Straight across the floor of the shack glided the
woman.
She was making a bee line for the
string of beads with the little silver cross at the
double end.
And the hidden scout could hear the
low words of musical Italian flowing from her lips
when she reached out an eager hand to seize upon the
sacred article.
Now was his time.
The critical moment had arrived when he must proceed
to spring his trap.
As silently as he could, then, Elmer
arose to his feet. He was behind the woman and
could never bring himself to believe that he had made
even the slightest sound when rising.
Then the only explanation left was
that the woman happened to be in front of the broken
looking glass at the moment, bent on fastening the
beads about her thick neck. And if so, she must
have discovered him as he arose from behind the big
box.
At any rate she uttered a cry that
to his mind was not unlike the snarl of a wild beast.
He saw the almost savage look that came over her swarthy
face, and knew that after all, such a woman was fully
as much to be feared as the stoutest ladrone.
And so Elmer did not think it was
unworthy of a true scout to send out the call for
help.
The woman might be disposed to defy
just one half-grown lad, whereas if she believed herself
to be up against the whole troop she would submit
with the best grace she could command.
And so he blew a shrill blast that
must bring both Mark and Lil Artha dashing to the
spot.
The effect upon the woman was rather surprising.
Perhaps Elmer might have expected
seeing her cower down, seized with a sudden overwhelming
fear, but nothing of the kind occurred.
To his surprise she snatched out a
wicked-looking knife from the bosom of her dress.
It looked to Elmer like a broken kitchen knife that
had been ground down to a point. With such a
blade he remembered seeing the Italian women from
the settlement just outside Hickory Ridge wandering
around in the early spring, digging dandelion plants
for “greens.”
He could hear the rush of approaching
footsteps even as the woman sprang for the door with
a wild look on her face.
The other two scouts had of course
caught his shrill signal, and were hastening to join
their leader.
Undoubtedly both Mark and Lil Artha
must have seen the woman, if not while she was looking
in at the window, then when she turned the corner
of the hidden shack to enter by the door.
And hence they would surely understand
that there was no man opposed to their combined force.
The fact of the woman being armed
with so terrible a weapon as a knife, and that look
of grim determination on her dark face, alarmed Elmer.
What if she attacked the two scouts-what
if in her sudden panic she wounded either of his chums?
There could be no telling what a fear-crazed, ignorant
woman, strong as an ox, and almost as irresponsible,
might do in an emergency like this.
Of course he would have only been
too well pleased could he have shown the woman that
it was all a mistake, and that they meant her no ill.
But with her brandishing that wicked-looking
knife and leaping for the door, there was certainly
no opportunity for argument.
Elmer sprang forward.
His main idea was to try and knock
that blade from her grasp by striking sharply on her
arm or her knuckles.
At the same time he thought to warn
the other scouts, so that they might take due precautions
when suddenly brought face to face with the Italian
woman who was running amuck.
Perhaps when they heard him shout
they would just naturally believe he was being hard
pressed. And in that case, instead of deterring
them, his cries would only further spur the others
on.
Nevertheless Elmer lifted his voice in warning:
“Look out, boys! She’s
got a knife, and is coming out at you! Take care
there!”
Just then something happened.
The woman had not turned her head
as Elmer thus gave tongue, as might a hound on the
warm trail of the fox.
She kept straight on. The door
was before her, and while she had drawn it shut after
entering, it has been mentioned before that she made
no attempt to fasten the same.
So now, when she hurled her whole
weight against the barrier it flew outward with a
jump.
As luck would have it, the two scouts
had managed to reach the door at exactly the same
time. And that second chanced to be the identical
one when the frightened foreigner crashed into the
door.
There could only be one result, and
that filled with bitterness and woe to both Lil Artha
and Mark. As the uncouth door was thrown suddenly
outward, as if forced by a battering ram from within,
it struck the scouts a tremendous blow.
They crumpled up and went over.
A couple of ten-pins struck by a swiftly hurled ball
could hardly have collapsed more ingloriously than
did Lil Artha and his mate.
Indeed, the long-legged scout seemed
to perform a complete revolution in the air, landing
on his knees among the bushes.
Two seconds later, when Elmer dashed
out of the shack, this was the astonishing spectacle
he saw-the woman running away as best her
bulk allowed, casting glances that were half frightened,
half triumphant, behind her; while Mark was sitting
up, rubbing a bump on his forehead ruefully, and Lil
Artha had taken out a handkerchief to dab at his bleeding
nose.
Still, nothing short of an earthquake
could ever bottle up the flow of animal spirits that
usually possessed the lanky one.
While he applied his handkerchief
until it looked particularly gory, he was bent upon
giving expression to his views.
“Wow! and again I say, wow!
What cyclone was that we ran up against, Elmer?
Did you let fly with that club of yours, or did the
old shack just take a notion to fall over on us?
It felt like I was being kicked by an army mule.”
“Same here, Elmer,” lamented
Mark, as he succeeded in struggling to his feet.
“Well, it wasn’t anything
like that at all,” declared Elmer, hastily;
“and if you take the trouble to look yonder,
before your eyes begin to close up, you’ll see
what hit you, running away like a scared hippopotamus.”
“Glory be! Was it that
dago woman?” yelled Lil Artha, now on his feet
again.
“Yes, she burst the door open
when she saw me, and as you chanced to be in the way,
why, you got the benefit, that’s all,”
Elmer remarked.
“Don’t let her get away,
fellows! Come on, who’s afraid? We
can cover three feet to her one. Let’s
make her a prisoner,” shouted Lil Artha, whose
usually even temper seemed to have been decidedly ruffled
by his recent mishap.
So the three scouts left the shack
and began to rush after the fleeing Italian woman.
Of course she knew immediately that
she was being pursued. She tried to increase
her pace, but evidently with little success. Short,
dumpy people can never hope to compete with slim,
long-legged greyhounds like Lil Artha.
And so, almost from the start, the
three scouts began to close in upon the fleeing Italian
woman.
“Say, she’s got a bloody
old knife,” gasped Lil Artha, as they struggled
on through the woods where the creeping vines and the
underbrush, not to mention frequent logs and occasional
woodchuck holes, made running a desperate business.
“That’s so, Elmer,”
piped up Mark, “I saw her shake it at us then.”
“I know it, fellows,”
said the scout master, “and that’s what
I was shouting about, to warn you.”
“Are we gaining any, Elmer?
I can’t see just as well as I’d like, with
this thing up to my nose,” the lanky runner asked.
“Pulling up on her fast, my
boy,” came the reassuring answer.
“And what’re we goin’
to do when she turns on us?” demanded Lil Artha.
“First of all, surround her.”
“That sounds good as far as she goes. What
next?”
“We must try and knock that
nasty thing out of her hand by a sharp blow on the
arm,” continued Elmer, who strangely enough seemed
as cool as a cucumber, while both of his companions
showed the effect of the mad pace.
“I tumble to it, Elmer,”
gasped Lil Artha, “and I’m the fellow to
give that lovely little tap. I made Red drop
his stick seven times when we were having a bout with
long sticks, and which we pretended were the old-style
quarterstaves.”
Even the long-legged Lil Artha must
see now that the distance separating the pursuers
from the fugitive had been greatly shortened.
Another five minutes would see them overhaul the woman,
unless something not down on the bills came to pass.
Five minutes-why there
would surely be ample time to bring this result about,
judging by the way they were covering two yards to
her one.
The woman knew it, too.
She was becoming more and more anxious.
This was shown by the way she kept turning her head
from time to time as she ran.
Elmer knew what was apt to happen.
For himself he found that he had need of both his
eyes with every step forward he took through that
tangle, where trailing vines lay in wait to trip him
up, and branches hung low as if seeking to catch in
his hair, to make him another Absalom.
Already had Lil Artha gone down with
a thud, but as he said himself, his “dander”
was aroused, and no little things like this could be
allowed to interfere with his pursuit.
So he had hastily scrambled to his
feet and followed at the heels of his more fortunate
chums, a sight calculated to excite wild laughter among
the rest of the troop, with his blood-flecked face.
At any rate Lil Artha was game to
the backbone, and Elmer often remembered it afterward
when “trying out” his scouts.
The closer they drew to the fleeing
woman the greater her fright seemed to become.
Whenever he saw her looking backward
over her shoulder Elmer would make pantomime gestures
with his free hand.
He was trying the best he knew how
to tell her to give over this foolish flight, and
that they had no hostile intentions.
But the chances were she interpreted
these movements just the other way, and believed he
must be threatening her with all sorts of terrible
things unless she yielded herself a prisoner to their
prowess.
Well, no matter, it could hardly last
more than another minute or so. Do what she would
the woman must find it utterly impossible to get away.
Already the active mind of the young
scout master was busy, weaving a clever scheme by
means of which they could surround the woman, and by
attacking her all at once, succeed in knocking the
shining knife out of her hand.
No doubt he would have succeeded in
doing the job, too, had conditions continued to make
such a move necessary.
But they did not.
The fickle hand of Fate came in between
just in time to share in the matter.
It seemed to Elmer that they were
constantly getting into a more tangled mess of undergrowth.
All around and ahead were traps calculated to slyly
catch unwary feet and trip them up.
Suddenly Elmer gave vent to a low
gasping cry; but while Mark involuntarily turned his
head to learn if his companion had gone lame, to his
surprise and gratification he found the other running
as smoothly and easily as ever, as though perfectly
fresh.
“The woman!” shrieked
Lil Artha, who, apparently, from his position in the
rear had been enabled to see just what had happened.
“Where-is-she?”
gasped Mark, once more allowing his eyes to travel
ahead.
For, apparently, the fleeing Italian
had vanished at that instant, as completely as though
the earth had opened and swallowed her up.
“She’s down-caught
her foot in a root!” cried Elmer, not slackening
his warm pace, for he wanted to make a quick job of
the thing.
Then Mark saw that some object was
threshing the bushes furiously. Twice the woman
tried to rise, but on each occasion she fell back again.
Then presently he gave a shout as
he guessed the true situation.
“She’s caught fast in
a vine, Elmer. Even the woods work with us!
I tell you she’s a prisoner right now!
All we’ve got to do is to tie her hands!”
“But look out for that dandelion
knife, boys,” warned Elmer, as the three of
them reached the spot.