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"Now, you, Dave, stay here with me," d.i.c.k went on, disposing of his forces with the air of a general. "The rest of you fellows scoot across the lawn and hide in the bushes. Hide so that you can't be seen from the street or from the front door of the cottage, either. Then just wait and see what happens."
Tom Reade and Greg managed to get the crowd started. Then d.i.c.k called, softly:
"Oh, say, Hoof! I'll hold the baby for you a while. You must be tired."
Hoof started, and glared suspiciously. But he knew that d.i.c.k was "always on the square," and so, after swallowing hard, pa.s.sed the tiny, bundled youngster over to Prescott's waiting arms. "Say, be careful what you do with him," pleaded Sadby. "He's a fine little fellow."
Then the crowd hid. How they watched and waited! Miss Lowthry's sitting room was lighted, and the boys could see her, seated in a rocking chair, reading a book.
It seemed ages ere Wrecker Lane returned. When he came he brought a basket. Some soft fragments of blanket rested in the bottom of it.
"Just the thing," chuckled d.i.c.k softly, placing the baby in the basket.
"Now, skip over there, Wrecker, and hide with the fellows in the bushes."
d.i.c.k waited until Wrecker Lane vanished.
"Now, come along, Dave," chuckled Prescott. "You ring the bell just as I place the basket on the steps. Then we'll both hot-foot it to join the fellows."
A few moments later d.i.c.k and Dave scurried to cover, snuggling down among a lot of Grammar School boys who were holding their handkerchiefs wedged in their mouths.
Then they heard the front door open, saw Miss Lowthry peer out, and then heard her utter a shriek, followed with:
"Mercy me! Who has dared to leave a foundling on my step?"
And then, as she bent over and poked the pieces of blanket aside:
"Mercy! What a horridly homely brat!"
"It isn't!" exploded Hoof, in an undertone, as he s.n.a.t.c.hed the handkerchief from his mouth. "Gracious! Wouldn't I like to pinch her!"
But Miss Lowthry must have recognized her duty as a citizen, for she picked up the basket and bore it into the house, slamming the door behind her.
"Wow! Oh, dear! oh, dear!" laughed a lot of mischievous youngsters hidden in the bushes.
"Look!" whispered Dave Darrin. "She has taken the basket into her sitting room. She's placed it on a table. There she goes to the telephone. Whee! See how she's working her arm, jerking that telephone bell crank!"
Some conversation that the young peepers, of course, couldn't hear pa.s.sed over the telephone. Then Miss Lowthry hung up the receiver and thrust her forefingers into her ears as she turned to stare at the human contents of the basket on the table.
"The poor kid's hollering," muttered Hoof. "Can you blame it?"
All that followed, and which the boys could see through the lighted windows of the room interested them mightily. But at last they heard a heavy step on the sidewalk. Then one of the blue-coated guardians of Gridley's peace turned in at the gate, went up to the door and rang the bell.
"She sent for the police," chuckled d.i.c.k Prescott.
"Of course," grinned Dave.
The peeping boys saw the officer step through into the old maid's sitting room. Miss Lowthry pointed at the basket in a highly dramatic way. The policeman bent over to take a kindly look at the tiny youngster therein, then adjusting the pieces of blanket, he lifted the basket.
"Now, it's time to do your turn, Hoof," whispered d.i.c.k, giving young Sadby a nudge. "Slip over the fence and do it right."
Miss Lowthry followed the policeman to the door, opening it for him and letting him out.
"Boo-hoo!" sounded a heart-broken voice out on the sidewalk, in the darkness beyond. Then, as the policeman stepped down from the steps, Hoof suddenly let out a wail and darted into the yard.
"Say, Mister Cop, have you got it?" demanded Hoof eagerly.
"Got what?" demanded the policeman.
"My baby brother! You see, Mister Cop, some fellows took my baby brother and carried him off for a joke."
Then Hoof came into the pale light that was shed just past the open front door. There were tears in his eyes, all right, for an onion was one of the things that "Wrecker" Lane had brought from home. Hoof had rubbed a slice of the onion on the skin under his eyes, and the tears that he wanted to show were genuine enough.
"Is this your brother?" demanded the policeman, lowering the basket he was carrying.
The Sadby baby had begun to cry again, but at sight of Hoof the little fellow stopped suddenly, crowed and reached out with its little hands.
"After that do you have to ask if that's my kid brother?" demanded Hoof Sadby proudly.
"I guess it is, all right, Sadby," replied the policeman. "I know you.
Well, if this is your brother, please take him off my hands--and welcome. You see, Miss Lowthry, it was nothing but the humorous prank of some boys. This is Hallowe'en."
"Boys!" sniffed Miss Lowthry, glaring. "Humph! I think I could eat a couple of boys, right now, if I could see them skinned alive and then boiled."
Hoof, once he had possession of the basket, raced away as though nothing else on earth mattered. This was good policy for, if he lingered, the policeman might begin to ask questions.
When the door had closed and the officer was gone, d.i.c.k and his crowd slipped out from concealment, joining Hoof and his baby brother.
"Oh, me, oh, my!" groaned Dave Darrin, stifling with laughter. "We must play this on some more folks."
"But say," warned d.i.c.k Prescott, "don't you think that, by the time we've played this on three or four more people, the policeman will begin to be suspicious of Hoof's wailing accents and his great joy at finding his kid brother?"
"Oh, we'll have to try it again, anyway," urged Tom Reade. "I know just the people to work it on. You know Mr. and Mrs Crossleigh? They live around on the next street. They haven't any children, and they're big cranks."
CHAPTER XVIII
CARRYING "FUN" TO THE DANGER LIMIT
The Hallowe'eners hidden across the street, and Hoof Sadby posted up the street, ready to come on the scene and do his part when needed, Tom Reade and Greg Holmes crept up to the front porch of the Crossleigh home, deposited the basket, rang and then bolted.
In a short time a dim light was visible through the stained gla.s.s of the front door. Then that barrier itself was opened, and Mr. Crossleigh, a man past middle age, and in dressing-gown and slippers, came out.
Seeing no one, and coming further out, Mr. Crossleigh almost kicked the basket. But he recovered in time, and bent down.
The peepers, not far away, heard him utter an exclamation of amazement.
Then: