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Bart Keene's Hunting Days Part 31

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He fairly yelled the last words, and those near him saw a look of horror spread over his face.

"What's that?" he shouted. "The electrician has stepped out you say?

What? He thought the power was to be left on? Oh! He'll be back in five minutes? But that will be too late. Can't you--hold on there--don't go away--what's that--yes, I hear you but--don't go away--do something--pull out the switch--do something--never mind the electrician--you do it--don't go away--don't go away--Ah--it's too late!"

He turned to those standing near him at the telephone.

"The only electrician now at the power station stepped out after turning on the current," the man explained dully, as he hung up the receiver.

"There was some mistake. He thought the wiring was finished, and that the power was to remain turned on. So he went out, and he left a green man in charge, who doesn't know anything about the engines, or dynamos.

This man said he'd run out and get the electrician. I tried to stop him--tried to make him understand that he, himself, must do something--must shut off the current--but I couldn't get it through his head. He dropped the telephone, and ran out after the electrician. Now there's no way of shutting off the power until the engineer gets back, and, by that time----" He paused significantly, and rushed out. Nothing more could be done at the telephone. It was as if the wire was broken.

Up on his high perch the lineman was becoming weaker from the strain, and the fear of death. He looked down at the crowd below. Bart and Fenn gazed upward. How they wished they could help!

"Is that man--that mysterious man gone?" asked Bart, in low tones.

"Yes," replied Fenn, "he's hurrying down the street. We'd better take after him, if we want to catch him. He's getting to be very suspicious of us. We ought to catch him."

"I know it. If we could only signal Ned or Frank we might run some chance----"

At that moment another lineman, standing near Bart, turned to him, and asked excitedly, as he saw the rifle in the lad's hand:

"Are you a good shot? A man's life may depend on it! Can you shoot straight?"

"Pretty straight," answered Bart, wondering what was coming next. The lineman was excited, he approached nearer to Bart, and motioned to his friend high up on the pole--the man from whom death seemed but a short distance away.

"Is your rifle loaded? Then, if it is, for mercy sakes fire and see if you can sever that main feed wire," and the lineman pointed to a thick conductor, which was shooting out blue sparks, and which had charged all the other wires with the deadly current. "See if you can cut that wire,"

went on the lineman eagerly. "It's the only chance to save his life!"

Bart hesitated. He turned to see the man whom they had pursued, making his escape. If he got away it might mean that they would never see him again--never have the theft of the diamond bracelet solved. It was a choice between the honor of the Darewell Chums and the life of a man.

Which would Bart choose?

There could be but one answer to this question.

CHAPTER XXIX

BART'S BEST SHOT

Bart turned to Fenn. He was just about to whisper to his chum to take up the pursuit of the mysterious man, leaving him to attempt a difficult shot to save the life of the lineman, but at that instant there was a swaying in the crowd, and a boy stumbled up against Fenn's sore arm. The injured lad uttered a cry of pain. His face turned white, and he was struggling to stay on his feet.

"Catch him! He's going to faint!" cried some one, and faint poor Fenn did, being caught in the arms of two men.

Bart felt his brain reeling, but, by a strong effort he held himself together.

There was now no chance of continuing the pursuit of the mysterious man.

Fenn was being carried to a place where he could be cared for. It was impossible to communicate with Ned and Frank, who were on the other side of the street, and Bart could not go away and leave the man on the pole to die. There was no help for it. He must stay and try, by a most difficult shot, to sever the dangerous wire.

"Will you do it? Can you do it?" asked the lineman who had proposed the extreme measure to the lad. "It's the only chance. Can you cut that wire?"

"I think so," was the quiet answer. No one in that crowd knew under what a strain Bart Keene was at that moment. No one a.s.sociated the now unconscious Fenn with him, and no one dreamed that Bart was anxious to continue after a man who he believed to be a criminal, and who was fast making his escape.

"Can you hold on a minute longer, George?" called a workman on the ground, up to the lineman on the pole.

"Yes," came back the faint answer, "but it's hard work. Can't you shut off the current? If I make a move I'm a goner. Can't you turn off the current?"

"We're going to try to cut the wire," went on the man who had thought of the plan. "We can't get the current shut off right away. Listen carefully, George. Hold as still as you can. There's a lad here with a rifle. He's a good shot, he says, and he's going to fire at the live wire until he cuts it. It's going to be a close shave for you, as the wire is pretty near to your head. Have you nerve enough to stand it?"

"I--I guess so," came the hesitating answer. "Go ahead!"

The crowd below was scarcely breathing. The man on the pole could be seen straining himself to maintain his perilous position. He looked down. Death was below him, and on every side, and none dare climb the pole to help him. The rifle seemed the only chance, unless some one could go five miles to the power house, and have the current turned off, or unless the electrician returned, and this would take so long that the man's hold would loosen, and he would either fall, or be shocked to death. It all depended on Bart, and the lad knew that he must now shoot true, if he never shot straight again. It was to be his best shot--a well-nigh tragic shot.

"Clear a s.p.a.ce for the lad!" ordered the lineman, as he and his fellows began making a circle about Bart. "Give him room. Have you got plenty of cartridges, young man?"

Bart nodded. He felt that he could not speak, and he knew that the chamber of his rifle was filled. Yet he hoped to do the trick with only one bullet.

The shot was a hard one. He must cut a wire within four inches of the shoulder of the man whose life he was trying to save, and he had to fire upward, and at a slightly swaying target--a target small enough at best, hardly more than half an inch wide. Yet Bart did not hesitate.

He took his position under the wires, and close to the pole. The crowd was looking eagerly on, and the man on the pole was like a statue. Well he knew how much depended on his remaining motionless.

Bart raised his rifle. A mist seemed to come before his eyes, but with a gritting of his teeth he got more control of himself, and then he saw clear. He took careful aim, and then he saw that he could shoot to more advantage from the other side of the pole. He would have to fire closer to the man, but the bullet would take an outward slant in cutting the wire, and there was less danger of it glancing off and wounding the lineman.

The lad changed his position, and once more took careful aim. He took a long breath, and his finger began to tighten on the trigger. At that instant there came a puff of wind, and the wire at which he was aiming swayed toward the unfortunate man. There was a cry of horror, and several persons in the crowd started toward Bart, as if to stop the firing of the gun. But the lad was on the alert, and waited until the wire was still again.

One, two, three seconds pa.s.sed. Would he never fire? Suddenly those watching him saw his figure stiffen. He braced the rifle more firmly against his shoulder. There was a further tightening of the tension of his trigger finger, and a report that seemed to the nervous crowd to be as loud as a cannon vibrated on the wintry air.

An instant later there came tumbling from aloft a long wire, that writhed about like some snake, spitting blue flames and sparks. It wiggled about on the ground as a thing alive.

"Keep back! Keep back from that wire!" shouted a lineman. "Good shot, my lad! Great! You cut the wire with one bullet!"

Bart lowered his gun. Once more the mist seemed to come before his eyes, but it did not matter now, for he had saved the man. Yet no one ever knew how narrow was the margin, for, as Bart was pulling the trigger, the wire was once more swayed by the wind, and the bullet from the rifle had sped past the man's head less than two inches away. So close had he been to death! But Bart had shot true, and, ever, in after years, he called that his best shot.

A cheer went up from the crowd at the plucky act of the lad, but it was quickly hushed as one of the linemen began to climb the pole, to a.s.sist down his comrade who had had such a narrow escape. He was too unnerved to descend alone, but there was no more danger, for the live wire was out of the way, and other linemen, with insulated gloves, soon had it in its proper place.

CHAPTER x.x.x

THE DIAMOND BRACELET--CONCLUSION

Bart turned to make his way out of the crowd, for he was anxious about Fenn. He had given up all hope of capturing the mysterious man, who had started to hasten away before the accident to the lineman on the pole, and who, doubtless, was far enough off by this time. But Bart's progress was arrested by a voice.

"Hold on, young fellow!" exclaimed the workman whose life Bart had saved. "I want to shake hands with you. That was a corking good shot. I heard the bullet whistle past me, and then I knew I was safe. Shake!"

and he extended his hand that did not tremble as much as did Bart's, such nerve did the electrician have. He had fully recovered from his thrilling experience.

Bart received modestly the almost extravagant praise accorded him, and once more began to make his way toward where Fenn had been carried.

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Bart Keene's Hunting Days Part 31 summary

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