The burst of derisive laughter that
greeted his proposition in no way disconcerted Randy.
He waited quietly until it was over, and then repeated
his request.
“Ho! ho!” cackled Daddy
Perkiss; “is the lad tired of livin’, or
kin he breathe under water like a fish?”
“He’s a stout hearted
chap,” cried Mose Hocker, “and sense his
mind’s bent on takin’ a good long dive
I reckon he kin have the boat. There ain’t
no undercurrent out there as I know of, so he ain’t
likely to come to harm, and besides I’m mighty
anxious to git my gun back.”
Here Mr. Hocker winked slyly at Daddy
Perkiss and the fishermen.
The old man failed to appreciate the joke.
“It’s temptin’ Providence,”
he cried shrilly, pounding his cane on the beach.
“If you ever sees that weapon agin, Mose Hocker,
I’ll give you ten pounds of the best plug terbacker
that Bill Smith has in his store.”
“That’s a bargain,”
exclaimed Mose. “You fellows can testify
to what he said.”
Then turning to Randy he added with
a laugh, “Don’t fail me now, lad.
Ten pounds of terbacker ain’t picked up every
day.”
“Just give me a fair show and
I’ll astonish you all before long,” replied
Randy, moving toward the boat. “Ned, will
you go with me?” he added.
Ned willingly agreed, much to the
amazement of Clay and Nugget, who expected him to
oppose Randy’s project with all his might.
The truth of the matter was that Ned, being a sensible
fellow, shared Randy’s view, and was rather
anxious to see the tables turned on the credulous
rustics.
He was satisfied from the smooth and
sluggish appearance of the water that a dive would
not be attended with danger.
In some unaccountable manner the news
seemed to have spread through the neighborhood, and
when Ned and Randy embarked, the crowd had been augmented
by three men and two bare-footed urchins. A wagon
containing two farmers had stopped at the entrance
of the bridge, and the occupants were tying the horse
preparatory to coming down.
Mose Hocker’s boat was a large,
heavy craft, built on the order of a bateau, and was
admirably adapted to Randy’s purpose. The
boys paddled up stream a little until they were directly
below the rock Hocker had designated. Then, while
the boat drifted down with a barely perceptible motion,
Randy hastily undressed.
“It’s a pity we didn’t
bring a fishing line along,” observed Ned.
“I could ascertain the depth for you in a minute.”
“We don’t need it,”
replied Randy. “I was never in better wind
than I am now. If there’s a bottom at all
I’ll find it.”
The boat was now one hundred feet
below the rock, and a stroke or two of Ned’s
paddle put it in line with the big buttonwood tree
on the right shore.
“This is just about the exact
spot,” said Randy, surveying with a critical
eye the rock and then the tree. “Hold the
boat steady, Ned. I’ll be ready in a second
or two.”
This was not a difficult task, for
the water was as smooth as a mill pond and almost
as motionless.
Clay and Nugget had by this time paddled
out in their canoes to witness operations, and the
little group on the shore were waiting in breathless
silence.
Randy was prepared now, and suddenly
he mounted the broad stern seat, and stood on the
outer edge.
An audible murmur came from the shore,
and Daddy Perkiss mumbled shrilly: “They’re
right over the middle of the Hole.”
“Paddle down a little,”
said Randy in a quiet tone to Clay and Nugget.
“You obstruct the view. Still in the right
location, are we?” he inquired of Ned.
“Yes, as near as possible,”
was the reply. “Be careful, old fellow!”
Randy smiled and glanced at the expectant
crowd on the shore. Then he drew a long breath,
pressed his hands together and dived gracefully into
the cloudy blue water. It was done so quickly
and cleverly that no loud splash followed, nor was
the boat violently shaken.
As the seconds passed on not the least
sound broke the stillness; every eye was fixed on
the spot where the lad had disappeared, and every heart
was beating tumultuously.
The seconds grew almost to a minute,
and still the smooth surface remained unbroken.
Ned’s hand trembled as he kept the boat in position,
and Clay and Nugget exchanged frightened glances.
“I knew it,” cried Daddy
Perkiss in a cracked voice. “That lad will
never be seen again. He’s gone down to meet
Jonas Rudy.”
This ill boding prophecy had scarcely
left the old man’s lips, when Randy shot into
view a few feet to the left of where he had disappeared.
Half a dozen strokes brought him to the boat, and with
Ned’s assistance he scrambled over the side.
His hands were empty.
A burst of laughter came from shore,
and Daddy Perkiss cried triumphantly: “Where’s
the gun, lad? Did you find bottom?”
Randy only waved his hand in reply.
He was panting a little for breath, but his face wore
a very peculiar smilea smile that quite
baffled the three eager boys.
“What luck?” queried Ned
excitedly. “How far down were you?
Did you find anything?”
“You will know before long,”
replied Randy with aggravating calmness. “Keep
the boat in the same place, Ned. One more stroke.
There, that’s it Here goes for another.”
He quickly mounted the seat again,
and drew in his breath.
“Hold on, young fellar,”
cried Mose Hocker in a loud voice, “Don’t
risk your life a second time. I kin stand the
loss of that terbacker.”
Randy laughed, waved his hand, and
went under head foremost.
The suspense was now greater than
on the previous occasion. Ned began to count,
and when the half minute expired his face grew pale.
Thirty-fivefortythree-quarters
of a minute! No sign of the reckless diver.
Had some undercurrent dragged him far down in those
blue depths?
When the forty-ninth second had expired
a loud murmur rose from the people on shore, and just
a second later it changed to a deafening burst of
applause as Randy shot above the surface holding in
his right handMose Hacker’s gun.
His face was fairly purple for want
of breath, and he had scarcely enough strength to
gain the side of the boat. He threw the gun over
first and then, with Ned’s aid, rolled into the
bottom, where he lay for a moment, panting for breath.
Cheer after cheer came from shore,
and the boys joined in heartily. Randy was all
right in a moment, and as Ned paddled across the creek,
he hurriedly pulled on his clothes.
When the boat landed by the rocks
such a scene ensued as no pen can describe. The
men crowded about Randy with eager congratulations,
and fairly pumped his arms off.
Mose Hocker snatched the gun and waved
it triumphantly before Daddy Perkiss.
“What do you think of that?”
he cried. “The lad brought it clean up from
the bottom of Rudy’s hole. I’ll take
that ten pounds of terbacker, Daddy, as soon as you
please.”
“Shoo, now! thar’s some
trick about the thing,” mumbled the old man
petulantly. “You can’t make me believe
that Rudy’s Hole ain’t two or three hundred
feet deep.”
“But here’s the gun to
prove it,” said Mose, “an’ we all
saw the lad bring it up. Let him speak for himself,
and say whether he touched bottom or not.”
“Of course I touched bottom,”
returned Randy with a slight shiver at the recollection.
“It was the biggest dive I ever made. The
water must be fifteen or twenty feet deep. It’s
not any more than that, though. I thought I’d
never come to the top the second time. I was just
ready to burst when I found the gun, and the weight
of it kept me from coming up rapidly.”
Daddy heard the lad through, and then,
with a contemptuous sniff, he rose and hobbled up
the path.
“Don’t forgit the terbacker,”
Mose Hocker shouted after him.
The old man made no reply, and was soon out of sight.
“It’s a hard blow for
Daddy,” said one of the fishermen, “an’
the same in fact fur all of us, I reckon. I’ve
been brung up from a lad in the full belief that Rudy’s
Hole were well nigh bottomless.”
“And I,” “and I,” cried half
a dozen voices.
“It will be most amazin’
news to the whole community,” said Mose Hocker,
“an’ mebbe it’ll teach folks to investigate
things. I’m kinder sorry for Daddy Perkiss.
It was his chief delight to tell that story to every
stranger what come along, an’ now he won’t
dare to open his lips about Rudy’s Hole.
When I get the terbacker I’ll give you fellows
a plug apiece.”
Three or four of the men laughed at
this, as though they had their doubts on the subject.
“Oh, I’ll keep Daddy to
his word,” resumed Mose. “He kin easily
afford it.” Then turning to the boys he
said abruptly, “I want you boys to come down
the creek and spend the night at my place. I’ll
try to treat you well. The recovery of that gun
means a good deal to me, and I want to do what I kin
in return.”
Several other invitations of a similiar
nature were extended to the Jolly Rovers, but they
accepted Mose Mocker’s without hesitation.
A few moments later they paddled down the creek, cheered
loudly by the admiring spectators.