The boy was hurried off at the head of the posse, which by this time had been reinforced. He led the way through the dismal thickets, telling his story as he went.
“She was mighty purty, too,” he said. “The feller waved his hat when he seen her, an’ she waved back. He run down an’ jumped in the boat, an’ ’nen—’nen—”
“Then what?” exploded Anderson Crow.
“He kissed her!”
“The damned murderer!” roared Crow.
“He grabbed up the oars and rowed ’cross an’ downstream. An’ he shuck his fist at me when he see I’d been watchin’,” said the youngster, ready to whimper now that he realised what a desperate character he had been dealing with.
“Where did he land on the other side?” pursued the eager reporter.
“Down by them willer trees, ’bout half a mile down. There’s the skift tied to a saplin’. Cain’t you see it?”
Sure enough, the stern of a small boat stuck out into the deep, broad river, the bow being hidden by the bushes.
“Both of ’em hurried up the hill over yender, an’ that’s the last I seen of ’em,” concluded the lad.
Anderson Crow and his man-hunters stared helplessly at the broad, swift river, and then looked at each other in despair. There was no boat in sight except the murderer’s, and there was no bridge within ten miles.
While they were growling a belated detachment of hunters came up to the river bank greatly agitated.
“A telephone message has just come to town sayin’ there would be a thousand dollars reward,” announced one of the late arrivals; and instantly there was an imperative demand for boats.
“There’s an old raft upstream a-ways,” said the boy, “but I don’t know how many it will kerry. They use it to pole corn over from Mr. Knoblock’s farm to them big summer places in the hills up yender.”
“Is it sound?” demanded Anderson Crow.
“Must be or they wouldn’t use it,” said Squires sarcastically. “Where is it, kid?”
The boy led the way up the river bank, the whole company trailing behind.
“Sh! Not too loud,” cautioned Anderson Crow. Fifteen minutes later a wobbly craft put out to sea, manned by a picked crew of determined citizens of Tinkletown. When they were in midstream a loud cry came from the bank they had left behind. Looking back, Anderson Crow saw excited men dashing about, most of them pointing excitedly up into the hills across the river. After a diligent search the eyes of the men on the raft saw what it was that had created such a stir at the base of Crow’s Cliff.
“There he is!” cried Anderson Crow in awed tones. There was no mistaking the identity of the coatless man on the hillside. A dozen men recognised him as the man they were after. Putting his hands to his mouth, Anderson Crow bellowed in tones that savoured more of fright than command:
“Say!”
There was no response.
“Will you surrender peaceably?” called the captain of the craft.
There was a moment of indecision on the part of the fugitive. He looked at his companion, and she shook her head—they all saw her do it.
Then he shouted back his reply.
CHAPTER III
The Culprits
“Ship ahoy!” shouted the coatless stranger between his palms.
“Surrender or we’ll fill you full of lead!” called Anderson Crow.
“Who are you—pirates?” responded the fugitive with a laugh that chilled the marrow of the men on the raft.
“I’ll show you who we are!” bellowed Anderson Crow. “Send her ashore, boys, fast. The derned scamp sha’n’t escape us. Dead er alive, we must have him.”
As they poled toward the bank the woman grasped the man by the arm, dragging him back among the trees. It was observed by all that she was greatly terrified. Moreover, she was exceedingly fair to look upon—young, beautiful, and a most incongruous companion for the bloody rascal who had her in his power. The raft bumped against the reedy bank, and Anderson Crow was the first man ashore.
“Come on, boys; follow me! See that your guns are all right! Straight up the hill now, an’ spread out a bit so’s we can surround him!” commanded he in a high treble.
“But supposin’ he surrounds us,” panted a cautious pursuer, half way up the hill.
“That’s what we’ve got to guard against,” retorted Anderson Crow. The posse bravely swept up to and across the greensward; but the fox was gone: There was no sight or sound of him to be had. It is but just to say that fatigue was responsible for the deep breath that came from each member of the pursuing party.
“Into the woods after him!” shouted Anderson Crow. “Hunt him down like a rat!”
In the meantime a coatless young man and a most enticing young woman were scampering off among the oaks and underbrush, consumed by excitement and no small degree of apprehension.
“They really seem to be in earnest about it, Jack,” urged the young woman insistently, to offset his somewhat sarcastic comments.
“How the dickens do you suppose they got onto me?” he groaned. “I thought the tracks were beautifully covered. No one suspected, I’m sure.”
“I told you, dear, how it would turn out,” she cried in a panic-stricken voice.
“Good heavens, Marjory, don’t turn against me! It all seemed so easy and so sure, dear. There wasn’t a breath of suspicion. What are we to do? I’ll stop and fight the whole bunch if you’ll just let go my arm.”
“No, you won’t, Jack Barnes!” she exclaimed resolutely, her pretty blue eyes wide with alarm. “Didn’t you hear them say they’d fill you full of lead? They had guns and everything. Oh, dear! oh, dear! isn’t it horrid?”
“The worst of it is they’ve cut us off from the river,” he said miserably. “If I could have reached the boat ahead of them they never could have caught us. I could distance that old raft in a mile.”
“I know you could, dear,” she cried, looking with frantic admiration upon his broad shoulders and brawny bare arms. “But it is out of the question now.”
“Never mind, sweetheart; don’t let it fuss you so. It will turn out all right, I know it will.”
“Oh, I can’t run any farther,” she gasped despairingly.
“Poor little chap! Let me carry you?”
“You big ninny!”
“We are at least three miles from your house, dear, and surrounded by deadly perils. Can you climb a tree?”
“I can—but I won’t!” she refused flatly, her cheeks very red.
“Then I fancy we’ll have to keep on in this manner. It’s a confounded shame—the whole business. Just as I thought everything was going so smoothly, too. It was all arranged to a queen’s taste—nothing was left undone. Bracken was to meet us at his uncle’s boathouse down there, and—good heavens, there was a shot!”
The sharp crack of a rifle broke upon the still, balmy air, as they say in the “yellow-backs,” and the fugitives looked at each other with suddenly awakened dread.
“The fools!” grated the man.
“What do they mean?” cried the breathless girl, very white in the face.
“They are trying to frighten us, that’s all. Hang it! If I onlyknew the lay of the land. I’m completely lost, Marjory. Do you know precisely where we are?”
“Our home is off to the north about three miles. We are almost opposite Crow’s Cliff—the wildest part of the country. There are no houses along this part of the river. All of the summer houses are farther up or on the other side. It is too hilly here. There is a railroad off there about six miles. There isn’t a boathouse or fisherman’s hut nearer than two miles. Mr. Bracken keeps his boat at the point—two miles south, at least.”
“Yes; that’s where we were to have gone—by boat. Hang it all! Why did we ever leave the boat? You can never scramble through all this brush to Bracken’s place; it’s all I can do. Look at my arms! They are scratched to—”
“Oh, dear! It’s dreadful, Jack. You poor fellow, let me—”
“We haven’t time, dearest. By thunder, I wouldn’t have those Rubes head us off now for the whole county. The jays! How could they have found us out?”
“Some one must have told.”
“But no one knew except the Brackens, you and I.” “I’ll wager my head Bracken is saying hard things for fair down the river there.”
“He—he—doesn’t swear, Jack,” she panted.
“Why, you are ready to drop! Can’t you go a step farther? Let’s stop here and face ’em. I’ll bluff ’em out and we’ll get to Bracken’s some way. But I won’t give up the game! Not for a million!”
“Then we can’t stop. You forget I go in for gymnasium work. I’m as strong as anything, only I’m—I’m a bit nervous. Oh, I knew something would go wrong!” she wailed. They were now standing like trapped deer in a little thicket, listening for sounds of the hounds.
“Are you sorry, dear?”
“No, no! I love you, Jack, and I’ll go through everything with you and for you. Really,” she cried with a fine show of enthusiasm, “this is jolly good fun, isn’t it? Being chased like regular bandits—”
“Sh! Drop down, dear! There’s somebody passing above us—hear him?”
They crawled into a maze of hazel bushes with much less dignity than haste. Two men sped by an instant later, panting and growling.
“Safe for a minute or two at least,” he whispered as the crunching footsteps were lost to the ear. “They won’t come back this way, dear.”
“They had guns, Jack!” she whispered, terrified.
“I don’t understand it, hanged if I do,” he said, pulling his brows into a mighty scowl. “They are after us like a pack of hounds. It must mean something. Lord, but we seem to have stirred up a hornet’s nest!”
“Oh, dear, I wish we were safely at—” she paused.
“At home?” he asked quickly.
“At Bracken’s,” she finished; and if any of the pursuers had been near enough he might have heard the unmistakable suggestion of a kiss.
“I feel better,” he said, squaring his shoulders. “Now, let me think. We must outwit these fellows, whoever they are. By George, I remember one of them! That old fellow who bought the horse is with them. That’s it! The horse is mixed up in this, I’ll bet my head.” They sat upon the ground for several minutes, he thinking deeply, she listening with her pretty ears intent.
“I wonder if they’ve left anybody to guard our boat?” he said suddenly. “Come on, Marjory; let’s investigate! By George, it would be just like them to leave it unprotected!”
Once more they were moving cautiously through the brush, headed for the river. Mr. Jack Barnes, whoever he was and whatever his crime, was a resourceful, clever young man. He had gauged the intelligence of the pursuers correctly. When he peered through the brush along the river bank he saw the skiff in the reeds below, just as they had left it. There was the lunch basket, the wee bit of a steamer trunk with all its labels, a parasol and a small handbag.
“Goody, goody!” Marjory cried like a happy child.
“Don’t show yourself yet, dearie. I’ll make sure. They may have an ambuscade. Wait here for me.”
He crept down the bank and back again before she could fully subdue the tremendous thumping his temerity had started in her left side.
“It’s safe and sound,” he whispered joyously. “The idiots have forgotten the boat. Quick, dear; let’s make a dash for it! Their raft is upstream a hundred yards, and it is also deserted. If we can once get well across the river we can give them the laugh.”
“But they may shoot us from the bank,” she protested as they plunged through the weeds.
“They surely wouldn’t shoot a woman!” he cried gayly.
“But you are not a woman!”
“And I’m not afraid of mice or men. Jump in!”
Off from the weeds shot the light skiff. The water splashed for a moment under the spasmodic strokes of the oarsman, and then the little boat streaked out into the river like a thing of life. Marjory sat in the stern and kept her eyes upon the bank they were leaving. Jack Barnes drove every vestige of his strength into the stroke; somehow he pulled like a man who had learned how on a college crew. They were half way across the broad river before they were seen from the hills. The half dozen men who lingered at the base of Crow’s Cliff had shouted the alarm to their friends on the other side, and the fugitives were sighted once more. But it was too late. The boat was well out of gunshot range and making rapid progress downstream in the shelter of the high bluffs below Crow’s Cliff. Jack Barnes was dripping with perspiration, but his stroke was none the feebler.
“They see us!” she cried.
“Don’t wriggle so, Marjory—trim boat!” he panted. “They can’t hit us, and we can go two miles to their one.”
“And we can get to Bracken’s!” she cried triumphantly. A deep flush overspread her pretty face.
“Hooray!” he shouted with a grin of pure delight. Far away on the opposite bank Anderson Crow and his sleuths were congregating, their baffled gaze upon the man who had slipped out of their grasp. The men of the posse were pointing at the boat and arguing frantically; there were decided signs of dispute among them. Finally two guns flew up, and then came the puffs of smoke, the reports and little splashes of water near the flying skiff.
“Oh, they are shooting!” she cried in a panic.
“And rifles, too,” he grated, redoubling his pull on the oars. Other shots followed, all falling short. “Get down in the bottom of the boat, Marjory. Don’t sit up there and be—”
“I’ll sit right where I am,” she cried defiantly.
Anderson Crow waved to the men under Crow’s Cliff, and they began to make their arduous way along the bank in the trail of the skiff. Part of the armed posse hurried down and boarded the raft, while others followed the chase by land.
“We’ll beat them to Bracken’s by a mile,” cried Jack Barnes.
“If they don’t shoot us,” she responded. “Why, oh, why are they so intent upon killing us?”
“They don’t want you to be a widow and—break a—lot of hearts,” he said. “If they—hit me now you—won’t be—dangerous as a—widow.”
“Oh, you heartless thing! How can you jest about it? I’d—I’d go into mourning, anyway, Jack,” she concluded, on second thought. “We are just as good as married, you see.”
“It’s nice—of you to say it, dear—but we’re a long—way from—Bracken’s. Gee! That was close!”
A bullet splashed in the water not ten feet from the boat. “The cowards! They’re actually trying to kill us!” For the first time his face took on a look of alarm and his eyes grew desperate. “I can’t let them shoot at you, Marjory, dear! What the dickens they want I don’t know, but I’m going to surrender.” He had stopped rowing and was making ready to wave his white handkerchief on high.
“Never!” she cried with blazing eyes. “Give me the oars!” She slid into the other rowing seat and tried to snatch the oars from the rowlocks.
“Bravo! I could kiss you a thousand times for that. Come on, you Indians! You’re a darling, Marjory.” Again the oars caught the water, and Jack Barnes’s white handkerchief lay in the bottom of the boat. He was rowing for dear life, and there was a smile on his face.
The raft was left far behind and the marksmen were put out of range with surprising ease. Fifteen minutes later the skiff shot across the river and up to the landing of Bracken’s boathouse, while a mile back in the brush Anderson Crow and his men were wrathfully scrambling in pursuit.
“Hey, Bracken! Jimmy!” shouted Jack Barnes, jumping out upon the little wharf. Marjory gave him her hands and was whisked ashore and into his arms. “Run into the boathouse, dear. I’ll yank this stuff ashore. Where the dickens is Bracken?”
The boathouse door opened slowly and a sleepy young man looked forth.
“I thought you’d never come,” he yawned.
“Wake up, you old loafer! We’re here and we are pursued
! Where are George and Amy?” cried Mr. Barnes, doing herculean duty as a baggage smasher.
“Pursued?” cried the sleepy young man, suddenly awake.
“Yes, and shot at!” cried Marjory, running past him and into the arms of a handsome young woman who was emerging from the house.
“We’ve no time to lose, Jimmy! They are on to us, Heaven knows how. They are not more than ten minutes behind us. Get it over with, Jimmy, for Heaven’s sake! Here, George, grab this trunk!”
CHAPTER IV
Anderson Rectifies an Error
In a jiffy the fugitives and their property were transferred to the interior of the roomy boathouse, the doors bolted, and George Crosby stationed at a window to act as lookout.
“Is it your father?” demanded the Rev. James Bracken, turning to Marjory. Young Mrs. Crosby was looking on eagerly.
“Mr. Brewster is at home and totally oblivious to all this,” cried Jack Barnes. “I don’t know what it means. Here’s the license, Jimmy. Are you ready, Marjory?”
“This is rather a squeamish business, Jack—” began the young minister in the negligée shirt. He was pulling on his coat as he made the remark.
“Oh, hurry, Jimmy; please hurry!” cried Marjory Brewster.
“Don’t wait a second, Jimmy Bracken!” cried Amy Crosby, dancing with excitement. “You can’t go back on them now!”
Three minutes later there was no Marjory Brewster, but there was a Mrs. John Ethelbert Barnes—and she was kissing her husband rapturously.
“Now, tell us everything,” cried Mrs. Crosby after the frantic congratulations. The Reverend “Jimmy” Bracken, of the Eleventh Presbyterian Church, was the only one who seemed uncertain as to his position. In the first place, old Judge Brewster was a man of influence in the metropolis, from which all had fled for a sojourn in the hills. He and his daughter were Episcopalians, but that made them none the less important in the eyes of “Jimmy” Bracken. In the second place, Jack Barnes was a struggling lawyer, in the Year of our Lord 1880, and possessed of objectionable poverty. The young men had been room-mates at college. Friendship had overcome discretion in this instance, at least. The deed being done, young Mr. Bracken was beginning to wonder if it had not been overdone, so to speak.
The George Barr McCutcheon Megapack: 25 Classic Novels and Stories Page 286