“Come on,” ordered Gus to Andy, unfastening the end of the rope and giving it a jerk.
“Hey, not that way,” dissented Dale.
“Why not?”
“Think you can parade him through the town without attracting attention? We’ve got to be careful to cut out from here without a soul seeing us till we strike a country road. You march,” commanded Gus anew to his captive, heading in another direction. “And you just so much as peep if we meet anybody, and you get a whack of this big stick.”
Andy submitted to circumstances. He figured out that it would be some time before his captors could perfect their arrangements for interesting some officer of the law in their scheme. He readily guessed that for some reason or other they did not wish or dare to return personally to Princeville. Andy calculated that it was nearly ten miles to the county line. He believed he wouldhave half a dozen chances to break away from his captors before they reached it.
“Huh, what you going to do now?” inquired Gus in a grumbling tone, as they came directly up against a high board fence.
“You wait here a minute,” directed Dale.
The speaker ran down the fence in one direction to face at its end a busy field occupied by aviation tents. He tried the opposite direction to find matters still worse, for there the fence ended against a lighted street of the town.
“What’s beyond the fence?” inquired Gus.
“Not much of anything—a sort of a prairie,” reported Dale, peering through a crack in the fence.
“We can’t scale it.”
“Not with Andy in tow. Here we are, though.”
Dale had discovered a loose board. He began tugging at its lower end, and succeeded in pulling it far enough out to admit of their crowding through the opening. He went first, grabbing and holding Andy till Gus made the passage.
“Keep away from those lights over yonder,” ordered Dale, indicating a point on the broad expanse where some aeroplane tents showed. “This way, I tell you,” he added in a hoarse, hurried whisper. “There’s a man.”
Andy pushed forward, came to a dead halt,bracing himself as his captors tried to pull him out of range of a man seated on a hummock, apparently watching some night manœuvres of airships over where the lights showed.
“Mister, oh, mister!” shouted Andy.
He received a blow on the mouth from the fist of Gus, but that did not prevent him from renewing the outcry. The man sprang quickly to his feet and came towards them.
He was small, thin, dark-faced, and so undersized and effeminate-looking that Andy at once decided that he would not count for much in a tussle with two stout, active boys. Dale thought so, too, evidently, for he squared up in front of Andy, trying to hide him from the view of the stranger, while Gus attempted to pull his captive back towards the fence. Andy, however, gave a jerk that drew Gus almost off his feet, and a bunt to Dale that sent him forcibly to one side.
“What is this?” spoke the stranger in a soft, mellow, almost womanly tone of voice. “Did some one then call?”
“It was I,” proclaimed Andy. “These fellows have tied me up and are trying to kidnap me.”
“It is wrong, I will so investigate,” said the little man, coming straight up to the group and scanning each keenly in turn.
“See here,” spoke Dale, springing in front of the man, “this is none of your business.”
“Oh, yes, it is,” returned the stranger in the same gentle, purring way. “I am interested. Speak on, young man.”
“Get him away!” directed Dale in a sharp whisper to Gus.
Then, quick as lightning, he made a pass at the stranger. He was double the weight of the latter and half a head taller. Andy expected to see his champion flatten out like the weakling he looked.
“Ah,” said the latter, “it is so you answer questions. My way, then.”
What he did he did so quickly that Andy could not follow all of his movements. The hands of the little man moved about like those of an expert weaver at the loom. The result was a marvel. In some way he caught Dale around the neck. The next moment he swung him from the ground past his shoulder and his adversary landed with a thump.
Gus dropped the rope and ran at the stranger, club uplifted. Again the wiry strength of the little man was exerted. He seemed to stoop, and his arms enclosed Gus about the hips. There was a tug and tussle. Gus was wrenched from his footing, and went skidding to the ground, face down, for nearly two yards.
“Thunder!” he shouted, wiping the sand from his mouth.
THE WIRY STRENGTH OF THE LITTLE MAN WAS EXERTEDTHE WIRY STRENGTH OF THE LITTLE MAN WAS EXERTED
“Go,” said the stranger, advancing upon the prostrate twain, who scrambled promptly to their feet.
Both dove for the loose plank in the fence and disappeared through it. The stranger drew out a pocket-knife and relieved Andy of his bonds.
“I look at you and then at those two,” he said simply, “and your face tells me the true story. Where would you go?”
Andy pointed in the direction of the Parks’ Aerodome, and the man walked by his side in its direction.
“I don’t care to have those fellows find out where I am working,” explained Andy. “Mister,” he added admiringly, “how did you do it?”
“It was simple jiu-jitsu.”
“Eh? Oh, yes, I’ve heard of that,” said Andy, but vaguely. “It’s a new Japanese wrestling trick, isn’t it?”
“I am from Japan,” observed his companion with a courteous dignity of manner that impressed Andy.
“I see,” nodded Andy, “and you come from a wonderful people.”
“We strive to learn,” replied his companion. “That is why I am here. I was sent to this country to study aeronautics. Besides that, the science has a peculiar attraction for me. Myfather was chief kite maker to the family of the Mikado.”
“Is it possible?” said Andy.
“I therefore have an absorbing interest in your airmen and their daring work. You must know that we make wonderful kites in my home country.”
“I have heard something of it,” said Andy.
“Two hundred years ago many of the principles now used in your airships were used in our kite flying, only we never tried to fly ourselves.”
“We have a gentleman up at our camp who would be just delighted to talk with you,” declared Andy enthusiastically. “He is an inventor, a Mr. Morse.”
“I should like to meet him,” said the Japanese.
“Then come right along with me,” invited Andy cordially; “only, say, please, don’t mention the fix you found me in.”
“It shall be so,” declared his companion.
Andy made sure that his recent captors were not following them as they made a cut across a field and reached the Parks’ camp. He led his guest into the sitting room of the living building, to find his employer and Mr. Morse there. Andy introduced his companion. It did not take long for the inventor to discover a kindred spirit in the Japanese, who gave his name as Tsilsuma.
That night after he had got into bed Andywondered if he had not better tell Mr. Morse or his employer his entire story, and the former about the near proximity of his old-time enemy, Duske. Then, too, he worried some over the appearance of Gus and Dale and his daily risk of being arrested. With daylight, however, Andy forgot all these minor troubles.
There was to be a race for a small prize that afternoon on the aviation field, and Parks had arranged for theRacing Starto participate. The aeronaut was busy half the morning seeing to the machine, while Mr. Morse flitted about adjusting a device suggested by the intelligent Tsilsuma for folding the floats under the aeroplane. The Japanese, too, had suggested sled runners in front and wheels at the rear for starting gear.
TheRacing Starhad not appeared in the general field before, and this was a kind of qualification flight. Just after two o’clock Parks made his final inspection of the bearings of the motors and the word to go was given. Andy sailed over the railroad tracks and landed in the field half a mile distant, with a dexterity that made his rivals there take a good deal of notice of him and theRacing Star.
When the word came Andy started the motor, and a friend of the aeronaut tugged at the propellers. With a blast that resembled a cyclone the airship started.
The helpers worked at the rudders, and after a run of only seventy-five feet theRacing Starshot up into the air.
Andy tried a preliminary stunt that he had practiced for two days past. It was to fly around the field in a figure eight at a height of ninety-five feet. Then, just to test the excellency of the machine, he plunged for the ground.
“The boy will kill himself!” shouted the man in charge of the race, but just at the critical moment Andy shifted his steering planes and flew across the ground, barely skimming the grass.
Once in this fashion he went around the course, then another upward lunge and he circled back to the starting point and came gently to earth. The crowds sent up an enthusiastic roar.
Four other machines made their exhibition in turn. Two went through a clumsy process, one became disabled, and the other retired with the derisive criticism of “Grasshopper!” as its pilot failed to lift it more than ten feet from the ground at any time.
“Mind the wind checks, Andy, lad,” warned John Parks anxiously, as the three aeroplanes were ranged for the prize test of a mile run around the course.
“I’ll be the pathfinder or nothing!” declared Andy, his eyes bright and observant, his nerves tingling with the excitement of the moment.
“Go!”
The three powerful mechanical birds arose in the air, dainty creations of grace and beauty, Andy in the lead. Then his nearest competitor passed him. Then No. 3 shot ahead of the other two, and then the turn.
“Huzza!” breathed Parks.
At his side, safe from recognition in his great disfiguring goggles, Mr. Morse moved restlessly from foot to foot. TheRacing Starhad accomplished what he had worked so hard to bring about—a true circle in a rapid turn.
The two other machines bungled. One nearly upset. Down the course came Andy, headed like an arrow for the starting point. A slanting dive, and theRacing Starskimmed the ground fully five hundred feet in advance of the nearest opponent.
Watch in hand, John Parks ran up to Andy, his face aglow with professional pride and delight.
“Won the race—but better than that you have beat the home record by eight seconds!”
“Winner, theRacing Star,” sang out the starter.
And then he added:
“Time: forty-eight seconds and seven-eighths.”
“Hurrah!” shouted John Parks, throwing his hat in the air.
“No sky-sailing to-day, Andy,” said John Parks, the aeronaut.
“I guess you are right,” answered Andy.
“A rest won’t do you any harm. There are three days before the last event, and plenty of time to try Morse’s new wrinkles.”
“I think I’ll go and see what the latest one is,” said Andy.
It was a rainy day with a strong breeze, and waste of time, Andy well knew, to attempt any flights under the conditions. He went to the workshop to find Mr. Morse and the Japanese deep in discussion over some angle of a new reversible plane, they called it. Tsilsuma had become almost a fixture at the Parks’ camp. He was unobtrusive generally, but his instincts and mission to delve and absorb were accommodated and encouraged by the inventor, and a strong friendship had sprung up between the two.
Andy wandered about promiscuously, timehanging heavily on his hands. Finally he settled down in the comfortable sitting room looking over some books on scientific subjects, and picking out here and there a simple fact among a group of very abstruse ones.
“If ever I get any money ahead,” he observed, “I’ll put some of it into education, and I’ll study up aeronautics first thing. It seems as if it’s natural for me to see right through a machine first time I see it, but I don’t understand the real principles, for all that. No, sir, it’s brains like Mr. Morse has got that counts. If sky-sailing is going to last, and I follow it up, I’m going to dig deep right down into it, college fashion, and really understand my business. Hello!”
Andy had laid aside the scientific book and had taken up a newspaper. Glancing over its columns, his eye became fixed upon an advertisement occupying a prominent position just under some local reading matter. This is what it read.
Notice—Important!
Notice—Important!
Lost—Somewhere on a train between Macon and Greenville, an old leather pocketbook, marked Robert Webb, Springfield, and containing $200. The finder may keep the money, and upon return of the pocketbook will be handsomely rewarded.
West, Thorburn & Castle,Attorneys,Butler Block, Greenville.
West, Thorburn & Castle,Attorneys,
Butler Block, Greenville.
“Well,” aspirated Andy energetically, “here’s something new!”
The incident stirred up his thought so much that he found himself walking the floor restlessly. Andy had a vivid imagination, and he built up all kinds of fancies about the singular advertisement.
“Wonder what lies under all this?” ruminated Andy. “They don’t want the two hundred dollars, and they offer more money to get back that old pocketbook! They will never get the whole of it, though, that’s certain. Gus Talbot tore off the flap of it. The rest of it—lying in my old clothes in that shed on the Collins farm, where I helped drive those geese. There was nothing left in the pocketbook, I am sure of that. What can they want it for, then? Evidently Mr. Webb didn’t get my postal card.”
Andy could not figure this out. He found it impossible, however, to dismiss the subject from his mind.
“People don’t go to all the bother that advertising shows,” he reasoned, “unless it’s mighty important. Can I get the pocketbook, though, after all. I threw it carelessly up on a sort of a shelf in that old shed, and it may have been removed and destroyed with other rubbish. I’ve got the day before me, with nothing to do. I wouldn’t be at all sorry if the two hundred dollarscame my way in a fair, square manner. I’ll run down to Greenville. It won’t take four hours, there and back. I’ll see what there is to this affair—yes, I’ll do it.”
Andy sought out Mr. Parks and told him he was going to take a run down to Greenville on business, and would be back by evening at the latest. He caught a train about ten o’clock, and noon found him at the door of the law offices of West, Thorburn & Castle, Butler Block. Our hero entered one of three offices, where he saw a gentleman seated at a desk.
“I would like to see some member of the firm,” he said.
“I am Mr. West,” answered the lawyer.
“It is about an advertisement you put in the paper about a lost pocketbook,” explained Andy.
“Oh, indeed,” said Mr. West, looking interested at once, and arising and closing the door. “Do you know something about it?”
“I know all about it,” declared Andy. “In fact, I found it only a few minutes after it was lost.”
“On the train?”
“No, sir. Mr. Webb did not lose it on the train.”
“He thinks he did.”
“He is mistaken,” said Andy. “He lost it inan automobile that took him on a rush run from Princeville across country to Macon. I was his chauffeur, and found it.”
“Where is the pocketbook?” inquired the lawyer eagerly. “Have you brought it with you?”
“No, sir; but I think I can get it.”
“We will make it richly worth your while,” said Mr. West.
“There is something I had better explain about it,” said Andy.
“Spent the two hundred dollars?” insinuated the lawyer, with an indulgent smile.
“Oh, no—the two hundred dollars is waiting for Mr. Webb to claim it with Mr. Dawson, the banker at Princeville. Let me tell you my story, Mr. West, and then you will understand better.”
Andy told his story. He had a surprised, but intent listener. When he had concluded, the lawyer shook his hand warmly.
“Young man, you are a good, honest young fellow, and you will not regret acting square in this affair. Mr. Webb did not get your postal card, because he is no longer located at Springfield. How far from here is the farm you spoke of where you left the pocketbook?”
“About eighteen miles, I should think.”
“Can you get there by rail?”
“Within two miles of it.”
“And soon?”
“Why, yes, sir,” replied Andy, glancing at his watch. “There is a train west in a quarter of an hour.”
“At any expense,” said Mr. West earnestly, “get there and return with the pocketbook. As to your reward——”
“Don’t speak of it,” said Andy. “Mr. Webb treated me handsomely when I brought him over to Macon. I can’t imagine, though, why he puts so much store by the pocketbook.”
“If you find it, he will tell you why,” responded Mr. West. “You will be doing the best piece of work you ever did in finding that pocketbook. I shall telegraph my client to come here at once. He will be here by four o’clock.”
“And I will be here not more than an hour later,” said Andy.
He left the office on a brisk walk, planning his proposed route to the old farm. As he reached the street, he again glanced at his watch and found he had just ten minutes to reach the depot. Andy made a running spurt down the pavement.
He dodged an automobile speeding around a corner, heard its driver shout something he did not catch. Then he heard the machine turn and start furiously down the street in the direction he was going.
Andy saw some people stare at him, halt, and then look towards the speeding machine. Wonderingwhat was up, he glanced back to notice the driver of the machine waving one hand frantically towards him as if bent on overtaking him.
At the same moment the man in the machine bawled out:
“Hey, stop that boy!”
Andy stopped running at the loud alarm from the automobile. Several persons started to block his course and one man caught him by the coat sleeve. Andy recognized his pursuer at once. It was Seth Talbot.
The Princeville garage owner ran his car up to the curb and jumped out. His face was red with exertion and excitement, and he grasped Andy roughly by the arm.
“What’s the trouble?” queried the man who had detained Andy.
“Escaped criminal—firebug,” mumbled Talbot. “In with you,” and he forced Andy into the machine. “Hey, officer, take charge of this prisoner.”
Talbot hailed a man in uniform pressing his way through the gathering crowd.
“What is he charged with?” inquired the officer.
“Burning a barn at Princeville. Get him to the station and I’ll explain to your chief.”
There was no chance for Andy to expostulate or struggle. The officer held him tightly by one wrist, while Talbot whisked them away till they reached a police station.
Here the garage owner drew the officer in charge to one side. They held a brief consultation. Andy caught a word here and there. It was sufficient to apprise him of the fact that there was a reward offered for his arrest, and Talbot was agreeing to divide it with the officer if he would take charge of Andy till he was delivered over to the authorities at Princeville.
“You are in charge of the law now, young man,” said the officer, leading Andy back to the automobile. “I won’t shackle you, but don’t try any tricks.”
He and Andy occupied the rear seat in the automobile, while Talbot drove the machine.
“May I say something to you?” inquired Andy of the officer.
“About what?” asked the officer.
“My being arrested this way. I don’t see what right Mr. Talbot has to chase me and give orders about me like some condemned felon. I haven’t seen any warrant for my arrest.”
“You’ll see it soon enough. Meanwhile don’t say anything to incriminate yourself,” returnedthe officer, glibly using the pet phrase of his calling.
“I’ve done nothing to be incriminated,” declared Andy indignantly. “What I wanted to ask was the simple favor of getting word to some people here in Greenville, who have sent me on an errand, and will be put out and disappointed if I don’t show up.”
“What people?” quizzed Talbot, overhearing Andy and half turning around in his seat.
“A firm of lawyers here——” began Andy.
“Yah!” derided the garage owner. “Guessed it was something of that sort. Want to tangle up this affair with some legal quibble! Officer, you just hold on to him tight. He’s a slippery fellow.”
Andy saw that it would be useless to appeal to either of his companions in the automobile, and put in his time doing some pretty serious thinking as the machine sped over the landscape.
“This is a bad fix at a bad time,” reflected Andy. “The lawyer will expect me back as I promised, and think all kinds of things about me because I don’t come. And there’s Mr. Parks. And the race. I mustn’t miss that! But then, I am arrested. They’ll lock me up. Suppose they really prove I fired that barn?” Andy’s heart beat painfully with dread and suspense.
The town hall at Princeville was reached. Andyhad been in the main offices of the structure many times, but this was his first visit to the lower floor of the building where the prisoners were kept. He only casually knew the deputy sheriff in charge of the barred cage, and who looked Andy over as he would any criminal brought to him to lock up.
“This is Andy Nelson—Jones’ barn—ran away—reward.” Andy was somewhat chilled as the deputy nodded and proceeded to enter his name in a big book before him on the desk.
“Search him,” said the official to the turnkey.
“Hello!” ejaculated Talbot, as Andy’s watch was brought into view, and “hello!” he repeated with eyes goggling still more, as Andy’s pocketbook came to light, and outside of some small bills and silver, a neatly-folded bill was produced.
The officer himself looked surprised at this. Andy, however, did not tell them that this represented the prize he had won at the aviation meet, treasured proudly in its entirety.
“Wonder if that’s some of the money I’ve found short in my business?” insinuated Talbot.
“If there is any shortage in your receipts,” retorted Andy indignantly, “you had better ask your son about it.”
The shot told. The garage owner flushed up.
“What’s that?” he covered his evident confusion byasking, as the officer unfolded a slip of printed paper.
It was the advertisement about the lost leather pocketbook, that Andy had preserved. Glancing over the shoulder of the officer and taking in its purport, Talbot gave a start. Then he eyed Andy in an eager, speculative way, but was silent.
“What are you going to do with me?” Andy asked of the officer.
“Lock you up, of course.”
“Won’t I be allowed to send word to my friends?”
“Who are they?” demanded the officer.
“I think Mr. Dawson, the banker, is one of them,” replied Andy.
“Mr. Dawson has been away from town for a week, and will not return for two.”
Andy’s face fell. The thought of the banker had come to him hopefully.
“Can I telegraph, then?” he asked, “to friends out of town?”
“Telegraph,” sneered Talbot. “My great pumpkins, with your new suit of clothes and watch and one hundred dollar bills and telegrams!”
“I can grant you no favors before I have notified the prosecuting attorney of your arrest,” said the deputy. “Lock him up, turnkey.”
All this seemed very harsh and ominous to Andy, but he did not allow it to depress him. He followed the turnkey without another word. The latter unlocked a great barred door, and Andy felt a trifle chilled as it reclosed on him and he was a prisoner.
“How do you do, Mr. Chase?” he said, as he recognized the lockup-keeper, an old grizzled man, who limped towards him.
“Got you, did they?” spoke the man. “Sorry, Andy.”
“Yes, I am sorry, too, just at this time. Of course you know, I’m not the kind of a fellow to burn down a man’s barn.”
“Know it—guess I know. I can prove——” began Chase, so excitedly, that Andy stared at him in some wonder. “See here,” continued Chase, controlling himself, “I’ve got something to say to you later on. Just for the present, you count on me as your friend. I’ll see you get the best going in this dismal place.”
“Thank you, Mr. Chase,” said Andy.
“You needn’t sleep in any cell. I’ll let you have a cot in my room,” continued Chase with earnestness and emotion. “Andy——” and there the speaker choked up, and he grasped Andy’s hand, and turning away trembled all over. “You’re a blessed good boy, and you’ve got a true friend in me, and remember what I tell you—theywill never find you guilty of burning down Jones’ barn.”
Andy returned the pressure of the hand of the man whom he was meeting under peculiar circumstances, feeling sure that his avowed friendship was genuine. He had good reason to believe this.
When Andy had come to Princeville, Chase was a worthless drunkard, who worked rarely and who was in the lockup most of the time. One winter’s night, as Andy was returning from taking a customer to the lake, he lined a swampy stretch and noticed a huddled-up figure lying at its half-frozen edge.
Andy got out of the automobile and discovered a man, his body and clothes half frozen down into the reeds and grass. It was Chase, sodden with drink and fast perishing.
Andy managed to get the poor fellow in the tonneau and drove home. It was late, and Talbot had left the garage for the night. Andy dragged his helpless guest into his little den of a room and hurried for a doctor. He was a favorite with the physician, for whom he had done many little favors, and the latter worked over the half-frozen Chase for nearly two hours. He refused to think of taking any pay, and at Andy’s request promised to say nothing about the incident.
Andy kept his little oil stove going all night and plied the patient with warm drinks. When morning came Chase was awake and sober, but he was so weak and full of pain he could hardly move.
All that day and into the next Andy managed to house and care for Chase without detection. Talbot finally discovered the intruder, however. He stormed fearfully. He was for at once sending for an officer and having Chase sent to jail or the workhouse.
Andy pleaded hard for the poor refugee. Talbot declared that his wet garments had spoiled the automobile cushions. Andy got Chase to agree that he would work this out when he got well, and Talbot was partly mollified.
When Chase got about he did some drudgery at Talbot’s home. Then one day he came to tell Andy that Talbot had got him a position. Chase was well acquainted with prison ways. Talbot had quite some political influence, and the forlorn old wreck was installed as lockup-keeper at the town jail.
Once a week regularly he came to visit Andy at the garage. It was usually Saturday nights, after the others had gone home. Chase would bring along some dainty for Andy to cook, and they would have quite a congenial time. During all this time Chase never touched a drop of liquor.He told Andy he had received the lesson of his life, leaving him crippled in one limb, and that he would show Andy his gratitude for his rescue by keeping the pledge.
“Mr. Chase,” now said Andy, “there is something you can do for me, if you will.”
“Speak it out, Andy,” responded the lockup keeper eagerly.
“I want to send a telegram to a friend right away. They have taken all my money from me, but the message can go collect.”
Chase hobbled down the corridor rapidly to return with paper and pencil.
“Write out your message, Andy,” he said. “I’ll see that it goes without delay.”
Andy wrote out a telegram to John Parks. It ran:
“Under arrest on a false charge. I want to see you on important business.”
Chase took the message, put on his hat, and going to the barred door tapped on it.
The turnkey appeared and unlocked the door. As Chase passed out, Andy observed that someone passed into the cell room. It was Seth Talbot.
“I want a little talk with you, Andy Nelson,” spoke the garage owner, “and it will pay you to listen to what I have to say.”
The garage owner moved a few feet away from the grated door of the cell room and sat down on a bench. He beckoned to Andy.
“No, I’ll stand up,” said our hero.
“All right, I won’t be long. Short and sweet is my motto. To begin with, Andy Nelson, I’ve been a second father to you.”
“I never knew it,” observed the boy.
“Don’t get saucy,” replied Talbot. “It don’t show the right spirit. I gave you a job when you didn’t have any, and took on myself a big responsibility—agreeing to look after you like a regular apprentice. What is the result? Ingratitude.”
Andy was silent, but he looked at Talbot, marveling that the man, mean as he was, could imagine that he meant what he said.
“You’ve brought me lots of trouble,” pursued Talbot in an aggrieved tone. “The worst of allis that it’s led to my son running away from home.”
The speaker evidently thought that Andy knew all about this, while in reality Andy only guessed it.
“Oh, I’m responsible for that, too, am I?” observed Andy.
“Yes, you are. You left me in the lurch, and while Gus was off with a customer some one robbed the money drawer. I was mad and accused Gus of taking it. Gus got mad and left home.”
“What did I have to do with that?”
“Why, if you’d stayed where you belonged it wouldn’t have happened, would it?”
Andy actually laughed outright at this strange reasoning.
“What!” he cried. “Me, the firebug, me, the thief you accuse me of being!”
“Well, anyhow, you’ve been a lot of expense and trouble to me. Now you’re in a hard fix. You are dead sure to go to the reformatory until you are twenty-one years of age, unless some one steps in and saves you.”
“You think so, do you, Mr. Talbot?”
“I am certain of it.”
“Who’s going to step in and save me?” inquired Andy innocently.
“I’m the only man who can.”
“Oh!”
“And I will, if you’re willing to do your share.”
“What is my share?” demanded Andy.
“Doing what I advise you. I’m a man of influence and power in this community,” boasted the garage owner. “I can fix up this business all right with Jones. You’ve got to help, though.”
“All right, name your terms,” said Andy.
“I wouldn’t put it ‘terms,’ Andy,” replied Talbot, looking eager and insinuating, “call it rights. There’s that two hundred dollars at the bank. It was found on my property by one of my hired employees. Good, that gives me legal possession according to law.”
“Does it?” nodded Andy. “I didn’t know that before.”
“You can get that money by going after it,” continued Talbot.
“How can I?”
“Why, that advertisement they found in your pocket says so, don’t it? See here, Andy,” and Talbot looked so mean and greedy that our hero could hardly keep from shuddering with disgust, “tell me about that advertisement—all about it, I want to be a good friend to you. I am a shrewd business man, and you’re only a boy. They’ll chisel you out of it, if you don’t have some older person to stand by you. I’ll stand by you, Andy.”
“Chisel me out of what?” inquired Andy, intent on drawingout his specious counsellor to the limit.
“What’s your due. They’re after the pocketbook that held the two hundred dollars. Don’t you see they’re breaking their necks to get it back? Why? aha!”
“That’s so,” murmured Andy, as if it were all news to him.
“So, if you know what became of that pocketbook——”
“Yes,” nodded Andy.
“And where it is——”
“I do,” declared Andy.
“Capital!” cried Talbot, getting excited. “Then we’ve got them. Ha! Ha! They can’t squirm away from us. Where’s the pocketbook, Andy? You just hand this business right over to me. I’ll do the negotiating.”
“And if I do?” insinuated Andy.
“You won’t be prosecuted on this firebug charge. I’ll take you back at the garage and raise your salary.”
“How much?” inquired Andy.
“Well—I’ll be liberal. I’ll raise your wages twenty-five cents a week.”
“Mr. Talbot, if you made it twenty-five dollars I wouldn’t touch it, no, nor twenty-five hundred dollars. You talk about your goodness to me. Why, you treated me like a slave. As to thetwo hundred dollars, it stays right where it is until its rightful owner claims it. If he then wants to give it to me as a reward, you can make up your mind you won’t get a cent of it.”
“You young reprobate!” shouted Talbot, jumping to his feet, aflame with rage. “I’ll make you sing another tune soon. It rests with me as to your staying in jail. I’ll just go and see those lawyers myself.”
“You will waste your time,” declared Andy. “I have told them all about you from beginning to end, and they’re too smart to play into any of your dodges.”
“We’ll see! We’ll see!” fumed the garage owner, as he went to the cell-room door and shook it to attract the attention of the turnkey. “I’ll see you once more—just once more, mind you, and that’s to-morrow morning. You’ll decide then, or you’ll have a hard run of it.”
Andy was left to himself. He walked around the stout cell room with some curiosity. There were two other prisoners in jail. Both were locked up in cells. One of them asked Andy for a drink of water. The other was asleep on his cot.
A clang at the barred door attracted Andy’s attention again, and he reached it as the turnkey shouted out in a tone that sounded very official:
“Andrew Nelson!”
He stood aside for Andy to step out. An officer Andy had not seen before took him by the arm and led him up two flights of stairs to a large courtroom.
It had no visitors, but the judge sat on the bench. Near him was the prosecuting attorney and the court clerk. Talbot occupied a chair, and conversing with him was Farmer Jones.
“We enter the appearance of the prisoner in this case, your honor,” immediately spoke the attorney, as if in a hurry to get through with the formalities.
“Let the clerk enter the same,” ordered the judge in an indifferent tone. “Take the prisoner before the grand jury when it convenes.”
“In the matter of bail——” again spoke the attorney.
“Arson. A pretty serious offense,” said the judge. “The prisoner is held over in bonds of two thousand dollars.”
Andy’s heart sank. He had heard and read of cases where generally a few hundred dollars bail was asked. He had even calculated in his mind how he could call friends to his assistance who would go his surety for a small amount, but two thousand dollars.
“How are you, Andy?” said Jones, advancing and looking him over critically. Andy was a trifle pale, but his bearing was manly, his countenanceopen and honest. He was neatly dressed, and looked the energetic business boy all over, and evidently impressed the farmer that way.
“I’m glad to see you, Mr. Jones,” he said respectfully.
“I suppose you feel a little hard agin’ me, Andy, but I couldn’t help it. That barn cost me eight hundred dollars.”
“It was a serious loss, yes, sir,” said Andy, “and I am sorry for you.”
Jones fidgeted. Talbot was talking to the attorney, and the farmer seemed glad to get away from his company.
“See here, Andy,” he said, edging a little nearer, “I’ve got boys of my own, and it makes me feel badly to see you in this fix.”
“What did you place me here for, then?” demanded Andy.
“I—I thought—you see, Talbot had the evidence. He egged me on, so to speak. Honest and true, Andy, did you set fire to my barn?”
“Honest and true, Mr. Jones, I had no hand in it. Why should I? You have always been pleasant and good to me.”
“Why, you see, I stopped you running away from Talbot that day.”
“And you think I turned firebug out of spite? Oh, Mr. Jones!”
“H’m—see here, judge,” and Jones moved upto the desk. “I don’t know that I care to prosecute this case.”
“Out of your hands, Mr. Jones,” snapped the prosecuting attorney sharply. “The case must go to the grand jury.”
“Andy—I—I’ll come and see you,” said Jones, as the officer marched Andy back to the jail room.
“Two thousand dollars bail,” ruminated Andy, once again under lock and key. “I can never hope to find anybody to get me out. Too bad—I’m out of the airship race for good.”
“All right, Andy.”
“Did you send the telegram?”
“Yes, and paid for it, so there would be no delay.”
“You needn’t have done that.”
“I wanted to be sure that it went double rush.”
“All right, I will settle with you when they give me back my money.”
Chase, the lockup-keeper, had promptly and willingly attended to the errand upon which Andy had sent him.
“See here, Andy,” said Chase, “I understand they had you up in court.”
“Yes,” answered Andy, “they took me up to fix the bail.”
“How much?”
“Two thousand dollars.”
“Why!” exclaimed Chase, his face darkening, “that’s an outrage.”
“I think so, too.”
“There’s something behind it,” muttered the lockup-keeper.
“Yes,” returned Andy. “Mr. Talbot is behind it. He seems to stand in with the prosecuting attorney. Mr. Jones was quite willing to drop the case, and said that Mr. Talbot had egged him on.”
Chase did not say any more just then, but as he strolled away, he muttered to himself in an excited manner. He busied himself about the place for the next hour. Then he showed Andy his own sleeping quarters, a quite comfortable, well-ventilated room, and set up an extra cot in it.
“You and I will have our meal in my room after I feed the other prisoners,” he said. “I’ll make it as easy for you as I can, Andy.”
“I know you will, Mr. Chase,” responded Andy heartily.
“I’ll do a good deal for you,” declared the faithful old fellow. “What do I care for this mean old job, anyway? Say,” and he dropped his voice to a cautious whisper, “suppose there was a way for both of us to get out of here?”
“What do you mean?” queried Andy quickly.
“Just what I say. Suppose you and I could get to some place a long way off, where they couldn’t trace us, could you get me another job, do you think?”
“Don’t you like this one?”
“No, I don’t. I despise it. I have to give Talbot half of my salary for getting it for me, and I’m tired of the jail.”
“Do you mean to tell me that Talbot takes one half of your salary?” questioned Andy indignantly.
“I do.”
“Then he’s a meaner man than I thought he was. I can get you a much better job when I get free,” said Andy, “and I’ll do it, but you mustn’t think of such nonsense as my escaping.”
“Why not?”
“Because I’m a sticker, and never ran away like a sneak in my life,” declared Andy strenuously. “No, I’m going to face the music like a man.”
Chase was silent for a while. Finally, evidently struggling with some new disturbing thought, he said:
“Sure you can get me a job, Andy?”
“I am.”
“If I cut loose from here and make Talbot an enemy for life, you’ll see to it that I get work?”
“As long as you keep sober, Mr. Chase, you can always get a position. You have made a brave start. Now brace up, think something of yourself, and earn a comfortable living.”
“I’ll do it!” cried Chase. “I’ll risk everything.Andy, you didn’t fire that barn. Do you know who did?”
“I have a suspicion,” replied Andy.
“If I guess right who you suspect, will you nod your head?”
“Yes.”
“It was Gus Talbot and Dale Billings.”
Andy nodded his head. He started slightly as he did so, wondering at the sturdy declaration of Chase. Then he asked:
“Why do you think so, Mr. Chase?”
“I don’t think, I know,” declared the lockup-keeper.
“Did you see them do it?”
“No, I didn’t, but—see here, Andy, I’ve nothing more to say.”
“Why not?”
“I want to find an old tramp named Wandering Dick, before I go any farther.”
“Does he know?”
“I’ll not say another word except this: they’ll never prove you a firebug, and old Talbot will be sorry for the day he stirred things up and started out to persecute an honest boy. Drat the varmint! I’ll be afraid of him no longer, Andy, you are a good friend.”
“I try to be, Mr. Chase.”
“I’ll prove that I am to you.”
Chase refused to say another word. Andy curiously watched him stump around attending to his duties. The old fellow would scowl and mutter, and Andy believed he was mentally discussing Talbot. Then he would chuckle, and Andy decided he was thinking something pleasant about himself.
Chase appeared to have entire charge of the cell room. At five o’clock in the afternoon he let the other prisoners out in the corridor for exercise, and at six o’clock he gave them their supper in their cells. Then he and Andy adjourned to the little room beyond the cells and had a hearty, appetizing meal.
Chase supplied Andy with some newspapers, and later they played a game of checkers. About nine o’clock a prisoner was brought in and locked up.
At ten o’clock, just as Andy was going to bed, the turnkey’s ponderous key rattled at the barred door, and again his voice rang out:
“Andrew Nelson!”
“Wonder who wants me now?” said Andy.
“Somebody to see you in the sheriff’s room,” said the turnkey, “follow me.”
Andy did so. As they entered the apartment indicated, a man with one arm in a sling advanced and grasped Andy’s hand warmly.
“This is a blazing shame!” he burst out, “butI’ll have you out of here if it takes all I’ve got and can beg or borrow.”
It was Andy’s employer, John Parks, the Airship King.
Andy’s heart warmed up and he felt that the tide was turning. Parks was an energetic, impulsive man, and generally put through what he started at. His hearty greeting showed what he thought of Andy and the charge against him.
“Is that the sheriff coming?” he demanded impatiently of the officer or guard at the door of the room.
“He’ll be here soon,” was the reply, “we have sent for him.”
“Come over here, Andy,” directed the aeronaut, leading the way to a corner of the apartment so the others could not overhear their conversation. “I want to talk with you. Now then,” he continued, as they were seated by themselves, “tell me the whole story.”
“I wish I had done it before,” began Andy, and then he recited his experience with Talbot and the details of the barn burning.
“Guesswork and spitework, eh? The wholebusiness,” flared out Parks. “They haven’t a foot to stand on in court. I’ll see that you have the right kind of a lawyer when the case comes to trial. All I am anxious about is to get you back to camp double quick. You know the race takes place day after to-morrow.”
“Yes, I know it only too well,” replied Andy; “I’ve worried enough about it.”
“Here comes my man, I guess,” interrupted Parks, as a portly consequential-looking person entered the room.
“I wanted to see you about this young man,” explained Parks. “They’ve shut him up here on a false charge, and I want to get him out. He’s a trusted employee of mine, and I need him badly in my business.”
“You want to give bail, do you?” inquired the sheriff.
“Every dollar I’ve got, judge,” responded the aeronaut with emphasis, “so long as he gets free.”
“The bail is two thousand dollars, and I suppose you know the bondsman must qualify as a real estate owner in the county.”
“I’m not that, judge,” said Parks, “but I’ve got some money.” He pulled out a roll of bills. “I’ve got nigh onto one thousand dollars personal property, and I’m going to earn the aviation prize down at Montrose day after to-morrow.”
“Considerably up in the air, part of your schedule,eh?” remarked the sheriff, smiling, “I’m afraid we can’t accept you as a bondsman. Residence here as a real estate owner is absolutely necessary.”
“Why, do you think I would leave you in the lurch or a boy like Andy sneak away. No sir-ree! You can trust me, Mr. Sheriff.”
“I don’t doubt that, but the law is very strict.”
Parks paced the floor excitedly. He looked disappointed and bothered.
“I’ve got to do something—Andy has just got to be at the aviation meet day after to-morrow. I’ve got it! Say, suppose I could line up two thousand dollars through friends, in cash, mind you, couldn’t I hire some man in Princeville to go on the bond?”
“It is very often done,” acknowledged the sheriff.
“Then I’ll do it. Andy, I’ll be back here to-morrow. Mr. Sheriff, you can fix the papers for quick action. I’ll raise that two thousand dollars if I have to mortgage everything I’ve got. I’ve got some friends and I own a farm out West.”
“Just a word, Mr. Parks,” said Andy.
“What is it, lad?” inquired the aeronaut.
“I wish you would get word to a lawyer at Greenville, a Mr. West, about something. He expected to see me yesterday, and I was arrested before I could get to him.”
Andy explained about the advertisement and the lost pocketbook. Mr. Parks was very much impressed and interested over his story.
“Why, Andy,” he commented vigorously. “There’s something strange about all this.”
“There is probably something very important for the man who lost the pocketbook,” said Andy. “I don’t want the lawyer to think I fooled him.”
“Can you find the pocketbook, Andy?”
“Unless it has been removed from the place where it was three weeks ago, I am sure that I can.”
“H-m, this sets me thinking,” observed Parks. “I’ll see that the lawyer gets the message, Andy. I’ll be back here to-morrow.”
“Mr. Parks,” said Andy seriously, “I don’t think you had better try to raise the money. It will be harder than you think, and all this will take up your time and attention away from the airship race.”
“There won’t be any airship race for me if you are out of it, will there?” demanded Parks.
“Why not? You can surely find someone to take my place. It’s theRacing Starthat is going to win the race, not the man at the lever. He’s got to keep his eyes open, but the machine is so far ahead of anything I’ve seen, that a careful, active pilot can hardly fail to win.”
Parks looked dubious and unconvinced.
“I’m going to get you out of here,” he maintained stubbornly, and, knowing the determined character of his employer, Andy went back to the lockup believing that he would keep his word.
“What’s the news, Andy?” inquired Chase eagerly.
“The best in the world, Mr. Chase,” replied Andy brightly.
“Are they going to let you out?”
“I hope so, soon.”
Andy had told Chase something about his circumstances, and now told him more, mentioning the airship race.
“I say, you shouldn’t miss that, should you, Andy?” excitedly proclaimed Chase. “I wish I could help you. I can in time. I have a good mind——”
Chase paused mysteriously, and began stumping about in his usual abstracted, muttering way.
Andy sat down on a bench as there was a movement at the cell-room door.
“Here, give this man shelter for the night and something to eat,” ordered the turnkey. “Turn him out in the morning.”
“Hello!” spoke Chase, evidently recognizing a regular habitue of the place, “it’s you again, is it?”
“On my rounds, as usual,” grinned the newcomer, a harmless-looking, trampish fellow.
“Been in some other lockup, I suppose, since we saw you last?” insinuated Chase.
“No, Wandering Dick and I have been following a show. You see——”
“Who? Say that again,” interrupted Chase excitedly.
“Wandering Dick.”
“Where is he now?”
“Three days ago I left him about fifty miles south of here.”
“Is he there now?”
“I think so. The show broke up and that threw me out, but Dick talked about staying around Linterville till he could panhandle it south for the winter.”
“See here,” said Chase, drawing out his pocketbook. “There’s a ten-dollar bill,” and he flipped over some bank notes.
“I see there is,” nodded the tramp wonderingly.
“I’ll start you out with a good breakfast and that money in the morning. I want you to find Dick, bring him here, and I’ll give you each as much more money when you do.”
The tramp looked puzzled, then suspicious, and then alarmed.
“See here,” he said, “what are you going to work on us, same old charge?”
“Not at all. I want Dick to answer a halfdozen questions, that’s all, and then you are both! free to go.”
“Say, let me start to-night!” said the tramp eagerly.
“No, it’s too late,” replied Chase. “There’s no train until morning.”
Andy had overheard all this conversation. Wandering Dick was the name he had heard Chase speak once before, and he had coupled it with the suggestion that in some way Wandering Dick was concerned in the incident of Farmer Jones’ burned-down barn.
Andy slept in a good bed and got up early in the morning, believing that the new day would bring some developments of importance in the situation.
The tramp was started off by Chase, breakfast was over, and Chase had been let out by the turnkey into the main room. He came rushing back in a few minutes carrying an armful of towels for jail use.
“Andy,” he chuckled, throwing his load recklessly on a bench and slapping his young friend gleefully on the shoulder, “You’re free!”