Kiddie the Scout

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Kiddie the Scout Page 23

by Robert Leighton


  CHAPTER XXIII

  EVIDENCE FOR THE PROSECUTION

  "Good--very good," said Kiddie. "He's captured; and you're sure hecan't escape--eh?"

  Nick Undrell laughed.

  "Don't you alarm yourself any," he answered, dismounting from the bayhorse. "He ain't goin' t' escape, that's sure."

  "Very well," returned Kiddie, slinging his coiled lariat over the hornof his saddle. "In that case, I c'n afford to wait for your furtherexplanations until we get along to my cabin. Sheriff Blagg is there,an' young Rube Carter."

  He led his pony through the woodland by the same narrow trail that hehad followed a few minutes earlier, and it was not long before theyreached the stables.

  "I presume," said Kiddie, when he was closing the door, leaving the twohorses secure in their stalls, "that Broken Feather was ridin' my horseRegent when you laid him by the heels?"

  "That's so," Nick answered; "the best hoss I've ever bin astride of.Yes, we waylaid him--middle of One Tree Gulch."

  "Seems you expected him. You knew just where he'd been, an' what he'dbeen up to. You expected him to ride through One Tree Gulch exactly atthat time?"

  "No, your lordship," returned Nick; "I knew nothin' for sure. It wasno more'n a cute guess on my part, knowin' the man."

  Kiddie turned and looked at Undrell very steadily.

  "I'm very much afraid that you know more about this business thanyou're likely to admit," he said. "You were in it yourself to someextent. Perhaps you even went partners with him--eh?"

  "What?" Nick showed genuine astonishment at the implied accusation.

  "Walk right in," ordered Kiddie, when they were at the front door ofthe cabin.

  Isa Blagg started forward excitedly at Nick's unexpected entrance.

  "Got him already!" he exclaimed. "That's smart, Kiddie--real smart."

  "Wait, Isa, wait," retorted Kiddie. "I want to ask a few questions."

  He reached round to his desk and laid a tobacco pipe on the table infront of Nick Undrell.

  "Is that yours?" he asked.

  "Yes," said Nick, taking it up and turning it in his fingers, "it'ssure mine. Where'd you pick it up? Last time I see it 'twas on theshelf at home in my shack. Been lying thar for months. Too good terthrow away, not good enough ter smoke. How in thunder did it get here?"

  "It was found in one of our canoes," explained Kiddie. "You aresupposed to have dropped it there and forgotten it."

  "Never bin in one o' your canoes in all my life," Nick declared.

  "Ever been in this room before?" pursued Kiddie.

  "Never," Nick denied; "never been inside the door."

  "Show me the soles of your boots," said Kiddie.

  Nick lifted his feet for inspection. Kiddie looked at the smooth solesinquiringly, nodded in satisfaction, and then leant forward andcarefully picked a thread of yellow worsted from Undrell's striped vest.

  "How do you explain," he went on, "that we found a thread of this verysame yellow wool caught in the glass of that broken window? How do youaccount for a thread of the same stuff bein' found fixed round one ofthe claws of my dead hound?"

  "Your dead hound!" repeated Nick, in genuine surprise. "Dead, d'yesay? D'ye mean he killed it--shot it? My, I'm glad we capturedhim--real glad, I am."

  "What's that?" cried Isa Blagg. "Who d'ye mean?"

  "All right, Sheriff," said Kiddie. "Leave it to me, please. I've onlyone more question to ask." He turned to Nick again. "Ever smoked oneof my foreign cigarettes, Nick?" he inquired.

  Nick shook his head.

  "Never even seen one of 'em, except that time in my shack when youoffered me one outer your gold case, an' I wouldn't have it," heanswered. "But I guess you knows as well as I do that Broken Feathercollared a whole heap of 'em?"

  "Yes," said Kiddie. "It was the takin' of the cigarettes that made mecertain that the robber was Broken Feather. You will have gatheredfrom my questions that he tried to fix the crime upon you, Nick. Hewore a pair of your boots an' left the prints of them around. Heplanted your old pipe in the canoe. He left the yellow threads fromyour woollen vest where they would serve as clues pointin' to you an'you alone and at the same time he was most careful to leave no trace orsign of his own identity."

  "The skunk!" muttered Nick; "the greasy, low-down skunk?"

  "Say, Kiddie," interposed Rube Carter, "thar's one thing you ain'tasked Nick Undrell t' explain. What was his game prowlin' around herean' tryin' ter make friends with the dog?"

  "I'll tell you that," returned Nick, glancing across at Rube. "It wasall quite innercent. I knew that Kiddie an' you was away on a canoetrip. Broken Feather knew it, too. I'd a suspicion, an' more'n asuspicion, that he'd made up his mind ter break in here an' carry offsome of Kiddie's valu'bles. I came prowlin' around ter spy on him. Isaw him here once. He saw me watchin' him, an' he quitted. Then Iheard that he'd gone cavortin' off on the war-path against the Crows,back of Lone Wolf Mountain, an' I didn't worry any more, since hecouldn't be in two places at once. D'ye savvy?"

  "Yes," nodded Kiddie; "yes, go on."

  "Well," continued Nick, "night before last I was sittin' all lonesomein my shack, waitin' for the water to boil an' listenin' t' the rainoutside, when there come a knock at the door. I opened it, an' therewas a stranger--a Injun--lookin' like a drowned rat. He wanted food;he wanted shelter. I lets him come in. He couldn't speak English. Wetalked by signs, an' didn't get a lot said. I made two mugs of coffee,one for myself, one for him.

  "Then I turned to the cupboard ter git some cheese an' a cracker ortwo, never suspectin' that he was anythin' else than a homelesswanderer. Well, I dunno just how he managed it--wasn't watchin' him,didn't suspect him--but when my back was turned, he must ha' took theopportunity he was waitin' for an' cunningly dropped suthin' in my mugof coffee. That's sure what he did. Thar ain't a doubt about it. Ididn't taste nothin' unusual; but that coffee was doped. I couldn'tkeep awake. I fell asleep, an' yet not altogether asleep. I kindersaw things an' heard 'em in a dreamy way.

  "Seemed ter me after a while that the door opened an' a second Injuncame crawlin' in. It wasn't till afterwards that I realized who thissecond one was. He looked at me hard, kept on watchin' me for mebbe afull hour, until he figured I was sound asleep. Then he crept near an'touched me: caught hold o' this yer vest an' tugged at it till he torea hole in it. Then he went about the room, silent as a cat. He drewmy boots away from the stove, where I'd put 'em to dry. He went to theshelf, where that old pipe was lyin'. I dunno what else he did. I wastoo much asleep t' know anythin' or care anythin'. I only know that itwas broad daylight when I awoke, that both them Injuns had vamoosed,an' that I couldn't find my boots."

  "Reason bein' that Broken Feather had took 'em," said Rube Carter."Didn't you find tracks outside the door, Nick?"

  "Yes," Nick answered, "I found the marks of two pairs of moccasinsleadin' up to the door; a pair of moccasins an' a pair of hob-nailedboots--my own boots--goin' away. It wasn't a very difficultproposition, an' I allow it wasn't long 'fore I'd ciphered it all up.I made out that Broken Feather, havin' failed in his raid on the CrowIndian reservation, had planned ter come right here an' do a bit of theburglary business in your absence. He's bin owin' me a grudge for awhile back. He took my boots so that the marks of 'em in the mud woulddraw suspicion on me. D'ye savvy?"

  "That was clearly his idea," Kiddie agreed, "and he very nearlysucceeded. He gave himself away, however, by plantin' too many falseclues around, an' makin' them too conspicuous. Did you follow on histracks, Nick?"

  "We did," Nick replied. "Jim Thurston, Fred Crippleshaw an' me, wefollered him as far as Long Grass Creek. There we lost track of him,an' gave up the chase. We couldn't hope ter get here in front of him,though he was on foot an' we were mounted. But knowin' that he'dlikely be goin' back with the loot to his own village, an' guessin'which trail he'd take, we hung around in One Tree Gulch. Waited hoursan' hours.

  "At last we heard a stra
nge horse comin' along at an easy trot. By thesound of its feet we c'd tell it was no or'nary prairie cayuse, an'soon, sure enough, Broken Feather came inter view, with the goods in agunny sack slung over his shoulder. Before he guessed we werethere--before he c'd whip out his gun--we'd dropped on him."

  "Ah," said Sheriff Blagg, stroking his chin. "I allow you did thatbusiness with considerable credit, Nick Undrell. Case of set a thiefto catch a thief. I'm only regrettin' that I wasn't present on theoccasion to make a formal arrest."

  "'Tain't too late yet," smiled Kiddie. "You c'n ride back to FortLaramie along with Nick an' conclude the business in proper legal form.No need to caution you to see that the prisoner cannot escape, and whenthe trial takes place, I guess you'll count upon me to be there to giveevidence against him."

  "What d'you reckon they'll give him, Kiddie?" Rube Carter wanted toknow.

  "Dunno," Kiddie shrugged his shoulders: "two or three years in penalservitude, I expect. Anyhow, Broken Feather's ambitious career doesn'tlook as if it would materialize. He'll be put out of the way of doin'further mischief, and we can settle down in our peaceful solitude,happy and undisturbed."

  He turned to Nick Undrell.

  "By the way, Nick," he said, "you told me a while back that you'd lostthat cattle ranch of yours over a game of cards. You gambled it awayto an Indian, didn't you?"

  "That's so, your lordship," returned Nick. "An' the Injun referred towas Broken Feather. I ain't sure, but I've allus had a notion that hecheated in that game of poker. Why d'you ask about the ranch?"

  "Because," said Kiddie, "it came into the market the other day and Ibought it. Now that the estate is mine, I don't find that I've any usefor it. I don't want it. D'you reckon you could run it for a seasonor two, Nick?"

  "As your lordship's manager?" Nick asked.

  "No," Kiddie answered, "as my workin' partner."

  "Could you trust me?" questioned Nick.

  "Down to the ground," said Kiddie, holding forth his hand.

  Nick Undrell seized it.

  "Kiddie," he faltered, "you're making a new man of me. You found mewhen I was lost. You blazed a new trail for me, an' I kept to it. Ishall keep to it until the very end."

  * * * * * *

  During the rest of that same day, while Rube Carter was occupied in thework of unloading the canoe and setting the cabin in order, Kiddieengaged himself in opening his delayed correspondence and writingletters.

  Many of the letters he opened were business communications from hislawyers in London, requiring immediate attention. Some were lettersfrom friends in England, regretting his absence and imploring him toreturn. The one that he left to the last was addressed in a familiarhandwriting, and he read it with close interest.

  MY DEAR COUSIN HARRY,--

  Do you remember once when we sat together in the billiard-room at St.Olave, and you were yarning to me about Buckskin Jack and GideonBirkenshaw and the Pony Express? I said something about wishing Icould go out West again and enjoy some such adventures as yours, andyou said: "Well, you'd better come out with me." I don't know what Ianswered, but I believe you thought I didn't quite take to the idea,and you went off suddenly without repeating the invitation.

  Now, however, I'm not going to wait to be asked. Since you didn't takeme with you, I am going to come out on my own. I want to see youagain, Kiddie. I want to be your chum for a few weeks, and share yourlife in that shack in the Bush that you were going to build. By thistime you ought to be pining for a companion.

  There are so many things I want to do and to see, with you to teach me.Golf and tennis and billiards are all very well, but I yearn for thewide spaces and the wilds. I want to see a real herd of buffalo and apack of wolves, and to go bear hunting, to do some trapping, and to seesome Indians--not the imitation article that hangs around on railwaystations wearing breeches and a top hat, but the real noble savage, thewigwam Redskin with painted face and feathered head-dress. But morethan all, I want to live in the same world of adventure with you. So Iam coming out West. Before you get this letter I shall have started,and some day very soon you may meet me riding along the trail on my wayto Sweetwater Bridge.

  Then when I have had enough of it, I count upon your coming back hometo England with me. This is imperative. There are heaps of importantthings waiting for you to do and to see to here.

  Always your affectionate cousin, HAROLD FRITTON.

  P.S.--Give my love to Sheila, and stroke her velvet ears for me.

  Kiddie drew a deep breath. Rube Carter, who was behind him dusting thebooks and pictures, heard him, and turned round.

  "Got some bad news in that letter you're readin', Kiddie?" he asked.

  Kiddie folded up the letter and replaced it in its envelope.

  "No," he answered. "It ought to be good news. My cousin Harold iscoming out to pay us a visit."

  "That so?" said Rube. "You've told me of your cousin Harold. He'syour heir, ain't he? What did you sigh for? Don't you want him?"

  "It was Harold who gave me the deerhound," Kiddie explained. "He sendshis love to her. And she's dead. That's why I sighed. Say, Rube,you'll like Cousin Harold."

  "Dunno 'bout that," said Rube. "Guess I shall have ter take a very farback seat when he comes along. Why, by all accounts he's even more ofa gentleman than you are yourself, Kiddie."

  "That's quite true," Kiddie acknowledged. "But that's no disadvantage,is it? We both stand in need of a bit of polishin' up before we gohome to England again."

  "Home to England?" Rube repeated. "What d'you mean by that?"

  "Sooner or later I've got to go back to London," Kiddie told him. "Butit won't be for always, you see--just long enough for you to have agood look round."

  "Me!" exclaimed Rube in amazement.

  "That's my notion," Kiddie intimated. "You'd like to go to England,wouldn't you? And you don't expect me to stay here for ever?"

  "Course not," said Rube. "And--and--well, I dessay thar's a lot ofchores you're hankerin' to attend to over there. We c'n easily lock upthe cabin. It won't come to no harm now that thar's no Broken Featherslyin' around."

 


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