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"We will!" came from all of the Rover boys in concert.
"Take her below!" roared Baxter angrily, as he turned to Mrs.
Goss, who had followed Dora to the dock. "Didn't I tell you to
keep a close eye on her?"
"She said she wished to speak to you," answered the woman. "I
thought she wanted to make terms with you."
Mrs. Goss caught Dora by the wrist and, assisted by Mumps,
carried her below. She struggled and tried to fight them off,
and her cries, reaching Dick, made the youth long to be at her
side.
"Let her alone, Baxter!" he cried hotly. "If you harm her you
shall pay dearly for it, remember that!"
"Talk is cheap, Dick Rover," came back with a sneer. "Now keep
off, or I'll do as I threatened."
"Won't I? Just come a little closer and you'll see."
By this time the two yachts were not over a hundred feet apart,
the Searchlight to the starboard of her rival. So, far the
countless stars had brightened up the bosom of the ocean, but now
Martin Harris noted a dark mass of clouds rolling up from the
westward.
"We'll have it pretty dark in a few minutes," he cautioned. "If
you want to haul up close, better do it at once."
"All right, run them down," ordered Dick, half recklessly. "I
don't care how much their boat is damaged, so long as I save the
girl. Mumps ran me down, remember."
"I reckon I can sheer 'me all right enough," grinned Harris, who
by this time had entered fully into the spirit of the adventure.
"But will they shoot?"
"I don't believe they have any firearms," said Tom. "And if they
have I don't think Baxter could hit the side of a house at fifty
yards."
"Are you going to keep off or not?" yelled Baxter. "I'll give
you just ten seconds in which to make up your mind."
"By jinks! He has got a gun!" whispered Sam, as he caught a
glint of the polished barrel. "The villain!"
"Baxter, you are playing a foolish game," answered Dick. "What
do you intend to do with Dora Stanhope?"
"That's my business. I shan't harm her -- if you'll promise to
leave me alone."
"It's none of your business," put in Mumps, who had just returned
to the deck, after making sure that Dora should not get away from
Mrs. Goss again for the time being.
"If you do so, we'll fire in return," said Sam. "Maybe we can
scare him too," he added, in a whisper.
"I don't believe you've got any weapon," came from Mumps, in a
voice that the toady tried in vain to steady. If there was one
thing Mumps was afraid of it was a gun or a pistol.
"Try us and see," said Tom. Then he raised his voice. "Harris,
bring up that brace of pistols you said were in the locker."
"All right," answered the sailor, catching at the ruse at once;
and he hurried below, to return with two shining barrels, made of
the handles of a dipper and a tin pot. He held one of the tin
barrels out at arm's length. "Shall I fire on 'em now?" he
demanded at the top of his voice.
"Don't!" shrieked Mumps, and dropped out of sight behind the
mainmast of the Flyaway.
The toady had scarcely uttered the word when a loud report rang
out, and a pistol bullet cut its way through the mainsail of the
Searchlight. Baxter had fired his gun, but had taken good can to
point the weapon over the Rover boys' heads. The bully now ran
for the cabin, expecting to receive a shot in return, but of
course it did not come.
By this time the two yachts were almost side by side and running
along at a high rate of speed. Harris got out his boathook to
catch fast to the Flyaway, when a cry from Tom made him pause.
"He tried to jump to the other boat," said Dick, who had seen the
action. "I was just thinking of doing it myself."
With all possible speed the big sheet of the Searchlight was
lowered, and then they turned as fast as the wind would permit,
to the spot where unlucky Tom was bobbing up and down on the
swells like a peanut shell.
"Catch the line!" cried Dick, and let fly with a life preserver
attached to a fair-sized rope. His aim was a good one, and soon
Tom was being hauled aboard again with all possible speed.
"Oh, what a mess I made of it!" he panted when he could catch his
breath. "I'm not fit to hunt jack rabbits."
"It's lucky you weren't run down by the yacht and killed," said
Dick. "I was going to jump, but when I saw you go down I thought
better of it."
Ten minutes of precious time had been lost, and now the Flyaway
was once more far in the distance. She was heading for shore,
and soon the oncoming darkness hid her from view.
"Because they'll want a pilot otherwise. It's rather dangerous
sailing about here -- especially in the dark."
Five minutes later found them close to shore, and the sails were
lowered and the anchor cast out.
"I'm going to land," said Dick, and, after a consultation, it was
decided that he should take Sam with him, leaving Tom and Martin
Harris to keep watch from the yacht. If either party discovered
anything, a double whistle twice repeated was to notify the
others.
Now that Dan Baxter had actually opened fire on them, Dick wished
he had a firearm of some sort. But none was at hand, nor did he
know where to obtain such a thing in that vicinity, and the best
he and Sam could do was to cut themselves clubs out of some brush
growing not far from the shore line.
The spot at which they had landed was by no means an inviting
one. It looked like a bit of dumping and meadow ground, and not
far away rested the remains of half a dozen partly decayed canal
boats which the tide had washed up high in the bogs years before.
"If they landed around here I'd like to know where they went to,"
grumbled Sam, after he and his big brother had trudged around for
half an hour without gaining any clue worth following. "It
begins to took as if we had missed it, doesn't it?"
"Never give up, Sam. We have got to find them, you know."
"Yes, if we don't break our necks before that time comes, Dick,"
and as Sam spoke he went down into a meadow hole up to his knees.
Dick helped him out, and as, he did so the sound of two voices
broke upon their ears.
"You needn't come if you don't want to, Mumps," came out of the
darkness, in Dan Baxter's voice. "I only thought you would be
glad of the chance."
"There they are," whispered Dick. "Lie down, and we'll see where
they are bound, and if Dora is with them."
He threw, himself to earth, and Sam followed. In another moment
Baxter and his toady came into plain view, although still some
distance away.
"I'll come," came from Mumps. "But I didn't expect to meet your
father here."
"I did. He's been here for several days. That's the reason why
I had Goss bring the Flyaway over. I'm going to kill two birds
with one stone."