Left to themselves, Penny and Louise walked a few steps on the sagging planks which had been nailed to tree stumps. The boards beneath them creaked protestingly and dipped nearly into the water.
“We must have been crazy!” Louise exclaimed. “We’ll die of boredom waiting here. Two hours too!”
“It is a long time.”
“And if Joe shouldn’t come back, we’re stranded—absolutely stranded.”
“We did take a chance, Louise, but I’m sure Joe can be trusted.”
“He seems all right, but what do we really know about him?” Louise argued. “If anything queer is going on here in the swamp, he may be mixed up in it!”
“I thought about that,” Penny admitted. “Anyway, if we’re to learn anything, we had to take a certain amount of chance. I’m sure everything will be all right.”
Slowly they walked on along the rickety planks, now and then bending down to pluck a water lily. Louise quickly jerked back her hand as a water snake slithered past.
“Ugh!” she gasped. “Another one of those horrid things!”
Interested to learn where the planks led, the girls followed the bridge-like trail among the trees. Louise, however, soon grew tired. As they presently came to a stump which offered a perfect resting place, she sat down.
“This is as far as I’m going,” she announced.
“But we have lots of time to explore, Louise. Don’t you want to learn where this boardwalk goes?”
“Not at the risk of falling into the water! At any rate, I’m tired. If you want to explore, go on alone. I’ll wait for you here.”
Penny hesitated, reluctant to leave her chum alone.
“Sure you won’t mind, Louise?”
“I’d much rather wait here. Please go on. I know you’ll never rest until you reach the end of the walk.”
Thus urged. Penny, with the package of lunch still tucked under her arm, picked her way carefully along.
The board path curved on between the trees for some distance only to end abruptly where boards had rotted and floated away. After a break of several yards, the walk picked up again for a short ways, but Penny had no intention of wading through water to follow it further.
Pausing to rest before starting back, she noticed beyond the water oaks a narrow stretch of higher land covered with dense, wild growth. Above the trees a huge buzzard soared lazily.
“Ugly bird!” she thought, watching its flight.
Penny was about to turn and retrace her steps, when she noticed something else—footsteps in the muck not far from the end of the boardwalk.
“Someone has been here recently,” she reflected. “Those prints must have been made since the last rain.”
Even from some distance away. Penny could see that the shoemarks were small ones.
“Probably the person who made them is the same fellow who built the campfire,” she thought. “Wonder where the footprints lead?”
Penny tried to draw her eyes away, but the footprints fascinated and challenged her. She longed to investigate them further. However, she had not forgotten Trapper Joe’s warning that it was unsafe to leave the boardwalk.
“If I watch out for snakes and only go a short ways, what harm can it do?” she reasoned.
A moment more and Penny was off the walk, treading her way cautiously along the muddy bank. She paused to listen.
All was very quiet—so still that it gave the girl an uneasy feeling, as if she were being watched by a multitude of hostile eyes.
The footprints led to a large tree in a fairly open area. On one of the low, overhanging bushes, a bit of dark wool had been snagged.
“Someone climbed up there either to rest or sleep,” Penny thought.
In the bushes close by, the girl heard a faint, rustling sound.
“Who’s there?” she called sharply.
No one answered. All was still for a moment. Then again she heard the whisper of disturbed leaves.
Penny’s flesh began to creep. Suddenly losing all interest in the footprints, she decided to beat a hasty retreat to the boardwalk.
The decision came too late. Before she could move, a dozen big rooters led by an old gray boar, swarmed out of the bushes, surrounding her.
Too frightened and startled to cry out, Penny huddled back against the tree trunk. The rooters had spread out in a circle and slowly were coming closer.
Retreat to the safety of the boardwalk was completely cut off. The leader of the pack now was so near that she plainly could see his razor-sharp ivory tusks. In another moment, the animal would attack.
Throwing off the paralysis of fear which gripped her, Penny swung herself into the lowermost branch of the big trees. The package of lunch she had carried, dropped from her hand, falling at the base of the trunk.
Instantly, the rooters were upon it, tearing savagely at the meat and at each other. Sick with horror, Penny clung desperately to the tree limb.
“If I slip now, I’m a gonner!” she thought. “Those rooters are half starved. If I fall, they’ll attack me!”
Penny considered shouting for Louise, but dismissed the thought as quickly as it came. Her chum probably was too far away to hear her cries. If she did come, unarmed as she was, she might leave the boardwalk only to endanger herself.
“Louise can’t help me,” Penny told herself. “I brought this on myself by not heeding Old Joe’s warning. Now it’s up to me to get out of the mess the best way I can.”
The girl lay still on the limb, trying not to draw the attention of the rooters. Once they finished the meat, she was hopeful they would go away. Then she could make a dash for the walk.
Grunting and squealing, the rooters devoured the meat and looked about for more. To Penny’s relief, they gradually wandered off—all except the old boar.
The leader of the pack stayed close to the big tree, eyeing the girl in the tree wickedly. Even in the dim light she could plainly see his evil little eyes and working jaws.
“Go away you big brute!” she muttered.
Penny’s perch on the limb was a precarious one and her arms began to ache from the strain of holding on. Unsuccessfully, she tried to shift into a more comfortable position.
“I may be treed here for hours!” she thought. “Can I hold on that long?”
The old boar showed no disposition to move off, but kept circling the tree. It seemed to the now desperate Penny, that the animal sensed she was weakening and only awaited the moment when she would tumble down to the ground.
Breaking off a small tree branch she hurled it defiantly at the boar. The act caused her to lose her balance. Frantically, she clawed for a foothold but could not obtain it. Down she slipped to the base of the tree.
The old boar, quick to see his opportunity, charged. With a scream of terror, Penny leaped aside and the animal rushed past, squealing in rage at having missed his prey.
Even now, the boar stood between the girl and the plank walk. The tree from which she had fallen, offered her only refuge, and as she measured her chances, she realized that the probability of regaining the limb was a slim one.
The boar had turned and was coming for her again.
But at that instant, as Penny froze in terror, a shot was fired from somewhere in the bushes behind her. The bullet went straight and true, stopping the boar in his tracks. He grunted, rolled over, twitched twice, and lay still.
With a sob of relief, Penny whirled around to thank her rescuer. Through the thick leaves of the bushes she could see the shadowy figure of a man. But even as she watched, he retreated.
“Wait!” the girl cried.
There was no answer, and before she could call out a word of thanks for deliverance, the man had vanished.
His disappearance reminded her that though she had been snatched from the jaws of death, the danger by no means was over. At any moment the herd of rooters might return to attack.
Turning, Penny ran swiftly to the planked walk, in her haste not watching where she stepped. Her boots sank deeply in muck. Once on the planks well above the water level, she paused to catch her breath, and to gaze searchingly toward the bushes. All now was still.
“Who could my rescuer have been?” she mused. “Why didn’t he wait for me to thank him?”
Penny called several times but received no reply. Finally, giving up, she started slowly back along the walk toward the bay where she had left Louise.
More than the girl realized, the adventure had unnerved her. She felt weak all over, and several times as she gazed steadily at the water, became dizzy and nearly lost her balance.
“Guess I’m not tough enough for swamp life,” she reflected. “If ever I get out of here in one piece, I’m tempted to forget Danny Deevers and let the police do all the searching.”
Footsteps became audible on the boardwalk some distance away.
Every sense now alert to danger, Penny halted to listen.
Someone was coming toward her, moving swiftly on the creaking planks.
“Penny!” called an agitated voice.
Penny relaxed as she knew that it was her chum. “Louise!” she answered, running to meet her.
Rounding a clump of bushes, and walking gingerly on the narrow boards, Louise stopped short as she beheld her friend.
“Why, you’re as white as a ghost!” she exclaimed. “And I distinctly heard you shout! What happened? Did you see a snake?”
“A snake would be mild compared to what I’ve been through. Were you ever eaten alive?”
“Not that I recall.”
“Well, I escaped it by the skin of my teeth,” Penny said, rather relishing the adventure now that the story made such good telling. “I was saved by a mysterious stranger!”
Louise gazed at her chum anxiously and reached out to touch her forehead. “You’re hot and feverish,” she insisted. “This trip has been too much for you.”
“I’m as cool as a piece of artificial ice!” Penny retorted. “Furthermore, I’m not touched by the heat!”
“Well, something is wrong with you.”
“I’ve just had the fright of my life, that’s all. If you’ll give me a chance, I’ll tell you what happened.”
“The stage is all yours, sweet. But don’t give me any tall tale about being rescued by a Prince Charming disguised as a frog!”
Penny’s lips compressed into a tight line. “I can see you’ll never believe the truth, Lou. So I’ll prove it to you! Come with me, and I’ll show you the animal that nearly made mince meat of me.”
Treading single file, the girls returned the way Penny had come, to the end of the planks.
“Look over at the base of that big tree,” Penny instructed, pointing. “What do you see?”
“Nothing.”
“The boar that was shot—why, it should be there!” Penny scarcely could believe the sight of her own eyes. “But it’s gone!”
“It’s gone because it never was there. Penny, you’re suffering from too much heat.”
“I’m not! Neither am I imagining things! That old boar was there ten minutes ago. Either he came back to life and went off, or someone dragged him away.”
“And your mysterious rescuer?” Louise teased. “What became of him?”
“I wish I knew! Lou, I’m not imagining any of this! Surely you must have heard the shot?”
“Well, I did hear something that sounded like one.”
“Also, the lunch is gone. All that remains of it, is the paper lying over there by the tree.”
“I do see a newspaper,” Louise conceded.
“And that broken tree branch lying on the ground? I was up the tree and threw it at the boar. That’s how I lost my balance and fell.”
Louise now was convinced the story had solid foundation. “Start from the beginning,” she urged.
Penny related what had occurred, rather building up the scene in which she had been delivered from death by the bullet shot from behind a bush.
“Whoever the man is, he must be somewhere close by,” Louise said when she had finished. “Perhaps we can find him.”
“Not a chance! He’s deliberately hiding. Besides, I know better than to leave the walk again. It’s dangerous!”
“In that case we may as well go back and wait for Joe,” Louise said.
Treading their way carefully, the girls returned to the far end of the boardwalk. To their surprise, they saw a boat approaching.
“Why, it looks like Joe in the skiff!” Penny commented. “But he isn’t due back for a long while yet.”
Watching the oncoming boat for a moment, Louise said: “It’s Joe all right, and he’s coming fast. Something must be wrong.”
Soon the guide brought the skiff alongside the sagging boardwalk.
“I heard a shot and started back,” he explained. “I sure am glad to see both o’ ye safe.”
Before Penny could do so, Louise told Joe what had befallen her chum.
“Ye could have been kilt by that old boar,” he said soberly. “It was the package o’ meat that drew them rooters to the tree. They hain’t likely to attack a human lest they’re half starved.”
“I wish I knew who saved me,” Penny said. “Could it have been one of the Hawkins’ boys?”
“From the sound, I’d say that shot weren’t fired from their rifles. More’n likely it came from my own gun!”
“The stolen one?”
“That’s what I’m a-thinkin’. If I could see the bullet that was fired, I could tell fer sure.”
“The boar disappeared and the bullet with him,” Penny said. “That’s another queer thing.”
“Whoever kilt the critter may have drug him off, or maybe the animal was only stunned.” The guide squinted at the lowering sun. “I’d like powe’ful well to see the place, but it’s gitten late. We gotta git back.”
“What did you learn at Black Island?” Louise asked as she and Penny climbed into the skiff.
“Never got half way there,” the guide said in disgust. “Since I went in last time, the main channel’s clogged thick with hyacinths. To find yer way in now’s a half day’s job.”
“Can’t we try again tomorrow?” Penny asked eagerly.
The old guide gazed at her quizzically as he dipped his paddle. “Hain’t ye had enough o’ the swamp after today, young’un?”
“When that old boar came for me, I told myself if ever I got safely away, I’d never come again. But that was only a passing impulse. Black Island interests me.”
“It’s the most dangerous part of the swamp.”
“Because of wild animals, you mean?”
“There’s lots wuss things than animals,” said the old guide soberly.
“For instance?”
Trapper Joe ignored Penny’s question. Becoming as one deaf, he propelled the skiff with powerful strokes.
Penny waited patiently, but the guide showed no inclination to say more about Black Island.
“Shall we make it tomorrow?” she inquired presently.
“Make what?” Joe’s wrinkled face was blank.
“Why, I mean, shall we visit Black Island!”
“I hate to disappoint ye, but we hain’t a-goin’.”
“You may be busy tomorrow. Later in the week perhaps?”
“Not tomorrer nor never. I hain’t takin’ the responsibility o’ bringin’ ye young’uns into the swamp agin.”
“But why?” wailed Penny. “I wish now I hadn’t told you about that old boar!”
“It hain’t the boar that’s got me worried.”
“Then you must be afraid of something on Black Island—something you learned today and are keeping to yourself!”
“Maybe that’s it,” returned Joe briefly. “Anyhow, we hain’t goin’. And it won’t do no good to try coaxin’ me with yer female wiles. My mind’s made up!”
Having delivered himself of this ultimatum, the guide plied his paddle steadily.
The set of his jaw warned Penny it would be useless to tease. With a discouraged sigh, she settled down into the bottom of the skiff to think.
Since the eventful trip to the swamp, several days now had elapsed, and from Penny’s viewpoint, nothing of consequence had happened.
Each day theRiverview Starcarried a story giving details of the police search for Danny Deevers, and on each succeeding morning the account became shorter, with less new information.
Twice, it was rumored police were closing in on the escaped convict, and twice the rumor proved false.
At the request of Salt Sommers and Jerry Livingston, posses made several searches of the outer swamp area. However, no trace of the missing man was found, and investigators quickly switched their activities elsewhere.
Spurred by theStar’sreward offer, clues, anonymous and otherwise, came to both the newspaper and police officials. All proved worthless.
“It begins to look as if Danny has pulled out of this territory,” Mr. Parker remarked to Penny late one afternoon as she sat in his office at the plant. “At least he’s made no further attempt to carry out his threat against Jerry.”
“Maybe he’s only lying low and waiting until the police search cools off a little.”
“Quite possible,” the publisher agreed, frowning as he fingered a paperweight. “In that case, Jerry is in real danger. I’ll never feel entirely easy in my mind until Deevers is behind bars again.”
“Speaking of me, Chief?” inquired a voice from the doorway.
Jerry stood there, a long streamer of pasted copy paper in his hand. He had written a story of a political squabble at city hall, and needed Mr. Parker’s approval before handing it over to the typesetters.
The publisher quickly read the article, pencilled an “okay” at the top, and returned it to the reporter.
“Good stuff, Jerry,” he approved. “By the way, any news of Danny Deevers?”
“Nothing new.”
“Jerry, I can’t help feeling he’s hiding either in the swamp or somewhere close by,” Penny interposed eagerly. “At least something queer is going on out there.”
“That’s what Salt thinks. We were out there last night.”
“In the swamp?” Penny asked, caught by surprise.
“Not in it, but near the Hawkins’ place.”
“What did you learn, Jerry?”
“Frankly, nothing. You remember that swamp road where you and Salt saw the truck?”
“Yes, of course.”
“We watched there for quite awhile around midnight.”
“Did you see the truck stop there again?”
“No, but we thought we saw a couple of men at the edge of the swamp—apparently waiting for someone. We tried to sneak up close, but I’m afraid we gave ourselves away. Anyway, they vanished back among the trees.”
“Did you notice or hear anything else unusual, Jerry?”
“Well, no. Not unless you’d call pounding on a dishpan out of the ordinary.”
“A dishpan!” Penny exclaimed. “Who did it?”
“We couldn’t tell. Salt and I heard the sound soon after we had passed the Hawkins’ place on our way toward the swamp.”
“What sort of sound was it?”
“Just a metallic tap-tap-tap. It may not have been on a dishpan.”
“Were the taps in code, Jerry?”
“Couldn’t have been a very complicated one for the pounding only lasted a minute or two. It was irregular though.”
“Then I’m sure it was a code!” Penny cried. “Louise and I heard the same sound when we were with Trapper Joe in the boat!”
“Did the noise come from outside the swamp?”
“Inside, I’d say.”
“Then we may not have heard the same thing. The pounding noise Salt and I noticed, came from the direction of the Hawkins’ farm. It may have had no significance.”
Before Jerry could say more, Editor DeWitt called him to the copy desk. Mr. Parker turned again to his daughter.
“Penny, if I were you, I’d try to forget Danny Deevers,” he advised. “Whatever you do, don’t go into the swamp again unless you’re with Joe or another guide. Better still, don’t go at all.”
“Oh, Dad!”
“No good can come of it. Do I have your promise, Penny?”
“But I feel I should try to recover Louise’s dog!”
“We’ll buy her a new pet.”
“It won’t be Bones.”
“The chance that the dog ever will be found is slim,” Mr. Parker said. “In any case, he’s not worth the risk of trying to find him. Your promise, Penny?”
“That I won’t go in without a guide?” she asked, seizing upon the lesser of two evils. “All right, I promise.”
The next day it rained, keeping Penny closely confined at home. However, the following morning gave promise of being sunny and pleasant.
Arising early, she packed a lunch for herself, dressed in hiking clothes with heavy boots, and was ready to leave the house by the time Mrs. Weems came downstairs for breakfast.
“Up so early, Penny?” she inquired.
“Just going on a little trip. Don’t expect me back very early.”
The housekeeper regarded her severely. “Penny Parker, you’re not going to the swamp again!”
“Figured I might.”
“Does your father know you’re going?”
“We talked it over a day or so ago. He doesn’t mind so long as I go with Trapper Joe or another guide.”
“In that case I suppose I can’t object,” Mrs. Weems sighed. “Mind, you don’t set foot in the swamp without someone along!”
“I’ve already given my promise to Dad.”
“And do be careful,” the housekeeper added. “I’ll not feel easy until you’re back.”
Though neither she nor Penny knew it then, the girl’s absence from home was to be a long one, and both were to have many uncomfortable moments before her return.
Reaching the swamp sometime later, Penny parked the car and walked to Trapper Joe’s shack on the creek.
The old guide was sitting on the sagging porch, his feet propped on the railing. Catching sight of Penny he frowned slightly, but as she came up, greeted her in a friendly way.
“’Mawnin’,” he said briefly. “What’s on yer mind this time?”
“Can’t you guess?” Penny asked, sitting down on a step at his feet.
“If yer wantin’ me to take you into the swamp agin, yer only wastin’ yer words. I hain’t got the time.”
“I’ll pay you well.”
“It hain’t the money.”
“Then why do you refuse to take me in?”
“Tole ye, didn’t I? I got work to do.”
Penny knew that Joe was only making excuses, for obviously, one day was very like another in his care-free life.
“What work do you have this morning that can’t wait, Joe?”
“Well, fer one thing I gotta smoke out a swarm o’ bees and git me a nice mess o’ honey fer winter. Want to go with me?”
“Into the swamp?”
“No, this tree hain’t in the swamp.”
“Then I don’t want to go. Joe, I think you’re stubborn! You know how much this trip means to me.”
“Reckon I do.”
“Then why not take me? Tell me your reason for refusing.”
Old Joe gazed steadily at Penny and for a moment seemed on the verge of making interesting revelations. But to her disappointment, he shook his head.
“Jest don’t wanter go, thet’s all.”
“You learned something the other day when we were in the swamp!” Penny accused. “You’re keeping it from me—probably to protect someone! Isn’t that it?”
“Hain’t saying.”
“You know Danny Deevers is hidden somewhere in the swamp! You’re helping to protect him!”
Old Joe’s feet came down from the railing with a thump. “Now that hain’t so!” he denied. “I got no time fer the likes o’ Danny Deevers. If I knowed where he is, I’d give him up to the law.”
“Well, someone is hiding there! I heard Ezekiel Hawkins talking on Lookout Point, didn’t I? We found the dead campfire. Your gun was stolen, and later a mysterious person rescued me when I was treed by the boar.”
“Could have been one o’ the Hawkins.”
“You don’t honestly believe that, Joe.”
“No, reckon I don’t,” the guide sighed. “You sure kin shoot questions at a feller faster’n these new Army rockets I hear tell about. I’d like to tell ye what ye want to know, but there’s things best not talked about. Knowin’ too much kin be dangerous.”
Penny scarcely could hide her annoyance, for several times now the guide had made similar hints.
“I don’t trust the Hawkins’ family at all,” she announced. “If they’re not involved with Danny Deevers, they’re up to something here in the swamp. Otherwise, why would they be so mean?”
“The Hawkins’ family always has been mean an’ ornery.”
“Another thing—” Penny started to mention how she and Salt had seen large containers of some unknown product being removed from the swamp, but broke off as she decided to keep the information to herself.
“Yeah?” inquired the guide.
“Nothing,” replied Penny. “If you won’t take me into the swamp, is there anyone else who will?”
“Couldn’t say fer sure,” Joe replied, “but I reckon I’m the only guide herebouts fer maybe fifty miles.”
“Won’t you reconsider?”
“You put up a powe’ful strong argument, young’un, but I gotta say no fer yer own good.”
“You’ve certainly ruined all my plans,” Penny said crossly. “Well, since you won’t help me, I’ll say goodbye.”
Back in the car once more, she could not bring herself to return home so early in the morning. Debating a moment, she drove to the homestead of the Widow Jones.
Dressed in a bright calico dress, the woman sat under a shade tree skillfully cutting up the meat of a turtle and dropping it into a pan of cold water.
As Penny walked across the weed-choked yard, she looked up in a startled way, but smiled as she recognized the girl.
“I’m fixin’ to have me a nice soup,” she explained. “Ye cook the turtle with diced carrots, potatoes, okra, and tomatoes and serve it piping hot. Ever et any?”
“No, I never have,” Penny replied, watching the preparations with interest. “It sounds good.”
“Ye kin stay and have dinner with me,” the woman invited. “I’ll fix some flour biscuits and we’ll have a right nice meal.”
“I’m afraid I’ll have to get back home,” Penny said regretfully. “My trip here today was a failure.”
Because the Widow Jones gave her an inquiring look of sympathy, she explained that Trapper Joe had refused to take her into the swamp. She went on to tell why the trip meant so much to her, and of her belief that a clever investigator who knew the area might find clues which would lead to the capture of Danny Deevers.
“So Joe wouldn’t take ye?” the Widow Jones inquired softly. “Why?”
“He says it’s dangerous.”
“And since when has Joe got so a-feared of his shadow?”
“It did sound like an excuse to me. I think he knows what is going on in the swamp, and wants no part of it.”
“Ye say it means a lot to ye to make the trip?”
“Oh, yes, I’d do it in a minute, if I could find anyone who knows the channels. But Joe says he’s the only guide for fifty miles around.”
Mrs. Jones slapped the last piece of turtle meat into the water with a splash. She arose, gathering her long skirts about her.
“Joe’s maybe fergettin’ that as a gal, my paw taught me every crook and turn of the swamp. Hain’t been in there fer quite a spell now, but I got a hankerin’ to go agin.”
Penny stared at her incredulously.
“You mean you’ll take me?” she demanded. “Today? Now?”
“I’ve got a quilt I should be piecin’ on this afternoon, but hit can wait. If you hain’t afeared to place yerself in my hands, I’ll take you.”
“I’ll jump at the chance! But do you have a boat?”
“We’ll make Joe lend us his!” the widow said grimly. “And if he tries squirmin’, well, I know how to handle him!”
Making elaborate preparations for the trip into the swamp, Mrs. Jones packed a lunch, and donned a huge straw hat and stout boots.
However, she did not change the long, flowing skirt, which flopped about her ankles as she and Penny walked through the meadow to Trapper Joe’s dock.
From the porch, the old guide saw the pair and watched them warily.
“We’re takin’ yer boat, Joe,” the widow called to him from the creek’s edge. “We’re makin’ a little trip into the swamp.”
Joe pulled himself from the chair and came quickly to the dock.
“Hold on now!” he protested. “Two wimmin can’t go alone into the swamp! Leastwise, not beyond Lookout Point.”
“Says who?” retorted the widow, already untying the boat.
“That young ’un’s talked you into goin’ to Black Island! Ye can’t do it. You’ll git lost in one o’ the false channels. The hyacinths are bad this year.”
The widow hesitated, then tossed her head as she dropped the package of lunch into the skiff.
“Ye forgit I was swamp raised! Git me the paddles and a pole, Joe. Don’t stand there gawkin’.”
“No wimmin ever went as far as Black Island. It hain’t safe!”
“My Paw took me there when I was a little girl. I hain’t forgittin’ the way.”
“Ye’r stubborn as a mule!” Joe accused, glaring at her. “If you’re dead set on goin’, I see I’ll have to give in and go with ye. But it’s agin my best judgment.”
“No one asked ye to go with us, Joe,” the widow said tartly. “We aim to make this trip by ourselves. Jest git the paddles and pole.”
Joe threw up his hands in a gesture of defeat and started slowly for the shack. “Wimmin!” he muttered. “There jest hain’t no sense in ’em!”
He took his time inside the shack, but finally returned with the requested paddles and pole.
“There ye are!” he snapped. “But I’m warnin’ ye, if ye git into trouble or lost, don’t expect me to come after ye.”
“Now I’ll take the kicker motor,” the widow ordered, paying no heed to his words.
“Not my motor!” Joe exclaimed defiantly. “I paid sixty dollars fer it secondhand and I hain’t lettin’ no female ruin it.”
“Ye can’t expect me to blister my hands rowin’ all day,” the widow replied. “We aim to make a quick trip.”
“Ye can’t use the motor in all them hyacinths!”
“Maybe not, but it’ll take us through the open spots a heap faster. The motor, Joe.”
Grumbling loudly, the guide went to the house once more. He came back with the motor which he attached and started for the widow.
“Thank ye kindly, Joe,” she grinned at him as the boat pulled away from the dock. “I’ll make ye one of my apple pies when I git back.”
“If ye get back,” the guide corrected morosely.
Propelled by the motor, the skiff sped steadily through the channel and came presently to the Hawkins’ farm. The popping of the engine, which could be heard some distance, drew Mrs. Hawkins to the dock.
She signaled the boat as it drew near.
“Howdy,” the Widow Jones greeted her politely though with no warmth. She throttled down the engine and drifted in toward shore.
“Goin’ in fer a little fishin’, I take it,” Mrs. Hawkins observed by way of inquiry. “But where’s yer fishin’ poles?”
“Left ’em ter home,” the widow replied.
“Then you hain’t fishin’.”
“’Pears like yer right smart at usein’ yer eyes,” the widow agreed dryly.
A slight frown which did not escape Penny, puckered the farm woman’s forehead. She seemed on the verge of speaking, then appeared to change her mind. As the boat drifted on, she watched stolidly.
“Never did like that woman,” Mrs. Jones commented when the skiff had rounded a bend. “She’s got sharp eyes, and she don’t approve ’cause we’re goin’ inter the swamp together.”
“Why should she care?” Penny asked.
“I wonder myself.”
“I’ve noticed that she always seems to be watching the entrance channel into the swamp,” Penny said thoughtfully. “Perhaps she is the one who taps out those signals!”
“Signals? What do you mean, young’un?”
Penny told of the strange pounding noises she had heard during her previous trip through the swamp.
“I could almost wager Mrs. Hawkins will wait until we’re a safe distance away, and then signal!” the girl went on. “Don’t I wish I could catch her though!”
“Maybe ye kin. We could shut off the motor and drift back and watch.”
Penny’s eyes began to sparkle with excitement. “I’d love to do it. But won’t she be listening for the sound of our motor as we go deeper into the swamp? If she doesn’t hear it, she’s apt to suspect something.”
“Ye’ve got a real head on yer shoulders,” said the widow approvingly. “By the way, I don’t like to keep callin’ ye young’un now we’re good friends. What’s yer name?”
“I thought you knew. I’m sorry. It’s Penny Parker.”
“Penny! I never did hear o’ a girl named after money.”
“I wasn’t exactly,” Penny smiled. “My real name is Penelope, but no one ever liked it. So I’m called Penny.”
“Penelope, hain’t sich a bad name. That’s what I’ll call ye.”
“About Mrs. Hawkins—” the girl reminded her.
“Oh, yes, now if ye was a mind to find out about her, it wouldn’t be so hard.”
“How?”
“We hain’t gone fur into the swamp yet. I could let ye out here on the bank and ye could slip back afoot to the bend in the channel.”
“Where I’d be able to watch the house!”
“Ye got the idea, Penelope. All the while, I would keep goin’ on in the boat until the sound o’ the motor jest naturally died out. Then I could row back here and pick ye up agin.”
“Mrs. Jones, you’re the one who has a head on your shoulders!” Penny cried. “Let’s do it!”
The widow brought the skiff alongside the bank, steadying it as the girl stepped ashore.
“Ye got a watch?” she asked.
“Yes.”
“Then I’ll meet ye right here in ’bout three-quarters of an hour. I kin keep track o’ the time by lookin’ at the sun.”
“That may not give me enough time,” Penny said anxiously.
“If yer late, I’ll wait fer ye,” the widow promised. “But try to be here. If ye hain’t we may havter give up the trip, ’cause it hain’t sensible startin’ in late in the day.”
“I’ll be here,” Penny assured her. “If nothing happens in three-quarters of an hour, I’ll just give it up.”
The boat, it’s motor popping steadily, slipped away. Penny scrambled up the muddy bank, and finding a well-trod path, walked rapidly toward the Hawkins’ place.
Soon she came to the bend in the creek, and there paused. From afar, she could hear the retreating sound of the skiff’s motor.
Through a break in the bushes, the girl peered toward the distant farmhouse. To her disappointment, the yard was now deserted, and Mrs. Hawkins was nowhere in sight.
“Maybe I was wrong,” Penny thought. “I’d hate to waste all this valuable time.”