After that Toby seemed to have but
one object in life, which was to hatch up a clever
scheme whereby the educated monkey could be trapped.
He wandered around in the near vicinity of the camp,
with his eyes constantly searching the branches of
the trees in the vague hope that he might discover
the runaway snugly squatted in some crotch and fast
asleep.
“I believe Toby’s got
an idea he’s able to jabber monkey talk,”
said Steve, after the day was fairly well spent, and
they could hardly coax Toby to come in to his midday
meal, much less do his share of cooking; “and
that he expects, if only he, might find where that
slick old Link holds out, he could pan-handle him,
and get him to come into camp with us.”
“Now you’re hewing pretty
close to the line,” commented Bandy-legs, “and
I’ll let you know why. Toby’s got
a handful of the nut stuff in his pocket. I saw
him get it out of the bag the circus man left with
us. And I just bet you he’s thinking of
tempting Link with it.”
Steve jumped up and stepped into the
tent; he came out again with a broad grin on his face.
“I was mistaken, glad to say!” he remarked.
“About what?” Max asked him.
“Well, when Bandy-legs here
said Toby was running around with a pocket full of
the nut meat, it struck me that perhaps he’d
scooped that bottle of hard stuff too, which Mr. Jenks
said we might use to soak, first the dry bread and
then Link. But the country is safe, for he never
touched it.”
“None of us have seen or heard
anything of the monkey since he stole Toby’s
basket of frog legs this morning,” ventured Max;
“and it may be he’s left us cleared
out in disgust because what he steals here doesn’t
seem to touch the right spot with him.”
“Don’t mention that to
Toby, or you’ll give him the blind staggers,”
said Steve; “because he’s set his mind
on capturing the monk; and when Toby gets a thing
in that head of his he’s a mighty unhappy fellow
if he can’t carry it through.”
“What d’ye think,”
Bandy-legs went on to say, “I heard him grumbling
to himself, and seems like he was wondering whether
he couldn’t keep the old monkey and let the
two hundred go glimmering. Actually thinks more
about an old rascal of a Simian than a handful of plunks.
But we’re three to one, and we’ll see
to it that no such fool deal as that goes through.”
“No danger of it,” chirped
Steve, briskly; “that circus man thinks more
than two hundred of Link; and five times that wouldn’t
tempt him to let the monkey slip through his fingers.
Think of him coming away back here in hopes of bagging
the slippery old scamp! No, if we do get hold
of that Missing Link he’s going to keep on amusing
the circus public, and not just Toby Jucklin.”
When the afternoon came to an end
they managed to get the restless Toby to come in near
the campfire; but it was impossible for him to talk,
or even think of any other subject than capturing
the stray monkey.
Max had considered the subject, and
arrived at a sensible conclusion. They had really
come out just to break the ice for the new season,
and without any definite object in view save to enjoy
the open air, and renew some of their pleasures of
camp life.
It would be as well for them to spend
some of their time in inventing ingenious traps calculated
to ensnare the trick monkey. This would be pitting
their smartness against that of a suspicious and clever
animal; and if they won out why it would be reckoned
not only a glorious triumph but at the same time put
a nice little sum of good money in their pockets.
He announced this policy as they were
finishing their supper, and the others had to smile
to see the look of ecstatic joy that spread all over
Toby’s face.
“Oh! that’s just fine
of you boys to stand by me like that!” he burst
out with, and not tripping even once, strange to say.
“I’ll never forget it, give you my word
I won’t. And some time I’ll find a
chance to pay you back, see if I don’t.”
“Hear! hear!” cried Steve.
“Bravo!” exclaimed Max.
“Good stuff, Toby,” remarked
Bandy-legs, “and he never fell all over himself
once, you notice, fellers.”
“Of course,” Max continued,
“we don’t know whether we’ll have
another chance to see Link. He may have kicked
the dust of these parts off his feet, and started
out to find easier picking among the farmers’
houses, where he could sneak in and loot the kitchens
while the missus was out gathering eggs, or hanging
up the wash. But if we can coax him to stay around
our camp we’ll keep on hoping to get him in the
end.”
“But, Max,” ventured Steve,
“if all our smart traps go begging, and he gives
us the merry ha! ha! every time, wouldn’t you
try that monkey-catcher trick the circus man told
us about?”
“I’ve been thinking it
over,” said Max, “and while I’d much
prefer to take Link by some fairer scheme, if he is
too sharp for us, why I reckon we’ll have to
turn to that way. If he isn’t captured he
could live by stealing through the summer, but when
the cold weather came the poor beast would freeze
to death, because he’s a native of a hot climate,
you know.”
“G-g-good for you, Max!”
exclaimed Toby, beaming with joy; “oh! I
know now we’ll g-g-get Link in the end.
And to coax him to hang out around here r-r-right
along I’ve g-g-gone and b-b-baited the place.”
“How?” questioned Bandy-legs.
“I h-h-hunted up some likely
p-p-places where I just thought he’d be apt
to come and I p-p-put a few kernels of nuts in the
crotch, each one closer to the camp. You k-k-know
that’s the way they ketch wild t-t-turkeys,
make a t-t-trap of lathes, and have a road leading
into the same, comin’ up in the m-m-middle,
covered over just inside. Then they strew corn
all along and up onto the t-t-trap. Mister T-t-turk
he starts pickin’ up the g-g-grains, and is
so busy that he f-f-follows on till he comes up inside
the slats. Then he g-g-gets so excited that he
just runs around and around, tryin’ to p-p-poke
his old head through the bars, and never once rememberin’
that he came up in the m-m-middle!”
“Well, now, that wasn’t
a halfway bad idea of yours, Toby, to bait a line
with the nut meat, so’s to coax Link to come
closer,” Steve ventured to say, after listening
patiently to Toby’s staggering explanation;
“but tell us how you expect to trap the monk
after you’ve got him close in? I take it
that’s goin’ to be the job that’ll
make us think we’re up against a stone wall.”
“I saw Toby practicing with
a piece of old rope this afternoon, throwing a lariat,
and I bet you now he’s meaning to try and drop
a loop over the head of that Link,” Bandy-legs
asserted.
Max shook his head as though the idea
did not find much favor with him.
“A regular cow-puncher might
manage to do it,” he remarked, “but no
bungler like any one of us would be. That trick
monkey is too quick and smart to let a noose fall
over his head while he’s awake. You’d
see him duck every time, and slip off, chattering
like a parrot. You’ll have to try something
better than a lariat, Toby, if you hope to trap a
wideawake monkey.”
“Oh! well, I’ve been,
h-h-hammering my h-h-head all the while,” Toby
explained, “and I’ve fixed up a lot of
g-g-good schemes that I’d like to try out.
Once we g-g-get him to understand that there are n-n-nuts
around here, and he ain’t goin’ to desert
us in a h-h-hurry; so I’ll have a c-c-chance
to sample ’em all.”
“How about to-night; think it’ll
pay to rig that rope snare again, and bait it with
some of the nuts?” asked Steve, who was rapidly
becoming quite interested in the game, which appealed
to his sporting instincts more and more the deeper
he allowed himself to be drawn into it.
“I expected to,” admitted Toby.
“We might set a number of the
rope snares,” suggested Bandy-legs, “so
that if he missed connections with one he’d get
stuck in another. They could all be connected
with that stout hickory stick; or mebbe we might find
others just as full of spring.”
Max agreed that at least it would do no harm.
“All the same,” he went
on to tell Toby, “if I was you I wouldn’t
expect too much from that spring trap, no matter how
many snares you set. If that smart monkey really
put that stick in the noose, and set it off for fun,
or in spite, chances are you’ll never trap him
that way. He knows too much about tricks and
all that. But we’ll give the thing another
try-out to-night, and if it doesn’t work we’d
better change off to something else.”
Accordingly all of them became very
busy for some time. It was found that they could
fasten two other cords to the same bent sapling, making
a regular network of nooses, among which they scattered
some of the nut meat which the circus man had brought
along with him, knowing the weakness of the missing
animal for the same.
“Whew! if he eats up all that
and doesn’t get caught, I’ll believe he’s
sure a close relation of the Old Nick,” Steve
gave as his opinion, after this labor had been completed,
and they surveyed the trap with complacency.
Toby was very enthusiastic. He
declared that he felt it in his bones they would be
awakened by a screaming and scolding, to find poor
old Link dangling in mid-air, gripped by the hind
leg in one of those entangling nooses. He even
went so far as to arrange the stout collar, with its
padlock and chain, which Mr. Jenks had left with them
before going back, so as to have it handy in case
of sudden need.
None of them slept very soundly, even
Toby, who as a rule could be depended on to get his
full share of rest. Not that there was any wild
alarm, for the night crept on and everything remained
peaceful enough; but all of the boys felt more or
less excitement; and upon being awakened by some dream
would lie there listening, and occasionally peeping
out from the upturned flap of the tent.
The fire smouldered, and went out,
for no one ventured to replenish the exhausted fuel;
and during the last section of the night there was
not even a spark remaining; only the cold moon above
to dispel the darkness.
Then came morning, and as Bandy-legs
aroused them all with his kicking to get free from
his blanket, which seemed to be twisted around his
neck, while his feet were chilled, they thought it
best to start another day.
Toby of course was out as soon as
he could get some clothes on. He had expressed
himself as keenly disappointed because there had been
no sign of the trap being sprung; but shortly after
he went out to investigate, the others heard him coming
back on the jump.
“Sounds like he’s found
signs to tell that Link did pay us a call,”
suggested Steve, rightly guessing why Toby should manifest
so much excitement.
He proved to be a true prophet, for
Toby, as soon as he reached them, burst out with his
lament.
“What d’ye think, he’s
been and d-d-done it, fellers? Say, there isn’t
a c-c-crumb of all that nut meat left; but he stepped
over every n-n-noose as neat as you p-p-please.
My stars! but he’s a c-c-corker. G-g-guess
they make him walk on the tops of a h-h-hundred bottles
in the c-c-circus. He c’n do it easy, g-g-give
you my word for it. He’s a w-w-wonder,
that’s what he is. Whew! means I’ve
g-g-got to do some more high thinkin’ if I expect
to g-g-grab that Link. But I will, if I have
to p-p-play hookey from school, and s-s-stay up here
right along!”
Upon investigation it was found that
the clever simian had indeed managed to pass in and
out amidst that network of waiting loops without displacing
even one of the same. Every crumb of the nut meat
had vanished, too, showing how careful the sly rascal
had been, and cleaned up as he went.
Bandy-legs suggested that perhaps
woods rats might have done the trick, or even chipmunks
or red squirrels; whereupon a close examination disclosed
the plain imprints of the monkey’s feet in numerous
places, which proved the identity of the culprit beyond
any dispute.
Max was highly amused at the outcome,
for he always liked to find himself pitted against
a worthy antagonist. He seldom felt like exerting
himself when the game was not worth the candle.
He liked to cast a fly for bass, and having deceived
them with a feathery lure, play them with a slender
rod and fine line, giving them the sportsman’s
chance to get free if only they knew how to jump out
of the water and throw themselves across the taut
line.
It began to look as though the boys
had found a foeman worthy of their steel in this sly
trick monkey; and they would possibly have all the
fun they could want during the balance of their little
Easter outing, in trying to outwit him.
From time to time during that day
they talked matters over. Toby was not left alone
in the endeavor to invent some scheme whereby Link
might be caught. Steve hatched up one that they
determined to try that same night. It was to
dig a pit, cover it skillfully with a delicate mattress
that, when sprinkled with earth would seem to be perfectly
sound; but which was calculated to give way, once
a weight of thirty pounds or more had embarked on
the covering.
With high hopes, then, they carefully
baited this trap just before retiring to the interior
of the tent. Toby, always sanguine, was confident
that it was going to work. He had told long stories
as they sat around the camp fire, about how hunters
of big game, sent out by those who dealt in wild animals,
always used this trap in the shape of a pit in order
to secure various species that could not be caught
in their lion and tiger nets.
They had slept so poorly of late that
once they did manage to forget things the entire four
boys slumbered heavily for several hours. Any
ordinary noise would not have awakened Toby when at
home; indeed, his folks had threatened to get a patent
bed that, connected with clock-work machinery, would
throw him out on the floor at a certain hour arranged
for. But he had something on his mind now, and
hence when there suddenly arose a tremendous squealing
and crashing, Toby was up on his feet as quickly as
any of his three chums.
“Whoop! hurrah! we’ve
g-g-got him at last, fellers! Quick, let’s
hurry and k-k-keep the beggar from c-c-climbing out
again! Oh! joy! D-d-didn’t he make
an awful r-r-row, though? Listen to him, would
you? P-p-please hurry, Bandy-legs; you’re
as s-s-slow as molasses in winter!”
Not stopping to even pull on their
shoes they all hastened to reach the outer air, and
rush toward the spot where the pit had been dug.