Part 24 (2/2)

”I came to look after a rascally black who escaped from his owner, and you will be sorry for having interfered with me in my lawful business.”

”We are ready to take the consequences,” answered Mr Tidey. ”Before we set you free, we intend to learn whether your story is true; so submit quietly, or we shall be obliged to resort to more violence than we wish.”

While we were holding down the man, I examined his countenance, and was sure that he was one of those who had so outrageously attacked our house, I therefore felt no compunction at the way we were treating him.

Had he shown any courage, he might possibly have freed himself, but we managed--not without some difficulty--to lash his arms behind him, and to bind his legs so that he could move neither hand nor foot.

”The best thing we can do with him is to place him in the canoe, and let him remain there until we have discovered the little girls, for, depend upon it, his companions have carried them off, probably with the intention of holding them as hostages until we deliver up Dio,” observed Mr Tidey.

We had also another reason for keeping him a prisoner, to which, however, Mr Tidey did not allude in his presence. Without loss of time, we partly dragged and partly lifted him up to the canoe, into which we tumbled him without much ceremony.

”If you attempt to struggle, you'll kick a hole in the canoe and go to the bottom, my friend; so I would advise you to keep quiet,” said the Dominie.

The man only answered with a volley of oaths, but no further information could we draw from him. We therefore left him to his own reflections, while we hastened back to Rose, whom we found seated by her prisoner.

”He stay berry quiet,” she said, ”an' me no tinkee he run 'way.”

”That may be, but we will secure him as we have done his companion,”

said Mr Tidey, producing a piece of rope which he had brought with him from the canoe; and, dragging the Indian to a tree, we lashed him so securely to it, that we believed with all his cunning he could not set himself free.

”Now let us continue our search for the little girls and Dio,” said the Dominie; ”depend upon it, they cannot be far off. Probably they are somewhere near the sh.o.r.es of the lake, and if we approach their captors cautiously, we may master them as we have the other man.”

I suggested that we should paddle round the sh.o.r.es of the lake in the canoe, and as they were probably expecting her arrival with two men in her, they would not suspect who we were until we got close up to them.

The Dominie, after a little consideration, agreed to my proposal.

”What are we to do with Rose?” he asked.

”She can lie down at the bottom of the canoe, and a.s.sist in keeping our prisoner quiet, unless she will consent to remain behind,” I observed.

”No, no, me go with ma.s.sa!” she exclaimed.

As she might be useful, Mr Tidey agreed to her going. We hurried back once more to the canoe, and, lifting in Rose, placed her in the bows near the head of our prisoner, in a position which would enable her speedily to tighten his gag, should he attempt to cry out. We then, taking the paddles, commenced our voyage, I sitting in the bows, Mr Tidey in the stern. We paddled in towards every opening which was likely to afford a spot for camping, but no object could we see besides the tall trees rising up above the water. We had gone some distance, and I had begun to fear that those we were in search of had moved off from the sh.o.r.es of the lake, and that we might have a long march to come up with them, should we discover the direction they had taken, when I perceived a more ruddy tint on the surface of the lake than that reflected by the silvery moon.

”There must be a fire somewhere near the sh.o.r.e,” I whispered, ”people are encamped there, depend upon it; how shall we proceed?”

”We will land close in here, and then try to steal upon them un.o.bserved, so as to reconnoitre them first. If there are too many people to master, we must wait until some of the party fall asleep, and then try to surprise them. One at least is sure to be on guard; we must knock him over and then spring on the rest. We shall be able to judge better when we ascertain how matters stand,” observed the Dominie.

As he spoke he turned the head of the canoe to the sh.o.r.e, which we soon reached. Rose had crammed the handkerchief tight down into the mouth of the prisoner, or he would to a certainty have betrayed us. Even now I was afraid that we might have been seen, but no hail reached us. Making as little noise as possible with our paddles, we soon reached the beach, and, making a sign for Rose not to follow us, we landed, leaving her in charge of the canoe. We both crept forward as cautiously as any Indians could have done. As we approached the fire we heard the sound of voices, and by getting a little nearer we could hear what was said.

”I wonder that fellow Jowl hasn't found us out yet,” observed one of the speakers; ”we shall have a long tramp for it if he doesn't appear very soon, and the captain and his people will be down upon us. Now that we've got the black, I wish that we had let the girls alone, they'll only cause trouble, for old Bracher won't know what to do with them.”

”We'd better leave them, then, to s.h.i.+ft for themselves, they'll find their way home somehow or other; it matters little to us if they don't,”

answered another.

”But they'll betray the whereabouts of our train to the captain, and he'll be after us with his people and demand satisfaction. If he proves the strongest, he'll carry off the black, about whom we have had all this trouble, into the bargain,” observed the first.

”If he comes at all, it will give old Bracher an opportunity of shooting him, that's what they'd like to do better than anything else,” remarked a third.

The men continued talking on the same subject, but they had said enough as to the girls being carried off. From it I gathered that Mr Bracher was travelling eastward with a waggon train, probably having failed in the west, and that, finding himself in the neighbourhood of our new location, he had despatched a party to try and recapture Dio, but that meeting Kathleen and Lily, they had made prisoners of them with the intention of keeping them as hostages until the slave was delivered up.

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