Of course Darry knew what this attack meant.
His enemy had been brooding over matters
for a long time, and despairing of accomplishing his
end while Darry was armed with a gun, during his daily
visits to the big marsh, he had finally decided to
lie in wait and have it out on the road from the village.
Jim wisely backed himself up with
a couple of allies in thus undertaking to give his
enemy that long-delayed whipping.
He had tried it once by himself and
apparently had no relish to repeat the experiment.
Perhaps it would have been the part
of wisdom on the part of the young life saver to have
taken to his heels and beat a masterly retreat.
Great generals have done this same
thing and considered it no dishonor to save their
army for another day.
To a high-spirited lad, however, it
is the last thought, and many a fellow will stand
the chances of a beating rather than to turn his back
on the foe.
Of course there was no time to consider the matter.
The three disguised boys attacked him on all sides,
and almost before
Darry knew what he was doing blows were being exchanged
with a vim.
He fought gallantly and well, sending
in just as many hard hits as his knowledge of the
game permitted.
Whenever he saw an opening he was
quick to take advantage of the same, and as a consequence
first one of Jim’s supporters and then the other
temporarily bit the dust, with a galaxy of stars floating
before their mental vision.
They were very much surprised.
True, they may have heard something
about the fighting abilities of this wonderful new
boy; but Jim had kept declaring that only for his lame
hand he would surely have easily come out victor on
that memorable day of the first meeting, and they
were forced to believe him.
Artful Jim was wise enough to do a
great deal of jumping about, but seemed quite willing
his allies should meet with the brunt of the battle
while he saved himself for the finishing touches.
When Darry had tired himself out against
Sim Clark and Bowser then his time would have arrived.
Darry anticipated being whipped in the encounter.
It was not to be expected that one
boy could hold his own against three such tough customers
as those opposed to him, since they would wear him
out.
Nevertheless, he declined to run at
the beginning, and after a little it was entirely
out of the question for him to do so, since he lacked
the wind to conduct a flight.
So there was really nothing to do
but stand and take what was coming to him, at the
same time give as good as he knew how.
They would never be able at any rate
to say they had won an easy victory.
By this time they were beautifully
daubed with mud, as each appeared to be the under
dog while the minutes crept along.
Darry’s only hope lay in the
possibility of some one passing that way, and as the
day was so stormy, and few people ever took this road,
his chances were indeed slender.
Now the whole bunch seemed to be upon
the ground alongside the road, struggling like a pack
of Kilkenny cats, the three aggressors having their
hands on Darry at one time in the endeavor to subdue
him.
Suddenly Jim gave a hoarse cry.
“Haul off dere, fellers; somebody’s comin’!”
was what he ejaculated.
Immediately the other two sprang to
their feet like a couple of deer, afraid lest they
be caught at their game; perhaps a vision of old Hank
Squires flashed before them, with the penitentiary
in the background.
Darry, out of breath, but game to
the last, made an ineffectual attempt to hold one
of his tormentors, catching the flying end of his jacket;
but such was the moment of Sim’s upward movement,
and the flimsy character of his wearing apparel, that
the entire section came away, remaining in the grip
of the enemy as he went tearing after his mates.
The three of them plunged into the
bushes alongside the road, and were lost to sight,
leaving Darry half sitting up on the road, plastered
with mud, and ruefully surveying the strip of cloth
in his hand.
After all it proved to be a false
alarm, for no one came in sight.
Darry was not foolish enough to invite
a further attack by remaining on the ground after
the enemy had temporarily withdrawn, so he gathered
himself together and continued along the road, feeling
of his limbs to ascertain just how seriously he had
been bruised, and trying to scrape some of the mud
from his clothes.
He felt ashamed to let Mrs. Peake
see him in this condition, for the clothes had been
Joe’s, and naturally she would feel badly to
discover how they were now treated to a coating of
mud.
But then the fact of his having such
a joyful surprise for her would discount any bad effect
of his appearance.
Thinking thus, Darry put his hand
eagerly into the inside pocket where he had so carefully
stowed the little leather pocket-book in which the
hundred dollar bill given him by Paul, as well as the
amount which his muskrat pelts had fetched at the
hardware store, had been lodged.
The pocket-book was gone!
Poor Darry shivered as if someone had struck him a
blow.
Could he have lost it while upon the
shore with Paul Singleton and had the angry sound
claimed it as passage money for having allowed a victim
to escape?
No, he recollected very distinctly
feeling it there as he started from the office of
the lawyer, after learning that Mr. Quarles was away.
Then it must have fallen out during
his struggles on the road, for several times he had
been on his back, with those “wildcats”
clawing at him.
Despite the chances of meeting them
again, and having the struggle renewed, he deliberately
turned back and quickly ran to the spot where there
were plain evidences to be seen of the free-for-all
fight.
How eagerly he searched every foot
of that territory, his heart, figuratively speaking,
in his throat with anxiety. But as the minutes
passed and he realized the hopeless character of his
hunt it seemed to drop like lead into his shoes, the
change was so great.
Then there remained only one solution
of the mystery one of those young rascals
must have inserted a hand in his coat while they were
struggling there on the road and stolen the pocket-book
with its contents.
His heart seemed almost broken, and
he even contemplated rushing after them to renew the
battle and tear the prize from their possession; but
a little thought caused him to understand how foolish
such a move would be, for he had no idea as to what
quarter they could he heading for when they left him,
unless it might be that shack in the swamp, and it
would be rash indeed for him to go there alone.
He tried to pluck up courage enough
to go home, basing all his hopes on Paul, who had
seemed so very kind, and ready to help him out.
Of course Mrs. Peake was astonished
at his appearance, but the rising anger vanished when
she learned who had been the cause of his misfortunes at
least it was turned in the direction of Jim Dilks,
and she vowed that before another day had passed she
would swear out a warrant for his arrest, and go personally
to see that Hank Squires did his duty.
Depressed in spirits Darry crept away
to change his clothes for some others she brought
him, also once belonging to Joe.
Mrs. Peake advised that the muddy
garments be hung up until they dried, when by a vigorous
brushing they might be restored to something like
their former condition of cleanliness.
Accordingly, Darry first of all picked
up the trousers and placed them on a line in a corner
of the room, where they could drip without soiling
the floor, he having spread a newspaper beneath.
Then he proceeded to attend to the coat in the same
way.
While engaged in this he felt something
bulky in one of the pockets and smiled faintly as
he remembered thrusting that portion of Sim’s
torn coat there.
This he had done under the impression
that Hank might consider it conclusive evidence, calculated
to convict the young ruffian beyond a possibility
of doubt.
It might just as well hang alongside
the other garments, though Darry did not intend removing
the incriminating mud stains from the fragment.
As he drew the offending piece of
cloth out he was thrilled to feel something in the
folds, and with trembling fingers he opened it out.
It seemed that with the portion of
the coat that had come away in his hands was one of
the pockets, and out of this receptacle Darry quickly
drew something at which he stared as though he fancied
he were dreaming.
His pocket-book!
Sim had undoubtedly snatched the same
from his person as they wrestled upon the ground,
and having no other place in which to hide it at the
moment, had thrust it in the very outside pocket of
his coat that a minute later remained in the grip
of the boy he had robbed.
Darry stared at it until he realized
the amazing fortune that had so kindly returned him
his property, and then rolling over on the floor he
shook with wild laughter, so that Mrs. Peake came to
the door in alarm to see if he were ill.