“Now fellows,” whispered
Garry, “duck around the side of the barn here,
while I tell you what I doped out as we walked along.
Keep an eye out for dogs.”
They followed Garry’s lead around the barn.
“Here’s what I doped out.
Only one of us can enter the house. To have more
do it might spell disaster to our plans, for in case
of danger one could find a hiding place where two
could not. Two of us will go into the barn, while
one stays out here as guard. Once in the barn,
the feed box will be moved, and the one to enter the
passage will do so, while the other replaces the feed
box, and rejoins the man on guard. It is now
twelve-thirty, and the man who enters the house ought
to hear all that’s going on and be able to make
a getaway in at least three hours and a half, probably
a lot sooner. That is allowing the men an hour
or more for talking, as they probably will take no
longer, and two hours or two hours and a half for
everything to get quiet and allow the man in the house
to get away. Now to settle who goes into the house,
we will follow our custom of drawing lots. Phil
is out, for he has already been in danger once, and
furthermore, he has had his share of adventure.
That leaves it up to either Dick or I to go in.
Phil, get your knife out and hold it in one of your
hands. Then Dick and I will each choose a hand
and the one who guesses rightly will enter the passage.”
Phil did as he was bade, and then
Garry told Dick to take first choice of hands.
“Right hand,” said Dick, after a pause.
“Garry goes,” whispered Phil. “I
had my knife in my left hand.”
Dick muttered a muffled exclamation
of disappointment, for he had counted on being the
one to undertake the dangerous mission, but he abided
by the lot.
Leaving Phil on guard outside the
door, Garry and Dick noiselessly rolled back one of
the folding doors just enough to allow them to slip
through.
The inside of the barn was as black
as a pocket. Standing there for a minute or two,
the boys waited in silence. They could hear the
uneasy stamping of a horse, awakened probably by their
entrance.
After what they judged to be a safe
interval, Garry snapped on his flashlight, and threw
the beam of light playing about the floor, keeping
it on only long enough to get a general impression
of the interior, and being careful not to allow its
rays to strike upward lest it be seen through a window.
What they saw made it apparent that
Mr. Everett’s words about farming playing a
small part in Green’s life proved true.
There was a single horse in the barn, and one good
wagon. The farming implements appeared to be
suffering from long disuse.
Garry located at the end of the barn
the feed box that marked the passage entrance.
Hastening to it, they moved it forward,
and there, as told them by Ruth’s grandfather,
was the knot. Getting his knife out, Garry dug
at the knot which yielded to his efforts and came
out.
The trap was lifted, and Garry, shaking
hands with Dick, made ready to enter. A musty
odor emanated from the passage, making it evident that
it had not been used for a long time.
“Push the box back over the
passage when I get in,” he whispered to Dick.
“When I come to get out, I can tip it over when
I push upward on the trap. Now you hustle back
out and rejoin Phil. Wait for me down the road
under that big elm tree that we passed on our way here.
I noticed that there was a field back of it, and in
case you hear anyone coming along, you can slip back
into it and hide until he or they have passed on.
Now see you later,” and snapping on his flashlight,
went down the crude ladder that gave entrance to the
passageway.
He waited at the bottom of this ladder
until he heard the crunching sound of the feed box
being pushed back over the trap door. Then the
light of the flashlamp ahead of him in a dancing beam,
his heart beating rapidly with excitement, he pushed
on.
He was almost startled into an exclamation
of dismay, as there came the sound of a squeal, and
a small form scurried across his feet. Then he
laughed with relief, for it was nothing more than a
small rat.
After walking what he judged to be
about twenty feet through the passage, which was shored
up and roofed with timbers much after the manner of
a mine tunnel, he approached a spot where the passage
widened, and he found he was in a sort of room.
At one side were a number of casks,
but these were empty, as Garry found when he stirred
one of them with his feet. At the other side of
the room was a crude table, built of pine boards.
On this table reposed a stack of fine fur, roped into
a bundle. Garry examined it and found the skins
to be those of fine seals, caught in Canadian waters,
and destined to be sent to New York and sold to some
woman who would have no idea that the law of the land
had been broken by the making of the coat or neckpiece
that she would be wearing.
They had been there for some time,
Garry judged, for the dust was thick enough to denote
that no one had been there for some days.
He pushed his way on through the passage,
and came at last to the end. There was a box
to stand on so that one might get up high enough to
get a good purchase on the trap.
Now came a crucial moment. There
was no telling whether or not the cellar was occupied.
All that Garry could do was to push upward and trust
to chance. Very carefully and slowly he pushed
upward.
It required some exertion, but finally
gave way. Pushing it three or four inches, Garry
paused, and both looked and listened. There was
not a sound, and no beam of light came to disclose
the presence of anyone in the cellar.
Giving the trap a last upward fling,
Garry was soon in the cellar. Pressing the snap
of his light so that it would continue to shine, he
covered the trap with the dirt, smoothing it with his
hands so that it would show no signs of having been
recently displaced.
The first step had been successfully
negotiated. Now remained the difficult task of
getting upstairs and in a place where he could hear
what was being plotted by Green, LeBlanc and their
friends.
Walking as near the edge of the steps
as he could, for it is at this point that they are
less apt to creak, he made his way up the cellar stairs.
Every step was now one of potential
danger, for the throwing open of the kitchen door
would disclose his presence, and he would be trapped,
for there was no exit from the cellar except through
the passageway, and he knew that if he were discovered,
some of the men would run to the barn and guard that
exit. His rifle had been left with the boys, for
it would only be a hindrance in his movements in getting
into the house.
After a few moments he reached the
top of the stairs, and with his ear pressed to the
door, listened for sounds that would tell him whether
or not the kitchen was occupied. He heard nothing,
and then bent to where the latch pierced the door.
He could see no bit of light shining through the small
crevice, and then carefully raised the latch, taking
nearly a minute to do so, that it might give no sharp,
warning click.
The latch once raised, he pushed the
door open carefully, shoving it barely a fraction
of an inch at a time.
After what seemed almost ages, Garry
stepped into the kitchen. He knew it was dangerous
to press the button on his flashlamp, but there was
nothing else to be done, for he could not go moving
through the dark, taking the chance of crashing into
a chair or table, and thus advertising his presence
in the house.
Throwing the beam of light sweeping
along the floor for an instant, and concentrating
with all his might, he impressed on his mind a mental
picture of the interior of the room, noting two doors
and locating the various pieces of furniture in the
kitchen.
His next act was to untie hastily
the strings of his shoepacks, and slipping out the
footgear, knotted the laces and strung the shoepacks
about his neck. He was now able to move noiselessly.
Standing silently, he listened.
He could hear the murmur of voices beyond one of the
doors. His heart leaped, for there were probably
the plotters. He crept to the door, and listened,
but could make out nothing of what was being said.
Only an indistinct murmur reached his ears.
It would be foolhardy to try and open
the door, for he could not hope to do it without letting
those in the room know it, even with all the luck
in the world.
Garry was stumped. He began to
wish that he had taken a chance and approached the
house from the outside, trusting to fortune to get
to a window through which he might both see and hear.
The boy stood for a moment and debated
as to what was the best course to pursue, whether
to go back through the passage and try and approach
from the outside, or what.
Then he recollected the other door.
Knowing that the construction of old New England houses
generally called for a front and back stairs, he guessed
that this other door would lead to the upper part of
the house.
Noiselessly crossing the floor, he
cautiously opened the door, and found that his guess
was right, for a single flash of his lamp showed a
flight of stairs.
His stockinged feet making no sound,
he crept up the stairs. At the top of the flight
was another door, and opening this a bit at a time,
he entered the room. All was darkness and silence.
He swept his flashlamp around the
room, and made a discovery that promised the means
of hearing what was going on in the room the plotters
were in.
In most small towns, and especially
in farm houses, a furnace is an unknown quantity.
So to provide heat for the upper rooms without going
to the expense of getting extra stoves, holes about
a foot in diameter are cut through the ceiling, and
an iron grating called a “register” is
installed. This allows the heat to mount to the
upper rooms.
Garry mentally estimated the location
of the room he was in, and decided that it was over
the kitchen. Hence the next room on that floor
must be the one over that in which the conference
of the smugglers was taking place.
Walking as though the floor were covered
with eggs, he proceeded to the other door of the room,
and pursuing the same tactics of taking several moments,
cautiously opened the door. He found that he was
in a bedroom.
He stood stock still, and listened.
The room was unoccupied, for there
was no sound of breathing coming from the direction
of the bed. Deciding to get his bearings before
going further, he looked about. By this time
his eyes had become accustomed to the dark, and he
did not make use of his lamp. A faint bit of light
proved to be coming through the window. Creeping
across the floor, he examined. It was open, for
the night was warm.
Outside the window was a great maple
tree. One branch was almost on a level with the
sill and not more than two feet distant.
This done, he searched for the light
that would disclose the location of the register,
and his heart fell when he found nothing. It seemed
as if his carefully planned move had fallen like a
house of cards.
Since there was evidently no register
in the room, it seemed safe to flash his lamp.
It must be explained that Garry’s
examination of the room occupied only a matter of
seconds.
Just as he was about to press the
button of the flashlight, he heard the purring voice
of LeBlanc, muffled and indistinct.
With a thrill of excitement, he knew
that there was a register in the room after all.
Getting down on his hands and knees, he felt about
the floor. Only the bare boards were his reward,
until as he approached the bed he felt a heavy rag
rug.
Feeling over this, he discovered it
to be slightly raised in the middle. Carefully
rolling it back, he was rewarded by seeing light and
hearing the hum of voices.
At last Garry was an unseen listener
to the plot being hatched below!