to Newville by way of Darbyville just
+to show folks, as she said, that she had not lost confidence in me.
+<P>
+Kate was in a flutter of excitement. She had wished to
+see my father every day since he had been taken away. As for myself, I was
+fully as impatient. My father was very dear to me, and every time I thought
+of him I prayed that God would place it within my power to clear his name
+from the stain that now rested upon him.
+<P>
+We reached the station in Newville five minutes before
+train time. My uncle procured our tickets and also checked the basket of
+delicacies the Widow Canby had prepared.
+<P>
+"Remember me to Mr. Strong," said the widow, as we boarded
+the train. "Tell him I don't believe he's guilty, and perhaps other people
+in Darbyville won't think so either before long."
+<P>
+A moment later and we were off. Kate and Uncle Enos occupied
+one seat, and I sat directly behind them. A ride of an hour followed, and
+finally, after crossing a number of other railroads, we rolled into a brick
+station, and the conductor sang out:&#151;
+<P>
+"Trenton!"
+<P>
+It was eleven o'clock when we crossed the wooden foot-bridge
+of the station and emerged upon the street.
+<P>
+"We'll go to the prison at once," said my uncle. "Perhaps
+it isn't 'visiting day,' as they call it, but I reckon I can fix it. Sailors
+on shore have special privileges," he added with a laugh.
+<P>
+"Which way is it?" asked Kate.
+<P>
+"I don't know. We'll take a carriage and trust to the
+driver."
+<P>
+He called a coach, and soon we were rolling off.
+<P>
+Finally the coach stopped, and the driver sprang from
+his box.
+<P>
+"Here you are, sir," he said, as he opened the door.
+<P>
+I looked up at the big stone buildings before us. My father
+was behind those walls. I glanced at Kate. The poor girl was in tears.
+<P>
+"You had better stay on board here till I go in and take
+soundings," said Captain Enos. "I won't be gone long."
+<P>
+Jumping to the pavement, he walked up to the big open
+door and entered.
+<P>
+"What a dreadful place!" said my sister, as she strained
+her eyes to catch sight of some prisoner.
+<P>
+My uncle was gone not over ten minutes, yet the wait seemed
+an age. He returned with a brightened face.
+<P>
+"I had hard work to get permission, but we are to have
+half an hour's talk with your father under the supervision of a deputy,"
+he explained.
+<P>
+In another moment we were inside. We walked along a wide
+corridor and into an office, and then a short, stout man, Mr. Carr, the deputy,
+joined us.
+<P>
+"This way, please," he said, and gave a kindly glance
+at Kate and myself. "You will have to leave the basket here. I will see that
+it reaches the&#151; the&#151; your father."
+<P>
+He led the way. How my heart beat! Why, I cannot tell.
+<P>
+"I'll go in first," said my Uncle Enos.
+<P>
+We entered a room. In a moment the deputy brought in a
+man dressed in striped clothing, and with his hair cut close. It was my father.
+<P>
+My uncle and I rushed forward. But we were too late. With
+a cry Kate was in his arms. It was a great moment all around.
+<P>
+"My children! My Katie and my Roger!" was all my father
+could say, but the words went straight home.
+<P>
+"I am heartily glad that you are back," he said then to
+my uncle. "You will look after them, Enos, until I am free."
+<P>
+"Indeed I will," replied Captain Enos, heartily. "But
+you must listen to Roger. He has a long story to tell."
+<P>
+"Then tell it. I am dying to hear news from home." We
+sat down, and I told my story. Perhaps the deputy ought not to have allowed
+me to say all I did, but he pretended not to hear.
+<P>
+My father listened with keen attention to every word,
+and as I went on, his eyes grew brighter and brighter.
+<P>
+"Roger, my faithful boy, you almost make me hope for freedom,"
+he cried. "Oh, how I long to be set right before the world!"
+<P>
+"God make it so," put in my uncle, solemnly. "To suffer
+unjustly is terrible."
+<P>
+Then I told of my interview with Mr. Woodward in his library
+and of Holtzmann.
+<P>
+"Holtzmann was one of the principal witnesses against
+me," said my father. "So was Nicholas Weaver, who managed the Brooklyn business
+for Holland &amp; Mack. Who John Stumpy can be I do not know. Perhaps I would
+if I saw him face to face. There was another man&#151; he was quite bald, with
+a red blotch on the front of his hand&#151; who was brought forward by Woodward
+to prove that he had nothing to do with the presentation of the forged checks
+and notes, but what his name was I have forgotten."
+<P>
+"This can't be the man, for he has a heavy head of hair,"
+I replied. "But I am sure Stumpy is not his true name."
+<P>
+"Probably not. Well, Roger, do your best, not only for
+me but for Katie's sake and your own."
+<P>
+Then the conversation became general, and all too soon
+the half hour was at an end. My father sent his regards to Mrs. Canby, with
+many thanks for the basket of delicacies, and then with a kiss for Kate and
+a shake of the hand to Uncle Enos and me, we parted.
+<P>
+Little was said on the way back. No one cared to go to
+a restaurant, and we took the first train homeward.
+<P>
+It was dark when we reached Newville. The Widow Canby's
+carriage was at the depot waiting for us.
+<P>
+"Suppose I get my ticket for Chicago now," said I. "It
+will save time Monday, and I can find out all about the train."
+<P>
+"A good idea," returned my uncle. "I'll go with you."
+<P>
+So while Kate joined Mrs. Canby we entered the depot.
+<P>
+The ticket was soon in my possession, and then I asked
+the ticket seller a number of questions concerning the route and the time
+I would reach my destination.
+<P>
+Suddenly instinct prompted me to turn quickly. I did so
+and found John Stumpy at my shoulder.
+<h3>CHAPTER XXI</h3>
+<h4>A MIDNIGHT ADVENTURE</h4>
+<P>
+Mr. John Stumpy had evidently been watching my proceedings closely,
+for when I turned to him he was quite startled. However, it did not take
+him long to recover, and then, bracing up, he hurried away without a word.
+<P>
+He was now neatly dressed and had had his face shaved.
+I conjectured that Mr. Woodward had advised this change in order to more
+fully carry out the deception in relation to the tramp's real character.
+<P>
+"There's that Stumpy," I whispered to Captain Enos, as
+I pointed my finger at the man. "He has been watching us."
+<P>
+"How do you know?" asked my uncle.
+<P>
+"Because he was just looking over my shoulder," I replied.
+"Shall I speak to him? I'd like to know what he intends to do next."
+<P>
+"It won't do any good. It ain't likely he'd tell you anything,
+and if he did, it wouldn't be the truth."
+<P>
+"Maybe it might."
+<P>
+"Well, do as you think best, Roger, only don't be too
+long&#151; the widow and Kate are waiting, you know."
+<P>
+Pushing through the crowd, I tapped Stumpy on the shoulder.
+He looked around in assumed surprise.
+<P>
+"Hullo!" he exclaimed sharply. "What do you want?"
+<P>
+"Nothing much," I returned. "I just saw you were greatly
+interested in what I was doing."
+<P>
+"Why, I didn't see you before."
+<P>
+"You were just looking over my shoulder."
+<P>
+"You're mistaken, young man, just as you are in several
+other things."
+<P>
+"I'm not mistaken in several other things."
+<P>
+"What do you intend to do?" he asked curiously.
+<P>
+"That's my business."
+<P>
+"Where have you been?"
+<P>
+"That is my business also."
+<P>
+"Strong, you're a fool," he whispered. "Do you think you
+can hurt men like Mr. Woodward and myself?"
+<P>
+"I can bring you to justice."
+<P>
+"Bah! I suppose you think you can do wonders by going
+to Chicago."
+<P>
+"How do you know I am going to Chicago?" I questioned
+quickly.
+<P>
+Stumpy's face fell, as he realized the slip he had made.
+<P>
+"Never mind. But you won't gain anything," he went on.
+"Better stay home and save your money."
+<P>
+And to avoid further talk he pushed his way through the
+crowd and was lost to sight.
+<P>
+A moment later I joined the others in the carriage. While
+driving home I related the conversation recorded above.
+<P>
+"It's too bad he found out you were going to Chicago,"
+said my uncle. "He may try to stop you."
+<P>
+"I'll keep my eyes open," I replied.
+<P>
+The remainder of the day was spent in active work around
+the widow's place. Not only did I labor all the afternoon, but far into the
+evening as well, to show that I did not intend to shirk my duty even though
+I was going away. Besides, Mrs. Canby had treated me so well that I was almost
+willing to work my fingers to the bone to serve her.
+<P>
+The following day was Sunday. Kate and I were in the habit
+of attending church and Sunday-school over in Darbyville, but we shrank from
+doing so now. But Uncle Enos and I went to church, and despite the many curious
+eyes levelled at me, I managed to give attention to an excellent sermon.
+I noticed that the Woodward pew was empty, but then this was of common occurrence
+and excited no comment.
+<P>
+On Sunday evening my handbag stood in my room packed,
+ready for my departure. Dick Blair came over to see me and brought strange
+and sad news.
+<P>
+Duncan Woodward and Pultzer, his intimate crony, had gotten
+into a row in a pool room down in Newville and were both under arrest. Mr.
+Woodward and Mr. Pultzer had gone off to get their sons out of jail. Dick
+did not know how the row had started, but had heard that the young men had
+been drinking heavily.
+<P>
+I was much shocked at the news, and so were the others.
+If affairs kept on like this, Mr. Aaron Woodward would certainly have his
+hands full.
+<P>
+I retired early so as to be on hand the next day. Sleep
+was out of the question. I had never been a hundred miles away from Darbyville,
+and the prospect of leaving filled me with excitement.
+<P>
+I was up long before it was necessary, but found Kate
+ahead of me.
+<P>
+"You're going to have a good, hot breakfast before you
+go," she said. "Sit right down. It's all ready."
+<P>
+Presently, as I was eating, my uncle and Mrs. Canby joined
+me. They were full of advice as to what to do and what to avoid, and I listened
+to all they had to say attentively.
+<P>
+But all things must come to an end, and at length breakfast
+was over. My Uncle Enos and Kate drove me to Newville, and waited till the
+train rolled in.
+<P>
+"Good-by, Roger," said Kate. "Please, <I>please,</I> now
+do keep out of trouble."
+<P>
+"I will, Kate," I returned, and kissed her. Then I shook
+hands with my uncle.
+<P>
+"Keep a clear weather eye and a strong hand at the wheel,
+Roger, my boy," he said, "and you'll make port all safe."
+<P>
+"I'll try, Uncle Enos."
+<P>
+A moment more and I was on the cars. Then with an "All
+aboard" the conductor gave the signal, and the train moved off.
+<P>
+I passed into the car and took a vacant seat near the
+centre. I had hardly sat down before a well-dressed stranger took the seat
+beside me.
+<P>
+"Hot day," said he, after he had arranged his bag on the
+floor beside my own.
+<P>
+"Yes, it is," I replied, "and dry, too."
+<P>
+"Meanest part of the country I've struck yet," he went
+on. "Don't have any such climate as this out West."
+<P>
+"I should think that would depend on where you come from,"
+I returned, with a short laugh.
+<P>
+"I hail from Chicago. It's hot there, but we get plenty
+of breeze from the lakes."
+<P>
+I looked at the man with some attention. He came from
+the city I intended to visit, and perhaps he might give me some information.
+<P>
+He was a burly man of middle age, and, as I have said,
+well dressed, though a trifle loud. His hair was black, as was also his mustache,
+which he continually kept smoothing down with one hand. I did not like his
+looks particularly, nor his tone of voice. They reminded me strongly of some
+one, but whom I could not remember.
+<P>
+"You come from Chicago," I said. "I am going there."
+<P>
+"Is that so? Then we can travel together. I like to have
+some one going along, don't you?"
+<P>
+I felt like saying that that would depend on who the some
+one was, but thinking this would hardly be polite, I returned:&#151;
+<P>
+"I don't know. I've never travelled before."
+<P>
+"No? Well, it's fun at first, but you soon get tired of
+it. My name is Allen Price; what is yours?"
+<P>
+"Roger Strong."
+<P>
+"Glad to meet you." He extended his hand. "You're rather
+young to be travelling alone&#151; that is, going a distance. Do you smoke? We'll
+go into the smoker and take it easy. I have some prime cigars."
+<P>
+"Thank you, I don't smoke."
+<P>
+"That's too bad. Nothing like a good cigar to quiet a
+man's nerves when he's riding. So you're going to Chicago? On a visit?"
+<P>
+"No, sir; on business."
+<P>
+"Yes? Rather young for business&#151; excuse me for saying
+so."
+<P>
+"It is a personal business."
+<P>
+"Oh, I see. Going to claim a dead uncle's property or
+something like that, I suppose. Ha! ha! well, I wish you luck."
+<P>
+Mr. Allen Price rattled on in this fashion for some time,
+and at length I grew interested in the man in spite of myself. I was positive
+I had seen him before, but where I could not tell. I asked him if he had
+ever been to Darbyville.
+<P>
+"Never heard of the place," he replied. "Only been in
+Jersey a month, and that time was spent principally in Jersey City and Camden.
+I'm in the pottery business. Our principal office is in Chicago."
+<P>
+"Do you know much about that city?"
+<P>
+"Lived there all my life."
+<P>
+I was on the point of asking him about Holtzmann, but
+on second thought decided to remain silent.
+<P>
+On and on sped the train, making but few stops. There
+was a dining-car attached but I was travelling on a cheap scale, and made
+my dinner and supper from the generous lunch the widow had provided.
+<P>
+Mr. Price went to the dining-car and also the smoker.
+He returned about nine o'clock in the evening, just as I was falling into
+a light doze.
+<P>
+"Thought I'd get a sleeper," he explained. "But they are
+all full, so I'll have to snooze beside you here."
+<P>
+His breath smelt strongly of liquor, but I had no right
+to object, and he dropped heavily into the seat.
+<P>
+Presently I went sound asleep. How long I slept I do not
+know. When I awoke it was with a sharp, stinging sensation in the head. A
+pungent odor filled my nose, the scent coming from a handkerchief some one
+had thrown over my face.
+<P>
+With a gasp I pulled the handkerchief aside and sat up.
+Beside me sat Mr. Allen Price with my handbag on his lap. He had a number
+of keys in his hand and was trying to unlock the bag.
+<h3>CHAPTER XXII</h3>
+<h4>A TELEGRAM</h4>
+<P>
+I was startled and indignant when
+I discovered Mr. Allen Price with my handbag, trying to open it. It looked
+very much as if my fellow-passenger was endeavoring to rob me.
+<P>
+I had suspected from the start that this man was not
+"straight." There was that peculiar something about his manner which I did
+not like. He had been altogether too familiar from the first; too willing
+to make himself agreeable.
+<P>
+What he expected to find in my bag I could not imagine.
+If his mission was robbery pure and simple, why had he not selected some
+one who looked richer than myself? There was, I am certain, nothing about
+me to make him believe I had anything of great value in the bag.
+<P>
+"What are you doing with my valise?" I demanded as I
+straightened up.
+<P>
+My sudden question made the man almost jump to his feet.
+The bag dropped from his lap to the floor, and the keys in his hand jingled
+after it.
+<P>
+"I&#151; I&#151; didn't think you were awake," he stammered.
+<P>
+"You didn't?" I repeated, puzzled as to what to say.
+<P>
+"No&#151; I&#151; I&#151;"
+<P>
+"You were trying to open my bag."
+<P>
+"So I was&#151; but it's all a mistake, I assure you."
+<P>
+"A mistake?"
+<P>
+"Quite a mistake, Strong." He cleared his throat. "The
+fact is, I'm suffering so from the toothache that I'm hardly able to judge
+of what I'm doing. I thought your bag was my own."
+<P>
+"They are not much alike," I returned bluntly.
+<P>
+"Well, you see mine is a new one, and I'm not used to
+it yet. I hope you don't think I was trying to rob you?" he went on, with
+a look of reproach.
+<P>
+I was silent. I did think that that was just what he was
+trying to do, but I hardly cared to say so.
+<P>
+"It's awful to have such toothaches as I get," he continued,
+putting his hand to his cheek. "They come on me unawares, and drive me frantic.
+I wanted to get my teeth attended to in Jersey City when I was there, but
+I didn't have time."
+<P>
+"What's this on the handkerchief?" I asked.
+<P>
+"Oh, I guess I spilled some of my toothache cure on it,"
+he replied, after some hesitation. "I used some and then put the bottle back
+in the valise. That's how I came to look for the bottle again. I hope you're
+not offended. It was all a mistake."
+<P>
+"It's all right if that's the case," I returned coolly.
+<P>
+Holding my valise on my lap, I settled back in the seat
+again, but not to sleep. The little adventure had aroused me thoroughly.
+Mr. Allen Price sat beside me for a few moments in silence.
+<P>
+"Guess I'll go into the smoker," he said finally, as he
+rose. "Maybe a cigar will help me," and taking up his handbag, he walked
+down the aisle.
+<P>
+In a dreamy way I meditated over what had occurred. I
+could not help but think that the handkerchief I had found spread over my
+face had been saturated with chloroform, and that my fellow-passenger had
+endeavored to put me in a sound sleep and then rifle my bag. Of course I
+might be mistaken, but still I was positive that Mr. Allen Price would bear
+watching.
+<P>
+About four o'clock in the morning the train came to a
+sudden stop. The jar was so pronounced that it woke nearly all of the passengers.
+<P>
+Thinking that possibly we had arrived at our destination,
+I raised the window and peered out.
+<P>
+Instead of being in the heart of a city, however, I soon
+discovered we were in a belt of timber land. Huge trees lined the road on
+both sides, and ahead I could hear the flowing of a mountain stream.
+<P>
+The train hands were out with their lanterns, and by their
+movements it was plain to see that something was up.
+<P>
+I waited in my seat for ten minutes or more, and then
+as a number of passengers left the car, I took up my bag and did the same.
+<P>
+A walk to the front of the train soon made known the cause
+of the delay. Over a small mountain stream a strong wooden bridge with iron
+frame had been built. Near the bridge grew a number of tall trees, and one
+of these had been washed loose by the water and overturned in such a manner
+that the largest branch blocked the progress of the locomotive. The strong
+headlight had revealed the state of affairs to the engineer, and he had stopped
+within five feet of the obstruction. Had he run on, it is impossible to calculate
+what amount of damage might have been done.
+<P>
+"Don't see what we are going to do, except to run back
+to Smalleyville," said the engineer, who was in consultation with the conductor.
+<P>
+"Can't we roll the tree out of the way?" asked the latter
+official.
+<P>
+The engineer shook his head.
+<P>
+"Too heavy. All the men on the train couldn't budge it."
+<P>
+They stood in silence for a moment.
+<P>
+"If you had a rope, you could make the engine haul it,"
+I suggested to the fireman, who was a young fellow.
+<P>
+"A good idea," he exclaimed, and reported it to his superior.
+<P>
+"First-class plan; but we haven't got the rope," said
+the engineer.
+<P>
+"Have you got an axe?"
+<P>
+"Yes."
+<P>
+"Then why not chop it off?"
+<P>
+"That's so! Larry, bring the axes."
+<P>
+"It won't do any good," said one of the brakemen who had
+just come up. "The bridge has shifted."
+<P>
+An examination proved his assertion to be correct. As
+soon as this became known, a danger light was hung at either end of the
+structure, and then we started running backward to Smalleyville.
+<P>
+"How long will this delay us?" I asked of the conductor
+as he came through, explaining matters.
+<P>
+"I can't tell. Perhaps only a few hours, perhaps more.
+It depends on how soon the wrecking gang arrive on the spot. As soon as they
+get there, they will go right to work, and it won't take them long to fix
+matters up."
+<P>
+Smalleyville proved to be a small town of not over five
+hundred inhabitants. There was quite an excitement around the depot when
+the train came in, and despatches were sent in various directions.
+<P>
+Presently a shower came up, and this drove the passengers
+to the cars and the station. I got aboard the train at first to listen to
+what the train hands might have to say. I found one of the brakemen quite
+a friendly fellow, and willing to talk.
+<P>
+"This rain will make matters worse," said he. "That tree
+was leaning against the bridge for all it was worth, and if it loosens any
+more it will carry the thing away clean."
+<P>
+"Isn't there danger of trains coming from the other way?"
+<P>
+"Not now. We've telegraphed to Chicago, and no train will
+leave till everything is in running order."
+<P>
+"When does the next train arrive behind us?"
+<P>
+"At 9.30 this morning."
+<P>
+We chatted for quite a while. Then there was a commotion
+on the platform, and we found that part of the wrecking gang had arrived
+on a hand-car.
+<P>
+They brought with them a great lot of tools, and soon
+a flat car with a hoisting machine was run out of a shed, and they were off.
+<P>
+By this time it was raining in torrents, and the station
+platform was deserted. Not caring to get wet, I again took my seat in the
+car, and presently fell asleep.
+<P>
+When I awoke I found it was six o'clock. The rain still
+fell steadily, without signs of abating.
+<P>
+I was decidedly hungry, and buttoning my coat up tightly
+about my neck, I sallied forth in search of a restaurant.
+<P>
+I found one within a block of the depot, and entering,
+I called for some coffee and muffins&#151; first, however, assuring myself that
+my train was not likely to leave for fully an hour.
+<P>
+While busy with what the waiter had brought, I saw Mr.
+Allen Price enter. Luckily the table I sat at was full, and he was compelled
+to take a seat some distance from me.
+<P>
+"Good morning, my young friend," said he, as he stopped
+for an instant in front of me.
+<P>
+I was surprised at his pleasant manner. He acted as if
+nothing had ever happened to bring up a coolness between us.
+<P>
+"Good morning," I replied briefly.
+<P>
+"Terrible rain, this, isn't it?"
+<P>
+"It is."
+<P>
+"My toothache's much better," he went on, "and I feel
+like myself once more. Funny I mistook your valise for mine, last night,
+wasn't it?"
+<P>
+"I don't know," I replied flatly.
+<P>
+I returned to my breakfast, and, seeing I would not converse
+further, the man passed on and sat down. But I felt that his eyes were on
+me, and instinctively I made up my mind to be on my guard.
+<P>
+As I was about to leave the place, several more passengers
+came in, and by what they said I learned that the train would not start for
+Chicago till noon, the bridge being so badly damaged that the road engineer
+would not let anything cross until it was propped up.
+<P>
+Not caring to go back to the train, I entered the waiting-room
+and took in all there was to be seen. At one end of the place was a news
+stand, and I walked up to this to look at the picture papers that were displayed.
+<P>
+I was deeply interested in a cartoon on the middle pages
+of an illustrated paper when I heard Mr. Price's voice asking for some Chicago
+daily, and then making inquiries as to where the telegraph once was located.
+<P>
+He did not see me, and I at once stepped out of sight
+behind him.
+<P>
+Having received his directions, Mr. Price sat down to
+write out his telegram. Evidently what he wrote did not satisfy him, for
+he tore up several slips of paper before he managed to prepare one that suited
+him.
+<P>
+Then he arose, and throwing the scraps in a wad on the
+floor, walked away.
+<P>
+Unobserved, I picked up the wad. Right or wrong, I was
+bound to see what it contained. Perhaps it might be of no earthly interest
+to me; on the other hand, it might contain much I would desire to know. Strange
+things had happened lately, and I was prepared for all sorts of surprises.
+<P>
+A number of the slips of paper were missing and the remainder
+were so crumpled that the pencil marks were nearly illegible.
+<P>
+At length I managed to fit one of the sheets together
+and then read these words:&#151;
+<BLOCKQUOTE>
+C. Hholtzmann>, Chicago:
+ <P ALIGN=left class=left>
+ Look out for a young man claiming to&#151;
+</BLOCKQUOTE>
+<h3>CHAPTER XXIII</h3>
+<h4>IN CHICAGO</h4>
+<P>
+I had not been mistaken in my opinion
+of Mr. Allen Price. He was following me, and doing it with no good intention.
+<P>
+I concluded the man must be employed by Mr. Woodward.
+Perhaps I had seen him at some time in Darbyville, and so thought his face
+familiar.
+<P>
+I was glad that if he was a detective I was aware of the
+fact. I would now know how to trust him, and I made up my mind that if he
+got the best of me it would be my own fault.
+<P>
+One thing struck me quite forcibly. The merchant and John
+Stumpy both considered my proposed visit to Chris Holtzmann of importance.
+They would not have put themselves to the trouble and expense of hiring some
+one to follow me if this was not so. Though Mr. Aaron Woodward was rich,
+he was close, and did not spend an extra dollar except upon himself.
+<P>
+I was chagrined at the thought that Holtzmann would be
+prepared to receive me. I had hoped to come upon him unawares, and get into
+his confidence before he could realize what I was after.
+<P>
+I began to wonder when the telegram would reach Chicago.
+Perhaps something by good fortune might delay it.
+<P>
+Mr. Allen Price walked over to the telegraph office, and
+following him with my eyes I saw him pay for the message and then stroll
+away.
+<P>
+Hardly had he gone before I too stepped up to the counter.
+<P>
+"How long will it take to send a message to Chicago?"
+I asked of the clerk in charge.
+<P>
+"Probably till noon," was the reply. "The storm has crippled
+us, and we are having trouble with our lineman."
+<P>
+"It won't go before noon!" I repeated, and my heart gave
+a bound. "Are you sure?"
+<P>
+"Yes; perhaps even longer."
+<P>
+"How about the message that gentleman just handed in?"
+<P>
+"I told him I would send it as soon as possible,"
+<P>
+"Did you tell him it wouldn't go before noon?"
+<P>
+"No; he didn't ask," returned the clerk, coolly. He was
+evidently not going to let any business slip if he could help it.
+<P>
+"Is there any possible way I can get to Chicago before
+noon?" I went on.
+<P>
+The clerk shook his head. "I don't think there is," he
+replied.
+<P>
+"What is the nearest station on the other side of the
+bridge?"
+<P>
+"Foley."
+<P>
+"And how far is that from Chicago?"
+<P>
+"Twelve miles."
+<P>
+"Thank you."
+<P>
+I walked away from the counter filled with a sudden resolve.
+I must reach Chicago before the telegram or Mr. Allen Price. If I did not,
+my trip to the city of the lakes would be a failure.
+<P>
+How was the thing to be accomplished? Walking out on the
+covered platform, out of sight of the man who was following me, I tried to
+solve the problem.
+<P>
+Smalleyville was a good ten miles from the misplaced bridge,
+and in a soaking rain such a distance was too far to walk. Perhaps I might
+get a carriage to take me to the spot. I supposed the cost would be several
+dollars, but decided not to stand on that amount.
+<P>
+I had about made up my mind to hunt up a livery stable,
+when some workingmen rolled up to the station on a hand-car.
+<P>
+"Where are you going?" I inquired of one of them.
+<P>
+"Down to the Foley bridge," was the reply,
+<P>
+"Will you take a passenger?" I went on quickly.
+<P>
+"You'll have to ask the boss."
+<P>
+The boss proved to be a jolly German.
+<P>
+"Vont ter haf a ride, does you!" he laughed.
+<P>
+"I'm not over particular about the ride," I explained.
+"I've got to get to Chicago as soon as possible, even if I have to walk."
+<P>
+"Vell, jump on, den."
+<P>
+I did so, and a moment later we were off. I was pretty
+confident that Mr. Allen Price had not witnessed my departure, and I hoped
+he would not find it out for some hours to come.
+<P>
+The rain had now slackened, so there was no further danger
+of getting soaked to the skin. There were four men on the car besides the
+boss, and seeing they were short a hand I took hold with a will.
+<P>
+Fortunately the grade was downward, and we had but little
+difficulty in sending the car on its way. At the end of half an hour the
+stream came in sight, and then as we slackened up I hopped off.
+<P>
+Down by the water's edge I found that the bridge had shifted
+fully six inches out of line with the roadbed. It was, however, in a pretty
+safe condition, and I had no difficulty in crossing to the other side.
+<P>
+Despite the storm a goodly number of men were assembled
+on the opposite bank, anxiously watching the efforts of the workmen. Among
+them I found a man, evidently a cabman, standing near a coupe, the horses
+of which were still smoking from a long run.
+<P>
+"Are you from Foley?" I asked, stepping up.
+<P>
+"No; just come all the way from Chicago," was the reply.
+"Had to bring two men down that wanted to get to Smalleyville."
+<P>
+This was interesting news. Perhaps I could get the man
+to take me back with him. Of course he would take me if I hired him in the
+regular way, but if I did this, I was certain he would charge me a small
+fortune.
+<P>
+"I am going to Chicago," I said. "I just came from
+Smalleyville."
+<P>
+"That so? Want to hire my rig?"
+<P>
+"You charge too much," I returned. "A fellow like me can't
+afford luxuries."
+<P>
+"Take you there for two dollars. It's worth five&#151; those
+two men gave me ten."
+<P>
+"What time will you land me in Chicago?"
+<P>
+"Where do you want to go?"
+<P>
+That question was a poser. I knew no more of the city
+of Chicago than I did of Paris or Pekin. Yet I did not wish to be set down
+on the outskirts, and not to show my ignorance I answered cautiously:&#151;
+<P>
+"To the railroad depot."
+<P>
+"Have you the time now?"
+<P>
+"It is about seven o'clock."
+<P>
+"I'll be there by nine."
+<P>
+"All right. Land me there by that time, and I'll pay you
+the two dollars."
+<P>
+"It's a go. Jump in," he declared.
+<P>
+I did so. A moment later he gathered up the reins, and
+we went whirling down the road.
+<P>
+The ride was an easy one, and as we bowled along I had
+ample opportunity to ponder over my situation. I wondered what Mr. Allen
+Price would think when he discovered I was nowhere to be found. I could well
+imagine his chagrin, and I could not help smiling at the way I had outwitted
+him. I was not certain what sort of a man Chris Holtzmann would prove to
+be, and therefore it was utterly useless to plan a means of approaching him.
+<P>
+At length we reached the suburbs of Chicago, and rolled
+down one of the broad avenues. It was now clear and bright, and the clean
+broad street with its handsome houses pleased me very much.
+<P>
+In half an hour we reached the business portion of the
+city, and soon the coupe came to a halt and the driver opened the door.
+<P>
+"Here we are," said he.
+<P>
+I jumped to the ground and gazed around. Opposite was
+the railroad station, true enough, and beyond blocks and blocks of tall business
+buildings, which reminded me strongly of New York.
+<P>
+I paid the cabman the two dollars I had promised, and
+he drove off.
+<P>
+In Chicago at last! I looked around. I was in the heart
+of a great city, knowing no one, and with no idea of where to go.
+<P>
+Yet my heart did not fail me. My mind was too full of
+the object of my quest to allow me to become faint-hearted. I was there for
+a purpose, and that purpose must be accomplished.
+<P>
+My clothes were still damp, but the sunshine was fast
+drying them. Near by was a bootblack's chair, and dropping into this, I had
+him polish my shoes and brush me up generally.
+<P>
+While he was performing the operation I questioned him
+concerning the streets and gained considerable information.
+<P>
+"Did you ever hear of a man by the name of Chris Holtzmann?"
+I asked.
+<P>
+"I dunno," was the slow reply. "What does he do?"
+<P>
+"I don't know what business he is in. He came from Brooklyn."
+<P>
+The bootblack shook his head.
+<P>
+"This city is a big place. There might be a dozen men
+by his name here. The street what you spoke about has lots of saloons and
+theatres on it. Maybe he's in that business."
+<P>
+"Maybe he is," I returned. "I must find out somehow."
+<P>
+"You can look him up in the directory. You'll find one
+over in the drug store on the corner."
+<P>
+"Thank you; I guess that's what I'll do," I replied.
+<P>
+When he had finished, I paid him ten cents for his work,
+and walked over to the place he had mentioned.
+<P>
+A polite clerk waited on me and pointed out the directory
+lying on a stand.
+<P>
+I looked it over carefully, and three minutes later walked
+out with Chris Holtzmann's new address in my pocket.
+<P>
+As I did so, I saw a stream of people issue from the depot.
+Some of them looked familiar. Was it possible that the train from Smalleyville
+had managed to come through, after all? It certainly looked like it.
+<P>
+I was not kept long in doubt. I crossed over to make sure,
+and an instant later found myself face to face with Allen Price!
+<h3>CHAPTER XXIV</h3>
+<h4>WHO MR. ALLEN PRICE WAS</h4>
+<P>
+I will not deny that I was considerably
+taken aback by my unexpected meeting with the man who had been following
+me. I had been firmly under the impression that he was still lolling around
+Smalleyville, waiting for a chance to continue his journey.
+<P>
+But if I was surprised, so was Mr. Allen Price. Every
+indication showed that he had not missed me at my departure, and that he
+was under the belief that I had been left behind.
+<P>
+He stopped short and gazed at me in blank astonishment.
+<P>
+"Why&#151; why&#151; where did you come from?" he stammered.
+<P>
+"From Smalleyville," I returned as coolly as I could.
+"And that's where you came from, too," I added.
+<P>
+"I didn't see you on the train," he went on, ignoring
+my last remark.
+<P>
+"I didn't come up by train."
+<P>
+"Maybe you walked," he went on, with some anxiety.
+<P>
+"Oh no; I rode in a carriage."
+<P>
+"Humph! It seems to me you must have been in a tremendous
+hurry."
+<P>
+"Perhaps I was."
+<P>
+"Why, you excite my curiosity. May I ask the cause of
+your sudden impatience?"
+<P>
+He put the question in an apparently careless fashion,
+but his sharp eyes betrayed his keen interest.
+<P>
+"You may."
+<P>
+"And what, was it?"
+<P>
+I looked at him for a moment in silence.
+<P>
+"I came to see a man."
+<P>
+"Ah! A friend? Perhaps he is seriously sick."
+<P>
+"I don't know if he is sick or not."
+<P>
+"And yet you hurried to see him?"
+<P>
+"Yes."
+<P>
+"Well, that&#151; that is out of the ordinary." He hesitated
+for a moment. "Of course it is none of my business, but I am interested.
+Perhaps I know the party and can help you. May I ask his name?"
+<P>
+"It's the same man you telegraphed to," I returned.
+<P>
+Mr. Allen Price stopped short and nearly dropped his handbag.
+My unexpected reply had taken the "wind out of his sails."
+<P>
+"I telegraphed to?" he repeated.
+<P>
+"Exactly."
+<P>
+"But&#151; but I telegraphed to no one."
+<P>
+"Yes, you did."
+<P>
+"Why, my dear young friend, you are mistaken."
+<P>
+"I'm not your dear friend," I returned with spirit. "You
+telegraphed to Chris Holtzmann to beware of me. Why did you do it?"
+<P>
+The man's face fell considerably, and he did not answer.
+I went on:&#151;
+<P>
+"You are following me and trying to defeat the object
+of my trip to Chicago. But you shall not do it. You pretend to be an ordinary
+traveller, but you are nothing more than a spy sent on by Mr. Aaron Woodward
+to stop me. But I have found you out, and now you can go back to him and
+tell him that his little plan didn't work."
+<P>
+The man's brow grew black with anger. He was very angry,
+and I could see that it was with difficulty he kept his hands off me.
+<P>
+"Think you're smart, don't you?" he sneered.
+<P>
+"I was too smart for you."
+<P>
+"But you don't know it all," he went on. "You don't know
+it all&#151; not by a jugful."
+<P>
+"I know enough to steer clear of you."
+<P>
+"Maybe you do."
+<P>
+The man evidently did not know what to say, and as a matter
+of fact, neither did I. I had told him some plain truths, and now I was anxious
+to get away from him and think out my future course of action.
+<P>
+"What's your idea of calling on Chris Holtzmann?" he went
+an after a long pause.
+<P>
+"That's my business."
+<P>
+"It won't do you any good."
+<P>
+"Perhaps it may."
+<P>
+"I know it won't," he replied in decided tones.
+<P>
+"What do you know about it?" I said sharply. "A moment
+ago you denied knowing anything about me. Now I've done with you, and I want
+you to leave me alone."
+<P>
+"You needn't get mad about it."
+<P>
+"I'll do as I please."
+<P>
+"No, you won't," he growled. "If you don't do as I want
+you to, I'll have you arrested."
+<P>
+This was strong language, and I hardly knew what to say
+in reply. Not that I was frightened by his threat, but what made the man
+take such a strong personal interest in the matter?
+<P>
+As I have said, I was almost certain I had seen the fellow
+before, though where and when was more than I could determine. Perhaps he
+was disguised.
+<P>
+"Perhaps you don't think I know who you are," I said quickly.
+<P>
+My words were a perfect shock to Mr. Allen Price. In spite
+of his bronzed face he turned pale.
+<P>
+"You know who I am? Why, I am as I tell you,&#151; Allen Price,"
+he faltered.
+<P>
+"Really," I replied, with assumed sarcasm.
+<P>
+"Yes, really."
+<P>
+"I know better," I returned boldly.
+<P>
+I was hardly prepared for what was to follow. The man
+caught me by the arm.
+<P>
+"Then what you know shall cost you dear," he cried. "I'm
+not to be outwitted by a country boy. Help! Police! Police!"
+<P>
+As he uttered his call for assistance he let drop his
+handbag and drew his purse from his pocket.
+<P>
+"I've got you, you young thief!" he cried, letting the
+purse fall to the sidewalk. "You didn't think to be caught as easily, did
+you? Help! Po&#151; Oh, officer, I'm glad you've come!" the last to a policeman
+who had just hurried to the scene.
+<P>
+"What's the matter here?" demanded the minion of the law.
+<P>
+"I just caught this young fellow picking my pocket," exclaimed
+Mr. Allen. "Where's my pocketbook?"
+<P>
+"There's a pocketbook on the sidewalk," put in a man in
+the crowd that had quickly gathered.
+<P>
+"So it is." He picked it up. "You rascal! You thought
+to get away in fine style, didn't you?" he continued to me.
+<P>
+For a moment I was too stunned to speak. The un-looked-for
+turn of affairs took away my breath.
+<P>
+"I didn't pick his pocket," I burst out.
+<P>
+"Yes, you did."
+<P>
+"It isn't so. He's a swindler and is trying to get me
+into trouble."
+<P>
+"Here! here! none of that!" broke in the officer. "Tell
+me your story," he said to Mr. Allen Price.
+<P>
+"I was coming along looking in the shop windows," began
+my accuser, "when I felt a hand in my pocket. I turned quickly and just in
+time to catch this fellow trying to make off with my pocketbook."
+<P>
+"It is a falsehood, every word of it," I declared.
+<P>
+"Shut up!" said the officer, sternly. "Please go on."
+<P>
+"He is evidently a smart thief," continued Mr. Allen Price.
+"I must see if I have lost anything else."
+<P>
+He began a pretended examination of his clothes. In the
+meantime the crowd began to grow larger and larger.
+<P>
+"We can't stay here all day," said the policeman, roughly.
+"What have you got to say to the charge?"
+<P>
+"I say it isn't true," I replied. "This man is a humbug.
+He is following me for a purpose, and is trying to get me into trouble."
+<P>
+"Ridiculous!" cried my accuser. "Why, I never heard of
+such a thing before!"
+<P>
+"That story won't wash," said the officer to me. "Do you
+make a charge?" he continued to Mr. Allen Price.
+<P>
+My accuser hesitated. "I will, if it is not necessary
+for me to go along," he said. "I am pressed for time. My name is Sylvester
+Manners. I am a partner in the Manners Clothing Company. You know the firm,
+I presume."
+<P>
+"Oh, yes, sir," replied the officer. He knew the Manners
+Clothing Company to be a rich concern.
+<P>
+"I will stop at the station house to-morrow morning and
+make a complaint," continued Mr. Allen Price. "Don't let the young rascal
+escape."
+<P>
+"No fear, sir. Come on!" the last to me.
+<P>
+"I've done no wrong. I want that man arrested!" I cried.
+"He is no more a merchant here in Chicago than I am. He&#151;"
+<P>
+But the officer would not listen. He took a strong hold
+upon my collar and began to march me off. Mr. Allen Price walked beside us
+until we reached the corner.
+<P>
+"I will leave you here, officer," he said. "I'll be down
+in the morning, sure. As for you," he continued to me, "I trust you will
+soon see the error of your ways and try to mend them, and&#151;" he continued
+in a whisper, as the officer's attention was distracted for a moment, "never
+try to outwit John Stumpy again!"
+<h3>CHAPTER XXV</h3>
+<h4>AN EXCITING ADVENTURE</h4>
+<P>
+Mr. Allen Price and John Stumpy were one and the same person!
+For a moment so great was my surprise that I forgot I was under arrest, and
+walked on beside the officer without a protest.
+<P>
+Now that I knew the truth it was easy to trace the
+resemblance, and I blamed myself greatly for not having discovered it when
+we first met.
+<P>
+Of a certainty the man was bent upon frustrating my plans,
+partly for his own safety, and more so upon Mr. Aaron Woodward's account.
+No doubt the merchant was paying him well for his work, and John Stumpy intended
+to do all he could to crush me.
+<P>
+But I was not to be crushed. The forces brought against
+me only made my will stronger to go ahead. It was do or die, and that was
+all there was to it.
+<P>
+I could easily understand why John Stumpy wished to obtain
+possession of my handbag. In it he hoped to find the papers Mr. Woodward
+had lost and Nicholas Weaver's confession. I could not help but smile at
+the thought that, notwithstanding all I had said to the contrary, the two
+plotters still believed I had the lost documents.
+<P>
+One thing perplexed me. Why was my visit to Chris Holtzmann
+considered of such importance that every possible means was taken to prevent
+it? Did this man possess the entire key to the situation? And were they afraid
+he could be bought up or threatened into a confession? It looked so.
+<P>
+"You are not from Chicago, young fellow?" said the policeman
+who had me in charge.
+<P>
+"No; I'm from the East."
+<P>
+"Humph! Got taken in short, didn't you?"
+<P>
+"I'm not guilty of any crime," I returned, "and you'll
+find it out when it comes to the examination."
+<P>
+"I'll chance it," replied the officer, grimly.
+<P>
+"That man is a fraud. If you call on the Manners Clothing
+Company, you will find it so."
+<P>
+"That's not part of my duty. I'll take you to the station
+house, and you can tell the judge your story," replied the policeman.
+<P>
+Yet I could see by the way his brow contracted that my
+assertion had had its effect upon him. Probably had he given the matter proper
+thought in the first place, he would have compelled John Stumpy to accompany
+him.
+<P>
+Still, this did me no good. Here I was being taken to
+the jail while the man who should have been under arrest was free. I would
+probably have to remain in confinement until the following morning, and in
+the meantime John Stumpy could call on Chris Holtzmann and arrange plans
+to suit himself.
+<P>
+This would never do, as it would defeat the whole object
+of my trip West, and send me home to be laughed at by Mr. Aaron Woodward
+and Duncan.
+<P>
+"Can I ask for an examination at once?" I inquired.
+<P>
+"Maybe; if the judge is there."
+<P>
+"And if he isn't?"
+<P>
+"You'll have to wait till to-morrow morning. You see it
+isn't&#151; Hello! thunder and lightning! what's that?"
+<P>
+As the officer uttered the exclamation there was a wild
+cry on the streets, and the next instant the crowds of people scattered in
+every direction.
+<P>
+And no wonder, for down the pavement came an infuriated
+bull, charging everybody and everything before him.
+<P>
+The animal had evidently broken away from a herd that
+was being driven to the stock-yards, and his nose, where the ring was fastened,
+was torn and covered with blood, and he breathed hard, as if he had run a
+great distance.
+<P>
+"It's a mad bull!" I cried. "Take care, or he'll horn
+both of us!"
+<P>
+My words of caution were unnecessary, for no sooner had
+the bull turned in our direction than the officer let go his hold upon me
+and fled into a doorway near at hand.
+<P>
+For an instant I was on the point of following him. Then
+came the sudden thought that now would be a good chance to escape.
+<P>
+To think was to act. No sooner had the policeman jumped
+into the doorway than I dodged through the crowd and hurried across the street.
+Reaching the opposite side, I ran into an alley. It was long and led directly
+into the back garden of a handsome stone mansion.
+<P>
+The garden was filled with beautiful flowers and plants,
+and in the centre a tiny fountain sent a thin spray into the air. At one
+side, under a small arbor, stood a garden bench, and on this sat a little
+girl playing with a number of dolls.
+<P>
+Her golden hair hung heavy over her shoulders, and she
+looked supremely happy. She greeted my entrance with a smile, and took me
+at once into her confidence.
+<P>
+"This is my new dolly," she explained, holding the article
+up.
+<P>
+"Is it?" I asked, hardly knowing what to say.
+<P>
+"Yes; papa bringed it home yesterday. Does oo like dollies?"
+<P>
+"Oh, yes, nice ones like that. You must have lots of fun.
+I&#151;"
+<P>
+I did not finish the sentence. There was a noise in the
+alley, and the next instant the mad bull came crashing into the garden!
+<P>
+For a second I was too surprised to move or speak. The
+little girl uttered a piercing scream, and gathering her dolls in her arms
+huddled into a corner of the bench.
+<P>
+Why the animal had followed so closely behind me I could
+not tell, but once in the garden, it was plain to see he was bent upon doing
+considerable damage. He was more enraged than ever, and scattered the sodding
+about in every direction.
+<P>
+At first some red flowers attracted his attention, and
+he charged upon these with a fury that wrecked the entire flower-bed in which
+they were standing.
+<P>
+While the bull was at this work I partly recovered my
+senses, and then the first thought that came to my mind was the necessity
+of getting the little girl to a place of safety. Let the bull once get at
+her, and her life might pay the penalty. I was not many feet away from the
+little miss, and a few bounds took me to her side.
+<P>
+"Come, let me take you into the house," I said, and picked
+her up.
+<P>
+She made no reply, but continued to scream and clung to
+me with all the strength of her little arms.
+<P>
+There was a back piazza to the mansion five or six steps high. I knew that
+if we once reached this we would be safe, for no matter what the bull might
+do, he could not climb.
+<P>
+"Oh, Millie, my child!" came s voice from the house, and
+I saw a lady at one of the windows. "Oh, save her! Bring her here!" she cried,
+as she caught sight of the bull.
+<P>
+I uttered no reply, but sprang toward the steps.
+<P>
+But though I wasted no time, the bull was too quick for
+me. Springing over the flower-bed, he planted himself directly in my path.
+<P>
+It made my blood run cold to have him face me with that
+vicious look and those glaring eyes. One prod of those horns and all would
+be over.
+<P>
+"Oh, save Millie! Save my child!" The lady had opened
+the door and now came running out upon the piazza.
+<P>
+"I will if I can!" I returned. "Don't come down here.
+He'll tear you all to pieces!"
+<P>
+Even as I spoke the bull made a plunge for me. I darted
+to one side and sprang over to the edge of the piazza corner.
+<P>
+"Give her to me! Hand her up!" exclaimed the lady, as
+she rushed over, and as I held the little one on my shoulder, the lady drew
+her up and clasped the child, dolls and all, to her breast.
+<P>
+Hardly had I got rid of my charge than the bull came for
+me again. The trick I had played on him only served to increase his rage,
+and he snorted loudly.
+<P>
+I was in a bad fix. Between the piazza and the next-door
+fence was a distance of but ten feet, and behind me was the solid stone wall
+of the house. Escape on any side was impossible. Had I had time I might have
+climbed up to the piazza, but now this was not to be thought of, and another
+means of getting out of danger must be instantly devised.
+<P>
+"Oh, he will be killed!" cried the lady, in horror. "Help!
+help!"
+<P>
+I glanced around for some weapon with which to defend
+myself. I had nothing with me. Even my valise lay at the other end of the
+garden, where I had dropped it when the animal first made his appearance.
+<P>
+As I said, I looked around, and behind me found a heavy
+spade the gardener had at one time or another used for digging post holes.
+It was a strong and sharp implement, and I took it up with a good deal of
+satisfaction.
+<P>
+The bull charged on me with fury. As he did so, I took
+the spade and held it on a level with my waist, resting the butt end on the
+wall behind me.
+<P>
+The next instant there was a terrific crash that made
+me sick from head to foot. With all his force the bull had sprung forward,
+only to receive the sharp end of the spade straight between his eyes.
+<P>
+The blow was as if it had been delivered by an axe. It
+made a frightful cut, and the blood rushed forth in a torrent.
+<P>
+With a mad cry of pain the bull backed out. At first I
+thought he was going to charge me again, but evidently the blow was too much
+for him, for with several moans he turned, and with his head hanging down,
+he staggered across the garden to the alley and disappeared.
+<h3>CHAPTER XXVI</h3>
+<h4>SAMMY SIMPSON</h4>
+<P>
+I gave a sigh of relief when the
+bull was gone. The encounter with the mad animal had been no laughing matter.
+I had once heard of a man being gored to death by just such an infuriated
+creature, and I considered that I had had a narrow escape. I put my hand
+to my forehead and found the cold sweat standing out upon it. Taking my
+handkerchief, I mopped it away.
+<P>
+"Are you hurt?" inquired the lady, with great solicitation.
+<P>
+"No, ma'am," I replied. "But it was a close shave!"
+<P>
+"Indeed it was. And you saved my Millie's life! How can
+I thank you!"
+<P>
+"I didn't do so much. I guess she's scared a good bit."
+<P>
+"She hardly realized the danger, dear child. Did you,
+Millie, my pet?"
+<P>
+"The bad cow wanted to eat up my dollies!" exclaimed the
+little miss, with a grave shake of the head. "But oo helped me," she added,
+to me.
+<P>
+"I'm glad I was here," I returned.
+<P>
+"May I ask how you happened to come in?" continued the
+lady.
+<P>
+In a few words I told my story. I had hardly finished
+when the back door opened and a gentleman stepped out.
+<P>
+"What is the trouble here?" he asked anxiously. "I just
+heard that a mad bull had run into the garden."
+<P>
+"So he did, James; a savage monster indeed. This young
+man just beat him off and saved Millie's life."
+<P>
+"Hardly that," I put in modestly. I did not want more
+praise than I was justly entitled to receive.
+<P>
+"Indeed, but he did. See the spade covered with blood?
+Had he not hit the animal over the head with that, something dreadful would
+have happened."
+<P>
+"I didn't hit him exactly," I laughed. "I held it up and
+he ran against it," and once more I told my story.
+<P>
+"You have done us a great service, young man," said the
+gentleman when I had concluded. "I was once in the butcher business myself,&#151; in
+fact, I am in it yet, but only in the export trade,&#151; and I know full well
+how dangerous bulls can get. Had it not been for you my little girl might
+have been torn to pieces. One of her dolls is dressed in red, and this would
+have attracted the bull's immediate attention. I thank you deeply." He grasped
+my hand warmly. "May I ask your name?"
+<P>
+"Roger Strong, sir."
+<P>
+"My name is Harrison&#151; James Harrison. You live here in
+Chicago, I suppose?"
+<P>
+"No, sir, I come from Darbyville, New Jersey."
+<P>
+"Darbyville?" He thought a moment. "I never heard of such
+a town."
+<P>
+"It is only a small place several miles from New York.
+I came to Chicago on business. I arrived about half an hour ago."
+<P>
+"Really? Your introduction into our city has been rather
+an exciting one."
+<P>
+"I've had other adventures fully as exciting in the past
+few days," I returned.
+<P>
+"Yes?" and Mr. Harrison eyed me curiously.
+<P>
+"Yes. Our train was delayed, I almost had my handbag stolen,
+and I've been arrested as a thief."
+<P>
+"And all in a half an hour?" The gentleman and his wife
+both looked incredulous.
+<P>
+"No, sir; since I've left home."
+<P>
+"I should like to hear your story&#151; that is, if you care
+to tell it."
+<P>
+"I will tell you the whole thing if you care to listen,"
+I returned, reflecting that my newly made friend might give me some material
+assistance in my quest.
+<P>
+"Then come into the house."
+<P>
+"I'd better shut the alley gate first," said I, and running
+down I did so, and picked up my handbag as well.
+<P>
+Mr. Harrison led the way inside. I could not help but
+note the rich furnishings of the place&#151; the soft carpets, artistically papered
+walls, the costly pictures and bric-a-brac, all telling of wealth.
+<P>
+Mrs. Harrison and the little girl had disappeared up the
+stairs. Mr. Harrison ushered me into his library and motioned me to a seat.
+<P>
+I hardly knew how to begin my story. To show how John
+Stumpy had had me arrested, it would be necessary to go back to affairs at
+Darbyville, and this I hesitated about doing.
+<P>
+"If you have time I would like to tell you about my affairs
+before I started to come to Chicago," I said. "I would like your advice."
+<P>
+The gentleman looked at the clock resting upon the mantel
+shelf.
+<P>
+"I have an engagement at eleven o'clock," he returned.
+"Until then I am entirely at your service, and will be in the afternoon if
+you desire it. I'll promise to give you the best advice I can."
+<P>
+"Thank you. I am a stranger here, and most people won't
+pay much attention to a boy," I replied.
+<P>
+Then I told my story in full just as I have written it
+here. Mr. Harrison was deeply interested.
+<P>
+"It is a strange case," he said, when I had concluded.
+"These men must be thorough rascals, every one of them. Of course it yet
+remains to be seen what this Chris Holtzmann has to do with the affair. He
+may be made to give evidence for or against your father just as he is approached.
+I think I would be careful at the first meeting."
+<P>
+"I did not intend to let him know who I was."
+<P>
+"A good plan."
+<P>
+"But now if I venture on the street I may be arrested,"
+I went on.
+<P>
+"It is not likely. Chicago is a big city, and unless the
+officer who arrested you before meets you, it is improbable that he can give
+an accurate enough description of you for others to identify you. Then again,
+having failed in his duty, he may not report the case at all."
+<P>
+"That's so; but if I do run across him&#151;"
+<P>
+"Then send for me. Here is my card. If I can be of service
+to you, I shall be glad."
+<P>
+Mr. Harrison gave me minute directions how to reach
+Holtzmann's place. Then it was time for him to go, and we left the house
+together. I promised to call on him again before quitting Chicago.
+<P>
+It was with a lighter heart that I went on my way. In
+some manner I felt that I had at least one friend in the big city, to whom
+I could turn for advice and assistance.
+<P>
+Guided by the directions Mr. Harrison had given me, I
+had no difficulty in making my way in the direction of Chris Holtzmann's
+place of business or house, whatever it might prove to be.
+<P>
+As I passed up one street and down another, I could not
+help but look about me with great curiosity. If Chicago was not New York,
+it was "next door" to it, and I could have easily spent the entire day in
+sightseeing.
+<P>
+But though my eyes were taking in all that was to be seen,
+my mind was busy speculating upon the future. What would Chris Holtzmann
+think of my visit, and what would be the result of our interview?
+<P>
+At length I turned down the street upon which his place
+was located. It was a wide and busy thoroughfare, lined with shops of all
+kinds. Saloons were numerous, and from several of them came the sounds of
+lively music.
+<P>
+"Can you tell me where Chris Holtzmann's place is?" I
+asked of a man on the corner.
+<P>
+"Holtzmann's? Sure! Down on the next corner."
+<P>
+"Thank you."
+<P>
+"Variety actor?" went on the man, curiously.
+<P>
+"Oh, no!" I laughed.
+<P>
+"Thought not. They're generally pretty tough&#151; the ones
+Chris hires."
+<P>
+"Does he have a variety theatre?"
+<P>
+"That's what he calls it. But it's nothing but a concert
+hall with jugglers and tumblers thrown in."
+<P>
+I did not relish the idea of going into such a place,
+and I knew that my sister Kate and the Widow Canby would be horrified when
+they heard of it.
+<P>
+"What kind of a man is this Holtzmann?" I continued, seeing
+that the man I had accosted was inclined to talk.
+<P>
+"Oh, he's a good enough kind of a fellow if you know how
+to take him," was the reply. "He's a bit cranky if he's had a glass too much,
+but that don't happen often."
+<P>
+"Does he run the place himself?"
+<P>
+"What, tend bar and so?"
+<P>
+"Yes."
+<P>
+"Oh, no; he's too high-toned for that. He only bosses
+things. They say he's rich. Be came from the East some years ago with quite
+a little money, and he's been adding to it ever since."
+<P>
+"Then you know him quite well?"
+<P>
+"Worked for him two years. Then he up one day and declared
+I was robbing him. We had a big row, and I got out."
+<P>
+"Did he have you arrested?"
+<P>
+"Arrested? Not much. He knew better than to try such a
+game on me. When I was in his employ I kept my eyes and ears open, and I
+knew too much about his private affairs for him to push me, even if I had
+been guilty. Oh, Sammy Simpson knows a thing or two."
+<P>
+"That is your name?"
+<P>
+"Yes; Samuel A. Simpson. Generally called Sammy for short.
+I was his bookkeeper and corresponding clerk."
+<P>
+"Maybe you're just the man I want to see," I said. "Do
+you know anything about Mr. Holtzmann's private affairs in the East?"
+<P>
+"In Brooklyn?"
+<P>
+"Yes."
+<P>
+Sammy Simpson hesitated for a moment.
+<P>
+"Maybe I do," he replied, with a shrewd look in his eyes.
+"Is there anything to be made out of it?"
+<P>
+"I will pay you for whatever you do for me."
+<P>
+"Then I'm your huckleberry. Who are you and what do you
+want to know?"
+<h3>CHAPTER XXVII</h3>
+<h4>THE PALACE OF PLEASURE</h4>
+<P>
+Mr. Sammy Simpson was a character. He was tall and slim, certainly
+not less than fifty years of age, but with an evident desire to appear much
+younger. His face was cleanly shaven, and when he removed his hat to scratch
+his head I saw that he was nearly bald.
+<P>
+He was dressed in a light check suit and wore patent-leather
+shoes. I put him down as a dandy, but fond of drink, and that he proved to
+be.
+<P>
+"Whom do you work for now?" I asked.
+<P>
+"No one. To tell the truth, I'm down on my luck and I'm
+waiting for something to turn up."
+<P>
+"You say you worked for Holtzmann two years ago?"
+<P>
+"No, I said I worked for him two years. I only left last
+month."
+<P>
+"And he accused you of stealing?"
+<P>
+"Yes; but it was only to get rid of me because I knew
+too much of his private affairs."
+<P>
+"What do you know of his private affairs?"
+<P>
+Sammy Simpson rubbed his chin.
+<P>
+"Excuse me, but who am I talking to?" he asked abruptly.
+<P>
+"Never mind who I am. I am here to get all the information
+I can about Chris Holtzmann, and I'm willing to pay for it. Of course I'm
+not rich, but I've got a few dollars. If you can't help me I'll have to go
+elsewhere."
+<P>
+My plain speech startled Sammy Simpson.
+<P>
+"Hold up; don't get mad because I asked your name. You've
+a perfect right to keep it to yourself if you want to. Only make it sure
+to me that I'll get paid for what I tell and it will be all right."
+<P>
+I was perplexed. I had half a mind to mention Mr. Harrison's
+name, but if I did that, the man might expect altogether too much.
+<P>
+"I will promise you that you lose nothing," I said. "But
+we can't talk things over in the street. Tell me where I can meet you later
+on."
+<P>
+"Want to see Holtzmann first?"
+<P>
+"Yes."
+<P>
+"You won't get anything out of him, I'll wager you that."
+<P>
+"I don't expect to. I want to see what kind of a man he
+is."
+<P>
+"Well, you'll find me at 28 Hallock Street generally.
+If I'm not in, you can find out there where I've gone to."
+<P>
+"I'll remember it. In the meantime don't speak of this
+meeting to any one."
+<P>
+"Mum's the word," rejoined Sammy Simpson.
+<P>
+I went on my way deep in thought. I considered it a stroke
+of luck that I had fallen in with Chris Holtzmann's former clerk. No doubt
+the man knew much that would prove of value to me.
+<P>
+I doubted if this man was perfectly honest. I was satisfied
+that the concert-hall manager had had good grounds for discharging him. But
+it often "takes a rogue to catch a rogue," and I was willing to profit by
+any advantage that came to hand.
+<P>
+At length I reached the next corner. On it stood a splendid
+building of marble, having over the door in raised letters:&#151;
+<P ALIGN=CENTER class=center>
+CHRIS HOLTZMANN'S<BR>
+PALACE OF PLEASURE.<BR>
+<I>Open all the Time. Admission Free!</I>
+<P>
+For a moment I hesitated. Should I enter such a hole of
+iniquity?
+<P>
+Then came the thought of my mission; how I wished to clear
+the family name from the stain that rested upon it and free my father from
+imprisonment, and I went in.
+<P>
+I do not care to describe the scene that met my eyes.
+The magnificent decorations of the place were to my mind entirely out of
+keeping with its character. The foulness of a subcellar would have been more
+appropriate.
+<P>
+In the back, where a stage was located, were a number
+of small tables. I sat down at one of these and had a waiter bring me a glass
+of soda water.
+<P>
+"Is Mr. Holtzmann about?" I asked.
+<P>
+"Yes, sir. There he is over by the cigar counter. Shall
+I call him?"
+<P>
+"No."
+<P>
+I paid for my soda and sipped it leisurely. The place
+was about half full, and all attention was being paid to "Master Ardon, the
+Wonderful Boy Dancer," who was doing a clog on the stage.
+<P>
+Mr. Chris Holtzmann was very much the style of a man I
+had imagined him to be. He was short and stout, with a thick neck and a double
+chin. He was loudly dressed, including several seal rings and a heavy gold
+watch chain.
+<P>
+I calculated that he would be a hard man to approach,
+and now that I was face to face with him I hardly knew how to proceed.
+<P>
+At first I thought to ask him for a situation of some
+kind and thus get on speaking terms with him, but concluded that openness
+would pay best in the end, and so, rising, I approached him.
+<P>
+"Mr. Holtzmann, I believe?" I began.
+<P>
+"Yes," he said slowly, looking me over from head to foot.
+<P>
+"If you please I would like to have a talk with you,"
+I went on.
+<P>
+"What is it?" and he turned his ear toward me.
+<P>
+"I have come all the way from Darbyville, New Jersey,
+to see you."
+<P>
+"What!" He started. "And what is your business with me,
+sir?" he went on sharply.
+<P>
+"I would like to see you in private," and I glanced at
+the clerk and several others who were staring at us.
+<P>
+"Come to my office," he returned, and led the way through
+a door at one side, into a handsomely furnished apartment facing the side
+street.
+<P>
+"Ross, you can post the letters," he said to a clerk who
+was writing at a desk. "Be back in half an hour."
+<P>
+It was a hint that we were to be left alone, and the clerk
+was not long in gathering up the letters that had been written, and leaving.
+<P>
+"I suppose Woodward sent you," began Chris Holtzmann,
+when we were seated.
+<P>
+This remark nearly took away my breath. I thought he would
+deny all knowledge of having ever known the merchant, and here he was mentioning
+the man at the very start.
+<P>
+I hardly knew how to reply, and he continued:&#151;
+<P>
+"I've been expecting him for several days."
+<P>
+"Well, you know there was an accident on the railroad,"
+I began as coolly as I could. "The bridge shifted and the trains couldn't
+run."
+<P>
+"Yes, I heard of that." He paused for a moment. "What
+brought you?"
+<P>
+This was a home question. I plunged in like a swimmer
+into a deep stream.
+<P>
+"I came to get the papers relating to the Strong forgeries.
+You have all of them, I suppose."
+<P>
+I was surprised at my own boldness. So was my listener.
+<P>
+"Sh! not so loud," he exclaimed. "Who said I had the papers?"
+<P>
+"John Stumpy spoke about them to Mr. Woodward."
+<P>
+"He did, eh?" sneered Chris Holtzmann. "He had better
+keep his mouth shut. How does he know but what the papers were destroyed
+long ago?"
+<P>
+"I hope not," I replied earnestly.
+<P>
+"What does Woodward want of the papers?"
+<P>
+"I don't know exactly. The Strong family are going to
+have the case opened again, and he's afraid they may be dragged in."
+<P>
+"No one knows I have them but him, Stumpy&#151; and you." He
+gave me a suspicious glance. "Who are&#151;"
+<P>
+"The Strongs know," I put in hastily, thus cutting him
+off.
+<P>
+"What!" He jumped up from his chair. "Who was fool enough
+to tell them?"
+<P>
+"Nicholas Weaver left a dying statement&#151;"
+<P>
+"The idiot! I always said he was a weak-minded fool!"
+cried Chris Holtzmann. "Who has this statement?"
+<P>
+"I don't know where it is now, but Carson Strong's son
+had it."
+<P>
+"Strong's son! Great Scott! Then Woodward's goose is cooked.
+I always told him he hadn't covered up his tracks."
+<P>
+"Yes, but he paid you pretty well for your share of the
+work," I returned. I was getting mixed. The deception could not be kept up
+much longer, and I wondered what would happen when the truth became known.
+<P>
+"Didn't pay me half of what I should have got. I helped
+him not only in Brooklyn, but here in Chicago as well. How would he have
+accounted for all his money if I hadn't had a rich aunt die and leave it
+to him?" Chris Holtzmann gave a short laugh. "I reckon that was a neat plan
+of mine."
+<P>
+"You ran a big risk."
+<P>
+"So we did&#151; but it paid."
+<P>
+"And John Stumpy helped, too."
+<P>
+"He did in a way. But he drank too much to be of any great
+use. By the way, do you drink?"
+<P>
+As Holtzmann spoke he opened a closet at one side of the
+room, behind a screen, and brought forth a bottle of liquor and a pair of
+glasses.
+<P>
+"No, thank you," I replied.
+<P>
+"No? Have a cigar, then."
+<P>
+"Thank you; I don't smoke."
+<P>
+"What! Don't smoke or drink! That's queer. Wish I could
+say the same. Mighty expensive habits. What did you say your name was?"
+<P>
+At this instant there was a knock on the door, and Chris
+Holtzmann walked back of the screen and opened it.
+<P>
+"A man to see you, sir," I heard a voice say.
+<P>
+"Who is it?" asked Chris Holtzmann.
+<P>
+"Says his name is Aaron Woodward."
+<h3>CHAPTER XXVIII</h3>
+<h4>A DEAL FOR A THOUSAND DOLLARS</h4>
+<P>
+I was thunderstruck by the announcement
+that Mr. Aaron Woodward was waiting to come in. Had it been John Stumpy who
+was announced, I would not have been so much surprised. But Aaron Woodward!
+The chase after me was indeed getting hot.
+<P>
+Evidently the merchant was not satisfied to leave affairs
+in Chicago entirely in his confederate's hands. Either he did not trust Stumpy
+or else the matter was of too much importance.
+<P>
+I did not give these thoughts close attention at the time,
+but revolved them in my mind later. Just now I was trying to resolve what
+was best to do. Would it be advisable for me to remain or had I better get
+out?
+<P>
+To retire precipitately might not be "good form," but
+it might save me a deal of trouble. I had had one "round" with the merchant
+in his mansion in Darbyville, and I was not particularly anxious for another
+encounter. I was but a boy, and between the two men they might carry "too
+many guns" for me.
+<P>
+I looked around for some immediate means of escape. As
+I have said, the office was located on the side street. Directly in front
+of the desk was a large window, opened to let in the fresh morning air. For
+me to think was to act. In less than a minute I was seated on the desk with
+my legs dangling over the window sill.
+<P>
+"Aaron Woodward!" repeated Chris Holtzmann, in evident
+surprise.
+<P>
+"Yes, sir, and he says he must see you at once."
+<P>
+"Did you hear that?" called out Holtzmann to me.
+<P>
+"Yes, I did," I returned as coolly as I could.
+<P>
+"Did you expect him?"
+<P>
+"No."
+<P>
+"Humph!"
+<P>
+Holtzmann made a movement as if to step into view, and
+I prepared to vanish from the scene. But he changed his mind and walked from
+the office.
+<P>
+I was in a quandary. To remain would place me in great
+peril, yet I was anxious to know the result of the meeting between the two
+men. They were the prime movers in my father's downfall, and nothing must
+be left undone to bring them to justice.
+<P>
+I resolved to remain, even if it were at the peril of
+my life. I was not an over-brave boy, but the thought of my father languishing
+in prison because of these men's misdeeds, nerved me to stay.
+<P>
+The closet door was still open, and that gave me a sudden
+idea.
+<P>
+As I jumped from the desk another idea struck me, and
+without any hesitation I scattered the papers on the floor and upset the
+ink-well.
+<P>
+Then I squeezed myself into the closet, crouching down
+into one corner, behind several canes and umbrellas.
+<P>
+I was not an instant too soon, for hardly had I settled
+myself than the door opened, and Chris Holtzmann reentered, followed by Mr.
+Aaron Woodward.
+<P>
+Both men were highly excited, and both uttered an exclamation
+when they saw the room was empty.
+<P>
+"He's gone!" cried Holtzmann.
+<P>
+"Gone?" repeated the merchant. "Get out, Holtzmann! He
+was never here."
+<P>
+"I say he was, less than two minutes ago."
+<P>
+"Well, where is he now?"
+<P>
+"I don't know. Ha! I see it! He has jumped through the
+windows. See how he has upset the ink and scattered the papers. It's as clear
+as day."
+<P>
+"Can you see anything of him outside?"
+<P>
+Chris Holtzmann leaned out of the window.
+<P>
+"No; he's up and around the corner long ago."
+<P>
+"We must catch the rascal," went on Mr. Woodward, in a
+high voice. "He knows too much; he will ruin us both."
+<P>
+"Ruin us both?" sneered the proprietor of the Palace of
+Pleasure. "I don't see how he can ruin me."
+<P>
+"You're in it just as deep as I am&#151; just as deep."
+<P>
+"Not a bit of it," returned Holtzmann, with spirit. "You
+are the only one who profited by the whole transaction, and you are the one
+to take the blame."
+<P>
+"See here, Chris, you're not going back on me in this
+way," exclaimed the merchant, in a tone of reproach.
+<P>
+"I'm not going back on you at all, Woody. But you can't
+use me as you used John Stumpy. It won't go down."
+<P>
+"Now don't get excited, Chris."
+<P>
+"I'm not excited. But I know a thing or two just as well
+as you do. If there is any exposure to take place, you must stand the brunt
+of it. You were a fool to let the boy get ahead of you."
+<P>
+"I didn't; it was Stumpy. He let the boy get hold of Nick
+Weaver's statement, and that started the thing. Then the boy stole some of
+my papers that were in my desk, and how much information he has now I don't
+know."
+<P>
+"All your own fault," responded Holtzmann, coolly. "Why
+don't you destroy all the evidence on hand?"
+<P>
+"Do you do that?" asked Mr. Woodward, furiously.
+<P>
+"I do when I think it isn't going to do me any more good,"
+replied Holtzmann, evasively.
+<P>
+"Have you destroyed all the evidence in this matter?"
+<P>
+Holtzmann closed one eye. "I'm not so green as you take
+me to be," he replied impressively. "All my evidence against you is locked
+up in my safe."
+<P>
+"You intend to use it against me?" said the merchant.
+<P>
+"Only if it becomes necessary."
+<P>
+"And yet you pretend to be a friend of mine."
+<P>
+"I was until you cheated me out of my fair share of the
+spoils. But I am satisfied, and willing to let the whole matter rest."
+<P>
+"What will you take for the papers you hold?"
+<P>
+"Wouldn't sell them at any price. I'm not running my head
+into any trap."
+<P>
+"It will be all right."
+<P>
+"Maybe it will, but I'll run no risk," He paused a moment.
+"I'll tell you what I will do. Give me a thousand dollars and I'll let you
+see me burn them up.
+<P>
+I was intensely surprised at this proposition, more so,
+I believe, than was Mr. Woodward.
+<P>
+"A thousand dollars!" he exclaimed. "Chris, you're crazy."
+<P>
+"No, indeed. I know a thing or two. What do you suppose
+the Strongs would pay for them?"
+<P>
+"You don't mean to say you would play me false?" ejaculated
+the merchant, hoarsely.
+<P>
+"I mean to say I'd do anything to save myself if you got
+us into a hole. As far as I can see, you have allowed this boy to get the
+best of you at every turn."
+<P>
+"Humph! You needn't talk. You let him walk right into
+your confidence the first thing."
+<P>
+"Only when he told me all about your affairs."
+<P>
+"Well, let that drop. Can't you let me have the papers
+cheaper?"
+<P>
+"I said I wouldn't let you have the papers at all. I'll
+burn them up."
+<P>
+"Will you let me see them?"
+<P>
+Chris Holtzmann's brow contracted.
+<P>
+"What for?"
+<P>
+"Oh, I only want to make sure of what you've got.
+<P>
+"Will you pay the price?"
+<P>
+"Make them cheaper."
+<P>
+"No."
+<P>
+"I'll take them."
+<P>
+"You mean have them burnt up."
+<P>
+"Yes. But I must examine them first."
+<P>
+"I'm willing. And I must have my check before they go
+into the fire."
+<P>
+"You are very suspicious, Chris, very suspicious."
+<P>
+"No more so than you, Woody. I wasn't born yesterday."
+<P>
+"Well, let's have the papers and I'll write out the check.
+But it must be understood that you give no more information to the boy."
+<P>
+"Give him information!" cried Holtzmann. "Let him show
+his face here again and I'll break every bone in his body," he added grimly.
+<P>
+This was certainly an interesting bit of news. I made
+up my mind that to be seen would render matters decidedly warm for me.
+<P>
+But I was even more interested over the fact that the
+two men intended to burn up part of the evidence that might clear my father's
+name. Such a thing must not happen. I must use every means in my power to
+prevent it.
+<P>
+Yet what was to be done? If the documents were produced
+at once, how could I save them from destruction?
+<P>
+A bold dash for them seemed the only way. Once snatched
+from Holtzmann's or Aaron Woodward's hands, and escape through the window
+or the door would be difficult, but not impossible.
+<P>
+Yet while I was revolving these thoughts over in my mind
+the same thing evidently suggested itself to the proprietor of the Palace
+of Pleasure.
+<P>
+"Wait till I lock the door," he said. "We don't want to
+be interrupted."
+<P>
+"No indeed," returned Mr. Woodward; "interruptions don't
+pay."
+<P>
+"And I'll close the window, too," went on Holtzmann; "it's
+cool enough without having it open."
+<P>
+"So it is."
+<P>
+So the window and the door were both closed and fastened.
+I was chagrined, but could do nothing.
+<P>
+A moment later I heard Chris Holtzmann at his safe, and
+then the rattle of something on his desk.
+<P>
+"The papers are in this tin box," he said. "I placed them
+there over six months ago."
+<P>
+He opened the box, and I heard a rustling of documents.
+<P>
+"Why&#151; why&#151; what does this mean!" he ejaculated. "They
+are not here!"
+<P>
+"What!" cried Mr. Aaron Woodward, aghast.
+<P>
+"The papers are not here!" Holtzmann hurried over to his
+safe and began a hasty search. "As sure as you're born, Woody, they have
+been stolen!"
+<P>
+"It's that boy," exclaimed the merchant. "He's a wizard
+of a sly one. He has stolen them, and we are lost!"
+<h3>CHAPTER XXIX</h3>
+<h4>THE PRECIOUS PAPERS</h4>
+<P>
+I was not as much surprised over
+the situation as were the two men. I could put two and two together as quickly
+as any one, and I knew exactly where the papers were to be found.
+<P>
+Sammy Simpson, of 28 Hallock Street, was the thief. He
+had intimated that he had evidence against Chris Holtzmann, and these papers
+were that evidence.
+<P>
+This being so, there was no further use for my remaining
+in my cramped position in the closet, and I longed for a chance for escape.
+It was not long in coming.
+<P>
+"I don't see how that boy managed it," said Holtzmann.
+"He was alone only a few minutes."
+<P>
+"Never mind. He's as smart as a steel trap. Was the safe
+door open?"
+<P>
+"Yes. My clerk left it open. He is a new one and rather
+careless. What's to be done?"
+<P>
+"I'm going after the rascal," cried Aaron Woodward.
+<P>
+"You'd have a fine time finding him here in Chicago."
+<P>
+"I must find him. Most likely when he discovers how valuable
+the papers are he'll be off at once for home with them. I can intercept him
+at the depot."
+<P>
+"That's an idea, if you can locate the right depot."
+<P>
+"I'll be off at once," went on Mr. Woodward.
+<P>
+"I'll go with you," returned Chris Holtzmann, and three
+minutes later the two men quitted the office, locking the door after them.
+<P>
+I waited several minutes to make sure they were not returning,
+and then emerged from my hiding-place.
+<P>
+I was stiff in every joint and nearly stifled from the
+hot air in the closet. But at present I gave these personal matters scant
+attention, my mind being bent upon escape.
+<P>
+Even if the door had been unlocked, I would not have chosen
+it as a means of egress. It led into the main hall of the Palace of Pleasure,
+and here I might meet some one to bar my escape.
+<P>
+The window was close at hand, and I threw it open. The
+noise I made did not frighten me, for in the main hall a loud orchestra was
+drowning out every other sound.
+<P>
+I looked out and saw a number of people walking up and
+down the street. No one appeared to be watching me, and waiting a favorable
+opportunity, I slid out of the window to the sidewalk below.
+<P>
+With my ever present handbag beside me I hurried down
+the side street as fast as my feet would carry me. The neighborhood of the
+Palace of Pleasure was dangerous for me, and I wished to get away from it
+as quickly as possible.
+<P>
+After travelling several blocks I slackened my pace and
+dropped into a rapid walk. Coming to a fruit-stand, I invested in a couple
+of bananas, and then asked its proprietor where Hallock Street was.
+<P>
+"Sure an' it's the first street beyant the cable road,"
+was the reply.
+<P>
+"And where is the cable road?" I queried.
+<P>
+"Two squares that way, sor," and the woman pointed it
+out.
+<P>
+I thanked her and hurried on. When I reached the street,
+I found the numbers ran in the three hundreds, and I had quite a walk to
+the southward to reach No. 28.
+<P>
+At length I stood in front of the house. It was a
+common-looking affair, and the vicinity was not one to be chosen by fastidious
+people. The street, sidewalks, and doorways all looked dirty and neglected.
+I concluded that since being discharged Sammy Simpson had come down in the
+world.
+<P>
+"Does Mr. Simpson live here?" I asked of a slip of a girl
+who sat on the stoop, nursing a ragged doll.
+<P>
+"Yes, sir; on the third floor in the front," she replied.
+<P>
+I climbed up the creaky stairs two flights, and rapped
+on the door.
+<P>
+"Come," said a voice, and I entered. The room was the
+barest kind of a kitchen. By the open window sat a thin, pale woman, holding
+a child.
+<P>
+"Does Mr. Samuel Simpson live here?" I asked.
+<P>
+"Yes, sir, but he's not in now," she returned. "Can I
+do anything for you?"
+<P>
+"I guess not."
+<P>
+"I hope&#151; I hope there is nothing wrong," she went on
+falteringly.
+<P>
+"Wrong?" I queried. I did not quite understand her.
+<P>
+"Yes, sir."
+<P>
+"Not exactly. What makes you think so?"
+<P>
+"Because he drinks so," she replied.
+<P>
+"I wish to get some information from him; that is all,"
+I returned.
+<P>
+As I concluded a heavy step sounded in the hall, and an
+instant later Sammy Simpson appeared. He had evidently been imbibing freely,
+for his voice was thick and his sentences muddled.
+<P>
+"Hello!" he cried. "You here already, eh! What brought
+you? Want to find out all about Chris Holtzmann?"
+<P>
+"Yes."
+<P>
+"Thought so. Saw it in your eye. Yes, sir, your optic
+betrayed you. Sit down. Mag, give Mr. What's-his-name a chair. I'll sit down
+myself." And he sank heavily down on a low bench, threw one leg over the
+other, and clasped his hands on his knee.
+<P>
+"I want to see those documents you took from Mr. Holtzmann's
+safe," I began boldly.
+<P>
+He started slightly and stared at me.
+<P>
+"Who said I took any document out of his safe?"
+<P>
+"Didn't you say so? I mean the ones relating to Holtzmann's
+affairs in Brooklyn."
+<P>
+"Well, yes, I did."
+<P>
+"I want to see them."
+<P>
+"Again I ask, what is there in it?" he exclaimed dramatically.
+<P>
+"If they really prove of value to me, I will pay you well
+for all your trouble," I replied.
+<P>
+"Is that straight?" he asked thickly.
+<P>
+"It is," I replied, and, I may as well add, I was thoroughly
+disgusted with the man.
+<P>
+"Then I'm yours truly, and no mistake. Excuse me till
+I get them."
+<P>
+Be rose unsteadily and left the room. Hardly had he gone
+before his wife hurried to my side.
+<P>
+"Oh, sir, I hope you are not getting him into trouble?"
+she cried. "He is a good man when he is sober; indeed he is,"
+<P>
+"I am not going to harm him, madam. A great wrong has
+been done, and I only want your husband to assist me in righting it. He has
+papers that can do it."
+<P>
+"You are telling me the truth?" she questioned earnestly.
+<P>
+"Yes, ma'am."
+<P>
+"I think I can trust you," she said slowly. "You look
+honest. And these papers&#151; ought you to have them?"
+<P>
+"Yes. If your husband does not give them up, he will certainly
+get into great trouble."
+<P>
+"You are young, and you don't look as if you would lie.
+If Sam has the papers, he shall give them to you. He's coming now."
+<P>
+"Here's all the evidence in the case," said Sammy Simpson,
+on returning. He held a thick and long envelope. "What's the value to you?"
+<P>
+"I can tell better after I have examined them," I returned.
+<P>
+"Will you give them back if I let you see them?"
+<P>
+"Yes."
+<P>
+He handed the precious papers to me and then sat down.
+<P>
+Oh, how eagerly I grasped the envelope! How much of importance
+it might contain for me!
+<P>
+There were three letters and four legal papers. Like Nicholas
+Weaver's statement, all were badly written, and I had a hard job to decipher
+even a portion of the manuscript.
+<P>
+Yet I made out enough to learn that Aaron Woodward was
+the forger of the notes and checks that had sent my father to prison, and
+that the death of a relative in Chicago was only a pretence. The work had
+been done in Brooklyn through that branch of Holland &amp; Mack's establishment.
+Chris Holtzmann had helped in the scheme, and John Stumpy had presented one
+of the checks, for which service he had received six hundred dollars. This
+much was clear to me. But two other points still remained dark.
+<P>
+One was of a certain Ferguson connected with the scheme,
+who seemed to be intimate with my father. He was probably the man my father
+had mentioned when we had visited him at the prison. His connection with
+the affair was far from clear.
+<P>
+The other dark point in the case was concerning Agatha
+Mitts, of 648 Vannack Avenue, Brooklyn. She was a boarding-mistress, and
+the three or four men had stopped at her house. But how much she knew of
+their doings I could not tell.
+<P>
+"Well, what do you think?" muttered Sammy Simpson. "Mighty
+important, I'll be bound."
+<P>
+"Not so very important," I returned, as coolly as I could.
+"They will be if I can get hold of other papers to use with them."
+<P>
+"Exactly, sir; just as I always said. Well, you can get
+them easily enough, no doubt."
+<P>
+"I don't know about that," I said doubtfully.
+<P>
+"No trouble at all. Come, what will you give?"
+<P>
+"Five dollars."
+<P>
+"Ha! ha! They're worth a million." He blinked hard at
+me. "Say, you're a friend of mine, a good boy. Meg, shall I give them to
+him?"
+<P>
+"You ought to do what's right, Sam," replied his wife,
+severely.
+<P>
+"So I ought. You're a good woman; big improvement on a
+chap like me. Say, young man, give my lady ten dollars, keep the papers,
+and clear out. I'm drunk, and when Sammy Simpson's drunk he's a fool."
+<P>
+I handed over the money without a word. Perhaps I was
+taking advantage of the man's present state, but I considered I was doing
+things for the best.
+<P>
+A minute later, with the precious papers in my pocket,
+I left.
+<h3>CHAPTER XXX</h3>
+<h4>THE TRAIN FOR NEW YORK</h4>
+<P>
+Down in the street I hesitated as
+to where to go next. I felt that the case on hand was getting too complicated
+for me, and that I needed assistance.
+<P>
+I did not relish calling on the police for help. They
+were probably on the watch for me, and even if not, they would deem me only
+a boy, and give me scant attention.
+<P>
+My mind reverted to the adventure earlier in the day,
+and I remembered Mr. Harrison's kind offer. I had done his little daughter
+a good turn, and I was positive the gentleman would assist me to the best
+of his ability.
+<P>
+I decided to call on him at once. I had his address still
+in my pocket, and though I was quite tired, I hurried along at a rapid rate.
+<P>
+On the way I revolved in my mind all that had occurred
+within the past two hours, and by the time I reached Mr. Harrison's place
+I had the matter in such shape that I could tell a clear, straightforward
+story.
+<P>
+I found the gentleman in, and pleased at my return.
+<P>
+"I was afraid you had gotten into more difficulties,"
+he explained, with a smile.
+<P>
+"So I did but I got out of them again," I replied.
+<P>
+Sitting down, I gave him the particulars of my visit to
+Chris Holtzmann and to Sammy Simpson, and handed over the documents for
+inspection. Mr. Harrison was deeply interested, and examined the papers with
+great care. It took him nearly an hour to do so, and then he plied me with
+numerous questions.
+<P>
+"Do you know what my advice is?" he asked, at length.
+<P>
+"No, sir."
+<P>
+"I advise you to have both Holtzmann and Woodward arrested
+at once. They are thorough rascals, and your father is the innocent victim
+of their cupidity."
+<P>
+"But how can I do that? No one knows me here in Chicago."
+<P>
+"Hold up, you make a mistake. I know you."
+<P>
+"Yes, but you don't know anything about me," I began.
+<P>
+"I know you to be a brave fellow, and brave people are
+generally honest. Besides, your face speaks for itself."
+<P>
+"You are very kind."
+<P>
+"I have not forgotten the debt I owe you, and whatever
+I do for you will never fully repay it."
+<P>
+"And you advise me&#151;"
+<P>
+"To put the case in the hands of the police without delay.
+Come, I will go with you. Perhaps this Holtzmann may be frightened into a
+confession."
+<P>
+"I trust so. It will save a good deal of trouble."
+<P>
+"Woodward can be taken into custody as soon as the necessary
+papers are made out," concluded. Mr. Harrison.
+<P>
+An instant later we were on the way. I wondered what had
+become of John Stumpy. It was strange that he had not turned up at the Palace
+of Pleasure. Perhaps Mr. Aaron Woodward had intercepted him and either scared
+or bought him off.
+<P>
+The fellow held much evidence that I wished to obtain,
+for every letter or paper against Mr. Woodward would make my father's case
+so much stronger, and I determined with all my heart that when once brought
+to trial there should be no failure to punish the guilty, so that the innocent
+might be acquitted.
+<P>
+At the police station we found the sergeant in charge.
+Mr. Harrison was well known in the locality, and his presence gained at once
+for us a private audience.
+<P>
+The officer of the law gave the case his closest attention,
+and asked me even more questions than had been put to me before.
+<P>
+"I remember reading of this affair in the court records,"
+he said. "Judge Fowler and I were saying what a peculiar case it was. Chris
+Holtzmann claims to keep a first-class resort, and I would hardly dare to
+proceed against him were it not for these papers, and you, Mr. Harrison."
+<P>
+"You will arrest him at once?" questioned the gentleman.
+<P>
+"If you say so."
+<P>
+"I do, most assuredly."
+<P>
+"You are interested in the case?" queried the sergeant,
+as he prepared to leave.
+<P>
+"Only on this young man's account. He saved my little
+daughter from a horrible death this morning."
+<P>
+"Indeed? How so?"
+<P>
+"There was a mad bull broke into my back garden from the
+street, and was about to gore her, when this young man, who had been driven
+into the garden in the first place, came between and drove the bull out."
+<P>
+"Oh, I heard of that bull."
+<P>
+"What became of him?" I put in curiously.
+<P>
+"He was killed by a couple of officers on the next block.
+He was nearly dead before they shot him, having received a terrible cut between
+the eyes."
+<P>
+"Given by this young man," explained Mr. Harrison.
+<P>
+"You don't mean it!" cried the officer, in admiration.
+"Phew! but you must be strong!"
+<P>
+"It was more by good luck than strength," I returned modestly.
+<P>
+"Nonsense!" said Mr. Harrison. "My wife witnessed the
+whole occurrence, and she says it was pure bravery."
+<P>
+Five minutes later a cab was called, and we all got in.
+I was not sorry to ride, for my long tramp from one place to another on the
+stone pavement had made me footsore. I did not mind walking, but the Darbyville
+roads were softer than those of Chicago.
+<P>
+It did not take long to reach the Palace of Pleasure.
+<P>
+"Just wait in the cab for a minute or two," said the sergeant
+to me. "If he sees you first, he may make a scene."
+<P>
+"Most likely he's gone out," I returned.
+<P>
+The sergeant and Mr. Harrison left the carriage and entered
+the building.
+<P>
+I awaited their return impatiently. Would they get their
+man? And would Mr. Aaron Woodward be along?
+<P>
+Five&#151; ten minutes dragged slowly by. Then the two returned.
+<P>
+"He's not in the place, and no one knows where he has
+gone," said the officer.
+<P>
+"He can't be far off," I replied. "No doubt he and Mr.
+Woodward have gone off to look for me."
+<P>
+"And where?" put in Mr. Harrison. I thought a moment.
+<P>
+"The depot!" I exclaimed. "He spoke about looking for
+me there."
+<P>
+"Then we'll be off at once," returned the sergeant.
+<P>
+As he spoke, a familiar figure came shambling around the
+corner. It was Sammy Simpson.
+<P>
+"Hello, you!" he cried, on catching sight of me. "I want
+those papers back."
+<P>
+"Why do you want them back?" I asked.
+<P>
+"You didn't pay the value of 'em, didn't pay enough,"
+he hiccoughed.
+<P>
+"I paid all I agreed to."
+<P>
+"Can't say anything about that. But 'tain't enough." He
+glared at me. "Holtzmann said he'd pay me a hundred dollars. Yes, sir, ten
+times as much as you."
+<P>
+"When de you see Holtzmann?" I cried, in great interest.
+<P>
+"Saw him about half an hour ago. He came to see me&#151; came
+to see Sammy Simpson&#151; climbed the stairs to my abode. Wanted the papers&#151; said
+I must have 'em. Went wild with rage when I let slip you had 'em. So did
+the other gent."
+<P>
+"Who? Mr. Woodward?"
+<P>
+"That's the identical name. Yes, sir&#151; the correct handle.
+And they wanted the papers. Offered a hundred dollars for 'em. Think of it.
+Here's the ten dollars&#151; give 'em back."
+<P>
+Had Sammy Simpson been sober he would not have made such
+a simple proposition.
+<P>
+"No, sir," I replied decidedly. "A bargain's a bargain.
+I've got the papers, and I intend to keep them."
+<P>
+"No, you don't."
+<P>
+"What's that?" broke in the sergeant of police.
+<P>
+"I want those papers."
+<P>
+"Do you know who I am?"
+<P>
+"No, and don't care."
+<P>
+"I am sergeant of police, and I want you to behave yourself,
+or I'll run you in," was the decided reply.
+<P>
+At the mention of an officer Sammy Simpson grew pale.
+<P>
+"No, no, don't do that. I've never been arrested in my
+life."
+<P>
+"The papers are in the hands of the proper parties," went
+on the sergeant.
+<P>
+"Then I can't have 'em back?"
+<P>
+"No; and the less you have to do with the whole matter,
+the better off you'll be. Where has Holtzmann gone?"
+<P>
+"To Brooklyn."
+<P>
+I was astonished. To Brooklyn, and so soon!
+<P>
+"You are sure?" I queried.
+<P>
+"Yes; he and the other gent intended to take the first
+train."
+<P>
+Here was indeed news. This sudden and unexpected departure
+must portend something of importance.
+<P>
+"We must catch them!" I exclaimed.
+<P>
+"Do you know anything about the trains?" asked Mr. Harrison.
+<P>
+"No."
+<P>
+"Jump in, and we'll be off to the depot," said the sergeant.
+<P>
+In an instant we had started, leaving Sammy Simpson standing
+in the middle of the pavement too astonished to speak. It was the last I
+ever saw of the man.
+<P>
+We made the driver urge his horse at the top of his speed.
+I calculated that the pair would take the same line that had brought me to
+Chicago.
+<P>
+I was not mistaken; for when we reached the depot a few
+questions put by the sergeant revealed the fact that the two men had purchased
+tickets for New York but a minute before.
+<P>
+"And when does the train leave?" I asked.
+<P>
+"Her time's up now."
+<P>
+At that instant a bell rang.
+<P>
+"There's the bell."
+<P>
+"We must catch her," I cried, and ran though the gate
+and on to the platform.
+<P>
+But the train was already moving. I tried to catch her,
+but failed; and a minute later the cars rolled out of sight.
+<P>
+Mr. Aaron Woodward and Chris Holtzmann had escaped me.
+<P>
+What was to be done next?
+<h3>CHAPTER XXXI</h3>
+<h4>IN THE METROPOLIS</h4>
+<P>
+I was thoroughly chagrined when I
+stood on the platform and saw the train roll away. Now that I had Mr. Harrison
+and the sergeant of police with me I had fondly hoped to capture the two
+men, even if it was at the last minute.
+<P>
+But now that chance was gone, and as I turned back to
+my two companions I felt utterly nonplussed.
+<P>
+One thing was perfectly clear in my mind. The two men
+had gone to Brooklyn to see Mrs. Agatha Mitts. No doubt they thought that
+now I had the papers Sammy Simpson had stolen in my possession I would follow
+up the train of evidence by calling on the woman&#151; a thing I most likely would
+have done. They intended to head me off, and by this means break down my
+case against them at its last stage.
+<P>
+Yet though I was disappointed I was not disheartened.
+I was fighting for honor and intended to keep on until not a single thing
+remained to do. My evidence against Woodward and Holtzmann was gradually
+accumulating, and sooner or later it must bring them to the bar of justice.
+<P>
+"Well, they're gone," I exclaimed, as I joined the others.
+"That is, if they were on that train."
+<P>
+"We'll ask the gateman and make sure," said the sergeant.
+<P>
+This was done, and we soon learned that beyond a doubt
+Mr. Woodward and Chris Holtzmann had been among the departed passengers.
+<P>
+"My work in Chicago is at an end," remarked the sergeant,
+as we stood in the waiting-room discussing the situation.
+<P>
+"And so is mine," I replied. "I've got the papers, and
+now the two men are gone, there is no use of my remaining."
+<P>
+"What do you intend to do?" asked Mr. Harrison.
+<P>
+"Follow them to Brooklyn."
+<P>
+"To Brooklyn? It's a good distance."
+<P>
+"I can't help it; I must go. As for the distance, it is
+not many miles from my home."
+<P>
+Mr. Harrison mused for a moment.
+<P>
+"I have an idea of going along with you," he said at length.
+<P>
+"Going along with me!" I repeated, astonished by his offer.
+<P>
+"Yes; I intended to take a trip to New York, on special
+business next week, but I can go to-day instead. You no doubt need help,
+and I want to give it to you."
+<P>
+"You are very kind," I replied.
+<P>
+"I would like to see you and your family get your rights,"
+he went on. "I wonder when the next train leaves."
+<P>
+"I'll find out at the ticket office," I replied.
+<P>
+I walked over to the box, and at the window learned that
+the next train would not start for two hours and a half.
+<P>
+"That will give me time to go home, pack my valise, and
+arrange my affairs," said Mr. Harrison. "Come, you can go with me, and we
+can dine together."
+<P>
+"Thank you," was my answer.
+<P>
+"And you, sergeant. I will be pleased to have you, too,"
+continued Mr. Harrison, turning to the officer.
+<P>
+"You're kind, Mr. Harrison, but duty calls me elsewhere.
+I'll have to return to the station. But you've forgotten one thing."
+<P>
+"What?"
+<P>
+"That you can telegraph to New York and have the two men
+arrested as soon as they arrive."
+<P>
+"That's so! What do you say, Strong?"
+<P>
+I thought for a moment. It would be the simplest way to
+do, but would it be the best?
+<P>
+"Don't you think we had better let them go ahead?" I returned.
+"We know exactly where they are going, and by following them up may gain
+some additional information."
+<P>
+"I don't know but what you are right," replied Mr. Harrison.
+<P>
+"Then, in that case, my duty here is at an end," said
+the sergeant.
+<P>
+"I'm very much obliged for the trouble you've taken. Are
+there any charges to pay?"
+<P>
+"None at all. Good day. Hope you will meet with success
+in the future."
+<P>
+"Thank you. If we do, I'll write you."
+<P>
+"Now we'll jump into a cab at once," said Mr. Harrison,
+when we were alone.
+<P>
+A minute later we were whirling along in the direction
+of his mansion.
+<P>
+"I hope you are not taking too much trouble on my account,"
+I observed.
+<P>
+"I don't consider it too much," he replied. "Even if I
+had no business of my own to call me to New York I would go along if I thought
+I would be of service to you. You saved my little girl's life, and that debt,
+as I have told you before, I can never repay you."
+<P>
+We soon reached Mr. Harrison's mansion. Of course Mrs.
+Harrison was surprised at her husband's sudden determination, but when the
+situation was explained to her, she urged him to do his best for me.
+<P>
+The dinner served was the most elegant I had ever eaten,
+and despite the excited state of mind I was in, I did ample justice to it.
+Little Millie was present, and during the progress of the meal we became
+great friends.
+<P>
+But all good things must come to an end, and an hour later,
+each with his handbag, we entered the cab and were off.
+<P>
+On the way we stopped at Mr. Harrison's office, where
+that gentleman left directions concerning things to be done during his absence.
+Evidently he was a thorough business man, and I could not help but wonder
+what he was worth when I saw him place several hundred dollars in bills in
+his pocketbook.
+<P>
+Arriving at the depot, we found we had just five minutes
+to spare. This Mr. Harrison spent in the purchase of a ticket for himself&#151; I
+had mine&#151; and in getting parlor-car seats for both of us.
+<P>
+It was a novelty to me to have such a soft chair to sit
+in, and I thoroughly enjoyed it.
+<P>
+As we rode along, my kind friend questioned me closely
+about myself, and I ended by giving him my entire history.
+<P>
+"You've had rather a hard row to hoe, and no mistake,"
+he said. "It is a dreadful thing to have one's family honor assailed. Many
+a man has broken down completely under it."
+<P>
+"It is so with my father," I replied. "He used to be as
+bright as any one, but now he doesn't have much hope of any kind left."
+<P>
+In the evening another surprise awaited me. Instead of
+remaining in the comfortable chair, Mr. Harrison bade me follow him to the
+sleeping-car, and I was assigned as soft a bed as I had ever occupied. I
+slept "like a top," resolved to get the full value of so elegant an
+accommodation. When I awoke, it was broad daylight.
+<P>
+I climbed down from my bed and made my toilet leisurely.
+When I had finished, Mr. Harrison appeared, and together we had breakfast,
+and, five hours later, dinner.
+<P>
+It was six o'clock in the evening when we rolled into
+the station at Jersey City, and alighted. I was a little stiff from the long
+ride, but not near as much so as I would have been had I travelled in the
+ordinary cars.
+<P>
+"We'll cross the ferry at once," said Mr. Harrison. "The
+sooner we get to New York, the better."
+<P>
+"And the sooner we get to Brooklyn, the better," I added.
+"Do you think it will be advisable for me to hunt up Mrs. Agatha Mitts to-night?"
+<P>
+"I think it would. Even if you don't call on her, you
+can find out about her and see how the land lies. We will find a hotel to
+stop at first."
+<P>
+We were soon in New York and on our way up Broadway. Opposite
+the post-office we found an elegant hotel, where Mr. Harrison hired a room
+for himself.
+<P>
+He insisted on my having supper with him. Then leaving
+our handbags in his room, we started for the Fulton Street ferry to Brooklyn.
+<P>
+It was now growing dark, and the streets were filled with
+people hurrying homeward. I tried to keep as close to Mr. Harrison as possible,
+but something in a window attracted my attention, and when I looked around
+he was gone.
+<P>
+I supposed he had gone on ahead and hurried to catch him.
+But in this I was mistaken, for in no direction could I catch sight of the
+gentleman.
+<P>
+Deeply concerned, I stood on the corner of a narrow street
+or alley, undecided what to do. Should I go on to Brooklyn or retrace my
+steps to the hotel?
+<P>
+I had about made up my mind to go on, when a disturbance
+down the alley attracted my attention.
+<P>
+Straining my eyes in the semi-darkness, I discovered several
+rough-looking young fellows in a group.
+<P>
+"Give it to him, Bandy; hit him over the head!" I heard
+one of them exclaim.
+<P>
+"Fair share of plunder, Mickey," cried another.
+<P>
+And then I saw a helpless young man in their midst, who
+was being beaten and no doubt robbed.
+<P>
+I did not give thought to the great risk I ran, but hurried
+at once to the scene.
+<P>
+"What are you doing here?" I asked.
+<P>
+"Help me! help me!" called out the young man, in a beseeching
+voice.
+<P>
+I stared at him in amazement. And no wonder. The young
+man was Duncan Woodward.
+<h3>CHAPTER XXXII</h3>
+<h4>A NIGHT AT THE HOTEL</h4>
+<P>
+"Duncan Woodward!" I exclaimed. "Is it possible?"
+<P>
+He gave me a quick look of wonder. "Roger Strong!" he
+gasped. Oh, save me, Roger! These rowdies want to kill me!"
+<P>
+Even as he spoke he received a cruel blow in the side.
+<P>
+"I'll help you all I can," I replied promptly.
+<P>
+I knew it would be a waste of words to try to argue with
+the gang of toughs, so I simply went at them in a physical way.
+<P>
+I hit out right and left with all my might, and as quickly
+as I could, repeated the blows.
+<P>
+The suddenness of my attack disconcerted the three footpads,
+and when Duncan recovered sufficiently to lend a hand, one of them took to
+his heels and disappeared up the alley.
+<P>
+The two remaining ones stood their ground, and called
+on their companions to come back and bring "Noxy an' de rest."
+<P>
+I received a blow in the shoulder that nearly threw me
+over on my back. But I straightened up, and in return gave my assailant a
+hard one in the nose that drew blood.
+<P>
+"Duncan, you clear out to the street," I whispered. "I'll
+come after."
+<P>
+The young man followed my advice, first, however, stopping
+to pick up several things he had dropped or that had been taken from him.
+<P>
+When he was twenty or thirty feet away I started after
+him. As I did so, I noticed he had left a large note-book lying on the ground.
+I took it up, and hurried on. For a moment more we were safe upon the street
+again, and the two toughs slunk away up the alley.
+<P>
+Then, for the first time, I noted something about Duncan
+that I thought shameful beyond words.
+<P>
+He had been drinking heavily. The smell of liquor was
+in his breath, and it was with difficulty that he kept from staggering.
+<P>
+"You're my best, friend," he mumbled. "My enemy and my
+friend."
+<P>
+"What are you doing in New York, Duncan?" I asked.
+<P>
+"Come on important business, Roger. Say, take me to the
+hotel, will you? That's a good fellow."
+<P>
+"Where are you staying?"
+<P>
+"Staying? Nowhere."
+<P>
+"Then why don't you take the train to Newville and go
+home?"
+<P>
+"Can't do that."
+<P>
+"Why not?"
+<P>
+"The old gent would kill me. He says I spend too much
+money. Well, maybe I do."
+<P>
+"You've bean drinking, Duncan."
+<P>
+"So I have, Roger. Take me to a hotel."
+<P>
+"Will you promise to go to bed and not to drink any more
+if I do?"
+<P>
+"Yes. I've had enough."
+<P>
+"Then brace up and come with me."
+<P>
+Not without a good deal of difficulty did I manage to
+make him walk several blocks to a good though not stylish hotel. Here I took
+him into the office and explained the situation to the clerk in charge, who
+promptly assigned us to a room on the third floor.
+<P>
+The charge was three dollars, which Duncan with some
+difficulty managed to pay; and then we took the elevator to the third floor.
+<P>
+The room was a good one, with a soft bed. No sooner did
+Duncan reach it than he sank down, and in five minutes he was fast asleep.
+<P>
+I was in a quandary as to what to do. I did not care to
+leave him in his present state, and at the same time I was anxious to find
+Mr. Harrison and visit Mrs. Agatha Mitts in Brooklyn.
+<P>
+I wondered if my kind friend from Chicago had gone on
+without me, until I suddenly remembered that the Brooklyn address was in
+my pocket, and that he probably did not remember the street and number.
+<P>
+This being the case, he had no doubt returned to the hotel
+and was awaiting me.
+<P>
+I looked at Duncan, and made up my mind that he would
+sleep several hours, if not longer, without awaking.
+<P>
+Making him as comfortable as possible on the bed, I left
+the room, locking the door behind me.
+<P>
+Down in the office I explained the situation to the clerk
+when I left the key, and he promised to attend to matters if anything unusual
+happened.
+<P>
+I was not very well acquainted with New York City, and
+in trying to find my way to the hotel at which Mr. Harrison was stopping,
+I nearly lost my way.
+<P>
+But several inquiries, made here and there, set me right,
+and at length I reached the large, open corridor.
+<P>
+As I was about to step into the office, a well-known voice
+hailed me.
+<P>
+"Well, here you are at last." Of course it was Mr. Harrison.
+<P>
+"Yes, sir."
+<P>
+"Did I lose you, or <I>vice versa?"</I> he went on.
+<P>
+"I don't know. I'm sure it wasn't intentional, anyway."
+<P>
+"Have you been over to Brooklyn?" he continued curiously.
+<P>
+"No, sir."
+<P>
+"I thought you had; it is so long since we parted."
+<P>
+"I've had quite an adventure in the meantime."
+<P>
+"Indeed? You didn't meet Chris Holtzmann or this Aaron
+Woodward, did you?"
+<P>
+"I met Mr. Woodward's son," I replied, and in a brief
+way I related my adventures. Mr. Harrison listened with deep interest.
+<P>
+"It is too bad that the son has started in such a wrong
+path," he said. "I trust it teaches him a lesson to let liquor alone. What
+do you intend to do now?"
+<P>
+"I suppose I had better go back and stay all night with
+him. It is now too late to go to Brooklyn."
+<P>
+"I think you are right. I can call for you at, say, eight
+o'clock in the morning."
+<P>
+This was agreed upon, and as it was then after nine o'clock,
+I hurried back to Duncan at once. I found him still sleeping, and I did not
+disturb him. There was a lounge in the room, and throwing off my coat, vest,
+and shoes, I made my bed upon this.
+<P>
+For once I found it difficult to sleep. It seemed to me
+that my adventures must soon come to an end. Was it the foreshadowing of
+coming events that disturbed me? I could not tell. I wondered how all were
+at home; my sister Kate, Uncle Enos, and the Widow Canby, and I prayed God
+that I might be permitted to bring good news to them.
+<P>
+About midnight I fell into a light doze. Half an hour
+later I awoke with a start. Some one was talking in the room. Sitting up,
+I listened intently. It was Duncan, muttering in his sleep.
+<P>
+"Lift the spring, Pultzer," he said in a whisper. "Hist!
+don't make so much noise, the old gent may hear you." He paused for a moment.
+"There wasn't any money. But I've got the papers, yes, I've got the papers,
+and when I find out their true value the old gent shall pay me to keep quiet."
+<P>
+I could not help but start at Duncan's words. Like a flash
+of lightning came the revelation to me. He had entered his father's library
+and taken the papers which Mr. Woodward had accused me of stealing.
+<P>
+It was as clear as day. It explained why Pultzer, accompanied
+by another, who must have been of the party, had been out so late the night
+of the robbery. They had helped Duncan in his nefarious work, hoping they
+would be rewarded by the finding of a sum of money. Evidently the Models
+were a bad set, and I was thoroughly glad Dick Blair had turned his back
+upon them.
+<P>
+I waited with bated breath for Duncan to continue his
+speaking, but was disappointed. He turned over on his side and dreamed on,
+without a word.
+<P>
+At length I fell asleep. When I awoke it was daylight.
+I jumped up and looked at Duncan. He was just stirring, and a moment later
+he opened his eyes.
+<P>
+"Where am I?" he asked, with a puzzled look at me.
+<P>
+"You're all right, Duncan," I replied. "Don't you remember?"
+<P>
+"Oh, yes, I do now. How my head hurts. Is there any water
+around?"
+<P>
+I went over to the faucet and drew him a glass. He sat
+up and gulped it down.
+<P>
+"Have we been here all night?"
+<P>
+"Yes."
+<P>
+"You saved me from those toughs that wanted to rob me
+last night?"
+<P>
+"Yes."
+<P>
+"I'm not dreaming?"
+<P>
+"No, you're not," I laughed. "I was just in the nick of
+time."
+<P>
+"I know it all. You saved me, brought me to this place,
+and put me to bed. Roger, you're a better fellow than I thought you were.
+You're a better fellow than I am."
+<P>
+"You ought to turn over a new leaf," I said.
+<P>
+"Don't preach, Roger."
+<P>
+"I'm not preaching. I'm only telling you something for
+your own good."
+<P>
+"I know it. I don't blame you. I've been doing wrong&#151; sowing
+my wild oats. But they're all gone now. Just let me get straightened out
+and I'll be a different fellow, see if I'm not."
+<P>
+"I hope so with all my heart. What brought you to New
+York?"
+<P>
+He started.
+<P>
+"I&#151; I came&#151; I don't care to tell," he stammered.
+<P>
+"Were you going to Brooklyn?" I questioned, struck by
+a sudden idea.
+<P>
+"Why, how did you know?" he exclaimed.
+<P>
+"You have certain papers," I continued.
+<P>
+"Yes, I&#151;" he felt in his pockets. "Why, where are they?"
+<P>
+"Are they in this?" I asked, suddenly remembering the
+note-book I had picked up, and producing it.
+<P>
+"Yes, yes, give them to me."
+<P>
+"I think I had better keep them," I replied decidedly.
+<h3>CHAPTER XXXIII</h3>
+<h4>IN BROOKLYN</h4>
+<P>
+I fully understood the value of the
+papers that were contained in the note-book. Mr. Aaron Woodward would not
+have persecuted me so closely had he not deemed them of great importance.
+<P>
+And when I told Duncan I would keep them, I meant what
+I said. It might not be right legally, but I was sure it was right morally,
+and that was enough to quiet my conscience.
+<P>
+"Better keep them?" repeated Duncan, as he sprang to his
+feet.
+<P>
+"Exactly."
+<P>
+"You have no right to do that."
+<P>
+"I don't know about that. I was arrested for having them,
+and what's the use of my having the name without the game?"
+<P>
+Duncan sank down on the edge of the bed again.
+<P>
+"If you had spoken to me like that yesterday, I'd have
+wanted to punch your head," he said. "But you're a good fellow, Roger, and
+I don't blame you for acting as you do. Do you know what the papers contain?"
+<P>
+"I think I do."
+<P>
+"They concern my father's affairs," he went on uneasily.
+<P>
+"And my father's as well," I added.
+<P>
+"Not so very much."
+<P>
+"I think so."
+<P>
+"Let me show you. Hand the papers over."
+<P>
+"Excuse me, Duncan, if I decline to do so. You, aided
+by Pultzer and others, stole them from your father's library, and then threw
+suspicion on me."
+<P>
+"I didn't throw suspicion on you. My father did that himself."
+<P>
+"You had nothing to do with that handkerchief?"
+<P>
+"I took the handkerchief by accident."
+<P>
+"Then I beg your pardon for having said so," I said heartily.
+<P>
+"Never mind, let that pass. I'll tell you what I'll do.
+Give me the papers and I will restore them to my father and tell him the
+truth."
+<P>
+"I must decline your offer."
+<P>
+"Why? Don't you believe I'll confess? If you don't I'll
+give you a written confession."
+<P>
+"No, it isn't that. I am going to keep the papers because
+they are valuable to me."
+<P>
+"What do you mean by valuable?" asked Duncan, his curiosity
+increasing.
+<P>
+"Just what I say."
+<P>
+"What will the old gent say when he hears of it?"
+<P>
+"I don't care what he says. He'll hear of a good deal
+more before long."
+<P>
+"How about the robbery at the Widow Canby's?"
+<P>
+"That will be straightened out, too."
+<P>
+There was a knock on the door, and, opening it, I was
+confronted by one of the servants.
+<P>
+"Mr. Strong here, sir?" he asked.
+<P>
+"That's my name."
+<P>
+"A gentleman below to see you, sir. Gave his name as Mr.
+Harrison."
+<P>
+"Tell him I will be down in a minute," I said.
+<P>
+"Now I'm ready to leave you," I went on to Duncan, when
+the servant had departed. "I advise you to take a good wash, get your breakfast,
+and take the first train home. Good-by."
+<P>
+"Yes, but, Roger&#151;"
+<P>
+"By doing that you may be doing your father a greater
+service than in any other way. You say you will turn over a new leaf, and
+I hope you will. If all goes as it should you will have a hard trial to stand
+before long. But do as I did when things went wrong in our family, bear up
+under it, and if you do what's right somebody is bound to respect you."
+<P>
+And, without waiting for a reply, I caught up my hat and
+hurried from the room.
+<P>
+I found Mr. Harrison waiting for me in the parlor.
+<P>
+"I thought I'd come over early," he explained. "I know
+young blood is impatient, and I half expected to find you gone."
+<P>
+"I didn't want to make a call before folks were up," I
+answered. "Besides, I have made quite an important discovery since we parted."
+<P>
+"Indeed."
+<P>
+"Yes. Come away from this place and I'll tell you. I don't
+want to meet Duncan Woodward again."
+<P>
+And as we walked away from the hotel I related the particulars
+about the note-book.
+<P>
+"You are gathering evidence by the wholesale," laughed
+Mr. Harrison. "You'll have more than enough to convict."
+<P>
+"I don't want to make a failure of it," I said firmly.
+"When I go to court I want a clear case from start to finish."
+<P>
+"Good! Strong, I admire your grit. Come in the restaurant,
+and while we have a bit of breakfast let us look over the papers. I declare,
+I was never before so interested in some one else's affairs."
+<P>
+And as we waited for our rolls, eggs, and coffee, we read
+the papers through carefully.
+<P>
+They gave much information, the most startling of which
+was that John Stumpy and Ferguson were one and the same person.
+<P>
+"That explains why Mr. Woodward made so many slips of
+the tongue when addressing him," I said.
+<P>
+"Here is another important thing," remarked Mr. Harrison;
+"a letter from this John Woodward stating that Mrs. Agatha Mitts knows of
+the forgeries. Now, if you can get this woman to testify against the two
+culprits, I think you will have a clear case."
+<P>
+"And that is just what I will force her to do," I said,
+with strong determination.
+<P>
+I could hardly wait to finish breakfast. Fortunately it
+did not take Mr. Harrison long to do so, and, five minutes later we were
+on our way to the ferry. The trip over the East River, near the big bridge,
+did not take long, and we soon stood on the opposite shore. Vannack Avenue
+was pretty well up town, and we took the elevated train to reach it.
+<P>
+"There is No. 648," said Mr. Harrison, pointing to a neat
+three-story brick building that stood in the middle of the block; "let us
+walk past first, and see if there is any name on the door."
+<P>
+We did so, and found a highly polished silver plate bearing
+the words:&#151;
+<P ALIGN=CENTER class=center>
+MRS. AGATHA MITTS <BR>
+<I>Boarding</I>
+<P>
+"Perhaps it would be a good plan to find out something
+about the woman before we call on her," suggested my companion, after we
+had passed the house.
+<P>
+"There is a drug store on the corner," I said. "We can
+stop in there. No doubt they'll think we are looking for board."
+<P>
+"An excellent idea."
+<P>
+We walked down to the drug store. On entering, Mr. Harrison
+ordered a couple of glasses of soda water and then called the proprietor
+aside.
+<P>
+"Can you tell me anything about the lady that keeps the
+boarding-house below here?" he asked.
+<P>
+"Which one?"
+<P>
+"Mrs. Agatha Mitts."
+<P>
+"I've heard it's a very good house," was the noncommittal
+reply.
+<P>
+"You know the lady?"
+<P>
+"She comes in here once in a while for drugs."
+<P>
+"May I ask what kind of a woman she is?"
+<P>
+"Well, she's good enough in her way, though rather eccentric.
+I understand she furnishes good board, however. She has kept the house for
+many years."
+<P>
+"Has she many boarders?"
+<P>
+"Eight or ten. She used to have more. But they were rather
+a lively set and hurt the reputation of the place."
+<P>
+Mr. Harrison paid for the soda, and a second later we
+quitted the place.
+<P>
+"Not much information gained there," said my Chicago friend,
+when we were once again on the street.
+<P>
+"One thing is certain," I replied. "She is the right party.
+It would never have done to have tackled the wrong person."
+<P>
+"I guess the best thing for us to do is to call on the
+woman without waiting further."
+<P>
+"So I think."
+<P>
+"She may be a very hard person to manage. Strong, you
+must be careful of what you say."
+<P>
+"I shall, Mr. Harrison," I replied. "But that woman must
+do what is right or go to prison."
+<P>
+"I agree with you."
+<P>
+Ascending the steps of the house, I rang the bell. A tidy
+Irish girl answered the summons.
+<P>
+"Is Mrs. Agatha Mitts in?" I asked.
+<P>
+"Yes, sir."
+<P>
+"We would like to see her."
+<P>
+"Will you please step into the parlor?" went on the girl,
+and we did so.
+<P>
+"Who shall I say it is?"
+<P>
+"Mr. Harrison," put in my Western friend.
+<P>
+"Yes, sir."
+<P>
+The girl disappeared. My heart beat strongly. It seemed
+to me as if life and death hung upon the meeting that was to follow.
+<h3>CHAPTER XXXIV</h3>
+<h4>MRS. AGATHA. MITTS</h4>
+<P>
+I could not help but wonder, as I
+sat in the parlor with my friend Mr. Harrison, waiting for the appearance
+of Mrs. Agatha Mitts, what kind of a person the keeper of the boarding-house
+would prove to be.
+<P>
+For some reason the name suggested to me a tall, gaunt
+female with sharp features; and I was taken by surprise when a short, dumpy
+woman, with a round face, came wobbling in and asked what was wanted.
+<P>
+"This is Mrs. Agatha Mitts?" asked Mr. Harrison, as he
+arose.
+<P>
+"Yes, sir. And you are Mr. Harrison, I suppose. I don't
+remember you."
+<P>
+"I didn't think you would," laughed my friend from Chicago.
+"I am from the West, and have never before been in Brooklyn."
+<P>
+"Yes? Then your business with me is&#151; ? Perhaps you desire
+board?" and she smiled; first at him and then at me.
+<P>
+"No; we do not wish board," was the quiet reply. "We come
+to see you on business."
+<P>
+"And what is it?"
+<P>
+"We would like to see you privately."
+<P>
+"Certainly. Pray take a seat. I will close the doors."
+<P>
+She shut the folding doors leading to the sitting room,
+and then the door to the hall.
+<P>
+"Now I am quite at your service," she said, and peered
+at us rather sharply.
+<P>
+There was an awkward pause for a moment, and then Mr.
+Harrison went on bluntly:&#151;
+<P>
+"Has Mr. Aaron Woodward or Chris Holtzmann been here since
+yesterday, madam?"
+<P>
+Mrs. Mitts started at the mention of the two names. Then
+she recovered herself.
+<P>
+"Whom did you say, sir?" she queried innocently.
+<P>
+Mr. Harrison repeated his question.
+<P>
+"Why, I really haven't heard of those two gentlemen in
+so long a time I've nearly forgotten them," she said sweetly.
+<P>
+"They weren't here yesterday?" I put in.
+<P>
+"No." And this time her tone was a trifle cold.
+<P>
+"Do you expect them to-day?" I went on.
+<P>
+"No, I don't." She paused a second. "Is that all you wish
+to know?"
+<P>
+"No, ma'am," I replied promptly. "There is a good deal
+more I wish to know."
+<P>
+"Who are you, if I may ask?"
+<P>
+"My name is Strong."
+<P>
+She looked puzzled for a moment.
+<P>
+"I don't recognize the name," she said, and then she suddenly
+turned pale.
+<P>
+"I am the son of Carson Strong, who was sent to prison
+for alleged forgery and the passing of worthless checks," I continued. "I
+suppose you remember the case."
+<P>
+"Har&#151; hardly," she faltered. "I&#151; I heard something of
+it, but not the particulars."
+<P>
+"That is strange, when you were so interested in it."
+<P>
+"I?" she repeated, in pretended surprise.
+<P>
+"Yes, madam," said Mr. Harrison. "You were very much
+interested."
+<P>
+"Who says so?"
+<P>
+"I say so," said I.
+<P>
+"You! You are only a boy."
+<P>
+"I suppose I am, but that doesn't make any difference.
+You know all about the great wrong that has been done, and&#151;"
+<P>
+"It is false! I know nothing!" she cried in anger.
+<P>
+"You know all, and we want you to tell as all you know
+before we leave this house."
+<P>
+Mrs. Agatha Mitts arose in a passion.
+<P>
+"I want you to get out of my house at once!" she ejaculated.
+"I won't stand your presence here another minute."
+<P>
+"Excuse me, madam; not so fast," said Mr. Harrison, calmly.
+"My young friend Strong is quite right in what he says."
+<P>
+"I don't care what you think about it," she snapped.
+<P>
+"Oh, yes, you do. Perhaps you don't know who I am," went
+on my Western friend, deliberately.
+<P>
+The sly insinuation had its effect. Evidently the woman
+had a swift vision of a detective in citizens' clothes before her mind's
+eye.
+<P>
+"You come in authority," she said faintly.
+<P>
+"We won't speak about that now," said Mr. Harrison. "All
+we want you to do is to make a complete confession of your knowledge of the
+affair."
+<P>
+"I haven't any knowledge."
+<P>
+"You have," I said. "You know everything. I have papers
+here belonging to Woodward, Holtzmann, and Ferguson to prove it. There is
+no use for you to deny it, and if you insist and make it necessary to call
+in the police&#151;"
+<P>
+"No, no! Please don't do that, I beg of you," she cried.
+<P>
+"Then will you do as I wish?"
+<P>
+"But my reputation? It will be gone forever," she moaned.
+<P>
+"It will be gone anyway, if you have to go to prison,"
+observed Mr. Harrison, sagely.
+<P>
+"And if I make a clean confession you will not prosecute
+me?" she asked eagerly.
+<P>
+"I'll promise you that," I said.
+<P>
+"You are not fooling me?"
+<P>
+"No, ma'am."
+<P>
+She sprang to her feet and paced the room several times.
+<P>
+"I'll do it," she cried. "They have never treated me right,
+and I do not care what becomes of them so long as I go clear. What do you
+wish me to do, gentlemen?"
+<P>
+I was nonplussed for an instant. Mr. Harrison helped me
+out.
+<P>
+"I will write out your confession and you can sign it,"
+he said. "Have you ink and paper handy?"
+<P>
+"Yes."
+<P>
+Mrs. Mitts brought forth the material, and we all sat
+down again.
+<P>
+"Remember to give us only the plain facts," I said.
+<P>
+"I will," she returned sharply.
+<P>
+In a rather roundabout way she made her confession, if
+it could be called such. It filled several sheets of paper, and it took over
+half an hour. It contained but little more than what my readers already know
+or suspect. She knew positively that Mr. Aaron Woodward was the forger of
+the checks, Holtzmann had presented them, and Ferguson had so altered the
+daily reports that my father had unwittingly made a false showing on his
+books. About Weaver she knew nothing.
+<P>
+When once explained the whole matter was as clear as day.
+<P>
+When he had finished the writing, Mr. Harrison read the
+paper out loud, and after some hesitation the woman signed it, and then we
+both witnessed it.
+<P>
+"I guess our business here is at an end," said my Western
+friend.
+<P>
+"I think so," I replied. "But one thing more, Mrs. Mitts,"
+I continued, turning to her. "If Mr. Woodward or Chris Holtzmann calls, I
+think you will find it advisable to keep this affair a secret."
+<P>
+"I will not be at home to them," she replied briefly.
+<P>
+"A good plan," said Mr. Harrison. "Now that you have done
+the right thing, the less you say about the matter the better for you."
+<P>
+A few minutes later, with the paper tucked safely in my
+pocket, we left the house. Mrs. Mitts watched us sharply from behind the
+half-closed blinds.
+<P>
+In half an hour we were down town and across the ferry
+once more.
+<P>
+"I suppose you wish to get home as soon as possible,"
+said Mr. Harrison, as we boarded a street-car to take us to his hotel.
+<P>
+"Yes, sir. My sister and the rest will be anxious to hear
+how I've made out, and besides I'm anxious to learn how things have gone
+since I have been away."
+<P>
+"I've no doubt of it."
+<P>
+"What do you intend to do?"
+<P>
+"I hardly know. I have some business, but I am quite
+interested in your case, and&#151;"
+<P>
+"Would you like to go along! You'll be heartily welcome,
+sir."
+<P>
+"Thank you, I will. I want to see how this drama ends,"
+said Mr. Harrison.
+<P>
+A little later I procured my valise, and we set out for
+Darbyville.
+<h3>CHAPTER XXXV</h3>
+<h4>THE WIDOW CANBY'S MONEY</h4>
+<P>
+I am sure my readers will well understand
+why my thoughts were busy as the train rolled on its way to Newville. I could
+hardly realize that I held the proofs of my father's innocence in my possession;
+and I was strongly tempted several times to ask my kind Western friend to
+pinch me to make sure that I was really awake, and was not merely dreaming
+my good fortune.
+<P>
+Mr. Harrison probably guessed what was passing in my mind,
+for he placed a kindly hand upon my shoulder, and said, with a smile:&#151;
+<P>
+"Does it seem almost too good to be true?"
+<P>
+"That's just it," I returned. "The events of the past
+week have so crowded on each other that I'm in a perfect whirl."
+<P>
+"You will have a little more excitement before it is over."
+<P>
+"I suppose so. But now that I know it is all right I shall
+not mind it. I wonder if I couldn't send my father the good news by telegraph?"
+<P>
+"You can easily enough. But don't you think you had better
+wait until all is settled? You might raise false hopes."
+<P>
+"No fear; Aaron Woodward is guilty beyond a doubt. But
+I will wait if you think best."
+<P>
+It was not long before the train rolled into Newville.
+On alighting Mr. Harrison insisted on hiring a cab, and in this we bowled
+swiftly on our way to Darbyville. As we passed out of the city and up on
+the country road I wondered how matters had progressed during my absence.
+Had the merchant returned home?
+<P>
+At Darbyville a crowd of men gazed at us with curious
+eyes. Among them was Parsons the constable and others who knew me.
+<P>
+"Hello, you back again?" shouted Parsons.
+<P>
+"Yes, indeed," I replied. "I suppose you didn't expect
+me so soon?"
+<P>
+"I'll allow as how I didn't expect you at all," he returned,
+with a grin.
+<P>
+"Well, you were mistaken. I'm back, and back to stay,"
+said I.
+<P>
+My heart beat high as we turned into the side road that
+led to the Widow Canby's house. I strained my eyes to catch sight of the
+first one who might appear. It was my Uncle Enos. He was doing a bit of mending
+on the front fence. As soon as he saw me he threw down his hammer, and ran
+toward us.
+<P>
+"Well, well, Roger, struck port again, have you? Glad
+you're back."
+<P>
+And he shook my right hand hard.
+<P>
+"My friend, Mr. Harrison, from Chicago," said I. "This
+is my uncle, Captain Enos Moss."
+<P>
+They had hardly finished hand-shaking, when Kate and the
+Widow Canby came out of the house.
+<P>
+"Oh, Roger, I'm so glad you're back!" cried Kate. And
+then she looked earnestly into my eyes. "Did you&#151; did, you&#151;"
+<P>
+"Yes, Kate, I've succeeded. Father's innocence can be
+proven."
+<P>
+"Oh, thank God!" cried my sister, and the tears of joy
+started from her eyes. I felt like crying, too, and soon, somehow, there
+was hardly a dry eye in the group.
+<P>
+"You must have had a hard time of it," sail the Widow
+Canby.
+<P>
+"My kind friend here helped me a good deal," I said.
+<P>
+Mr. Harrison was introduced to the others, and soon we
+were seated, on the piazza, and I was relating my experiences.
+<P>
+The interest of my listeners grew as I went on. They could
+hardly believe it possible that Mr. Aaron Woodward, with all his outward
+show of gentlemanliness, was such a thoroughly bad man. When I came to speak
+of John Stumpy, alias Ferguson, Kate burst out:&#151;
+<P>
+"I declare, I've almost forgotten. I've got good news,
+too. This very morning I went hunting again and picked up the paper that
+was lost. I was trying to read it when you drove up. Here it is."
+<P>
+And my sister handed over Nicholas Weaver's dying statement.
+<P>
+"It is hardly of use now," I said. "Still, it will make
+the evidence against Mr. Woodward so much stronger."
+<P>
+"I've discovered that this Nick Weaver was a chum of
+Woodward's," said Uncle Enos.
+<P>
+"A chum?"
+<P>
+"Yes. He came from Chicago."
+<P>
+"From Chicago!" I ejaculated.
+<P>
+"Exactly."
+<P>
+Meanwhile Mr. Harrison was examining the statement, which
+Kate had produced from her dress pocket.
+<P>
+"I see it all," he cried. "Nicholas Weaver was the man
+who helped Holtzmann concoct the scheme whereby a relative in Chicago was
+supposed to have died and willed Aaron Woodward all his money."
+<P>
+"I see. But why did he leave the statement?" I asked.
+<P>
+"Because, he says here, Woodward did not treat him right.
+This Ferguson or Stumpy was a friend to Weaver, and the paper was gotten
+up to bring Woodward to terms."
+<P>
+That explanation was clear enough, and I could easily
+understand why John Stumpy had come to Darbyville, and how it was the merchant
+had treated him with so much consideration.
+<P>
+"And there is another thing to tell you, Roger," put in
+the Widow Canby. "Something I know you will be greatly pleased to hear."
+<P>
+"What is it?" I asked, in considerable curiosity.
+<P>
+"I have evidence to show that this John Stumpy was the
+man who robbed me of my money. Of course I knew it was so when Kate and you
+said so, but outsiders now know it."
+<P>
+"And how?"
+<P>
+"Miles Nanson saw the man running from the house. He was
+hurrying to get a doctor for his wife, who was very sick, and he didn't stop
+to question the fellow."
+<P>
+"But why didn't he speak of it before?" I asked. "He might
+have saved us a deal of trouble."
+<P>
+"He never heard of the robbery until last night, his wife
+has been so sick. He can testify to seeing the man."
+<P>
+"I'm glad of that," I said. "But unfortunately, that doesn't
+restore the money."
+<P>
+"No, I suppose not. This Stumpy still has it."
+<P>
+"No; he claims to have lost it," I returned, and I related
+the particulars as I had overheard them in the boarding-house on the opposite
+side of the Pass River.
+<P>
+"I wish I could find it&#151; the money, I mean&#151; as I did the
+papers," put in Kate.
+<P>
+"Where did he jump over the fence?" I asked suddenly.
+<P>
+"Down by the crab-apple tree," said Uncle Enos.
+<P>
+"Have you looked there?" queried Mr. Harrison.
+<P>
+"No," said Kate; "you don't think&#151;" she began.
+<P>
+"There is nothing like looking," said my Western friend,
+slowly.
+<P>
+"I guess you're right," I replied, "and the sooner the
+better."
+<P>
+In a minute I was out of the house. Kate was close on
+my heels, and together we made our way to the orchard, followed by the others.
+<P>
+"Now, let me see," I went on. "If he went over the fence
+here he must have vaulted over. I'll try that, and note how the money might
+have dropped."
+<P>
+I placed my hands on the top rail and sprang up to vault
+over. As my head bent over, my eyes caught sight of an object lying in the
+hole of the fence post.
+<P>
+I picked it up. It was the Widow Canby's pocketbook.
+<h3>CHAPTER XXXVI</h3>
+<h4>"ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL"</h4>
+<P>
+Of course I was highly delighted
+with the success of my search, and as I brought forth the pocketbook all
+the others gave a cry of surprise.
+<P>
+"You've got it, Roger!" ejaculated my uncle. "You've got
+it, just as sure as guns is guns!"
+<P>
+"So I have," I replied, as coolly as I could, though I
+was at the top notch of excitement.
+<P>
+"Better examine it," put in Mr. Harrison, cautiously.
+"It may be empty."
+<P>
+"Empty!" cried Kate in dismay, and the word sent a chill
+through my own heart.
+<P>
+With nervous fingers I tore the pocketbook open. I suppose
+I ought to have given it to the widow, but I was too excited to think of
+what was just right and what was not.
+<P>
+"The money was in a piece of newspaper," said the Widow
+Canby. "I had&#151; ah, there it is!"
+<P>
+And sure enough, there it was&#151; nearly three hundred
+dollars&#151; safe and sound.
+<P>
+I almost felt like dancing a jig, and could not refrain
+from throwing up my hat, which I did in such a way that it caught in a limb
+of a tree, and forced me to climb up to recover it.
+<P>
+As I was about jumping to the ground I heard a buggy pass
+on the road. Looking down, I was surprised to see that it contained Mr. Aaron
+Woodward and Chris Holtzmann. On seeing the party on the ground below, the
+merchant stopped his horse and jumped out.
+<P>
+"How do you do, Mrs. Canby?" he said, as he came over
+to the fence without catching sight of me.
+<P>
+"Pretty well, Mr. Woodward," was the widow's reply.
+<P>
+"Have you heard anything of your money yet?" went on the
+merchant, with apparent concern.
+<P>
+"Oh, yes&#151;" and the widow hesitated.
+<P>
+My sister whispered something in her ear.
+<P>
+"It was just found," said Kate.
+<P>
+The merchant gave a start.
+<P>
+"You don't mean it!" he cried. "Where?"
+<P>
+"Down here by the fence."
+<P>
+"Who put it there?" asked Mr. Woodward, sharply.
+<P>
+"No one. It was dropped by John Stumpy."
+<P>
+"Humph! Perhaps so!" sneered the merchant.
+<P>
+"It's true," exclaimed Kate, stoutly.
+<P>
+"More likely by your brother Roger."
+<P>
+"Avast there!" cried Uncle Enos. "You're saying too much."
+<P>
+"I don't think so," replied Mr. Woodward, in deep sarcasm.
+"Of course you want to shield the boy all you can, but I 'm sure in my mind
+that he is guilty."
+<P>
+"And I'm positive in my own mind that I'm innocent," said
+I, and I jumped to the ground.
+<P>
+"Roger Strong!" he cried, stepping back in surprise; and
+I saw Chris Holtzmann give a start. "Where did you come from?"
+<P>
+"I came from&#151; up a tree," I returned lightly, and I may
+add that never before had I felt in such particularly good humor.
+<P>
+"Don't trifle with me," he cried in anger. "Answer my
+question."
+<P>
+"I will when I get ready."
+<P>
+"You refuse?"
+<P>
+"Oh, no. But I'm not compelled to answer, understand that,
+Mr. Aaron Woodward. I'll answer because I choose to do so."
+<P>
+"Never mind," he snapped. "Where have you been?"
+<P>
+"To Chicago&#151; as you know&#151; and to Brooklyn."
+<P>
+"To Brooklyn!" he cried, growing pale.
+<P>
+"Yes, sir, to see Mrs. Agatha Mitts."
+<P>
+"And did you see her?" he faltered.
+<P>
+"Yes, sir."
+<P>
+"And she&#151;" he began.
+<P>
+"What she said or did will be produced in court later
+on," put in Mr. Harrison.
+<P>
+"Eh?" the merchant wheeled around. "Who are you?"
+<P>
+"My name is James Harrison. I am from Chicago. I am this
+boy's friend, and I am here to see justice done."
+<P>
+"What do you mean?"
+<P>
+"I mean that you and your colleagues&#151; Chris Holtzmann
+there, John Stumpy, alias Ferguson, and the late Nicholas Weaver&#151; have foully
+wronged this boy's father."
+<P>
+"It's a lie!" cried Aaron Woodward, with a quivering lip.
+<P>
+"It's the truth," I said. "The plain truth, and I can
+prove every word of it."
+<P>
+"Prove it!"
+<P>
+"Yes, in every detail, Mr. Aaron Woodward. I have worked
+hard fighting for honor, but I have won. Soon my father shall be free, and
+for aught I know to the contrary, you will occupy his place in prison."
+<P>
+"I!" cried the merchant, in horror. "A likely thing!"
+<P>
+"We shall see," I said. "In the meantime be careful of
+what you say against me, or I will have you arrested before sundown."
+<P>
+Mr. Woodward gave me a look that was savageness itself.
+Apparently he was on the verge of giving way to a burst of temper. But he
+seemed to think better of it, and turning, he jumped into his buggy and drove
+away.
+<P>
+It was the last time I ever saw him. On the following
+day Mr. Harrison, Uncle Enos, and myself drove down to Newville and engaged
+a first-class lawyer to take up the case. This legal gentleman pushed matters
+so fast that on the following Monday all the papers necessary for Woodward's
+arrest were ready for execution.
+<P>
+The officers came to Darbyville late in the afternoon
+to secure their man. They were told that Mr. Woodward had gone to New York
+on business. They waited for him the remainder of the day and all of the
+next.
+<P>
+It was useless. The highly respected head merchant of
+Darbyville did not appear; and an examination showed that he had mortgaged
+his house and his business, and taken every cent of cash with him.
+<P>
+It was an open acknowledgment of his guilt, and Kate was
+for letting it go at that.
+<P>
+"It will do no good to have him locked up," she said.
+<P>
+"One thing is certain, sech a rascal ain't fit to be at
+liberty," put in my Uncle Enos.
+<P>
+"He may turn around and rob somebody else," added the
+Widow Canby.
+<P>
+"That's just it," I said; and determined to bring the
+man to justice, I set a detective on his track.
+<P>
+The search was successful, for in a week Aaron Woodward
+was caught in Boston, preparing to embark for Europe. He was brought back
+to Newville to await the action of the grand jury. But he never came to trial.
+In less than a week he was found in his cell one morning, dying. Rather than
+face the humiliation of going to jail he had taken his life. What became
+of Duncan I did not know for a long while until, through Mr. Harrison, I
+learned that he was in Chicago working for one of the railroads. He had the
+making of a good fellow in him, and I trust that he became one. Chris Holtzmann
+disappeared, and his Palace of Pleasure is a thing of the past. John Stumpy
+went to Texas, and I heard that Pultzer went with him.
+<P>
+It was not long before my father received his pardon and
+came home. I cannot express the joy that all of us experienced when he came
+forth from prison, not only a free man, but also bearing the proofs of his
+innocence. We were all there to greet him, and as my sister Kate rushed into
+his arms I felt that fighting for honor meant a good deal.
+<P>
+Five years have gone by. My father and I are now in business
+in Newville. We live in Darbyville, along with my uncle,&#151; who married the
+Widow Canby,&#151; and my sister Kate.
+<P>
+Holland &amp; Mack have recovered all that was stolen
+from them. They were profuse in their apologies to my father, and offered
+him a good situation, which he declined.
+<P>
+We are all happy&#151; especially Kate and I. During off hours
+we are all but inseparable. I like my work, and expect some day to be a leading
+merchant. The clouds that hung over the family honor have passed, and sunshine
+seems to have come to stay, and that being so I will bid my readers good-by.
+<h4>THE END</h4>
+<pre>
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