Part 19 (2/2)

”Oh, maybe he hasn't!” cried Agnes eagerly. ”Maybe he is coming back here.”

”You think this old tree,” said Mr. Pinkney in doubt, ”is Sammy's headquarters?”

”I--don't--know--”

”That wouldn't be like Sammy,” declared Neale, with conviction. ”He always keeps moving--even when he is stowaway on a ca.n.a.lboat,” and he chuckled at the memory of that incident. ”For some reason he was chased away from here. Or,” hitting the exact truth without knowing it, ”he tucked the bag under that tree root and forgot where he put it.”

”Does that sound reasonable?” gasped Agnes.

”Quite reasonable--for Sammy,” grumbled Mr. Pinkney. ”He is just so scatter-brained. But what shall I tell his mother when I take this bag home to her? She will feel worse than she has before.”

”Maybe we will find him yet,” Agnes interposed.

”That's what we are out for,” Neale added with confidence. ”Let's not give up hope. Why, we're finding clues all the time.”

”And now you manage to get us stuck in the mud,” put in Agnes, giving her boy friend rather an unfair dig.

”Have a heart! How could I help it? Anyway, we'll get out all right.

We sha'n't have to camp here all night, if Sammy did.”

”That is it,” interposed Sammy's father. ”I wonder if he stayed here all night or if he abandoned the bag here and kept on. Maybe the woods were too much for his nerves,” and he laughed rather uncertainly.

”I bet Sammy was not scared,” announced Neale, with confidence. ”He is a courageous chap. If he wasn't, he would not start out alone this way.”

”True enough,” said Mr. Pinkney, not without some pride. ”But nevertheless it would help some if we were sure he was here only twelve hours ago, instead of twenty-four.”

”Let's get the car out of the ditch and see if we can go on,” Neale suggested. ”I'll get that pole you saw, Mr. Pinkney. And I see another lever over there.”

While Mr. Pinkney buckled the straps of the extension-bag again and stowed the bag under the seat, Neale brought the two sticks of small timber which he thought would be strong enough to lift the wheels of the stalled car out of the ditch. But first he used the b.u.t.t of one of the sticks to knock down the edge of the bank in front of each wheel.

”You see,” he said to Agnes, ”when you get it started you want to turn the front wheels, if you can, to the left and climb right out on to the road. Mr. Pinkney and I will do the best we can for you; but it is the power of the engine that must get us out of the ditch.”

”I--I don't know that I can handle it right, Neale,” hesitated Agnes.

”Sure you can. You've got to!” he told her. ”Come on, Mr. Pinkney!

Let's see if we can get these sticks under the wheels on this side.”

”Wait a moment,” urged the man, who was writing hastily on a page torn from his notebook. ”I must leave a note for Sammy--if perhaps he should come back here looking for his bag.”

”Better not say anything about his torn trousers, Mr. Pinkney,”

giggled Agnes. ”He will shy at that.”

”He can tear all his clothes to pieces if he'll only come home and stop his mother's worrying. Only, the little rascal ought to be soundly trounced just the same for all the trouble he is causing us.”

”If only I had stayed with him at that beet bed and made sure he knew what he was doing,” sighed Agnes, who felt somewhat condemned.

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