“So, it’s you yelping for help, eh?”
Buck was looking more or less surprised
even when making this remark. Fred had an idea
he could see something like growing satisfaction,
almost glee, creeping over the face of the other.
The prospect evidently began to please Buck.
“Yes, it’s me,”
the boy below replied, trying hard to appear to look
at it all in the light of a huge joke, just as he
might, had it been Sid Wells or Bristles Carpenter
who had discovered his ridiculous plight.
“Huh! and however did you come
in this old limestone pit?” demanded Buck.
“Well, to tell you the truth,
Buck,” he said, in a conciliatory tone; “Brad
Morton, as track captain, ordered me to slip out of
the bunch he sent over the regular roads laid out
for the race. He wanted me to take the last five
mile run in secret, you see; and long ago I had this
little course mapped out, when I used to practice without
anybody knowing I could run fairly well.”
“Oh! you don’t say?”
sneered Buck. “And what was his reason,
d’ye know?”
Fred knew that it was best to be frank
with the other, who really had him so absolutely in
his power. He would confide wholly in Buck, come
what might.
“Well, I didn’t take much
stock in the thing myself, but Brad insisted, and
as he was the captain of the team, I had to do what
he said, you see, Buck. He had been told that
Mechanicsburg had spies posted all along the course,
to time the runners, and get points on their weak
places. And somehow Brad got the idea in his head
that they were more anxious to watch me run than any
of the others. So he thought he’d surprise
them by having me disappear, and get my practice alone.”
Buck laughed at that, and it was a
very disagreeable laugh, too.
“My! what an important person
you’ve become, Fred Fenton,” he observed,
with the sneer more marked in his voice than ever.
“Have to have a private course of your own because
your running is attracting so much attention!
No wonder your head has begun to swell. No wonder
you look down on small worms, who only run up against
hard knocks whenever they try to even up the score.”
“But you’re going to help
me out of this, I hope, Buck?” Fred went on,
pleasantly, almost pleadingly, for he had much at stake.
“Oh! am I? You don’t
say!” mocked the other. “Now, how
d’ye suppose I c’n reach down seven feet
or more, and give you the friendly hand? Think
my arms stretch that far? Perhaps, now, you imagine
I’ll just drop in like the poor old goat did
in the fable, to let the smart fox jump up on his
back, and then out? If you do you’ve got
another guess coming; see?”
“But there’s an easy way
to do it, Buck; and because Riverport needs every
little help she can get to win out to-morrow, I’m
going to ask you to do it for me.”
“Sounds big; don’t it?”
the other went on, in his sneering way. “You’re
the Great Muck-a-muck, and will carry off the prize
for the long distance run, I suppose you mean?
Well, with the great luck you have, perhaps you will if
you’re there when the pistol cracks for the start.
Now, go on and tell me what you mean, and how could
I get you out of this hole if I took the
notion to try?”
“I suppose you’ve got
your knife with you, Buck?” Fred went on.
“That’s where you’ve
got another guess coming, Fenton; fact is, I broke
the last blade in it yesterday, and threw it away,”
Buck answered.
“Well, then, that seems to make
it harder to carry out my plan,” Fred remarked,
disappointment in his tone.
“Wait,” said Buck; “perhaps,
after all, I might get a knife from the feller along
with me, here.”
He disappeared, and Fred, straining
his ears, could hear him talking in a low tone with
some one else. He was filled with a deep curiosity
to know whatever brought Buck Lemington here to the
old limestone quarry; just as the day was passing.
The last thing Fred had heard in connection with Buck
was the fact that his suspected connection with the
desperate attempt to spoil the calculations of Riverport
school with regard to winning the laurels of the athletic
meet by kidnapping their best sprinter, Colon, had
met with universal condemnation among the good people
of the town. There was even talk of a committee
going to complain to his father.
Perhaps Buck had in some way gotten
wind of that expected coming of the townspeople, and
he might even now be on his way to some haven of refuge,
to remain practically in hiding until the storm blew
over.
A minute later, and once again the
face of the grinning bully protruded beyond the edge
of the pit above.
“I’ve got the knife all
right, Fenton,” he observed, curiously; “now,
what d’ye expect me to do with it? A knife
alone won’t pull you up; and I reckon clotheslines
don’t grow around this region.”
“No, but I think there’s
a fine stout vine close to your hand, Buck; and if
you’d be so kind as to cut that off, and let
one end of it down to me, with only a little help
I’d be out of this hole in a jiffy and
mighty thankful in the bargain.”
“Well now, that is a bright
idea,” remarked Buck, with exasperating slowness;
“they always said you had a brain in your head,
Fenton. It’s a good, strong vine too, and
even a sharp knife hacks into it pretty hard.
Oh! no doubt about it holding a fellow of your nimbleness,
when you manage to get a grip on the same!”
Fred did not exactly like the way
he said this. Somehow he seemed to feel that
the other was working himself up into a condition where
he would finally refuse to lend a helping hand to
his old-time rival, now that the only chance for Fred
to get free seemed to rest with Buck.
As he cut away, the bully continued
to talk. He was evidently enjoying the unique
situation keenly.
“Reckon you’d feel some
chilly if you had to stay in that damp hole all night;
eh, Fenton?” he went on.
“I sure would,” replied
Fred, trying to give a little laugh; “and it
was mighty lucky for me that you and your friend happened
along here just at such a time. Now, I wouldn’t
have supposed that anybody would come this way in
a year; and when I hollered for help I didn’t
think there was a chance in a thousand anybody’d
hear.”
“Well, you’d win, because
it was a chance in a thousand, Fenton,” Buck
went on to say, as he whittled away at the trailing
vine. “Fact is, the people down in Riverport
sent a committee of old fogies up to my governor to
complain. Said I’d been guilty of a bad
piece of business; that I’d engineered the scheme
for carrying Colon off to that mill, and leaving him
there, so’s to knock Riverport’s chances
to-morrow. Perhaps you heard something about
that, Fenton?”
“Oh! I believe one of the
boys did mention that there was some talk about it
being done; but honestly now, Buck, I didn’t
know they had gone over to your house to interview
your father,” Fred answered, candidly enough.
“Well, they did, all right,”
growled the other, cutting more furiously, as his
feelings began to work upon him. “And when
the old man called me in, I saw he was some mad.
Reckon he’d had bad news just about then, because
I saw a letter with a foreign postmark on it, lying
open on his desk; and I know the signs of a storm
under our roof.”
He paused to give a last cut, and
the vine came free; then he began to slice off a few
trailing side roots, so as to make a pretty fair rope
out of it. After which he started to speak again.
“He was awful mad, Fenton, I
give you my word. Never saw him in such a temper.
And the way he hauled me over the coals was scandalous,
too. Said he’d think up what he’d
have to do with me for punishment, over night.
Also said everything was going crooked with him at
once. Well, I just made up my mind I wouldn’t
stay around home, any longer; but skip out till the
breeze blew over. And I also thought up a bully
good scheme to bring the old man to terms. Huh!
you ain’t the only one that’s got brains,
Fenton, if you do think so.”
Again he paused, as if to give emphasis
to his words. Fred was waiting anxiously, to
learn what Buck had decided to do. If only he
would lower that vine, he felt sure he could pull
himself out in ten seconds.
“I happened to remember that
we had a relative somewhere up in this region; and
so I just made up my mind to disappear for a little
while myself. It’s in the air you see,
even you’ve got the fever. And I’d
play a winning card on the governor by taking with
me something he set considerable store on. A
day or two’d bring him to terms; and I reckoned
he’d promise to let up on me, in order to get
back there, how d’ye think that’ll
answer, Fenton?”
He held up the stout vine. Fred
could see it plainly, for the bright sky was beyond.
It seemed to be at least ten feet in length, and as
thick as one’s wrist.
“That ought to do the trick
finely, Buck,” he remarked, pleasantly, just
as if he did not have the slightest doubt in the world
but that the other fully intended pulling him out
of the hole.
“Do you think you can hold on?”
asked Buck, beginning to lower away with tantalizing
slowness, as though he enjoyed keeping Fred on the
anxious seat.
“Sure I can, once I get a good
grip. Just a foot or so more, Buck, and then
I will be able to reach it. And let me tell you,
it’s good of you to help a fellow like this.
They’ll say so in town when they hear about
it, Buck.”
“Think so, do you?” went
on the other, as he suddenly allowed the vine to drop
until it touched the hands extended, when it was instantly
withdrawn again.
“Oh! don’t you wish you
could grab it, Fenton?” mocked the grinning
bully.