Part 10 (1/2)

THE STICKS GET A FRIGHT.

BUT the Sticks didn't go! The children peeped out of the spy-hole at the top of the cave-roof every now and again, and saw one or other of the Sticks. The evening went on and it began to be dark. Still the Sticks didn't go. Julian ran down to the nearby sh.o.r.e and discovered a small boat there. So the Sticks had managed to find their way round the island, rowed near the wreck, maybe landed on it too, and then come to the sh.o.r.e, cleverly avoiding the rocks they might strike against.

”It looks as if the Sticks have come to stay for the night,” said Julian, gloomily. ”This is going to spoil our stay here, isn't it? We rush away here to escape from the Sticks-and lo and behold! the Sticks are on top of us again. It's too bad.”

”Let's frighten them,” said .George, her eyes s.h.i.+ning by the light of the one candle in the cave.

”What do you mean?” said d.i.c.k, cheering up. He always liked George's ideas, mad as they sometimes were.

”Well, I suppose they must be living down in one of the dungeon rooms, mustn't they?” said George. ”There is no place in the ruins to live in proper shelter, or we'd be there ourselves-and the only other place is down in the dungeons. I wouldn't care to sleep there myself, but I don't suppose the Sticks would mind.”

”Well, what about it?” said d.i.c.k. ”What's your idea?”

”Couldn't we creep down, and do a bit of shouting, so that the echoes start up all round?” said George. ”You know how frightening we found the echoes when we first went down into the dungeons. We only had to say one or two words, and the echoes began saying them over and over again shouting them back at us.”

”Oh yes, I remember,” said Anne. ”And wasn't Timmy frightened when he barked! The echoes barked back at him, and he thought there were thousands of dogs hiding down there! He was awfully frightened.”

”It's a good idea,” said Julian. ”Serve the Sticks right for coming to our island like this! If we can frighten them away, that would be one up to us! Let's do it.”

”What about Timothy?” said Anne. ”Hadn't we better leave him behind?”

”No. He can come and stand at the dungeon entrance to guard it for us,” said George. ”Then if any of the real smugglers happened to come, Timmy could give us warning. I'm not going to leave him behind.”

”Come on, then, let's go now!” said Julian. ”It would be a fine trick to play. It's quite dark, but I've got my torch, and as soon as we are certain that the Sticks are down in the dungeons, we can start to play our joke.”

There was no sign or sound of the Sticks anywhere about. No light of fire or candle was to be seen, no sound of voices to be heard. Either they had gone, or they were below in the dungeons. The stones had been taken from the entrance, so the children felt sure they were down there.

”Now Timmy, you stay quite still and quiet here,” whispered George to Timmy. ”Bark if anyone comes, but not unless. We're going down into the dungeons.”

”I think perhaps I'll stay up here with Timothy,” said Anne, suddenly. She didn't like the dark look of the dungeon entrance. ”You see, George-Timmy might be frightened or lonely up here by himself.”

The others chuckled. They knew Anne was frightened. Julian squeezed her arm. ”You stay here, then,” he said, kindly. ”You keep old Timmy company.”

Then Julian, George and d.i.c.k went down the long flight of steps that led into the deep old dungeons of Kirrin Castle. They had been there the summer before, when they had been seeking for lost treasure; now here they were again!

They crept down the steps and came to the many cellars or dungeons cut out of the rock below the castle. There were scores of those, some big and some small, queer, damp underground rooms in which, maybe, unhappy prisoners had been kept in the olden days.

The children crept down the dark pa.s.sages. Julian had a piece of white chalk with him, and drew a chalk-line here and there on the rocky walls as he went, so that he might easily find the way back.

Suddenly they heard voices and saw a light. They stopped and whispered softly together in each other's ears.

”They're in that room where we found the treasure last year! That's where they're camping out! What noises shall we make?”

”I'll be a cow,” said d.i.c.k. ”I can moo awfully like a cow. I'll be a cow.”

”I'll be a sheep,” said Julian. ”George, you be a horse. You can whinny and hrrrumph just like a horse. d.i.c.k, you begin!”

So d.i.c.k began. Hidden behind a rocky pillar, he opened his mouth and mooed dolefully, like a cow in pain. At once the echoes took up the mooing, magnified it, sent it along all the underground pa.s.sages, till it seemed as if a thousand cows had wandered there and were mooing together.

”Moo-oo-oo-OOOOOOOO, ooo-oo-MOOOOOOO!”

The Sticks listened in amazement and fright at the sudden awful noise.

”What is it, Ma?” said Edgar, almost in tears. Stinker crouched at the back of the cave, terrified.

”It's cows,” said Mr. Stick, amazed. ”Them there's cows. Can't you hear the moos? But how did cows get to be here?”

”Nonsense!” said Mrs. Stick, recovering herself a little. ”Cows down these caves! You're mad! You'll be telling me there's sheep next!”

It was funny that she should have said that, for Julian chose that moment to begin baa-ing like a flock of sheep. His one long, bleating ”baa-baa-aa-aa” was taken up by the echoes at once, and it seemed suddenly as if hundreds of poor lost sheep were baa-ing their way down the dungeons!

Mr. Stick jumped to his feet, as white as a sheet.

”Well, if it isn't sheep now!” he said. ”What's up? What's in these ”ere dungeons? I never did like them.”

”Baa-aa-AAAAAAAAAAP went the mournful bleats all round and about. And then George started her whinnying and neighing, just like an impatient horse. The little girl tossed her head in the darkness and hrrrumphed exactly like a horse and then she stamped with her foot, and at once the echoes stamped too, sending the whinnying and neighing and stamping into Sticks” cave twenty times louder than George had made them.

Poor Stinker began to whine pitifully. He was frightened almost out of his life. He pressed himself against the floor as if he would like to disappear into it. Edgar clutched his mother's arm. ”Let's go up,” he said. ”I can't stay here. There's hundreds of sheep and horses . and cows roaming these dungeons, you can hear them. They're not real, but they've got voices and hoofs, and I'm scared of them.”

Mr. Stick went to the door of the room they were in, and shouted loudly.

”Get out, you! Clear out! Whoever you are!”

George giggled. Then she shouted out in a very deep, hoa.r.s.e voice.

”BE-WARE!” And the echoes thundered out all round.

”WARE! 'WARE! ”WARE-ARE-ARE!”

Mr. Stick went back quickly into the cave-room, and lighted another candle. He shut the big wooden door that led into the room. His hands were shaking.

”Queer goings-on,” he said. ”Shan't stay here much longer if we get this kind of thing happening every night.”

Julian, d.i.c.k and George were now in such a state of giggle that they could not imitate any more-cows, horses or sheep. George did begin to be a pig, and gave such a realistic snort and grunt that d.i.c.k nearly died of laughing. The snorts and grunts were echoed everywhere.

”Come out” gasped Julian, at last. ”I shall burst with trying not to laugh. Come out!”

”Come out!” whispered the echoes. ”Come out, out, out!”

They stumbled out, stuffing hankies into their mouths as they went, following Julian's chalk-marks easily by the light of his torch. It was impossible to take the wrong pa.s.sage if they followed his guiding-lines.

They sat on the dungeon steps with Anne and Timmy, and choked with laughter as they related all they had done. ”We heard old Stick yelling to us to clear out,” said George, ”and he sounded scared stiff. As for Stinker, we never heard even the smallest growl from him. I bet the Sticks will clear off tomorrow after this! It must have given them a most terrible fright.”