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Four Afoot: Being the Adventures of the Big Four on the Highway
They had a fine time for half an hour and then swam back in search of the place they had left.
“I don’t see anything that looks like it,” said Tom.
“Nor I,” said Dan. “Say, wouldn’t it be a joke if we couldn’t find our clothes?”
“A mighty poor one,” answered Bob. “We’d ought to have made Barry stay and look after them. Then we’d known where they were.”
“Oh, they’re right along here somewhere,” said Nelson. “We went in opposite that big white house over there, the one with the high chimney on the outside.”
“Huh!” said Dan. “That’s a half mile away. Any place over here is opposite. Let’s go out here and look around.”
They did, and they looked a long time. But finally there was a shout from Tommy, who had meandered off on his own hook.
“Here they are!” he called. Then, a moment later,
“We’ve been ru-ru-ru-ru-robbed!” yelled Tom.
“What?” cried Dan.
“Oh, it’s one of Tommy’s jokes,” muttered Nelson anxiously as they raced toward where he was standing. But it wasn’t. It needed but one glance to prove that. The contents of the knapsacks were scattered about under the trees, the lunches were gone, and their clothes had evidently been handled. Bob picked up his coat and thrust his hand into a pocket. Then he seized his trousers and went through the same performance. And the others followed suit as though it had been a game of follow-your-leader. Then they all dropped the garments and looked at each other blankly.
“Stripped!” said Dan.
“Every blessed cent gone,” said Nelson. “Watch too!”
“I had twenty-six dollars,” said Tom mournfully.
“You shouldn’t carry so much wealth about with you,” answered Dan with a grin. “It ought to be a lesson to you. I only had eight.”
“You shut up!” growled Tom.
“Well, whoever they were,” said Bob ruefully, “they made a pretty good haul. I had about fifteen dollars. And they got my watch too. But it was only a cheap one.”
“Mine wasn’t,” said Nelson. “It cost forty dollars. Say, what’s the matter with Barry?”
The terrier was running excitedly about, smelling and sniffing and giving vent to short yelps. Once or twice he started off through the trees as though nothing could stop him. But each time he turned back, whining, and began sniffing the ground again.
“Barry’s got the fellow’s scent,” said Nelson.
“And the fellow’s got every cent of mine,” said Dan.
“Gee!” said Tom sorrowfully, “I don’t see anything to ju-ju-joke about!”
“Hello!” Bob stooped and picked up a piece of paper. It was part of an envelope which had inclosed a letter to Nelson and had reposed in that youth’s coat pocket. On the blank side a few words had been laboriously scrawled with a pencil.
“‘I gess this wil tech you Not to But in,’” read Bob slowly.
“What’s that mean?” asked Dan.
“Search me,” said Nelson. “Who’s butted in?”
“Du-du-don’t you su-su-su-see?” cried Tom. “I-i-i-it’s the fu-fu-fellow that su-su-stole the su-su-su-su – !”
“Silver! That’s right, Tommy!” cried Dan. “That’s just who did it. And I said yesterday I was glad he’d got away! I wish one of you chaps would kick me!”
“He was probably hiding in the woods here and saw us undress,” said Bob. “I wish – ”
“I wish I had hold of him again,” said Nelson angrily. “What’ll we do?”
“Get to the nearest town as soon as we can and report it to the police,” replied Bob.
“Where is the nearest town? Couldn’t we find a telephone somewhere around? How about those houses over there?”
“It would be a good two miles around there, I guess,” said Bob, consulting his map. “And there’s some sort of a town about a mile and a half ahead of us. We’d better light out for there.”
“All right,” said Nelson.
“I’m glad he left us our clothes, anyhow,” said Dan. “And look, maybe we can find which way he went. Here, Barry, seek him out! Get after him, sir!”
Barry whined and sniffed and ran around, but every time he started off on the trail he lost it and had to come back.
“Seems to me,” said Tom, “if I had a watchdog I’d make him watch.”
“Maybe he’s lost his watch, like the rest of us,” said Nelson soothingly. “Come on; I’m ready. What’s the odds, anyhow? It’s all in the day’s work – or rather walk. We’ll feel fine after we’ve had some lunch.”
“Lunch!” sniffed Tom, struggling with his trousers. “Lunch! Where are we going to get it, I’d like to know?”
“Oh, we’ll find something in this village Bob’s talking about.”
“Wu-wu-wu-well, s’posing we du-du-do? How we gu-gu-gu-going to pu-pu-pu-pay for it?”
“By Jove!” muttered Nelson blankly. “I hadn’t thought of that!”
CHAPTER IX
SHOWS THEM BOTH HUNGRY AND SATISFIED
It was a very subdued quartet that took the road to Clearwater, the nearest village, although, after they had walked along in silence for a few hundred yards, Dan’s face began to clear and the corners of his mouth stole upward as he glanced at his companions. I don’t think that Barry meant to seem heartless or unsympathetic, but his conduct would have looked, to one unacquainted with his real nature, decidedly callous. He chased birds and squirrels, tried to climb trees, dug for mice, and barked and scampered just as though there was no such thing as misfortune in all the world. And only Dan, I think, understood and sympathized with him.
They walked rapidly and before long reached Clearwater. In spite of the fact that the map made it appear to be quite a village, Clearwater proved to be merely a collection of some half dozen houses surrounding the junction of two roads. There was neither store nor hotel there. They asked information at the first house they came to. To find an officer, they were told, it would be necessary to go on to Millford, two miles beyond, although if they liked they could telephone there. Bob thanked the man and was conducted to the telephone. In a few minutes he had supplied the officers at Millford with all the information possible and had described the stolen property. He promised also to see the officers when he reached Millford. After that there was nothing to do but keep on for that town.
“We’ll find a telegraph office there,” said Bob, “and Dan can wire his father for some money. Then we’ll go to a hotel, tell them how we’re fixed, and get them to trust us until the money comes.”
As no one had a better one to offer, that plan was adopted. But it was weary work, that last two miles. They were all extremely hungry; indeed, Tom looked so famished that the others almost expected to see him expire before their eyes. Nelson became temporarily unbalanced, if Dan is to be believed, and muttered incoherent things about roast beef and mashed potatoes. It was three o’clock and after when they at last wandered into Millford. It was a tiny village, but there were stores there, a telegraph office, and a hotel. They came to the telegraph office first, and so they went in and Dan wrote his telegram.
“Money stolen. Please wire fifty dollars this office. All well. Dan.”
That was the message, and, as Bob couldn’t suggest any improvements, it was handed to the operator. The latter counted the words.
“Twenty-five cents,” he said.
“Send collect, please,” said Dan.
“What’s your address?”
“We haven’t any yet. We’re going to the hotel.”
“Hotel’s closed; closed first of the month.”
Dan looked at Bob, and Bob looked at Dan; and then they looked at Nelson and Tom.
“Closed!” muttered Dan finally.
“Is there a boarding house here we can go to?” asked Bob.
“I don’t believe so; never heard of any,” answered the operator.
“Well – you’ll send that message, won’t you?” asked Dan anxiously. The operator hesitated.
“It’s against the rules,” he objected. “If you lived here I might.”
“It will be all right,” said Dan. “It’s to my father, and that’s his address there. We’ve lost every cent of our money, and I don’t know how we’re going to get any more unless that message reaches him.”
“Well – all right. I guess I can send it for you. You guarantee charges, do you?”
“Yes,” said Dan. “And we’ll come around in the morning for the answer. I’m awfully much obliged.”
“Where is the nearest place we could get lodgings and something to eat?” asked Bob.
“I don’t believe there’s a place nearer than Port Adams, and that’s about four miles from here. There’s a hotel there.”
“Gosh!” muttered Tom.
They thanked the operator again and went out. Then began a search for a boarding place that lasted for half an hour. They heard of one lady who had a room which she sometimes rented and they went to her posthaste. But the room was taken. At the end of the half hour they had seemingly exhausted the possibilities of Millford and were still without shelter.
“How about the police folks?” asked Tom.
“I’d forgotten all about them,” answered Bob. “Maybe they’ll let us sleep in the police station.”
But the police station proved to be only a couple of small rooms in the townhall. They told their story all over again, gave their home addresses, and departed with little hope of ever seeing their property again. For it was evident that the officer suspected them of trying to work a hoax on him, and his promises to look for the robber didn’t sound very enthusiastic. Out on the sidewalk they held a council of war. Bob was for keeping on to Port Adams where the hotel was, but none of the others agreed with him.
“I couldn’t walk four miles farther this afternoon if there was a million dollars in it,” asserted Dan.
And Nelson and Tom echoed the sentiment.
“Besides,” said Nelson, “maybe if we went there they wouldn’t take us at the hotel, and we wouldn’t be any better off.”
“And we’d have to walk back here in the morning to get the money,” added Tom.
“All right,” said Bob. “What will we do, then?”
But no one offered a suggestion. Instead they stood and stared dejectedly across the street. Even Barry appeared to have lost spirit; there was a weary air in the way he held his stump of a tail. On the other side of the street a fence was placarded with highly colored circus posters. “Millford, Sept. 9,” was the legend they bore. That was to-morrow.
“If we get that money,” said Nelson, “let’s stay and see the circus.”
“Never mind about the circus,” said Bob irritably. “What we’ve got to do is to find some place to sleep.”
“And something to eat,” added Tom sadly.
“Let’s sleep outdoors,” said Dan. “It’s going to be fairly warm to-night, I guess.”
“But how about food?” asked Bob.
“Let’s go to a house and ask them to feed us,” suggested Tom. “Tell them we’ll pay in the morning.”
“No, sir,” answered Bob. “That’s begging, and I won’t beg.”
“Nor I,” said Nelson.
“It isn’t begging if you pay for it,” said Tom indignantly.
“Well, it sounds a whole lot like it. I’d rather go without eating.”
“We might draw lots,” said Dan, “and eat one of us.”
“Wish I was home,” muttered Tom.
He thrust his hands deep into his trousers pockets and stared disconsolately across at the circus posters. Then suddenly his face lighted, he uttered a gurgle, and yanked his left hand out of his pocket.
“Lu-lu-lu-look!” he sputtered.
They looked. There in Tom’s palm lay a shining half dollar.
“Where’d you get it?” they cried.
“Lu-lu-left pocket. I pu-pu-pu-put it there du-du-day before yu-yu-yu-yesterday and forgot all abub-ub-ub – all about it!”
The others searched their own pockets frantically, but were not so lucky.
“Say, that’s great!” cried Nelson.
“You bet!” said Dan. “Are you – are you sure it’s good?”
“Course it’s good!” said Tom.
“Gee! Doesn’t half a dollar look big when you’re starving?” said Dan softly. It was passed around from one to another, all examining it as though it were a quite unusual object. Bob sighed as it left his hand.
“It certainly looks good to me,” he muttered.
“Now, what’ll we do with it?” asked Tom. “I don’t suppose anyone will give us four suppers for half a dollar.”
“We might get two for that price,” suggested Dan. “Two of us could get supper and bring something out to the others.”
“Well, don’t let Tom go,” laughed Nelson.
“If only there was some sort of a restaurant in this idiotic place!” sighed Bob.
“I tell you!” cried Dan. “We’ll go to a store and buy some grub, pitch a camp, and cook it ourselves! We can get a lot for fifty cents!”
“Good scheme!” said Bob.
“Fine!” said Nelson.
“Swell!” agreed Tom. “Come on!”
They sought the main street and the stores. At a market they purchased a pound of round steak for twenty-five cents, and, in response to Dan’s hints, the man threw in a good-sized bone for Barry. Farther on they found a grocery store and spent five cents for a loaf of bread, seven cents for a quarter of a pound of butter, six cents for a quart of milk – the groceryman good-naturedly supplying a bottle for it – and five cents for half a dozen cookies. Thus armed they sought a place to pitch their camp. Five minutes of walking took them out of the village, and they soon espied a knoll which promised a suitable spot. They crossed a field, climbed the knoll, and found an ideal location on the western side of it. The trees were sparse, but, there was enough undergrowth here and there to serve as wind-break during the night. The four were once more themselves and in the highest spirits. Bob took command, and under his direction the others were set to finding fuel, whittling sticks for forks, and building the fireplace. By five o’clock the flames were sending a column of purple smoke up into the still evening air, and the slice of steak, cut into four portions, was sizzling over the fire on as many pointed sticks. And Barry was busy with his bone. In short, life was worth living again.
Now, if you have never spent the day out of doors and supped at night in the open with the wood smoke floating about you, you can have no very definite idea of how good that meal tasted to the Four. The steak was done to a turn, brown and crisp outside, burned a little about the edges as every camper’s steak should be, and inside slightly pink and so full of juice that a napkin, had one happened along, would have done a land-office business! And then the bread! Well, I suppose it was just an ordinary loaf, but – it didn’t taste so! There was a beautiful golden-brown crust all over the outside that broke with a brittle and appetizing sound. And under the crust was the whitest, softest, freshest, sweetest bread that ever made the thought of butter a sacrilege. I don’t mean by that that the butter wasn’t used; it was, lavishly as long as it lasted; after it was gone it was never missed. The cookies, too, and the milk, ridiculously rich milk it was, were simply marvelous. Really, it was astonishing how much better Long Island food was than any other! And Barry, flat on the ground, both paws on the big bone and teeth busy, grunted accordantly.
Before them as they sat in a semicircle about the little fire the hill sloped down to a broad pasture, here and there overgrown with bushes and dotted at intervals with low trees. Beyond the pasture was a swamp closed in on its farther side by a line of woods looking dark against the saffron evening sky. To their right, perhaps a quarter of a mile distant, was a farmhouse and buildings, and from the house a thin filament of blue smoke arose. Now and then a voice reached them; sometimes a dog barked afar off and Barry lifted his head and listened; once the chug-chug of an automobile, speeding along the road behind them, disturbed the silence.
Conversation was fitful at the best during that meal, for it must be remembered that they had had no lunch and had done a day’s march. And after the last morsel had disappeared no one complained of being uncomfortably full. But they had fared well and there were no complaints.
“I don’t know,” said Bob, “but what we’d ought to have kept something for the morning.”
“Oh, never mind the morning,” answered Dan. “We’ll have plenty of money then and we’ll breakfast in state.”
They fed the fire to keep it alive for the sake of its cozy glow and then leaned back on their elbows and talked. Barry abandoned his bone with a satisfied sigh and curled himself up by Dan’s side. Presently the sunlight faded and a crescent moon glowed brightly behind the knoll. The chill of evening began to make itself felt, and now they built up the fire for more practical purposes and edged themselves nearer. Before it got quite dark they busied themselves preparing for the night. They cut evergreen branches and piled them high in the lee of a clump of bushes. The packs were opened and each fellow donned as much of the extra clothing as was possible, the ponchos serving as blankets. Toward half-past eight they settled themselves for the night, burrowing deep into the fragrant branches and lying as close together as was compatible with comfort. The little fire danced and gleamed, the crickets sang loudly from all sides, and the slender silver moon sailed overhead in a purple sky.
Then Tom fell off to sleep, and the crickets’ song was quickly drowned.
CHAPTER X
IN WHICH NELSON SEES STRANGE VISIONS
Although it had been fairly mild when they went to sleep, by early morning the chill had crept under the rubber blankets, and the four sleepers twisted and turned uneasily, conscious of the cold and yet too sleepy to awake. Nelson was on the outside and therefore less protected than the others. At length, unable to endure it any longer, he sat up and looked about him with heavy eyes. It was beginning to get light, and the crescent moon, far down in the sky, was becoming dim. The other three slept on. Barry raised his head above Dan’s shoulder and glanced gravely across at Nelson. Then, with a sigh, he curled up again and went back to sleep.
Nelson’s legs were stiff and aching, and after a moment of indecision he got up and began to walk around. That warmed him up considerably, and presently he paused and looked about him over the sleeping world. Back of the knoll a rosy tinge was creeping upward. The farmhouse showed no signs of life as yet and the chimney sent no smoke into the gray sky. And everything was very still.
And then, of a sudden, from somewhere came a strange sound, a sound that was utterly at variance with the calm hush of early morning. Nelson puzzled over it for several moments. It was a sound made up of many lesser sounds, the sound of moving wheels, of creaking wagons, of heavy footfalls, of rattling harness, of clanking metal, and, so Nelson thought, of voices. He looked about him in bewilderment. At the farmhouse not a sign of life showed, nor did the sound seem to come from that direction. Nelson turned toward the summit of the little knoll and listened intently. Then he hurried to the top and – rubbed his eyes in amazement at what he saw. For a moment he thought that he was still asleep and dreaming.
Across the field which lay between him and the road lumbered a huge shape, black against the lightening sky. For a second it was formless, gigantic in that half-light. Then Nelson’s eyes served him better, and he saw that the approaching object was an elephant and that beside it walked a man. Yet surely he was dreaming! What could an elephant be doing in the middle of that country field at five o’clock in the morning? And then, as he looked again toward the road, he found the explanation. For now, coming from the direction of the town, emerging from behind the trees which hid the road there and turning into the field, came a procession of wagons and horses and – yes, surely that strange-looking thing was a camel! It was all clear enough now. The circus had arrived!
Several sections of the fence had been removed, and one by one, with urging and coaxing, the big boxlike wagons were being driven into the field. By this time the elephant had reached the end of his journey, and the attendant had brought him to a stop some fifty yards away from where Nelson stood and was filling and lighting his pipe. The wagons lumbered, creaking and jolting, across the grass and were drawn up in two rows. Then other wagons appeared, flat and low these, and made straight for the middle of the field. And after that so many things happened at once and with such amazing celerity that Nelson could only stand there on the knoll and stare.
As if by magic a small tent arose at the end of the twin lines of wagons. Dozens of men hurried hither and thither in squads, carrying canvas, ropes, poles, with never a sign of confusion. The camel, its ridiculous head moving from side to side superciliously, was driven over to where the elephant stood. Men with stakes and mallets followed, and in a minute the two animals were tethered. By that time the larger tent was lying stretched over the ground ready for raising. Fires gleamed near the smaller tent, and there came a rattling of pots and pans. Still another heap of canvas was dragged from a wagon and stretched out. Unconsciously Nelson had moved down the hill. The elephant watched him expectantly with his little eyes as he passed. Nelson kept on until he stood just outside the scene of operations. They were raising the big tent now. One end of it suddenly arose into air; men shouted and hurried; ropes were hauled and tightened, slackened and made fast; the great mallets rose and fell with resounding blows; inch by inch, foot by foot, the great gleaming canvas house took form. From somewhere came an appealing odor of coffee and frying bacon, and Nelson suddenly discovered that he was very hungry. He walked toward the fires.
Those who passed him looked at him curiously but offered no word of remonstrance. The sun came up behind the distant hills with a leap and glittered wanly on the tarnished gold carvings of the chariots and on the pots and pans of the busy cooks. There were two of these, and a youth of about sixteen was acting as helper. As Nelson approached, the youth disappeared into the tent with a basket of tin plates and cups. The flaps were up and Nelson could see a long table formed of planks in sections resting on wooden trestles. The boy was setting the table for breakfast. The stoves, of which there were two, were queer round cylinders of sheet iron which were fed with wood through doors in front. On one a great copper caldron was already beginning to throw off steam. On the other an immense frying pan was filled with bacon, which, as fast as it was done, was removed to other pans upon a near-by trestle. A wagon was backed up close at hand, and as they worked, the cooks went to it for salt and pepper and other ingredients, which they took from drawers and cupboards with which the rear of the wagon was fitted. It was all very astonishing and interesting to Nelson, and he looked and looked until presently one of the cooks saw him and spoke.
“Hello,” he said.
“Good morning,” answered Nelson.
“You’re up early,” continued the other, removing the cover from the caldron for an instant and slamming it back into place. He was a thickset man with a humorous, kindly face and the largest hands Nelson thought he had ever seen.
“Not as early as you,” said Nelson smilingly.
“No, that’s so. It’s our business, you see. Had your breakfast?”
“Not yet.”
“Have a cup of coffee, then?”
Nelson hesitated.
“Got plenty of it?”
“About four gallons,” was the answer. “Here, it’ll warm you up. Toss me a cup, Joe.”
The other cook obeyed without taking his attention from the sizzling bacon, and Nelson’s friend held it under a faucet at the bottom of the caldron.
“There you are. Now you want some sugar. We haven’t got the milk out yet. O Jerry! Bring a spoon and some sugar.”
“Thank you,” said Nelson as he accepted the tin cup of steaming coffee. “It smells mighty good.”
“Well, it ain’t the best in the world,” answered the cook cheerfully, “but it tastes pretty good on a cold morning. You, Jerry! Oh, here you are. Pass the sugar to the gentleman.”
Nelson turned and for the first time had sight of the boy’s face. The hand which he had stretched forth fell to his side.
“Why! Hello, Jerry Hinkley!” he cried.
“Hello,” responded Jerry with an embarrassed smile. He was quite a different-looking Jerry already. His hair had been cut, the faded overalls and blue gingham shirt had given place to a suit of plain, neat clothes, half-hidden by a long apron, and there was a new expression of self-reliance in the gray eyes. He shook hands with Nelson a bit awkwardly, but looked very glad to see him again.