Read CHAPTER XIII - IN THE CYPRESS COUNTRY of Chums in Dixie / The Strange Cruise of a Motorboat, free online book, by St. George Rathborne, on ReadCentral.com.

During the morning they talked often of the occurrence of the previous night. Phil no longer felt any qualms of conscience, on account of what he had done. And he really hoped Pete would get clear of the posse. There had been something in the face of the negro that impressed both boys with a sense of his honesty. He had been sent to the convict camp simply because he was unlucky enough to be in a fight. Had he been a common thief it might have looked different to Phil.

And while Tony McGee might not be able to grasp all the fine points in the matter, he could understand that these two new friends of his had warm, boyish hearts; and he often looked at them with growing affection when neither Phil nor Larry believed he was at all concerned about their affairs.

Then that old troubled expression would flit back again, to hold dominion over Tony’s face. That was when he tried to imagine what his father’s actions might be, after he learned that one of these lads was really the son of Dr. Lancing, the rich land owner, against whom he had so strong a grudge that he would have been sorely tempted to kill him, did the millionaire but venture into the land of the squatter shingle-makers.

They tied up again at noon, taking Tony’s advice. Phil could plainly see that the swamp boy, acting as pilot of the little expedition, was trying to time their progress so as to hit a certain place toward nightfall.

“What d’ye think of it?” asked Larry, when Tony having wandered off with the gun to see if he could find some “partridges,” the two could exchange words without being overheard.

“About Tony, do you mean?” queried his companion, easily guessing what was worrying Larry.

“Yes. He asked us not to leave here until about the middle of the afternoon; and then he sprung that idea on us, of stepping out to see if he could scare up any game. You don’t imagine for a minute, do you, Phil, that he means to betray us to his friends, and get us into trouble?”

“Rats! You don’t dream of believing that yourself, now. But I saw just as you did, that he wanted to hold us here a certain time. And it wouldn’t surprise me one little bit if Tony failed to come back until a couple of hours had gone,” and while saying this Phil looked wise, which fact struck his chum as particularly exasperating, seeing that he was so consumed with curiosity.

“Then do take pity on me, and tell me right away what you think,” said Larry; “because I can see in your face that you’ve guessed something.”

“Well, of course you’ve heard Tony try to convince me lots of times that it would be foolish in our stopping off to see his father?” Phil said to begin with.

“Yes, I have,” replied Larry, promptly. “First of all he wanted us to turn back. Then, when he saw that you just wouldn’t, he asked why not keep right on past his place.”

“Just so,” remarked Phil. “And I’ve got a notion right now that Tony is holding us back so that we will just have to do some traveling after dark tonight. Perhaps he’ll find some excuse for it, by saying there is no decent stopping place. And in that way the boy may hope to coax us past the dangerous point where the squatters have their settlement.”

“But you won’t consent, Phil; I just know you too well to believe it,” cried Larry.

“Well, not so you can see it,” came the positive reply. “When I embarked on this cruise I knew just what I was up against. I understood that McGee was feeling bitter against my dad; but I believe the message I’m carrying him will knock all his animosity to flinders. And not even Tony must upset my plans.”

The time crept on. An hour had passed since Tony went away. They had heard several distant shots in quick succession, and Larry was filled with hope that his craving for “quail on toast” might be finally made an accomplished fact; though just where the latter article was to come from might have puzzled any one, since their last scrap of bread had long since vanished from mortal view.

Another hour seemed almost exhausted, and Larry began to grow uneasy.

“He’s got your new gun along, Phil,” he remarked.

“That’s so,” smiled the other, who did not seem one whit disturbed by the non-appearance of the swamp boy; “but don’t you believe that cuts any figure in his keeping away. I’ve been studying Tony right along, ever since we met him first; and I’d stake a heap on his fidelity. He has come to care for us, too. I could see that by the way he watches us, and the light in his eyes at times. But there he comes right now, Larry; and he’s holding up some game you like right well.”

“It’s quail all right, and a fine bunch of the little darlings, too!” exclaimed the cook of the expedition, his face relaxing into a happy grin; and all doubts immediately vanished from his mind.

Tony came slowly into camp. Phil noticed that there was a serious look on his face, as though more than ever the swamp boy might be troubled in his mind. Which fact gave Phil a rather startling idea.

Could it be possible that Tony had met with any of the squatters during his little side hunt? And suppose this to have been the case, what had happened between them? Of course they must know that Tony had gone up-river with his little blind sister, so that his presence near the home settlement would arouse both their curiosity and suspicions.

They must also notice the wonderful pump-gun he was carrying; and that again would be likely to cause them to demand an explanation. Would Tony tell all that had happened to him? And might the news be thus carried ahead of their coming to the terrible McGee, that the son of the rich man he hated so bitterly was even now in his power?

But Tony said nothing. He was far from being talkative at any time, and just now he seemed to shut up as “tight as a clam,” as Larry expressed it aside to his chum.

They started down the now wide stream. Since the boys first commencing this eventful voyage two days back, the river had received many additions in the way of smaller creeks, so that it was now pouring quite a volume of water along toward the gulf.

And it was easy to see from the nature of the frequent swamps bordering the banks that they were drawing near the great cypress belt where the shingle-makers held forth in all their glory, defying eviction on the part of any owner of the territory.

It was about the latter part of the afternoon when Larry called attention to a man on the shore. He was standing on a hamak, and held an old gun in his hands, as though he might have been hunting up this way, and his dugout not far off.

The fellow was far from prepossessing looking, to say the least. His garments were of dingy homespun, and his beard gave him the appearance of a tramp. But of course Phil realized that he must belong to the settlement toward which they were gradually drawing closer with every mile passed over. And if so surely Tony would know him.

He noticed that the man was staring at them as they glided past, with the motor slowed down to its lowest ebb; as Tony had requested that they only keep with the current. And turning toward the swamp boy he saw him make some sort of sign to the man it might be merely a wave of recognition; and again there may have been a deeper significance connected with it.

“You knew him, then, Tony?” asked Phil, trying to seem indifferent.

“Oh! yes, sure,” replied the other, quickly. “That was Gabe Barker.”

“Barker!” exclaimed Phil, “any relation to our friend the sheriff, now?”

“Yep, that’s the funny part o’ it,” replied Tony, with a slight smile. “Gabe an’ the sheriff be full cousins. But all the same, Gabe he helped to carry the pole when they ride t’other Barker out o’ the settlement. They has a feud you see, his fambly an’ that o’ the sheriff.”

“But Gabe is one of the McGee clan now, isn’t he?” pursued Phil.

“He’s be’n, nigh on seven year,” Tony admitted. “Think he licked the father o’ the sheriff, and hed tuh cut stick an’ run afore they got ’im.”

“Why d’ye suppose he didn’t call out to you?” asked Phil; who really considered this the most sinister part of the entire proceeding; for according to his way of thinking it would have been the natural thing for a man to have done under such circumstances.

Tony allowed that queer little smirk to creep over his face again.

“Gabe he would like to much, on’y he couldn’t,” he said.

“Why, I didn’t see anybody stopping him!” ejaculated Larry.

Tony made a movement toward his mouth, and then observed:

“Gabe he not say much now for five years. Used tuh curse more’n three men. Then a tree he was cutting down fell wrong way. Gabe he caught underneath. Bite tongue off and near die when McGee find him. So he makes talk with hands since that time.”

“Oh! what d’ye think of that, now?” cried the wondering Larry. “Pretty tough on that long-legged Gabe, for a fact. No wonder then, he didn’t call out to you, and ask all those questions I could see on his face.”

“Tony, do you suppose now that Gabe came up the swift river in his dugout, which I noticed floating on the water near where he stood on that rise?” asked Phil, with a reason for the query.

The swamp boy looked uneasily at him, but answered at once.

“No, current too strong. We come this far through swamp. I paddle so when I take little sister up-river. That place whar Gabe stand hide entrance to swamp.”

“And how long do you suppose it would take Gabe, if he started right away, to get back to the settlement?” Phil continued.

“After sundown, an’ afore dark,” the other answered. “River turn many times, but through swamp it is easy to go straight away.”

“Then unless we started up, and ran for it, Gabe could get there sooner than our motor boat; is that a fact, Tony?”

“Yes,” replied the swamp boy, with a sigh, “Gabe get there first, anyhow!”