Part 9 (1/2)
”I'll run that risk--only go slow,” answered the man in trouble.
The rope had been made as long as possible, so that the stalled car could be drawn out of the ditch lengthwise instead of sidewise. The two cars in the road started up on low speed, and gradually the rope grew taut.
”Look out, everybody, in case that rope snaps!” cried Ben. ”I once heard of a rope like that snapping and killing a house-mover.”
”You are cheerful, I must say,” was Sam's dry comment. Nevertheless, all were on their guard as the rope grew as tight as a string on a bow.
”She ain't moving yet!” cried Pete Barnaby. He stood by the side of his machine watching the rope closely.
Hardly had he spoken when there came a slow, sucking sound, as the wheels left their bed of soft mud. Then the racing machine moved forward slowly.
”Hurrah! she's coming!” cried Sam. ”Put on a little more steam and you'll have her!”
Dave and Roger turned on more power, and the racing machine continued to move. Soon it was at the edge of the ditch, and then, with something of a jerk, it came up on the roadway, leaving a trail of dirty water and slimy mud behind it.
”Say, you did it all right enough!” cried Pete Barnaby, in delight. ”I was afraid she was too deep down to budge.”
”She would have been too deep if you had left her there very much longer,” answered Dave. ”Now, if you'll untie those ropes and clean them off for us, we'll be on our way again.”
”Sure, I'll clean them off.” And the sporty man set to work with alacrity. ”Say, don't you really want me to pay you for this?” And he made a move as if to draw a roll of bills from his pocket.
”I don't want a cent,” answered Dave.
”It's all right,” added Roger; ”only, Mr. Barnaby, I'd advise you after this not to stand in with Nat Poole and his crowd.”
”I'm sorry I did, now; honest I am,” was the sporty man's answer.
”I--er--I only did it as a favor for Nat, because his father is holding one of my notes. How did you make out after I went away? I see you must have got through.”
”We did,” replied Dave, and then mentioned how Jed Sully had come to their aid. At this news Pete Barnaby began to grin.
”It was sure a neat way of turning the trick,” he said, ”and seeing how you young gentlemen have helped me, I'm glad you did it. You can be sure I'll never lay a straw in your way again, never!” And then, the ropes having been put away, the two touring cars proceeded on their way once more, leaving Pete Barnaby to clean up his machine and put it in running order again.
”Dave, that was a real nice thing to do!” declared Jessie, and gave him a bright look.
”He must have felt awfully small, for you to be so generous after the way he acted,” was Laura's comment.
”Maybe it will be a lesson to him, to do what is square in the future,”
said Belle.
They were soon in the town of Lester, and there stopped at the main drug store, where the boys treated the girls to ice-cream ”sundaes,” as they are sometimes called. Then they took a round-about way back to Crumville, arriving there at sundown.
”Oh, what a nice day we have had, in spite of the drawbacks!” cried Jessie, dancing into the mansion.
”Drawbacks?” queried her mother. ”Did you get a puncture, or a breakdown?”
”Oh, no; nothing happened to the cars,” answered the curly-haired miss.
And then she turned to the boys, to let them tell the story. While they were doing this, Mr. Wadsworth came in, followed by Dave's father and his uncle, and Caspar Potts.
”That is just on a par with Aaron Poole's actions in general,” said Mr.