To return now for a while to the lean-to
we shall see what happened when sundown came and no
Phil appeared.
“Oh, Dick, I’m sorry I
let Phil go alone. We should have gone together,
then there would have been less chance of anything
having happened,” said Garry brokenly.
“Cheer up, Garry, it’s
only a little past sundown, perhaps he didn’t
allow himself enough time to get back here, may have
thought the distance was less than it was. You
know he has been over this distance only two or three
times. We’ll give him a little while longer
and then set our heads together and see what we can
do. I have a lot of confidence in Phil, he manages
to pull himself out of his scrapes pretty well most
of the time,” comforted Dick, although he too
feared that Phil had gotten into some scrape that
proved too much for him. Dick’s fear was
that Phil had run afoul of the tramps, for neither
he nor Garry knew that LeBlanc was in that vicinity.
Nearly an hour passed, and then Garry sprang to his
feet.
“There’s no use waiting
any longer. Phil would move heaven and earth to
keep up to the agreement that was made as to the hour
of return. Now we must do something. Get
your rifle and lariat and hatchet. Stick the
handle of the hatchet inside your trousers so that
it will not be so evident, or better yet, we can do
it just before we get to town. Then, too, we
can coil our riatas over one shoulder, and slip our
coats on over them. In that way we won’t
attract so much attention. The rifles won’t
appear to be out of place, for it would be only natural
that we should take them, seeing we are supposed to
be campers who will have to go back through the dark
woods to camp. First, before we start, take our
knapsacks, there’s nothing in them that we will
need, and cache them in the branches of a nearby tree.
Then we’ll leg it to town just as fast as we
can.”
Before Dick cached the knapsacks,
Garry poured all the water in the canteens on the
fire, thoroughly extinguishing it. Then in a trice
the knapsacks were hidden in a tree, and the pair
were ready to start for town.
Garry set a terrific pace at first,
until Dick toned him down with:
“Look here, Garry, we don’t
want to get to town all tuckered out. If we do
we will be useless if it comes to a pinch. I’m
just as anxious about Phil as you are, but we must
conserve our strength. We may need it before
the night is over.”
“Guess you’re right old
chap, but I just keep thinking that minutes may mean
more right now than hours would some other time.”
Nevertheless he moderated his pace, and in a trifle
under an hour they were in the town of Hobart.
Dick was for making at once to the
restaurant to institute inquiries as to whether or
not Phil had been there and when he was last seen.
Garry by this time had grown calmer and cooler and
again assumed the leadership.
“That would be a mighty foolish
thing to do. If Phil has gotten into a scrape,
there is just as good a chance that it was in that
place as out in the street. You know we were
warned that it wasn’t a regular drawing room
by any means. I have an idea, and I think you’ll
agree with me that it is a good one. We’ll
hike to the home of the chap we towed home with the
broken arm the other day, and see if his granddaughter
can give us a tip of any sort as to what sort of a
place the restaurant is and what sort of a chap runs
it and who hangs out there. Of course there is
one great chance that Phil stumbled onto a real clue
and followed it, but that is very remote, for I don’t
believe Phil would disobey an order that had been
agreed upon by all as a safety measure.”
“Jolly good idea, Garry,” said Dick.
“Let’s go.”
In a few moments they were at Mr.
Everett’s house, and were glad to find a light
still burning there. They knocked on the door,
and Ruth herself answered the knock.
“Goodness gracious,” she
exclaimed, in a surprised tone. “I never
expected to see you boys at this time of night.
Where’s your other companion?”
“That’s just what we would
give anything in the world to know right now,”
remarked Garry. “We’ve come to you
to see if you can give us a bit of help or information.”
Then rapidly he told of the plans
they had made to try and get evidence, and the agreement
that Phil was to have returned at sundown that night.
“You say he went to the restaurant?
Oh, that’s a wicked place, and if he’s
gotten into trouble, that place is just where it would
have been likely to happen. The owner of that
place is dreadful. He helps those smugglers and
sells contraband rum, and he and that half-breed LeBlanc
have been suspected of several crimes along the border.”
“What’s that you say?”
burst out Garry. “LeBlanc, you don’t
mean Jean LeBlanc?”
“Why, yes, do you know him or
know of him?” returned the girl, amazed at Garry’s
sudden outburst.
“Yes, to our sorrow we do.
I haven’t time to tell you all we know of him
now, except that he hates us like poison, since we
were instrumental in having him jailed for kidnapping
once, and then he broke out. Is that diabolic
villain in town?”
“He is, I saw him only this
afternoon. He used to be around here a great
deal, for his original home is in a town not far on
the other side of the border. I am so sorry to
say it, but if your chum was in the restaurant and
LeBlanc saw him there, he could have made him prisoner
with the greatest of ease, for he has many friends
there, and there are many who would do anything that
rascally proprietor told them to.”
“Does your grandfather know
the ins and outs of that house?” inquired Garry.
“Yes, he does, but he is asleep,
and as he had a bad day, the doctor says that he is
not to be waked up under any circumstances, so I’m
afraid you’ll have to put up with my help, such
as it is. All you have to do is wait till I run
across the street and get Mr. Allen to come in and
watch granddaddy and then I’ll be ready to help
you.”
“You’re a brick, Miss,”
said Garry enthusiastically, “but we couldn’t
think of letting you in for any danger.”
“I guess you don’t know
the border girls, sir. We aren’t afraid
of anything in the woods or the towns. We’ve
been brought up to take care of ourselves. Besides,
I’ve heard Granddad tell about the Rookery, as
he calls it, many times. An’ I’ve
an idea that if your chum is held a prisoner in that
house, I know just where it is. So just you let
me be your guide for a little while.”
So saying, she ran across the street
and soon returned with an elderly man, the Mr. Allen
of whom she spoke, and then bidding the boys wait a
minute, she dashed upstairs. In an incredibly
short time she was back again, clad in a khaki skirt,
high boots, and a heavy sweater. A knit tam was
perched on her head, making her quite one of the most
attractive girls the boys had ever seen.
“I’ll lead you around
to the back of the restaurant, where there won’t
be much chance of you’re being observed.
There’s one window that has always puzzled me.
It has a great heavy shutter on it, and I don’t
ever remember seeing it opened. I’ve always
imagined it was the dungeon keep of the place, like
the ones they used to have in old castles, long years
ago.”
Evidently, thought Garry, the young
lady was of an extremely romantic turn of mind.
In a very few minutes she had led
them through a dark back street to where they could
command a view of the rear of the restaurant.
“There, wait till the moon comes
out from behind that cloud. Now. See that
window there all barricaded? That’s what
I think is the prison room for the Canuck’s
house,” said Ruth.
The boys looked and saw the sinister
window, which although they did not know it then,
was the one to the room in which Phil was at that moment
soundly sleeping, worn out by the mental and physical
strain that he had been under for the past twenty-four
hours.
Under the shuttered window ran a dark
alleyway, and the other windows in that side of the
house were dark and deserted looking. On the other
side of the alley was a low blacksmith shop.
“Well, Garry, if you don’t
mind my calling you that, have you decided on what
you are going to do?” asked Ruth. “I
am afraid that you haven’t much chance of getting
upstairs if you go into the restaurant, for even if
the proprietor is not there he has a couple of strong,
ugly assistants, and if you tried to force your way
upstairs at the point of a rifle, you would only bring
the whole place down on you like a swarm of hornets.
It’s up to us to think out some scheme.”
“I think I have that worked
out now. See that chimney on the roof? It
is just over that dark shuttered window. Now
what I propose is this: Dick and I will get up
on the roof of the blacksmith shop here, and from
there we can throw a lariat up over the chimney, then
one of us will go up hand over hand and call to Phil
to see if he is in that room. If he is, we’ll
have him out as soon as you could say Jack Robinson.
Miss Ruth, I’m going to ask you to stand guard
for us, and if danger approaches, give us some sort
of a signal. I suppose you can imitate a whippoorwill?”
asked Garry.
“Indeed I can,” and in
a soft tone she proved it to the satisfaction of both
Dick and Garry.
“There, then that much is accomplished.
Believe me, I’ll be overjoyed if I hear Phil’s
voice in answer to my hail,” said Garry.
“Say, listen Garry. A fine
business you’d make of calling through a thick
shutter. First place maybe he couldn’t hear
it, but it’s a cinch that everyone on the street
will. Use your imagination. What did you
ever learn wigwagging and signalling and things for?
When you get to the window, take your knife and rap
out a message in International Code. That will
make no noise down here, but will penetrate into the
room, for the shutter will form a natural sounding
board.”
“Fine, Dick. I must be
wool gathering not to have thought of that myself.
Now up on the roof with you.”
Bracing himself against the wall,
Garry formed a step for Dick to crawl up on the roof.
Once arrived there, he lay flat, and extending his
arms over the edge, gave a pull, and helped Garry
up.
It took only four throws to settle
the noose of the lariat over the chimney, and they
let it swing down on the side of the building.
Clambering down from the roof, Garry made ready to
go up the rope. He went up in agile fashion,
and soon was tapping on the shutter. It was his
call that had awakened Phil.
When Phil heard it, he fished out
his knife, and soon they were carrying on a brief
conversation. Phil told Garry the inside of the
shutter was sheathed with iron. Also he told
him if anything happened to prevent them getting him
out, to keep watch that night on Lafe Green’s
house, as there was a great plot on the way.
“I’ll have you out in
a jiffy now.” Garry tapped the message to
him, and then he slid down the rope. Dick and
Ruth came running to him.
“Must have something to pry
off that shutter with. My axe isn’t strong
enough,” he told them.
“Oh, I know what,” whispered
Ruth. “I stumbled over something a minute
ago, and it was a crowbar. Darius, the blacksmith,
must have forgotten to take it in.”
“Fine, let’s have your
riata, Dick. There, I’ll loop it around
my wrist and go back up the rope. In the meantime,
you tie an end of it to the crowbar and I can haul
it up to me.”
So saying, Garry swarmed up the rope
again. Arriving at the height of the window,
he manoeuvered until he had twisted the free end of
the rope around his foot several times, thus preventing
himself from slipping.
Then he set to work to pry the shutter
loose. Fortunately it did not long resist.
“Look out below,” he warned
softly, and with a loud thud the shutter fell into
the alley below. Phil was waiting in the window.
“Quick, slide down after me.
Lose no time, Phil,” ordered Garry.
Down he went, the friction smarting
his hands. In less time than it takes to tell,
Phil was down after him. “Never mind the
riata on the chimney. Away we go,” said
Garry.
“Follow me,” ordered Ruth,
and she sped away followed by the three chums.
They were out of sight not a moment too soon, for as
they turned a corner, running across a lawn to deaden
their footsteps, they heard a howl of rage.
“That’s the proprietor’s
assistant. We just got away in time,” said
Ruth.