At that there arose new exclamations of wonder, as
well as of disbelief.
“Oh, come off, now,” remarked
Red, quite forgetting in his amazement the respect
supposed to be shown for an acting scout master, even
though in the private walks of life he might only
be a fellow playmate; “you can’t expect
us to swallow that, now, Elmer.”
“Do you mean about the woman’s
height, or her age?” asked the other, calmly.
“Why-er-both
I guess,” faltered Red, weakening as he saw the
positive front of the other.
“Stop and think, did you ever
see any other than a short, squatty woman among the
Italian laborers? And I reckon nobody else ever
did. They carry heavy burdens on their heads,
and people say that’s one reason they’re
always dumpy,” Elmer began.
“He’s right, fellows,”
broke out Landy; “why, I’ve seen a dago
woman carrying a mattress, a stove and some chairs
on her head all at the same time. Gee, looked
like a two-legged moving van:”
“But see here, you notice a
shelf with a few things on it, some hairpins among
the lot. It was built unusually low, so she
could reach it. And what’s this you see
here, fellows? A piece of broken looking glass
fastened to the wall. Notice how low down it is?
No man ever used that glass, you can depend on it;
and the woman who did was surely small, wasn’t
she now?”
“A regular sawed-off,” assented Lil Artha,
emphatically.
“Elmer’s sure proved his
point there, fellows,” declared Red Huggins,
grinning.
“But what makes you think the
woman is old, Elmer?” asked Landy, curiously.
“That’s so; how in the
wide world could you know such a thing without ever
seeing her?” demanded Toby.
“Nothing could be easier, fellows; see here!”
As Elmer spoke he reached out his
hand and took something off the low shelf.
Those in the room crowded around,
fairly wild to follow out the clever deduction of
their young leader.
“Why, it’s a comb,” cried one.
“Only an old broken comb,”
echoed another, with a shade of uncertainty in his
voice.
“What is there about that to
tell you, Elmer?” queried Red, staring first
at the article in question, and then at the smiling
scout master.
“I know,” burst out Matty just then.
“Tell us,” pleaded several.
“Yes, throw some light on the
dark mystery,” added Lil Artha, “because
to the untrained eye it’s all as gloomy as the
inside of my pocket. A comb, and how to tell
a woman’s age from that! Well, I own up
beat.”
“Why, it’s as easy as
falling off a log, or coming down in a smash when
you’re first learning how to fly,” Matty
began.
“Hey, don’t you drag me
into this thing,” spoke up Toby, whose many
experiments as a new beginner in the science of aviation
had usually ended in his enjoying a disastrous tumble.
“All you have to do is to examine
the comb,” Matty went on. “Then you’ll
find that it holds a few long hairs, and, fellows,
just see how gray they are, will you?”
“Well, what d’ye think
of that!” burst out Red. “And I guess
we’re a lot of chumps, fellows, not to have
seen through it before.”
“Would a woman be among anarchists,
Elmer?” demanded Toby.
“Oh, I don’t know,”
came the reply. “Perhaps so, though not
as a usual thing. But understand that I haven’t
said I agreed with you altogether, when you gave such
a hard name to these people.”
“Then you don’t count
’em as Black Hand kidnapers, who expect to raise
a bully good sum by holding our pard, Nat Scott, for
ransom?” demanded Red.
“I’ve seen nothing to
tell me that’s the way matters stand,”
Elmer commenced saying, “and several things
seem to say just the opposite. The presence of
the woman, and her having such an article as this precious
string of beads don’t seem to go along with such
a thing as a band of rascals.”
“Yes, yes, go on, Elmer,” several called
out.
“We haven’t found the
slightest sign of a bomb factory here, or even a book
teaching how to bring about a revolution. These
things make me believe that these three men and a
woman may not be such terribly hard cases after all.”
“But you believe they’ve
got our chum, and are holding him a prisoner, don’t
you, Elmer?” asked Matty.
“I do believe it,” Elmer
went on. “In fact I know it, because if
you look back of that empty box yonder, which they
use for a table, you’ll find a hat-Nat’s
hat, if I’m not mistaken.”
A rush was made for the box in question,
and there followed a confusion of tongues, as half
a dozen fellows tried to talk at once.
“You found a hat, didn’t you?” demanded
Elmer.
“We sure did, and here she is,”
cried Red, holding up the article in question.
“It looks like a scout’s regulation hat?”
Elmer remarked.
“Which nobody could deny,” sang Lil Artha.
“And as every scout present
has his own hat on his head right now, it stands to
reason this couldn’t belong to any of us, eh,
fellows?”
“To clinch the matter, Elmer,”
observed Matty, “if you look inside the hat
you’ll find two little silver letters fastened
there. The N. S. stands for Nathaniel Scott.”
“Well, that point seems proved.
Nat was here. Perhaps in wandering about he struck
this place. But the indications are he was captured
first, and brought to this shack.”
“But,” said hasty Red,
interrupting Elmer, “if you admit that these
Italians have made our pard a prisoner, how can you
say they are not bad men, thieves wanted by the officers
of the law, even if not anarchists?”
“Some things I can only guess
at, without being able to explain my conviction.
But, honestly, fellows, I hardly think these people
are as bad as you make out. I know blackmail
is practiced over in Italy a lot. And that one
of the favorite ways to get money is to kidnap the
son or daughter of a rich man, and demand a heavy
ransom. But in this case they would hardly pick
Nat Scott for a pigeon to be plucked. His father
is only a schoolmaster. There are others here
who would seem to be more attractive bait.”
“Hear, hear!” cried Lil
Artha, casting a meaning look in the direction of
Larry Billings, whose father, being a banker, was reckoned
the richest man in all Hickory Ridge.
“But ain’t we wasting
a heap of time here?” asked Red, impatient as
always to be doing something.
“That’s just what I was
saying to Ted here,” declared Larry, whom the
meaning glance of Lil Artha had plainly rendered uneasy.
“You may think so,” remarked
Elmer, “but this is a case of the more haste
the less speed. I reckon it’s wise for us
to make sure about the character of these Italians
before we go to chasing after them. They’re
an excitable lot, you know, and we might bring on trouble
that could just as well be avoided if we went slow.”
Matty looked at his leader sharply.
“Say, see here, Elmer,”
he remarked, “you know, or anyhow you’ve
got a pretty good hunch, who these people are?”
“Why, yes, Italians,” laughed the other.
“Now, that ain’t what I mean,” Matty
went on. “No dodging, but own up.”
“You’re wrong there,”
Elmer said. “I don’t know, and my
suspicions so far are founded on such slight evidence
that I don’t care to commit myself before the
whole of you-yet.”
“But from what you said just
now,” Matty continued, “you don’t
seem to agree with the rest of us when we call these
Italians anarchists.”
“Because there hasn’t
been a solitary thing to prove it. We pathfinders
must always discover some trace of the trail, or else
we’d go astray. And I’ve owned up
that I’m more than half inclined to believe these
people are not the bad lot you’d make out.”
“But they’ve got our chum a prisoner,”
said Red.
“Looks that way,” assented Elmer, cheerfully.
“And honest men would never do a thing like
that,” declared Red.
“Oh, wouldn’t they?”
replied the other. “Perhaps now the shoe
might be on the other foot.”
“Eh?”
“And perhaps these honest people
might suspect that you three fellows in uniform represented
the great United States army about to surround them,
and make them prisoners because they had been occupying
private property here at Munsey’s mill.”
The scouts looked at one another,
astonished. Here was a theory then which had
never appealed to them before.
“Well, I declare!” gasped Red.
“Don’t it just beat the
Dutch how he gets on to all these things?” said
Lil Artha.
“But, Elmer, why take poor Nat
a prisoner, bottle him up so he couldn’t call
for help, fetch him to this old shack, and finally
carry him off when they light out!”
It was Matty who asked this question.
Elmer smiled and shook his head.
“I can figure out a lot of things,”
he said, “just as I can read Indian writing;
but please don’t expect me to tell you what people
think. I only know that these Italians
were surely frightened at the sudden appearance of
three fellows in khaki, and that they probably took
them for soldiers. They must have had some idea
in view when they captured Nat, and hustled him to
this shack. Perhaps they only meant to hide here
until the rest of us had gone.”
“And they got more scared when
you sounded that bugle, I reckon,” remarked
Lil Artha.
“Yes, and then the coming of
another bunch of six scouts may have made them believe
the worst was about to happen,” Elmer continued.
“Say, I thought I heard low
voices when I was just going to peep in that window
there, and the bugle called me back to duty,”
Landy spoke up.
“Yes,” Elmer added; “and
it may be the coming of Landy just finished their
panic. After he went away they must have vamosed
the ranch in a hurry.”
“Well, all this is mighty interesting,
sure,” declared Red, with an appreciative nod,
“but it ain’t bringing us any closer to
finding our chum Nat.”
“Yes, what’s the programme,
Elmer?” asked Chatz. “Do we take up
the trail right away, and try to follow these heah
rascals to their new camp? You can count on all
of us, suh, to do the troop credit.”
“There may be another way,”
remarked Elmer, who seemed to be pondering over the
matter.
“Tell us about it, then, please.”
“Sometimes it’s the best
policy to hike after an enemy as fast as you can put.
Then again, there are other times when a whole lot
can be won just by waiting for the enemy to come
to you.”
“That’s so, fellows,”
declared Matty; “I see what Elmer means.
He thinks that if we hid out here, we’d be able
to bag the whole blooming crowd soon.”
“Sounds all right in theory,”
admitted Red, “but for one I’d like to
know why Elmer believes that push will come back after
a little.”
“I only feel pretty sure on
one point,” explained the acting scout master.
“And that concerns the woman alone.”
“Meaning, I take it, that you
think they’ll send her back, the cowards, to
find out whether the coast is clear,” ventured
Red.
“No, they will never have to
send her back, fellows,” Elmer went on, positively.
“Won’t, eh?” remarked Lil Artha.
“I firmly believe that once
we withdraw from this same old shack the woman will
steal back of her own free will.”
“To get her precious old comb, mebbe,”
sneered Red.
“To recover something which
I guess she values above ten thousand combs,”
and Elmer as he spoke held up the string of beads forming
the rosary.
“In her hurry to get away she
must have forgotten all about this. But I warrant
you, fellows, she’s discovered the loss by now.
What follows? She makes up her mind that she’s
just got to return and find it, if so be we
haven’t taken it from that nail where it was
hanging when we came in.”
“Good! You’ve got
things down just pat, Elmer. And then what?”
asked Matty.
“I expect to hide near by while
the rest of you go noisily away. She can’t
know how many came, and she’ll think all have
departed. Then, when she comes in I’ll
make her a prisoner. Perhaps they’ll be
glad to exchange Nat for their woman. Or else,
if we can make her understand that we’re only
toy soldiers, and mean the men no harm, she will lead
us to their hide-out.”
The scouts were listening attentively,
as they always did when Elmer was talking. He
possessed such a fund of interesting information that
they knew full well they could learn many useful things
by trying to grasp the ideas he advanced.