Moxley’s face turned a deeper
shade of purple, and he made a threatening step toward
Ned.
“You’re a bold lad,”
he said with a harsh laugh. “There are not
many would dare to speak to me in that way. But
it wasn’t you who fired the gun that night.
I can tell by your actions that you’re anxious
to screen one of your companions.”
He paused a moment and then went on:
“You’ll find out before long that Dude
Moxley ain’t to be trifled with. I’ll
get what I want out of you obstinate pig headed chaps
if it takes a week. I know how to bring you to
terms. Back you go in that closet now, and there
you stay until you can listen to reason. When
you hand over the lad I want the rest of you can go
free, and so can the other one for that matterwhen
I’m through with him.
“Perhaps when he finds his companions
are suffering for what he did, his conscience will
make him confess. But mark you now, if this affair
ain’t settled by to-morrow’s dawn I’ll
chop up your canoes and burn the tent. I’ll
do more than that, too. I’ll bind and gag
you, and leave you here alone. And not a bite
do you get to eat, either.”
With this ultimatum Mr. Moxley rose,
and bolted the door. Then he sat down on the
sawdust, and sorting out some crackers and jerked beef
from the provisions began to eat greedily.
He was evidently quite satisfied to
spend another night at the mill, for the rain was
coming down faster than ever. What he had told
the boys about the loneliness and security of the
place was no idle boast, else he would have made haste
to leave the locality with his plunder.
Meanwhile a very excited discussion
was being carried on in whispers behind the closet
door.
Randy, stricken with remorse for the
troubles in which he had involved his companions,
was resolved to admit the shooting.
“I’d sooner stand the
punishment than see you fellows starving here,”
he said. “It will save the canoes and the
tent, too. I don’t believe the man will
dare to harm me. He is only trying to scare us.”
“Not a bit of it,” replied
Ned stoutly. “He’s a thoroughbred
villain, and will certainly take some revenge on you.
Your resolve does you lots of credit, Randy, but it
won’t do. You might repent it all the days
of your life.”
Clay and Nugget were of the same mind,
and earnestly urged Randy to abandon his rash intention.
“Help may be nearer than we
think,” said Clay. “The man who stopped
us up the creek this morning was certainly Bug Batters,
and it looks very much to me as though he has been
following this Moxley on purpose to keep him from
doing us any injury. He may feel grateful to us,
you know, because we saved his brotheror
rather you did, Ned.”
“And Bug Batters knew that Moxley
was in the vicinity,” whispered Nugget.
“That’s who he was looking for when we
met him.”
“I have no doubt that the stranger
was Bug Batters,” said Ned, “and I think
he is trying to prevent his old companion from carrying
out his revenge, as Clay suggests. But what has
become of Bug Batters now? That is the important
question. I am afraid he has strayed off in some
other direction. If he came near the mill he
could not help finding the canoes.”
“He told us he had been down
the creek just before we met him,” remarked
Clay, “but he could not have been all the way
to the mill, for the two canoes and the tent were
there then, and he did not say anything about them.”
“And when he left us he struck
back toward the base of the hill,” added Nugget.
“It looks very much as though
he had lost the trail entirely,” said Ned.
“He may be three or four miles away. It
would be very foolish to count on getting help from
him, anyhow.”
“Then we don’t stand a
ghost of a chance,” muttered Randy. “You
had better let me have my own way. I’ll
throw myself on that fellow’s mercy.”
“You won’t do anything
of the kind,” said Ned firmly. “We
won’t let you. If anything serious happened
we would have to shoulder the blame. If you are
really sorry for being the cause of this scrape, prove
it by dropping your foolish project.”
“You take things coolly enough,”
grumbled Randy. “Do you want us to stay
cooped up here for a week, and lose everything we have?
Go ahead, then. I won’t say any more.”
In truth Randy was glad enough to
give up his resolve. Remorse had prompted him
to make the offer, and he had secretly hoped that his
companions would refuse to accept the sacrifice.
“I don’t intend that we
shall stay here a week, or even a night, if I can
help it,” said Ned, after a pause. “I
have a little plan in my head, but it won’t
work until evening. If that fails we still have
a slim chance left.
“The farmer from whom those
chickens were stolen may stray down here in search
of the thief, and it is not impossible that Mose Hocker
is somewhere about here. This man certainly stole
that gun from Hocker’s cabin, and if he took
the boat at the same timewhich I believe
he didHocker will surely try to recover
his property, and will naturally look for it along
the creek.”
Ned’s reasoningand
especially his intimation of a plan to escapeput
the boys in a more cheerful mood. They were all
thoroughly exhausted for want of sleep, but that was
of little consequence compared with the pangs of hunger
and thirst they were enduring. They had eaten
nothing since the previous evening, nor had a drop
of water touched their lips. And it was now past
noon.
It was aggravating, nay, maddening,
to know that their store of provisions was so close.
Well they realized the futility of appealing to their
merciless captor.
He had said they should have no food,
and they knew he meant it. No doubt he would
deny them water also, and they did not venture to ask
it.
They could see the fellow plainly.
He was sprawled in a lazy attitude on the sawdust,
pulling at his foul black pipe. Occasionally he
took a flat, greenish bottle from his pocket and tasted
the contents with a satisfactory smack of the lips.
The fumes of bad tobacco and whisky began to permeate
the closet.
So the long afternoon wore on.
Moxley seemed quite unconcerned about his prisoners.
He was well content to lie on the soft sawdust with
his bottle and his pipe, secure from the pelting rain
that was falling outside.
Ned kept a close watch upon him, noting
with satisfaction that he had frequent recourse to
the bottle. His potations would likely induce
sleep.
It seemed to the impatient boys that
night would never come, but at last the gray light
faded from the crevice, and the dusk of evening deepened
the shadows in the old mill.
Before it was fairly dark Moxley lighted
one of the lanterns that he had brought from the canoes
and put it on a log. It was a bullseye, and he
so trained it that the yellow glare shone on the sawdust
heap.
Perhaps he fancied it an excellent
substitute for sunlight, which all tramps love so
dearly. At all events he basked in it while he
smoked a couple of pipes, and then, after several
ineffectual efforts to sit straight, he rolled over
on his back.
A moment later heavy snores came from
his parted lips. He was undoubtedly asleep.
It may be imagined with what anxiety
Ned had been watching this little scene through the
crevice.
“The time has come,” he
whispered to his companions. “Moxley won’t
wake in a hurry now. But to make sure, suppose
you mount guard there, Randy.”
“What are you going to do?”
asked Randy, as he crouched down on the floor.
“Break the door open?”
“Not much. I’ll show you in a moment.”
The closet in which the boys were
confined was built right against the rear end of the
mill. Its dimensions were ampleeight
feet long and about four wide. Underneath was
the wasteway, but its usual roar was now subdued by
an influx of water from the flooded creek.
Ned had been quietly examining the
situation during the day, and had noted the shaky
condition of the floor planks. He now directed
Clay and Nugget to stand close to the door. Then
kneeling down he inserted both hands in a crevice
between two of the planks and pulled with all his
might.
A ripping noise, a sharp crackand
the worm eaten plank came free of the beams, leaving
a gaping orifice in the very center of the floor,
four feet long by a foot and a half wide.
Ned trembled like a leaf.
“Is it all right?” he whispered eagerly.
“Yes,” replied Randy. “The
rascal is sound asleep. He didn’t budge.”
“I’m glad of that.”
The boys looked timidly down the hole,
and crouched closer to the wall. Far below, through
the network of crossed beams, they could see the eddying
flood. It looked immeasurably distant.
“You don’t expect us to go down there,
I hope,” queried Clay.
“No, but I intend you to lower
me through,” answered Ned. “If
I can reach one of those rafters I will be all right.
It won’t be a difficult matter to get out on
land. Then I will hurry around to the door, liberate
you fellows, while Moxley is sleeping, seize his gunand
then away for freedom.”
Ned drew a long breath at the prospect.
“Now this is what I want you
to do,” he resumed in a calmer tone. “If
the rafters are too far below me you must let me down
to them by one of your coats. Brace yourselves
now so you can stand the strain.”
The boys obeyed and Randy stripped
off his coat in case it should be needed.
Then Ned lowered himself at one end
of the hole, and swung clear down.
He pulled himself up, and clung by
his elbows. “No good,” he whispered
hoarsely. “The nearest rafter is a foot
below. Let me have the coat. It will be
safer than trusting to your hands. I might drag
you down with me.”
The three boys braced themselves around
the hole, and took a firm grasp of the upper part
of the coat.
“All right,” whispered Randy.
By a dexterous movement Ned transferred
his hold from the planking to the more precarious
support and slipped downward, hand over hand.
An instant later his feet touched a broad, solid beam.