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Fred lay where he had been lying ever since ten o'clock that morning.
He was coatless, stretched out face downward, with Towser still camped across his shoulder, and the dog's teeth still fastened in his shirt.
"Come and call this measly dog off!" ordered Fred, in a surly tone. "This is a fine reward that I get for trying to do you fellows a friendly turn!"
d.i.c.k, Dave and Tom were the first to get within range and obtain a glimpse of the extraordinary scene. They halted, gasping, though their glances swiftly took in the whole affair. They comprehended what Ripley had been doing, and how the dog had come upon the marauder.
By this time the other members of the party came in sight. Fred still lay on the ground, scowling and fuming over his undignified position, while Towser still kept an eye open for business.
"Call this dog off!" Fred ordered again.
"How did the dog happen to catch you here?" d.i.c.k asked quietly.
"Call this dog off and I'll tell you," snapped Fred. "I was trying to do you fellows a good turn, but the dog had to interfere and get hold of the wrong party."
"You were trying to do us a good turn?" gasped d.i.c.k wonderingly.
"Yes---but it will be the last time, unless you call this dog off," snarled young Ripley.
Perhaps it is hardly necessary to say that not one in the party believed Fred's extraordinary story.
"Hazelton, get this dog of yours away, or I'll go to court and secure an order to have the beast shot!" snapped young Ripley.
But at this moment another voice was heard calling from the roadway:
"Fred! Fred! Are you there?"
It was Squire Ripley's voice, though the lawyer himself could not be seen as yet.
"Yes, sir; your son is here," d.i.c.k answered. "Come and see just how he is here!"
"Get your dog off quickly, Hazelton!" urged Fred.
But Harry, at a slight sign from d.i.c.k, didn't stir or open his mouth to call off his dog.
Through the brush came the sound of hurried steps. Then Lawyer Ripley stepped into the group.
"Fred, what on earth does this mean?" demanded the lawyer, staring hard.
"That's just what we thought you might like to find out, sir,"
d.i.c.k replied. "We've been away from camp all day, and just came back to this scene, Mr. Ripley. You are something of an expert in the matter of evidence, sir. Will you kindly tell us what you make out of this? There is our tent cut down. There are all of our food supplies in a pile, except what you see scattered about on the ground. Your son appears to have been headed for the lake when our dog overtook him and pinned him down. As a lawyer, Mr. Ripley, what would you conclude from the evidence thus presented?"
"Call that dog away!" ordered Mr. Ripley.
"Willingly, sir," d.i.c.k agreed, "now that you have had opportunity to look into all the evidence that we found. Harry, will you do the honors?"
Smiling slightly, Hazelton stepped forward to speak to Towser.
That four-footed guardian of the camp displayed some resentment at first over the idea of letting go of Fred's shirt. After a little, however, Hazelton succeeded in getting his dog away and tied to a tree.
Fred rose to his feet, his face fiery red while he trembled visibly.
"What is the meaning of this, young man?" demanded Lawyer Ripley.
"The meaning," choked the lawyer's son wrathfully, "is just this: I was coming by this place this morning in the runabout, when I heard a good deal of coa.r.s.e laughter down here. I knew the voices weren't those of boys, and so I knew that something must be up. I got out of the car and came over here. I saw two tramps in the camp. They had already cut down the tent, and when I arrived they were planning to cart the food away. Then they saw me as I stepped forward. I told them what I thought of them for thieving in such fashion. Then the tramps got ready to jump on me and thrash me. Just as I raised my hands to defend myself this dog came bounding out of the woods and the tramps ran away. Having no more sense than any other fool dog, the cur pinned me down and held me here."
"All day?" asked his father.
"Yes; I've been a prisoner here for hours," quavered Fred. "And now these fellows want to make out, before the high school friends of mine," nodding toward the girls, "that I was the thief and destroyer."
"That story is straightforward enough," commented the lawyer, turning to the others rather stiffly. "Do any of you wish to challenge it?"
No one spoke.
"I'll tell you what I wish, father," broke in Fred angrily. "I want an order from the court to have that dog seized and shot.
He's a vicious and dangerous brute!"
"I think such a court order will be easily obtained," replied Mr. Ripley frigidly.
Harry Hazelton turned pale, clenching his fists, though he had the good sense not to speak just then. The other boys all looked highly concerned.
"Were you bitten by the dog?" asked Dr. Bentley quietly.
"I---I don't know yet," replied Fred. "I can't tell."
"Mr. Ripley," said Dr. Bentley very quietly, "if you contemplate seeking a court order for having the dog shot, then I suggest that you permit me to take the young man aside and examine him.
I am a physician, with a good many years of practice behind me, and any court would p.r.o.nounce me competent to testify as to whether your son has been bitten, and, if so, to what extent."
"I don't choose to be examined here," Fred declared sulkily.
"If I want anything of that sort done our own physician can do it."
"Young man," replied Dr. Bentley, "your father is an eminent lawyer.
He is therefore qualified to inform you that if you decline an examination now as to the presence or absence of injuries on your body, your refusal would have to be taken into account in contested court action for the death of the dog."
"Dr. Bentley is quite right, and he has stated the matter accurately,"
replied Mr. Ripley. "Fred, do you desire to be examined now?
If so, we can go away to some secluded spot with the doctor, and with the dog's owner and any other witness desired."
"I don't want to do anything now but to get away from here," replied Fred sulkily. "I want to be rid of Prescott and his friends as soon as possible."
"Very good, then," nodded his father. "You may do as you like, but if you refuse Dr. Bentley's suggestion for an immediate examination you will stand no chance of securing an order dooming the dog."
Fred's further answer was an angry snort as he turned away. His father lingered to say:
"If your suspicions that my son was here improperly are anywhere near correct, then you are ent.i.tled to my most hearty apology.
Fred is a peculiar and high-strung boy, but I believe his impulses are right in the main. I will add that I believe his account of how he came to be in this strange plight. He took the car early this morning. I am just returning from a spin in our larger automobile. I saw my runabout at the edge of the road and it occurred to me to stop and see if my son were here. Is there anything more to be said about my son's peculiar experience here?"
"Nothing, thank you, Mr. Ripley," replied Dr. Bentley, after a sidelong glance at d.i.c.k.
"Then I will bid you all good afternoon," replied Squire Ripley, raising his hat to the women.