"Say, that's the talk!" cried Tom, quickly. "I hadn't thought of
that,-- but it's just what we ought to do."
"It won't be easy, Tom," said his younger brother. "The chances are
that Crabtree has made good use of his time. He may be hundreds of
miles away-- bound for the West or the South, or Canada or Europe."
"Well, we can have a try at finding him, anyway," put in Dick. "Someti
a criminal sticks close to the jail until the excitement is over, Look
at those fellows who escaped from jail in New York City not long ago.
The detectives thought they had gone to Chicago or St. Louis, and all
the while they were on the East Side, right in New York!"
"Oh, my! but wouldn't I just like to land on old Crabtree!" muttered
Tom. "I think I'd be apt to put him in the hospital first and jail
afterwards! He certainly deserves it-- for all the trouble he has
caused us and our-- er-- friends."
"'Friends' is good, with Dick engaged to marry Dora and you as good as
engaged to Nellie," snorted Sam "Precisely, and you and Grace making
goo-goo eyes at each other," added Tom, with a wink at his younger
brother. Then he quickly changed the subject. "Dick, do you think you
can strike a straight course for Plankville?"
"I'll try it," was the answer. "I don't think I'll go much out of the
way."
The Dartaway had a powerful motor, and once on the right trail the
eldest Rover advanced his gasoline and spark, and they went rushing
through the air at express-train speed. The boys were provided with
face guards, so they did not mind this. They did not fly high, and so
kept the railroad and other familiar objects fairly well in view. They
passed over several villages, the inhabitants gazing up at them in
open-mouthed wonder, and finally came in sight of a big church spire
that they knew belonged in Plankville. Then Dick slowed down the
engine, and soon they floated down in an open field close to the main
street and not a great distance from the sheriff's office and the
jail.
"Well, it certainly didn't take long to get here," cried Tom, as he
consulted his watch.
A man who lived close by was approaching and he readily agreed, for a
small amount, to guard the biplane.
"Have they caught those men who escaped from the jail?" asked Sam, of
the man.
"Got two on 'em," was the reply. "Dacker and Penfield."
"In the office, yes. We won't want to go to the cells," answered Dick,
with a short laugh.
When they reached the office of the jail they found several men
present, including the head keeper and one of the State detectives.
The keeper had seen the Rover boys at the time of the capture of
Crabtree and the others and he smiled a little as he shook hands.
"Bad business," he said, in answer to a question Dick put. "But I
can't exactly blame my men for what happened."
"No, I was out of town-- calling on my mother, who is very old and
quite sick. There was a fire in the pantry off the kitchen, and for a
few minutes it looked as if the old jail would burn to the ground. Of
course the guards got excited, and all they thought of was to put out
the blaze-- and it's a good thing they did that. That's how the
prisoners got away. I suppose you've heard that we rounded up two of
them."
"Yes," answered Dick. "Have they any idea what became of Crabtree?"
"I haven't. If the sheriff knows anything he hasn't told it. By the
way, boys, I'll tell you something, now you are here. That man is a
hypnotist!"
"Why, he was a tall, thin fellow with a very pointed chin, and bushy
black hair and heavy black eyebrows. When he spoke his voice had a
regular rumble to it."
At this description the Rover boys shook their heads. They could think
of nobody they had met who would fit the picture.
"A couple of days ago. I didn't like him for a cent, but as the
prisoners haven't been convicted of any crimes as yet I had to let 'em
see their friends," explained the jail keeper.
"What of Sobber, Larkspur and the others?" questioned Tom.
"All safe enough. Nobody else is going to get out of here if I can
help it," and the keeper shook his head decidedly.
The boys remained at the jail for a while longer, and heard the
particulars of how the fire had originated and of how the prisoners
had gotten away. Two of the men had kept together, but Crabtree had
gone off by himself, and the last seen of him was when he was running
for the river, which flowed some distance back of the jail.
"Let us go down to the river and take a look around," suggested Dick,
at last, and bidding the jailer good-bye, they hurried away.
Along the river bank they found several men and boys, all looking for
Crabtree, some thinking there might be a reward offered for the
capture of the criminal. The Rovers joined in the hunt for the best
part of an hour, but without success.
"It's worse than looking for a pin in a haystack," grumbled Tom,
presently. "We might as well give it up."
"Let us walk around the town and see if we can learn anything,"
suggested his big brother.
They walked down the main street of Plankville from end to end,
questioning several people they knew. At last they got word that a
mysterious automobile had passed through the town about midnight of
the day Josiah Crabtree had broken from jail. But who had been in the
touring car nobody could tell.
"And if he did, that man who came to see him at the jail had the car,"
added Sam.
"Just what I think," cried Tom. "Well, if he got away in an auto there
is no use of our looking for him here," he added, with a sigh.
Nevertheless, the boys hung around Plankville for an hour longer. Then
they got aboard of the Dartaway, and with Tom at the wheel, and Dick
with a pair of field glasses to his eyes, swung in several circles
about the neighborhood.
"No use," declared the oldest Rover boy, at last. "It is getting late.
We might as well return to college. We can do nothing here."
"Haven't we got time to go to Hope?" asked Sam, a bit wistfully.
"Well, I don't know," answered his big brother, just as wistfully.
"Let us take time-- Doctor Wallington didn't want us to hurry back,"
put in Tom. "I think the girls ought to know about this, so as to be
on guard, in case old Crabtree tries to molest them again."
As the lads were all of one mind, the biplane was headed in the
direction of Hope. As before, the flying machine swung through the air
at a good rate of speed, and half an hour before sundown they came in
sight of the Seminary buildings.
"Wonder where they are?" mused Dick, as the biplane came to earth at
the spot where they had landed before.
"If they are around they must have heard us," answered Tom. "The
engine makes noise enough to wake the dead." And this was well
expressed, for the motor, like many of the flying machine kind, had no
muffler attached, and the explosions were not unlike the firing of a
gatling gun.
Some girls had seen them come down, and presently the boys saw three
figures hurrying towards them.
"Oh, what made you come so late?" cried Grace, as she rushed up and
shook hands with Sam and then with the others.
"We thought you might come to-day," put in Nellie, as she beamed on
Tom, and extended both hands.
"I heard the machine first," declared Dora, and came straight to Dick,
who did not hesitate to give her the hearty kiss to which he thought
his engagement entitled him.
"We have been to Plankville," came from Tom and Sam, in a breath.
"Have you heard the news?" questioned their big brother, and he looked
anxiously from Dora to her cousins.
"What news?" cried Dora, quickly. "We have heard nothing unusual."
"Josiah Crabtree broke out of the Plankville jail and ran away."
"Oh, Dick!" and Dora grew suddenly pale. "Do you really mean it?"
"We can't tell you any more than what we have heard," answered Sam.
"We just got word ourselves this morning."
Then the boys told their story and answered innumerable questions
which the girls put to them.
"This will be bad news for mother," said Dora, to Dick. "She is afraid
of Josiah Crabtree, and always has been-- because of his strange
hypnotic power."
"I don't think he will dare to show himself-- at least, not for a
while, Dora," he answered. "He knows only too well that the jail is
waiting to receive him."
"That strange man with the bushy eyebrows and the pointed chin must
have helped him to get away," was Nellie's comment.
"That's a conundrum we can't answer," returned Sam. "I think he was
waiting around with that auto, and as soon as the fire started
Crabtree saw the chance he wanted and got out."
"Maybe Crabtree started the fire?" suggested Dora.
"No, that was purely an accident-- so the jailer says. The wind blew a
curtain against a lamp and the burning curtain fell into some
excelsior in a box of new dishes. The excelsior made quite a blaze and
a lot of smoke, and everybody in the jail was badly frightened for a
while."
After that the talk became general, and quite unconsciously Dick and
Dora strolled off by themselves, down towards a tiny brook that flowed
past the campus grounds.
"You must be very careful, Dora, now that Crabtree is at liberty,"
said the eldest Rover boy. "I wouldn't have him run off with you again
for the world," he added, tenderly.
"I shall watch out, Dick,-- and I'll make the others watch out, too."
And then, as he squeezed her hand, she added, in a lower voice: "How
is that other matter coming along?"
"Not very well, Dora," and Dick's face became more serious than ever.
"No, Uncle Randolph means well, but he is no business man-- he showed
that when he allowed those men to swindle him out of those bonds,"
went on Dick, referring to an event which has been related in detail
in "The Rover Boys on the Farm."
"But what can you do, Dick?" questioned the girl, earnestly.
"I think I'll have to quit college and take up the matter myself,"
answered Dick Rover.