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"What do you think of that?" whispered Dick, as he led the way back
to the sidewalk.
"It's all as plain as day," replied his brother. "This Bradner was
set to watch the house immediately after the robbery occurred.
More than likely he was around at the time of the robbery."
"Do you suppose he is the man who helped Arnold Baxter to escape
from prison on that forged pardon?"
"Creation! It may be so!" ejaculated Tom. "I'll tell you one
thing: we ought to have them both arrested at once."
"I don't know about that," mused the elder Rover. "If we do that
then how are we to find out where Arnold Baxter is, or this fellow
they called Roebuck?"
"But they may slip through our fingers if we don't have them locked
up."
The two brothers talked the matter ever, and then decided, late as
it was, to call upon Jack Wumble for advice.
"You can go for him," said Dick. "I'll continue to watch this
place. If they leave I'll throw bits of paper on the sidewalk and
you can follow the trail just as if we were playing a game of hare
and hounds."
Tom made off at top speed, carefully noting the street and number,
so that he would not miss his way when returning.
Left to himself Dick went into the alleyway again and looked
through the window as before.
Dan Baxter and Bradner were still conversing, but the youth could
not hear what was said.
Presently the pair at the table arose, settled for their drinks and
came out of the place.
They walked up the street and around a corner, and Dick followed,
scattering bits of an old letter as he went along. When the letter
was used up, he tore to bits some handbills which he found in the
street.
Eight squares were covered before Dan Baxter and Bradner reached a
dingy looking hotel which went by the name of Lakeman's Rest.
It was set in the middle of the block, with brick houses on either
side of it.
They entered a narrow hallway, and by the light above the door Dick
saw them ascend the stairs to the second floor.
There now seemed nothing to do but to await Tom's return, and the
youth retired to the opposite side of the street.
It was late -- after midnight, in fact -- and the street was
practically deserted.
A half hour went by and Dick felt as if his brother would never
return, when he heard swift footsteps behind him.
"So this is your game, eh?" cried the voice of Bradner, and of a
sudden a club descended upon Dick's head and he went down as if
shot.
The man had looked out of the hotel window and spotted Dick, and
had gone out by a back way add around the square to make certain of
his victim.
"That was a good crack," came from Dan Baxter. "It serves him
right for following you."
Bradner was about to bend over his victim to ascertain how badly
Dick was hurt when the footsteps of two men approaching made him
draw back.
"Come, we don't want to be caught," whispered Dan Baxter nervously.
And then, as the footsteps came closer, he darted away, with Henry
Bradner at his heels. They did not stop until a long distance away
from the scene of the dastardly attack.
The men who were approaching were a couple of bakers who were
employed in a neighboring bakery.
"Vas ist dis!" cried one of them, as he stumbled over Dick's body.
"A young mans!"
"He is drunk, Carl," said the other. "Let him be or you may get
into trouble."
"Maype he vos hurt, or sick," said the German baker, bending down.
"I vos know der cop on dis beat and he knows I vos no footpad."
Just then Dick gave a shiver and a groan, and both bakers realized
that he was suffering in some way. While the German remained by
the boy's side the other ran to the bakery for a lantern and
assistance.
Soon a small crowd had collected, and Dick was carried into the
bakery and made as comfortable as the means permitted. One of the
bakers went on a hunt for a policeman, and presently the officer of
the law hove into sight. Dick was just coming to his senses, but
was too dazed for several minutes to give an account of what had
happened. At last he said a man had struck him down with a club.
"Gone, too, I suppose. They must have been together." And then
Dick related what had occurred -- so far as he knew -- since Tom had
left him.
The officer of the law accompanied all three to the police station,
and here the boys told their story, and a watch was set for Bradner
and Dan Baxter. But nothing came of this, for the pair left
Chicago early the next day.
"We had better keep close together after this," said Jack Wumble,
as he was seeing the boys back to their hotel. "I reckon you've
got a mighty bad crowd to deal with." And he remained with them
for the balance of the night.
The express for Denver left at eleven o'clock in the morning, and
all of the party of four were on hand to catch it. Soon they were
whirling over the fields and through the forests toward the mighty
Mississippi River.
"Never been West afore-eh?" remarked Jack Wumble. "Well, you will
see some grand sights, I can tell ye that."
"No, we have never been West," answered Sam. "But we have been to
Africa," he added proudly.
"Gee shoo! is that so! Well, that's long traveling certainly. But
I reckon I'd rather see my own country first."
"We went to Africa for a purpose," said Tom, and told of the rescue
of his father. The old miner listened with keen appreciation and
at the conclusion clapped Tom on the back.
"You're true blue, Tom!" he cried. "You and your brothers will
pull through, I feel sure of it." And then he fell to telling
about his own life, and how he had become acquainted with Anderson
Rover and his partner Kennedy, and of the various bad things Arnold
Baxter had done in those days. "This man seems to be a chip of the
old block," he concluded.
The trip to Denver was full of interest, and Dick was sorry he did
not have a camera along, that he might take snapshots of the
scenery. Yet he was impatient to get to his destination and stake
out the missing Eclipse Mine before Arnold Baxter and his
confederates should have the chance to do so.
It was the afternoon of the next day when Denver was reached, and a
light rain was falling. Jack Wumble wished to put up at a hotel
called the Miner's Rest, a favorite resort with men from the mining
districts. He had been negotiating for the sale of one of his
mines, and thought he could close the deal the next morning.
"And then we'll be off for Larkspur Creek without further delay,"
was what he told Dick.