THE OLD CRONE PLACED HER HAND OVER BETTY'S MOUTH.THE OLD CRONE PLACED HER HAND OVER BETTY'S MOUTH.—Page 162.
The Outdoor Girls at Ocean View.
Betty Nelson was an unusually muscular girl. She and her outdoor chums had not lived so much in the open air for nothing, and taken long tramps and regular physical exercise. They had played basketball, tennis and golf, and though their arms looked pretty in evening dresses, there were muscles beneath those same beautifully tanned skins.
For a moment Betty was so surprised at the suddenness of the attack that she could do nothing. She had had but a momentary glimpse of the face of the old crone, and only for that she might have thought it was the boys, who had stolen up behind her and Amy, and had put their hands over their eyes to make them guess who had thus blinded them.
But in an instant Betty knew this was no friendly game. And so, as soon as she realized that, she began to struggle, and to some good purpose.
She managed to pull from her mouth the horrible, fishy-smelling hand of the old woman, and then Betty screamed as she endeavored to loosen the grip the old crone had on her arms.
"Help! Help!" screamed Betty. "Let me go! How dare you! What does this mean? Amy, where are you?" for Betty could not, for the moment, see her chum.
But poor Amy was not as muscular as Betty, nor did she have the advantage of battling against a woman, for a man had caught her, and held her in a cruel grip.
"Help! Help!" Betty cried again, struggling desperately.
"Be quiet! Be quiet, my little dear—little imp!" hissed the old woman, for Betty had struck her in the face. "Be quiet or I'll——"
"Can't you stop her screams?" roughly demanded the man. "She'll have some one buzzing down on us if you don't! Clap a stopper on her, or I'll——"
"You must be quiet, my dear!" hissed the old crone, struggling to infuse some measure of conciliation in her cracked voice. "Be quiet or——"
"I'll not! Let me go! How dare you! Help! Help!" screamed Betty, but, even as she called, she realized how hopeless it was, for she saw no one in sight and the thunder of the surf wouldnot permit her cries to carry far. She tried to get a sight of Amy, but could not.
"Let me—let me——" panted Betty, and then, though she struggled with all her might, making the old woman pant and hiss to overcome her, Betty found herself being gradually exhausted. Again that horrid hand stole over her mouth, making her feel ill, and effectually shutting off her cries.
"Quick!" panted the old woman. "I can't hold her much longer. You'll have to tie her—or—something."
"I'll dosomething, all right!" said the man, significantly. He was having little trouble with poor Amy, who had yielded like some broken flower. "I'll just tie this one up, and then take care of her," the fellow went on.
Betty had a glimpse of his dark and brutal face and she shuddered. It was bad enough to have him touch Amy, and bad enough for the old fishwife to clasp Betty in her horrid arms, but Betty thought she surely would die if that man approached her.
She tried to speak—to say that she would not scream again if they would only tell what they wanted—take her purse and its contents—but only let her alone. But she could only mutter a meaningless jumble of sounds with that fishyhand over her mouth, pressing cruelly on her lips.
"Can you carry her, and keep her from screaming?" asked the man, who had pulled some cords from his pocket and was quickly tying Amy's hands. Then he fastened a rag over her mouth, and poor Amy, who came out of a half-faint, was too late to add her voice to Betty's.
"Carry her—no, she'll struggle like a cat!" muttered the old woman. "You'll have to help."
"Help! Haven't I got my hands full?" he demanded. "Where are some of the others? They ought to be back now. They knew this chance might come any time."
"They have been lying in wait for us," thought Betty. It was one of the many ideas that raced through her brain at express-train speed. "That is why this old woman wanted us to come to her hut."
"There's some one now!" exclaimed the man, leaning up from having put a cord around Amy's ankles as she lay on a sand hill.
"If it isn't some one she's brought by her yells," snarled the fishwife.
"No, it's Jake, thank goodness!" muttered the man, as a rough-looking specimen, the counterpart of himself, peered around a dune. "Get busy here, Jake, and truss up that other—cat!" the first man ordered.
"All right, Pete," was the answer. "Got any rope?"
"Here's some," and the one addressed as Pete kicked over some net-cord toward the newcomer.
Meanwhile Betty had desisted from her struggle to get loose. She was strong and wiry, but the old crone was more than a match for the Little Captain. The fisherman's wife seemed to know how to handle struggling persons, for she held Betty in a peculiar grip that was most effective. Bend and strain as Betty might, she could not break away, and that hand was still held over her mouth, preventing any further outcry.
"Just a minute now, Mag, and I'll have her safe," went on Jake, as, with practiced hands he whipped several coils of cord around Betty's wrists and ankles.
"Stop! Stop!" she implored as the woman's hand was taken from her mouth for a second. It was poor Betty's last chance to appeal, for, an instant later, a fold of ill-smelling cloth was put over her lips, and she was effectually gagged. Tears of shame, rage and fear came into her eyes.
"Now you can carry her, without any trouble," announced Jake, rising.
"Take 'em up to the shack," ordered Pete. "Then tell the others to get the boat ready."
Betty wondered what that meant. Were they to be kidnapped? She tried to look at Amy, but could not see her just then.
A moment later she felt herself being lifted up between the two men. It was useless to struggle.
Amy was much lighter than Betty, and was hoisted up to the shoulder of the old crone, who seemed wonderfully strong.
"Take a look out, Mag, and see if any one's in sight before we make a dash for the shack," directed Pete. "Her screams may have been heard. She yelled like a banshee!"
The fishwife, carrying the limp figure of Amy, peered beyond the line of sand dunes.
"No one in sight," she muttered, beckoning the others to advance.
"But what gets me is where the other two are," growled Pete who, with Jake, was carrying Betty. "There's four of 'em, and they've always been together ever since they come down here. Where are the other two? That's what I'd like to know."
Betty shuddered as she thought of Mollie and Grace sleeping in the little clump of trees. Suppose these horrid men should go back there and find them. It was horrible to contemplate.
"Well, you've got half of 'em. That oughtto be enough for what you want," said Jake, hoarsely chuckling.
Betty was puzzling her brains, trying to think why she and Amy had been thus captured. What object had the old fisherman and, too, why had the old crone been so eager to get them to her hut? Betty could only guess. Her head ached. She felt really ill, and could not doubt but that poor Amy was in like condition.
A few seconds later they were both carried into the hut, and set in rickety chairs. Their bonds were not removed, and the door was closed and locked. Amy looked over at Betty, and the latter could see that her chum's eyes were filled with tears.
Then, suddenly, Amy seemed to collapse. She slipped from the chair to the floor.
"Now what's up?" roughly demanded Pete. "I wish I'd never gone into this girl business, anyhow—it's so uncertain. What's happened?" and he looked at the limp form of Amy on the floor.
Betty tried to rise, but sank back dizzily. The room seemed to become suddenly dark. She feared she would topple over as Amy had done.
"It's only a faint, the poor dear," chuckled the old woman. "I'll attend to her. You go out and get the boat ready," she told the two men.
Betty's brain became clearer. There was no longer blackness before her eyes.
"Here, drink this," said the woman, raising Amy by her shoulders, and holding a glass of water to her lips. The gag had been removed. Amy drank and a little color came into her face.
"Where—where am I? What happened?" she faltered.
"Nothing, dearie," said the hoarse voice of the crone. "You'll be all right soon. You're just going to stay with me a little while—you and your friend. You won't suffer a bit of harm, if you tell us what we want to know. You'll be well taken care of."
Betty began to see a light now. She wished the gag might be taken from her lips, and water given her, but the old woman was busy with Amy. The girl closed her eyes again, and seemed too weak to cry out, even though the rag was not again bound across her lips.
There sounded voices outside the cabin, and a knock on the door.
"Drat 'em," muttered the old woman. "A body would need four hands to attend to all that's to be done."
She laid Amy back on the floor, and hobbled across the room to unbar the door. Betty wasfrantically struggling to loosen the bonds that held her hands behind her back.
"The boat's ready," gruffly said Jake, as he and Pete were admitted to the shack.
"That's good," muttered the old crone. "We can take care of 'em easier when we get 'em out of here. We don't care if they do yell then. Wait until I tie up this one's mouth. She may rouse up enough to make a racket."
Poor, half-senseless Amy was again gagged. Betty had given up trying to loosen her bonds. Those men knew how to tie knots.
And then, as before, Betty was carried down to the shore and placed in a boat. Amy was brought down on the shoulders of the old woman, who also got in the boat with the captured girls.
"Now row out," she ordered the man. They were on the bay side, where there was no surf, so the boat was easily pushed out. The men leaped in and began pulling on the long oars. Betty could see them heading for the mysterious schooner, and, a little later she and Amy were lifted on board that vessel.
"Up anchor!" came the command from some one, and, an instant later, the vessel was in motion.
Poor Betty wished she could do as Amy had done, and faint.
Grace Ford slowly opened her eyes. Grace seldom did anything in a hurry, not even awakening, and on this occasion, after the little doze that hot summer day, in the grove by the seashore, she was even more dilatory than usual in bringing all her faculties into play.
Lazily enough she glanced over at Mollie, who was still asleep. Grace felt a little sense of elation that she was awake before her friend. She did not look around for Betty or Amy, but, picking up a small pebble, tossed it in Mollie's direction.
Straight and true it went, alighting on the sleeper's nose, which, in spite of the assurance of her friends, Mollie felt was always likely to be classed as "slightly pug."
"Score one for me!" laughed Grace, still lazily, as Mollie sat up with a start. There was nothing slow about Mollie, waking or sleeping.
"What is it? Oh, you! Did you throwthat?" she asked, rubbing her nose, on which a little red spot had been raised. Feeling a sting there Mollie opened her bag and gave a hasty glance at the little mirror hidden in one flap.
"You mean thing!" she cried. "And you know how sensitive my skin is!" By this time Mollie had glanced around her, something which Grace had not yet done.
"Why—why," Mollie exclaimed. "Where is Betty—and Amy?"
"Oh, probably off somewhere indulging in athletic stunts for fear they'll lose their figures on account of eating so much lunch," remarked Grace, reaching out her hand toward a box that had held some chocolate almonds.
"But they're not in sight!" declared Mollie. She rose to her feet, and glanced rapidly up and down the beach. "I can't see them anywhere," she went on. "They—could they have gone back and left us sleeping here?"
"Well, we certainlyweresleeping," admitted Grace, with a smile that was lazy—like her drawling words.
"Oh, do be sensible—for once!" exclaimed Mollie, and her tones had a snap to them that made Grace sit up and fairly gasp.
"Why, whatever is the matter, Billy?" sheasked in aggrieved accents. "I haven't done anything. And just because Betty and Amy aren't here——"
"That's just it—where are they?" asked Mollie, sharply.
"How should I know?" returned Grace, determined not to be conciliated so easily. "They went off for a walk while we were asleep, I suppose."
"Yes, but unless they went a long distance we ought to be able to see them," Mollie went on. "And they're not in sight—you can see for yourself."
"If they're not in sight Ican'tsee, Mollie dear," spoke Grace, this time soothingly.
"Oh, do be sensible!" snapped the other. "Stop eating that silly candy, and help me gather up some of these things. I—I wonder what could have happened?"
The manner in which Mollie said this startled Grace as perhaps nothing else could have done.
"Help me up," she begged. "This skirt is so narrow. Oh, Mollie, do you think——" and she paused with frightened eyes, gazing into the more determined ones of her chum.
"I don't know that I think anything—just now," replied Mollie, in rather gentler tones. "I'm afraid I was a bit cross, Grace, but you know, dear it is——"
"Abitcross! You were positively—horrid. But I forgive you."
"I'm always cross when I wake up suddenly," explained Mollie. "You shouldn't have hit me on the nose, Grace."
"I wouldn't have, had I known you were such a—er—what animal is it that has such a sensitive nose, Mollie?"
"Bear, I guess you mean," Mollie admitted.
"Yes, that's it. Oh, but I did have a nice sleep!" and Grace lazily stretched first one arm and then the other. "But where are Betty and Amy keepingthemselves?" she asked.
"That's just what I've been trying to get you to realize," said Mollie. "It's rather strange of them to go so far away."
"Oh, probably Betty wants to get some more shells for those string portiers she is making," Grace said. "Come on, we'll walk down the beach a little way ourselves."
Mollie assented and the two were soon strolling down the strand, looking in advance for a sight of their chums.
But the seashore was deserted, save for the presence of some birds that swooped down now and then to snap up the hopping white insects which made such queer little burrows down in the sand.
A few hundred feet beyond the little grove where the picnic had been held, Mollie and Grace came to a pause.
"I don't see them," Mollie said, and her voice was troubled.
"Nor I," conceded Grace. "Do you suppose they can be hiding to play a joke on us?"
"They might," Mollie admitted. "But they would hardly go so far away."
"Let's look on the other side," proposed Grace. But that beach, of the little arm of land that jutted out into the bay and ocean, showed no sight of Betty and Amy.
"Oh, I—I'm getting—worried," returned practical Mollie. "Nothing could have happened, unless one of them sprained her ankle, or something like that, and can't walk. Even then the beach is so open, and there isn't a place on it that one need fear——"
"Unless it's that old fisherman's hut," broke in Grace.
"Oh," observed Mollie, slowly, and there came a change over her face. "I didn't think of that. Yes, they might——"
She was interrupted by a shrill whistle, as if of some boat. Both girls turned quickly, and the same exclamation came to the lips of both.
"The boys!"
It was thePocohontasapproaching, and Allen, Roy and Henry waved their hands as they came on swiftly over the blue waters.
"Are they in the boat?" asked Grace.
"Who?" Mollie wanted to know.
"Betty and Amy."
"Why, how could they be?"
"I thought perhaps the boys might have come up while we were asleep, taken Betty and Amy out for a little run, and were now coming back, to laugh at us for being so lazy."
"Well, they're not in the motor boat, anyhow," Mollie said. "I do hope nothing has happened."
Grace did not ask what might possibly have happened. She was just a little afraid of what her chum might say. The sprained ankle theory was too simple. Somehow Grace felt a growing concern.
But, for the present, at least, this was lost sight of in the little excitement over the advent of the boys. They came on, laughing, singing and shouting, while Roy held up a string of fish. Evidently they had had good luck.
The motor boat grounded gently in the shallow water and the boys jumped out, Allen tossing out a light anchor high up on the sand.
"We came to take you home," he announced. "We thought you'd have enough of picnic bythis time. Where's Betty?" he asked, quite frankly. Allen was not at all fussy about showing his admiration for the Little Captain.
"Why, it's queer," Mollie replied, smiling just the least bit, "but she and Amy seem to have gone off by themselves. Grace and I dozed, and when we awoke they were gone."
"Probably down the beach," suggested Roy. "How's that for fish?" and he held up the string. But Mollie and Grace were not interested in fish just then.
"We've been looking for them," Mollie went on. "We were looking when—when you came."
Something in her words and manner caused Allen to ask quickly:
"You—you don't think anything could have happened; do you?"
"I—I don't know what to think," Mollie faltered. "It seems—a little strange."
"Oh, we'll find them," declared Henry. "Amy isn't one to go far."
"But Betty is a great walker," Grace ventured.
"Well, we'll find them and all go back in the boat," proposed Allen. "It looks as though we might have a thunder shower. That's why we gave up fishing. Come on, have a look."
It did not take a very long search up and downthe beach to disclose the fact that Amy and Betty were nowhere near. The little clump of trees held no hiding place, and unless they had gone inland there was no other explanation except that they had gone back to the cottage.
"And this they would hardly do," said Mollie. "Unless something had happened. Maybe——"
"What?" asked Roy, as she stopped suddenly.
"Oh, nothing," she said in some confusion. "Nothing at all."
"They may have gone over to that fisherman's hut, just to see what it was like," Mollie said. "You know the old woman was always teasing us to come in and have some milk. She may have been more persuasive this time, though Betty couldn't bear her."
"We'll have a look in that direction," suggested Henry.
"Yes, for I don't just like the looks of the weather," added Allen. "Henry and I will go over there," he said. "Roy, you stay here with the girls and help them pack up the things. We may have to make a run for it when we come back with Betty and Amy."
"If you find them," said Mollie, in a low voice—so low that no one heard her.
Allen and Henry set off over toward the sand dunes behind which was hidden the fisherman'sshack. Grace, Mollie and Roy began collecting the picnic things.
The young law student and his chum made good time. Nor did they waste any when they reached the lone cabin. A glance up and down the beach showed no trace of the missing ones. In the offing a schooner was slowly sailing away.
"There goes that boat," remarked Allen. "Didn't seem to have any business around here—neither clamming or fishing."
"That's right," agreed Henry. He knocked, and, after waiting a moment, tried the latch. The door swung open, showing the place to be deserted.
"Betty—Amy!" called Allen.
There was no answer. Then with a quick motion Henry darted forward and picked up something from the floor. It was a handkerchief.
"It's my sister's," he said. "They—they've been here!"
He and Allen looked at each other strangely.
Slowly the mysterious schooner gathered headway. Her sails creaked and groaned as the ropes slipped through the sheaves, and the chains squeaked around the drum of the steering wheel. There was a rattle of blocks, hoarse cries from several sailors on deck, and then, down in the cabin, where the horrid old woman slipped the pieces of cloth from the mouths of Betty and Amy, had the two girls the strength to utter cries it is doubtful if they would have been heard a hundred feet away.
There was no other craft within a mile of the vessel that was moving up the bay toward the more open water.
"There you are, my dear," leered the fishwife. "All nice and snug and comfortable."
"Oh—oh!" gasped Betty, as the creature stretched out her hands toward her. "Don't—don't you dare touch me!"
"Jest goin' to take the ropes off your prettyhands, dearie," was the smirking answer. "You don't need them now. You can't run away, you know. Tee-hee!" and she tittered in glee.
Betty felt it better to submit to the ministrations of the crone, for the sake of being released from the bonds, which hurt her cruelly. For they had been pulled tight by the fishermen. It was some time after the ropes were taken off her ankles and wrists before Betty felt the blood circulating normally.
Amy lay inert on the rude bunk where she had been placed. Betty noticed there were sleeping accommodations for three in the place, and with a shudder she wondered if the old woman was to be their companion on the voyage that seemed to have begun. For the schooner was pitching and tossing on a ground swell, that seemed to presage a change of weather.
"Oh—oh, Betty! What has happened?" faltered Amy, as she opened her eyes. The cloth had been removed from her mouth and the ropes loosed. Having done this much the old woman crouched on the third bunk, smiling, muttering to herself, and looking from one girl to the other.
"Oh, Betty—what does it mean?" repeated Amy.
"I don't know, but I'm going to find out soon," declared the Little Captain, with a return of herusual courage. She felt better now that she had the use of her arms and legs. She started toward the door.
"It's locked—on the outside, my dearie!" chuckled the old woman. "And it won't be opened until I call to 'em. So there's no use in makin' a fuss, my dear!"
"Stop your senseless talk!" snapped Betty. "Don't dare call me by that name, you—you horrid creature."
"No use gettin' mad," said the crone, and she showed a change of temper. "You're here, and you're goin' to stay until we put you on shore, so you might as well make up your mind to that."
"We demand to be put on shore at once!" cried Betty. "Evidently you and—and those with you have made some mistake. We will not make trouble for you, if you set us ashore at once. If not——"
"Well, what will you do, dearie?" sneered the old woman.
"My father will deal with such as you!" declared Betty, her eyes flashing. "You must put us ashore."
"The men will have to attend to that," the crone said. "One of 'em will be here pretty soon, and you'd better answer 'em fair, or it may be the worse for you."
Her tone was fierce now.
"Oh—oh, I—I feel faint," gasped Amy. "It is so close in here——"
"Get her some water," ordered Betty, authoritatively.
"It's right here," said the old woman. "I thought you'd want a drink. And you can have somethin' to eat as soon as you like. It sha'n't be said we starved you."
"Eat! I couldn't bear the sight of food!" said Betty, with a shudder. "Here, Amy, drink this. It seems to be—clean!" and Betty tried to express the contempt she felt for the slovenly appearance of the old woman.
Fortunately the water did seem to be drinkable, and it was quite cold, as though it had been on ice. Both girls drank gratefully, for their mouths were parched and dry.
"Are you better?" asked Betty, smoothing back the hair of her chum.
"Oh, yes, much. But, Betty dear, what does it all mean? Why are we here? I—I seem to be in a sort of daze."
"I feel that way myself. I don't know what has happened, Amy, except that we were kidnapped, and brought to this schooner."
"Kidnapped? Oh, no, my dear!" interrupted the old woman. "We only want you to tell ussomething, and as soon as you do that you can go where you please."
"Tell you? Tell you what?" demanded Betty, though she felt she could answer that question herself.
"I don't rightly know what it is, my pretty!" protested the crone with an evil glance. "My man will be here pretty soon and tell you. He has to get the sails up, and all of that, first."
The creaking of pulleys on the deck told that the operation of getting the schooner under way was not yet completed. There was a regular swing to the vessel now, however, that told she was getting into more open water. Fortunately both the outdoor girls were good sailors.
The old woman was putting back in a box the bottle of water and the tin cup from which she had given Amy and Betty to drink. For a moment her back was turned, and Betty decided on a bold move.
Quickly she darted over toward the door, and pulled with fierce strength on the knob. It resisted her efforts. The old woman turned with a mocking smile on her wrinkled face.
"I told you it was locked," she jeered. "It won't be opened until I knock in a certain way. I'll do it soon, for we must be getting pretty well out."
She peered through a dirty round window that gave light to the cabin, which seemed to be located in the after part of the schooner, though neither Betty nor Amy had noticed to which part they had been taken.
"I demand that you let us out of here!" cried Betty, stamping her foot.
She looked around as though for some weapon with which to enforce her orders, and the woman evidently guessed this, for she chuckled grimly.
"You can't have your own way here," she said, with a grin that showed her almost toothless gums. "My man is captain of this boat, and out at sea, you know, the captain has to be obeyed."
"Oh, are you going to take us out to sea?" gasped Amy. "Please don't! I'll do anything if you will release us. See, I have money," and she brought out a little gold purse from a skirt pocket. At the sight of the gleaming metal the crone's eyes glittered.
"Don't be afraid," she said. "You won't be harmed. All we want to know is——"
A knock interrupted her. She glided quickly between Betty and Amy and the door was opened a crack. Betty had a wild idea of forcing her way out, but she had a glimpse of two rough looking men through the opening, and she darednot approach. There was a whispered talk between the old woman and one of the men.
Then, in an instant the old crone slipped out, and the door was locked again, leaving Betty and Amy alone in the cabin.
"Oh—oh!" cried Amy, and a moment later she was sobbing in the strong arms of Betty.
Meanwhile Allen and Henry had come out from the fisherman's cottage, having satisfied themselves, by a quick search, that no one was in the upper story, or down in the cellar.
"They were here, though," Allen said.
"Yes, my sister's handkerchief proves that," agreed his chum. "Now we must go back to the others."
"But Grace and Mollie will have a fit when they know we haven't found Betty and Amy."
"It can't be helped. There has been some mix-up somewhere. I have an idea, but I won't spring it now. Come on."
They hurried back to where the motor boat had been left.
"Were they there?" asked Grace, eagerly.
"Yes, they—were," said Allen, slowly. "But they've gone home."
"How do you know that?" asked Henry in a low voice.
"I don't know it!" came the reply in a whisper. "But we've got to pretend that until we find it isn't so. I'm hoping it is, though. You see," he went on, aloud, "we found they had been there. Amy dropped her handkerchief."
"But where are they now?" demanded Mollie.
"They probably hurried back to the cottage."
"But without coming to tell us?" objected Grace.
"They probably had no time," said Allen. "My idea is," he went on, speaking rapidly so he would not be interrupted, "that they got some news about the diamonds, and had to act on it quickly. I think that is why they didn't wait to tell you girls. They knew if they didn't come back that you would know enough to come home, or they may have planned to return to you later."
"What had we better do?" asked Grace.
"Get back to Edgemere as soon as we can," was Allen's opinion. "We'll probably find them waiting for us."
They piled into the motor boat, and used all speed in getting back. No sooner had they reached the little dock, where Tin-Back tied his boats, than Will Ford came racing down from the cottage.
"I thought you would never come back!" he cried, his face showing excitement.
"Why, have you found them? Are theyhere?" asked his sister, wondering why her brother had returned from Boston.
"Here? Of course they're here!" he answered. "Where else would they be. And I've found them."
"I don't see how——" began Allen.
"Oh, it wasn't easy, I assure you. I had to work on a lot of clues. But I came out all right. I've found out all about 'em. Those diamonds were smuggled, and there's a good reward offered for the capture of the men, as well as something due for turning the diamonds over to Uncle Sam."
"The diamonds!" cried Mollie.
"Yes. I've found out their secret!" Will said.
"We—we thought you meant you had found Betty and Amy," returned Grace, in a strange voice. "They—they're lost! They're gone!"
"What gone? Not the diamonds!" cried Will, hopping about, first on one foot, and then the other. "Don't tell me those sparklers are gone, after all the trouble I've had on this case—and it's my first, too! That's a shame! How did it happen."
"Oh, you and your diamonds!" cried Allen. "It's the girls who are missing! Don't you understand? The girls!"
"I don't understand," replied Will. "What's the game?"
"And Betty and Amy are not up at the cottage?" asked Mollie.
Will shook his head.
"I just came down from Boston," he said. "I was told you were all out—the boys fishing and the girls on a picnic. I could hardly wait until you came back to tell you the news. But you've knocked my feet from under me."
"Oh, it's just terrible!" said Grace. "What will Mrs. Nelson say?"
"Now look here!" exclaimed Allen, taking charge of matters in the masterful way he had. "We've got to do something in a hurry. Of course Mrs. Nelson will have to be told, but it may be all right after all. Betty and Amy may have gone in to the village, to send a telegram, or something like that."
"What about?" asked Grace.
"The diamonds, of course. They may have struck a clue. Now look here," Allen went on quickly. "Will, as I understand it, you have found out to whom those stones belong?"
"Well, yes; that is, almost. There's been a big smuggling job, and those diamonds are part of the loot, or swag——"
"Such slang!" protested Grace.
"Don't worry about slang at a time like this," said Mollie. "Go on, Will."
"No, we haven't time for all his story now," said Allen. "It is enough for us to know that he has solved the mystery."
"This much of it, at any rate," Will assented, "though I'm in the dark yet about the missing girls. As I said, I've been working my government position for all it's worth. There was a big smuggling job lately, and they were keepingit quiet. These diamonds are undoubtedly part of it, and now if I can only help get some of the men it sure will be a feather in my cap—a whole ostrich plume, in fact."
"Well, the rest of your story will keep," Allen remarked. "The next thing is to trace the girls. Here's the story about them, Will," and he rapidly told it as he had gathered it from Mollie and Grace.
"At the fisherman's hut, eh?" mused Will. "I always thought he had a hand in the affair. But where did the girls go from there?"
"That's just what we don't know," Henry remarked. "I found Amy's handkerchief in the cabin, or we wouldn't have known that much."
"It's a bare chance that they may have gone to the telegraph office in the village, to send a wire to Betty's father," said Allen. "We'll try there before we raise an alarm."
"But can we keep the news from Mrs. Nelson?" asked Mollie.
"She isn't home," Will said. "She's out calling somewhere. I've been keeping bachelor's hall at Edgemere ever since I came from the train. The maids told me where you were."
"We might stave off worrying Mrs. Nelson if one of us could get to town and back before she returned," said Allen. "Of course if the girlshaven't been there we'll have to come out with the whole story."
"If we only could get to the village in a rush," said Mollie.
"An auto!" exclaimed Grace.
"There isn't one near enough——" began Will, when Grace cried:
"Percy Falconer! There he comes!"
The Deepdale johnny was coming down the road in his powerful machine. With all his faults he had the car in his favor, though he was not a skilled driver, and seldom could get anyone to venture out with him.
"Hey, Percy! You're just in time!"
"Over here!"
"This way!"
"Got to get to town in a hurry!"
Thus called the boys and girls to him, and it is doubtful if Percy Falconer ever received such a warm welcome before, or since.
"Just the one we want to see," said Allen, getting into the car with Will. "We are in a hurry to get to the telegraph office."
"Some one ill?" asked Percy, looking at his wrist watch.
"No, but there may be if we don't hustle," Allen said. "To the telegraph office as fast as you can make it, Percy boy."
"And let Allen drive, if you don't mind, old man," put in Grace's brother. "You must be tired, and we don't want to be ditched."
"Oh, all right, of course. If you're in a rush," agreed Percy, good-naturedly, and he found a warmer place in the hearts of those who had hitherto cared little for him.
"After all, Percy isn't such a bad sort," remarked Roy, as he walked with Grace and Mollie up the drive leading to Edgemere.
"He came in very useful to-day, at all events," Mollie agreed. "I think I shall teach him that new aeroplane whirl in the hesitation he is so anxious to learn."
"Oh, a dance!" acclaimed Grace. "I'm just dying for one."
"There won't be any—if we don't find Betty," said Mollie, seriously enough.
"Oh, we'll find them!" declared Roy.
"I hope Mrs. Nelson stays away until—well, until the scare is either over, or until we have something to go on, in case—in case they are lost," commented Grace.
Betty's mother had not returned home when the auto, driven at break-neck speed by Allen, swung down the road again.
"What news?" asked Mollie, as the echo of the screeching brakes died away. But there wasno need to ask. A look at the faces of Allen and Will told her what she wanted to know.
"They weren't there, and hadn't been," said Allen, slowly.
"Oh, but I say! What's it all about?" asked Percy.
"You'll know soon enough," Will answered in a low voice.
As they stood on the porch, a much-worried group of young people, Mrs. Nelson came back from her call.
There was no need for her to ask if anything was the matter. A glance told her that. But she met the emergency bravely. The girls told their story first—how they had awakened to find Betty and Amy gone. Then Henry told of finding the handkerchief in the hut, and lastly Will explained how he had found out that the diamonds were the booty of a smuggling plot.
"Well, we must get right to work," said Mrs. Nelson, and she proved herself a worthy mother of a worthy daughter. "I am sure nothing serious could have happened—no drowning, or anything like that. The only other explanation is, I think, along the lines suggested by Allen.
"Their disappearance must have something to do with the diamonds. It is possible they are following some suspect, and have had no chance tosend back word. In that case they are all right. But we must search for them, and begin at the fisherman's shanty.
"We must also telegraph for Mr. Nelson. I'll go to town and do that. I'll also try to get him on the long distance telephone. Now, let me see. Some of you will come with me, others will go to the fisherman's cabin, and others will start a search along the beach, and notify the life saving station. We must neglect nothing."
"Isn't she splendid?" asked Grace of Mollie. "I feel better already."
"So do I."
There was a hasty consultation, and three parties were made up. Percy offered the use of his car, and Allen elected to go in it with Mrs. Nelson, to town. The others would go to the fisherman's shack and to the life saving station, though at this time of year there was only one man on duty. But he would know how to organize a corps of fishermen and clammers to make a search, if needed.
Mrs. Nelson returned from the village, after sending a telegraph message. She was unable to communicate with her husband by telephone.
"We had best follow them to the fisherman's cabin," said Allen. "That will be a sort of rallying point."
There they found all the young folks gathered, those who had been assigned the task of going to the life saving station having accomplished their errand, bringing back the message that soon a body of hardy men would be patrolling both beaches.
But it was Tin-Back who gave the real clue. He came up as they were making a second examination of the cabin, to discover some other evidence of the former presence of Betty and Amy there.
"The girls missin'!" exclaimed the old crabber. "Wa'al, there's only one place t' look fer 'em!"
"Where's that?" asked Mrs. Nelson. "Not—not——"
"No'm, they're not drowned, don't fear that, mum," said Tin-Back, with ready perception. "Nothin' like that could happen. They're off—there!"
He waved his hand toward where the mysterious schooner had been anchored.
"What makes you think so?" asked Allen, after the crabber had spoken of his belief, and mentioned the absence of the schooner as evidence.
"Because that vessel has been hanging around here on purpose to work off some such schemeas that! Take my word for it, the girls are aboard her. Pete and his woman Mag haven't gone off together for nothin'. The girls are on theSpud, and bad luck to her for a sneaky craft!"
"There's no time to lose!" he went on. "We've got to take after 'em, and locate her before nightfall. We need a fast boat——"
"ThePocohontasis in good trim!" interrupted Allen.
"The very thing!" cried Tin-Back. "Hurray! This is like old times! I'm with you!" and he clapped his hand on his thigh with a report like a pistol shot. "To the rescue!" he cried.
"All aboard!"
It was the tense voice of Allen Washburn calling, as he and his chums clambered aboard thePocohontas. There had been a hurried filling of the gasoline and oil tanks after the suggestion offered by Tin-Back, that the disappearance of the mysterious schooner was coincident with the disappearance of the girls.
"If she only will run," ventured Roy, who was in charge of the motor.
"She'sgotto run!" declared Allen, fiercely. Not all of the party went in the motor boat. Mrs. Nelson did not feel equal to the task, but Mollie said she would go, for her girl chums might need her in case they were found.
Tin-Back went, of course, with Henry, Allen and Roy. Will volunteered to stay with Mrs. Nelson and Grace. At first he had begged to be taken along, but some one had to stay to be the "man of the house," and I think, after all, Will wanted to get another look at the diamonds, inwhich he now had so strong and growing an interest.
"Let her go!" cried Allen, and the motor boat glided away from the little dock. It was late afternoon, and while the threatened storm had held off, the daylight was fast fading.
Fortunately they had a clue as to the direction the schooner had taken after leaving her anchorage. The man at the life saving station had observed her beating out on a long tack. He had noticed her through a glass, but had taken no note of any girls that might have been put aboard. But the wind was now quite strong, and the schooner would hardly sail against it. So our friends had a certain fairly sure direction to follow.
Will and Mrs. Nelson, with Grace and Percy, went back to the cottage. Their first care was to see that the diamonds were safe, and this was soon ascertained to be the case.
Meanwhile the motor boat had taken up the search. Driven at top speed, and with the engine "doing its prettiest," as Roy boasted, they made good time. In and out they went, over the course, now and then pausing to speak some clammer, but getting no information, save in one or two instances. But they learned enough to know that they were on the right track.
"Are you going to cruise all night," asked Mollie.
"No, unfortunately we'll have to turn back at dark," Allen said. "That is why I want to cover as much water as possible before all the light is gone."
They chased after one or two schooners, but without result, until, just as the last light of a threatening day was fading, Tin-Back startled them all by leaping up and shouting:
"Sail, ho!"
"Where away?" demanded Allen, in true nautical fashion.
"Dead ahead. There she is or I'm a candidate for Davy Jones's locker! Put after her, boys!"
It was comparatively easy, for the wind had died out—the calm before a storm, and as the schooner had no "kicker," or small gasoline engine, as had some of the clammers, she was soon overhauled.
That she was at least the one which had been anchored out in the bay was evident, for Tin-Back recognized her at once. Also it was evident that no visitors were desired, for, as thePocohontascame up alongside the almost motionless sailing craft, an ugly face looked over the low rail, and a gruff voice cried:
"That'll do, now. Keep off or you'll get into trouble! What do you want, anyhow?"
"You know well enough what we want!" cried Allen. "Up on deck, boys! We've got 'em just where we want 'em. There's your man, officer!" he called. It was pure "bluff," but it seemed to have its effect, for the man who had given the warning drew back.
"What is it?" demanded some one else, coming up out of the cabin.
"Oh, some fresh guys——"
"Come on, fellows!" Allen called loudly. He had leaped out on the forward deck of the motor boat. Mollie had been urged to stay in the little cabin, and did so. But it was evident there was to be no serious trouble—at least just yet.
"Come on!" cried Tin-Back, and at the sound of his resolute voice there was a surprised exclamation from the group of men on the schooner's deck.
"All aboard!" yelled the old clammer. "We've got 'em where we want 'em! Close-hauled! We'll holystone 'em an' slush 'em with hot tar if they give any trouble! Come on!"
Another instant and, despite his age and the crippling effects of rheumatism caused by exposure in all sorts of weather, Tin-Back had leaped to the schooner's deck. He was followed byRoy, Allen and a couple of sturdy fishermen, who had been picked up on the beach.
"Now, then, what do you fellows want?" demanded Pete, who was recognized as the fisherman of the lonely cabin.
"You know well enough what we want!" answered Allen resolutely. "The two young ladies you have on board here."
"There's nobody here," was the surly denial.
"I tell you there are!"
"You——"
There came a shrill scream from somewhere below decks, followed by an exclamation in a woman's voice.
"They're loose! They're loose. Pete—Jake—I—I——"
The men of the schooner uttered surprised exclamations.
"Come on!" cried Pete, leaping up.
"Not so fast," interposed Tin-Back, stepping in front of the man who had made a dash toward the cabin. "Wait a minute," and an extended foot tripped Pete, who fell heavily to the deck.
"We're coming!" shouted Allen, and, followed by Roy and Mollie, who by this time had made her way to the deck of the schooner, they hurried below. From behind a closed door came the sound of a struggle.
"In here!" cried Allen, and he threw himself against the panels as though he were stopping a rush on the football field. There was a cracking of wood and a snapping of metal. The door burst open.
In the cabin, struggling against the old crone, were Betty and Amy, disheveled and almost hysterical, but otherwise safe and sound.
"Allen!" gasped Betty, holding out her hands to him. He clasped them warmly, and the old crone, seeing that the whole affair was over, slunk off, whining something about meaning no harm to the "dearies"!
"Just watch those fellows that they don't do any mischief," said Henry to Tin-Back, when he had comforted his sister.
"Oh, they won't do any harm. They know it's all up. Besides, I brought this with me," and the clammer showed an ancient horse pistol, that, had it been fired, would probably have worked more havoc to the marksman than to the person aimed at.
There were tears, hysterical laughter, and rapid-fire explanations—all, seemingly, at once.
"But you're safe!" cried Allen, who had both Betty's hands. Whether or not it had been a continuous performance I cannot say. Probably it had. Betty was a very nice girl.
"Oh, yes, we're safe," she said, trying to control her voice.
"But those awful men; that—that horrid woman!" gasped Amy.
"You needn't worry about them any more," Allen assured her. "We'll see that they get what's coming to them."
Whether or not he would have been able to put this into operation is a question. But unexpected help arrived. It would not have been easy for the little force in the motor boat to cope with the larger crew of men on the schooner. Besides, there were three girls to be considered, and, though they were equal to most emergencies, both Betty and Amy were now rather unnerved.
There was a sharp whistle outside—a boat signal, evidently.
"What's that?" asked Allen, who, with Henry, Roy and the girls, was in the cabin, so recently a prison.
"It's a revenue cutter," bawled Tin-Back down the hatchway. "They want to know if we need help."
"We'll take it, anyhow," chuckled Allen. He felt like laughing now. "But how in the world did they come, and in the nick of time?"
"Maybe Will sent them," suggested Mollie. "They may be down here after the smugglers."
And so it proved when Allen went up on deck and held a short talk with an officer aboard the trim cutter, which had come to a stop alongside the motor boat and drifting schooner.
Will, left behind at the cottage with Mrs. Nelson and Grace, had suddenly thought to send the cutterMinoato follow up thePocohontas. The government vessel had come down to Ocean View in view of certain facts Will had given his chief in the Secret Service, but Will had not expected to use theMinoain the chase. When he recalled that she was but a short distance off shore, awaiting wireless instructions, he rushed in Percy's auto to the telegraph office in town, and got into communication with his chief, who was awaiting word from him.
It was but the matter of a few minutes to relay the instructions to the cutter by wireless from Boston, and she started out to look for a small motor boat chasing a suspicious schooner. She found both in the nick of time.
Explanations made, men from the revenue vessel boarded the sailing craft and made her captain and crew prisoners, the old crone being among those captured. She had tried to make off in the rowboat trailing at the schooner's stern, but had been caught by Tin-Back.
"No, you don't!" he cried. "We want you!"and the old lobsterman held to her despite her struggles.
There were more explanations, and then, as the storm showed signs of breaking, the rescued girls and their friends set out for Ocean View in the motor boat. The revenue officers remained in charge of the captured schooner, and said they would see Will in the morning to complete the case.
"But what in the world did they want to capture you girls for?" asked Roy, when they were all safe again in Edgemere. The rain was beating against the windows, for they arrived just as the downpour began.
"They thought to get the secret of the diamonds," declared Will. "I can tell you that much. Though how they expected to do it I can't say."
"But were those men who had us—and that horrid old woman—the smugglers?" asked Amy.
"No, only their tools," Will said. "In brief, the game was this: The box of diamonds you found was smuggled from France. But before those interested in bringing them over could make good they received word that the customs officers in Boston were waiting for them. The government agents abroad had sent word here to be on the lookout.
"So the smugglers adopted a bold plan. They sent a message in cipher, by the ship's wireless, when two or three days outside of Boston, to their confederates, to have a boat waiting for them off this coast. That was done, and one dark night the smugglers tossed overboard the box with the diamonds concealed in the false bottom. It was fixed in a cork arrangement, so it would float. This box was picked up, but before the confederates could make away with it something happened. There was a quarrel among the smugglers, I believe, and one gang hurried off and buried the box here in the sand.
"You girls came along just as that had been done, and though some of the men wished to come back and take away the booty, others would not permit this, thinking no chance comer would find it."
"Those were the men we saw leaving in the boat," said Mollie.
"Yes," assented Will.
"And we did find the diamonds!" cried Grace.
"Yes, and that made all the trouble—for the smugglers," went on Will. "Of course they soon learned that the box was gone, and they guessed you girls had taken it. Then they tried to get it back."
"Those men in the cellar?" asked Betty.
"Were part of the gang," declared Will. "And I learned that they found the diamonds were in the cellar because a tramp hanging around for food overheard us taking about them. He wasn't in with the smugglers then, but later he joined them, giving this information.
"But the plan to get the diamonds from the cellar failed, and they had to do something else. That old woman and her fisherman husband were delegated to capture one or more of you girls, and force you either to tell where the diamonds were, or else they were going to hold you as a ransom for them."
"How terrible!" cried Grace.
"But it's all over now," her brother said. "Now we have the diamonds, we have the poor dupes of tools the smugglers bribed—the fisherman and the men of the schooner—and it only remains to get the criminals themselves. We'll do it, too."
"Did they treat you badly?" asked Grace of Betty and Amy.
"Badly enough," the Little Captain replied. "They would not tell us why we were made prisoners. But after they had taken the gags from our mouths, they put them on again, just before you came."
"That was because they saw the motor boatafter them and knew they couldn't get away because of no wind," suggested Will.
"We thought perhaps there was a pursuit," Amy said. "And then Betty grew desperate and managed to attack the old woman."
"But you helped," said Betty.
"Oh, don't let's talk about it," exclaimed Grace. "All's well that ends well."
"But it isn't all ended yet," Will remarked, significantly.
Working on the fears of their prisoners the government men learned where the real smugglers were hiding, waiting for the success of their plot, and they were arrested. In due time they were tried, found guilty and sentenced to pay heavy fines on the charge of trying to defraud Uncle Sam. On the charge of kidnapping the two girls the heavier punishment of imprisonment was meted out to those involved.
It developed that the smugglers, however, had protected themselves from the graver charge. They had instructed the fishermen to get information from the girls about the diamonds, in any way the ignorant men thought best, and the kidnapping scheme was the product of the brains of the old woman and her husband. They laid the plot to capture the girls, and secured the help of several friends, hiring the schooner for theirpurpose. When the schooner sailed away with Betty and Amy the old woman and her husband expected to pick up the smugglers and let them force the truth from the girls. But their plan was spoiled.
The diamonds, of course, became the property of the government, and were sold at auction, and on such favorable terms that each of the girls was able to obtain one for herself. Will helped bring this about, for the government was under obligation to him and his friends for recovering the jewels and capturing the smugglers. The reward was evenly divided.
"And I received a fine letter of thanks from my chief," said Will. "For my first case he said it was a—corker!"
"Oh, Will!" objected his sister.
"Well, he meant that, if he didn't say it," was the answer. "And I'm going to have a vacation which I'm going to spend down here if Betty will let me."
"Of course I will," she said. "We'll have jolly times!"
And then began glorious days at Ocean View, days in which there was no worriment about the packet of diamonds. Allen was allowed to keep the mysterious box and the original of the cipher, but he was never able to discover the meaning ofit, nor who the enigmatical "B. B. B." was.
It was practically certain, however, that "B. B. B." was the real head of the smugglers, he who furnished the money and most of the brains. But his confederates never betrayed him. The value of the diamonds was several thousand dollars above Mr. Nelson's estimate.
There followed vacation days of boating and bathing, with more picnics, and Grace had all the chocolates she wanted—or at least all that were good for her. Tin-Back came in for a share of the reward, and bought himself, among other things, a new fish net.
And, while the outdoor girls are enjoying life at beautiful Ocean View, we will take leave of them.