Reaching the camp, the boys were heartily
welcomed by the Liberty Boys, who knew that something
had happened when Ben and the rest came in with a
prisoner and were eager to hear the rest.
“Did you get the other fellow, Captain?”
asked Sam.
“Yes, and we left him holding an interview with
General Putnam.”
“In which he was likely to get
the worst of the argument,” put in Ben dryly.
At that moment a jolly-looking Irish
boy up and said, giving a comical salute:
Captain dear, supper do be ready an the young leddies have
come to camp, an will ye ate thim foirst Oi
mane mate thim foirst an’ ate supper
afther, or phwativer?”
There was a laugh, and then two young
very pretty young ladies rode up to the fire and were
helped to dismount by Dick and BobThe girls
were their sisters and their sweethearts also, the
sister of each being the sweetheart of the other,
and were as constant companions as the boys themselves.
They lived in Westchester county and had come to visit
friends in New York, stopping on the way to see the
boys.
“Well, Alice,” said Dick
to his sweetheart, “so you have come to the
city, have you? Things are in a rather turbulent
state, but I fancy we can get you out of it in case
there is any immediate trouble. You will stay
to supper, of course Patsy has just announced
that it is ready, so we will lose no time in sitting
down.”
The girls were well known to all the
Liberty Boys and when they sat down they received
a general salute, every boy there being glad to see
them. After supper the boys who had brought in
the spy took him to the general’s quarters,
and shortly after this Dick and Bob set out with the
girls to see them to the house of their friends in
the city. Dick and Bob took their horses, the
captain riding a magnificent black Arabian and Bob
a fine bay, and all set out together, laughing and
talking in lively fashion. They struck across
the Common to the road running to the west of it,
and would then make their way into the city past the
new church and Broadway to Maiden Lane.
As they were going on at an easy jog,
expecting to leave the Common, four or five dark forms
suddenly sprang up in front of them and seize their
bridles, while as many ran up behind and prevented
their wheeling. Then some one flashed the light
of a lantern in their faces, and a voice was heard
saying:
“H’m! women! We don’t want
them. All want is the rebels!”
The girls’ horses were at once
set free, and the girls themselves lost no time in
wheeling and dashing back toward the camp, Alice taking
the lead.
“Hi! what are you doing?”
growled one of men, who were all evil-looking fellows,
as Dick could see “The gals will bring
the rest of the rebels.”
Dick was dragged from the back of
Major, his black Arabian, and one of the men attempted
to mount the animal to go in chase of the two girls
but was immediately thrown.
“Back to camp, Major!” said Dick.
In an instant the intelligent animal
was flying after the girls, who quickly recognized
his hoof-beats. Meanwhile the men who had captured
Dick and Bob knew the danger they would run remaining
on the ground, and they hurried away with the two
boys, letting Bob’s bay go free. They went
on so rapidly that Dick was unable to see much of the
way, but he knew the direction they took almost by
instinct, and could have returned without trouble
if he had been liberated. The men kept the two
boys in the middle of the party and held on to them
tightly.
“We got the rebels an’ we’ll get
the reward,” said one.
“Yes, the gals an’ the
other rebels won’t be able to find the house,
and they can hunt all they like.”
It was a sharp decline to the river,
down the lane, and one of the men stumbled and rolled
several yards, picking himself up with a grunt and
a groan and a lot of bad language, and then hurrying
after the rest. Dick heard the swash of the water
on the gravel bank, and then saw the river itself
dimly, but in another moment some dark object loomed
up before him, and then he and Bob were taken into
a house, the front of which was much lower than the
back on account of the steepness of the hank.
The boys were taken to the front and then down a flight
of steps to a room in the rear, where they were left
in the dark, the door being locked and barred on the
outside.
“Who are these fellows, do you
suppose, Dick?” asked Bob, when they were left
alone.
“I don’t know. Tories,
no doubt, or just men who want the reward offered
for my capture.”
“But there is none offered for
me,” with a laugh “Why should they
take me with them?”
“To keep you from giving the
alarm. They would have taken the girls if they
had thought twice.”
“But will the girls be able to show them the
way?”
“They can take them to where
we were attacked, and after that the boys will follow
the trail. Mark is a good hand at that sort of
thing, and he will have good boys to help him.”
“Yes, they would all turn out
and join in the hunt if he asked them,” declared
Bob.
“But there is no use in our
staying in the dark, Bob,” said Dick “You
have matches with you?”
“Yes. They did not search
us and I have matches, and my pistols and everything.”
Bob then lighted a sulphur match,
the only kind in use at the time, and looked about
him. They were in a room with one door but no
windows, and were evidently under guard at the back
of the stone house. Dick listened attentively
for some minutes, and at last heard the sound of some
one coming downstairs.
“Put out the light, Bob,”
he said, in a low tone “If they see it
under the door they may get suspicious.”
Bob blew out the candle, and in a
moment all was dark and still in the room.
“When the door opens make a
rush at it, Bob, and overturn the fellows. There
are two of them.”
Bob stood ready to act upon the instant,
and the steps of the two men coming on could be heard
plainer than ever, rays of light beginning to show
under the door. The men said nothing, and came
on softly, but Dick’s ears were very sharp,
and he could hear them with no trouble.
The key was turned in the lock and
the bolts shot back, and then, as the door opened
slowly, the boys both threw their weight upon it suddenly
and sent it flying wide open in an instant. There
was a startled cry and a heavy fall, and in a moment
the place was thrown into profound darkness.
“Pick them up and lock them
in, Bob,” said Dick, and the boys hurried into
the passage, presently stumbling upon two men who were
just getting upon their feet.
They seized the men, threw them into
the room, closed the door and locked them in, taking
out the key, and then looked for the lantern as they
heard a call from above.