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"d.i.c.k, you're foolish to feel any liking for Tag Mosher. He's bad all the way through. As it was he was locked up on a charge of possible manslaughter, and now he has escaped, taking with him firearms and ammunition enough to rid the county of peace and police officers. He'll do it, too, if he's cornered. Now, where's the good in that kind of a pest?"
"I don't know how to answer you," sighed d.i.c.k. "Perhaps I am foolish, but I'm not yet prepared to admit it. Instead, I still contend that I feel a sneaking liking for poor Tag."
"'Poor Tag,' indeed!" mimicked Tom Reade. "Poor wives and kids of the deputy sheriffs whom Tag may shoot down in their tracks before he's cornered at last! d.i.c.k, young Mosher is a budding outlaw and a bad egg all around."
"No decent citizen should feel any sort of sympathy for him,"
affirmed Harry Hazelton.
"Let d.i.c.k alone," objected Greg Holmes. "d.i.c.k generally knows what he's about, even in regard to his emotions and sympathies."
"What do you say, Danny?" asked Dave.
"May the sheriff deliver me from Tag Mosher!" replied Danny Grin.
"You're a prejudiced lot," smiled d.i.c.k, as he rose from his camp stool. "Who'll watch camp this time while the rest of us go to swimming pool?"
"I will," Darry volunteered.
Carrying clean underclothing, soap and towels from the tent, the other five started through the woods to a new swimming pool that had been discovered lately.
When they returned Dave went away alone for his bath. Tom Reade, as the cook for the day, lifted the lid of the soup pot to examine the contents.
"I wish one of you fellows would go out into the woods and bring in some of that flowering savory herb for the soup," called Tom.
"I know the kind you mean," nodded Prescott. "I'll go and get it."
He strolled off in the opposite direction from the pool. Yet, truth to tell, his mind was very little on the herb he was seeking.
His mind dwelt almost completely on the thought of Tag Mosher, once more at large, and most likely roaming about somewhere in this vast expanse of woods.
"I don't believe it's so much badness in Tag, as it is that he's just a plain, simple savage, with the instincts and the pa.s.sions of the savage," d.i.c.k reflected. "I wonder if Tag ever did really have a chance to be decent? Poor fellow! If he must be caught and returned to jail, and by and by pay the penalty of his attack upon Farmer Leigh, then I don't believe he ever will have a real chance to try to be decent again. I wonder if I'm wrong and the other fellows are right? Perhaps Tag would scorn a chance to be an all-around decent fellow. I wonder. I wonder!"
His musings led Prescott rather far afield. At last he halted, looking about him in some bewilderment.
"Humph! That's queer!" he muttered. "Now, I wonder if I can really remember what it was I came out here for?"
For a few moments the bewilderment continued.
"Oh, yes! Now, I know," he laughed. "I am after some of that savory herb for the soup."
It was necessary to retrace his steps considerably, and to go in a somewhat different direction. At last he came upon a patch of the herb.
"This stuff has been burned by the sun," he said to himself, turning away from the first specimens of the herb. "Over there in the shade it will be fresher and greener."
d.i.c.k took a few rapid steps, halting before a fringe of bushes.
Bending over, he extended a hand to pick some of the herbs.
Just then he heard a slight sound, like the catching of someone's breath. Starting, Prescott raised his head just a trifle, to find himself looking straight into the eyes of Tag Mosher, as that youth lay flat on the ground. Two muzzles of a shotgun stared d.i.c.k in the face, while the fingers of the fugitive rested on the triggers of the gun.
"If you're looking for me," grimaced Tag, "you've found me! I'm right here, and this is going to be my dizzy day!"
CHAPTER XVI
TEN MINUTES OF REAL DARING
Still keeping his eyes turned on the fugitive, d.i.c.k took three quick, backward steps.
"Halt!" ordered Tag.
"I was going to stop, anyway," smiled d.i.c.k. "Now, put your hands up!"
"Why?"
"Because I'm boss here!" remarked Tag.
"I didn't know that you were boss of anything," d.i.c.k replied, still smiling.
"I'm telling you," declared Mosher. "Want me to make good?"
"I wish you'd make something of yourself, instead," rejoined Prescott in a voice of intense earnestness.
"Get your hands up!" ordered Tag, with a decided increase in emphasis.
"That's a silly demand on your part," d.i.c.k retorted calmly. "Why should you want my hands up? I'm not armed, and am in no position to attack you. Are you such a coward, Mosher, that you're afraid of an unarmed fellow that you could thrash even if you were unarmed?
I can't bring myself to believe that of you.
"You've a mighty fine opinion of me, haven't you?" jeered Tag.
"I'd like to have a fine opinion of you," Prescott declared.
"Oh! And what must I do to win that fine opinion?" demanded Tag mockingly.
"If you want to know, I'll tell you," d.i.c.k continued. "Just put down that gun and step away from it."
"And then you'll pounce on it and hold me up!" jeered Tag. "Fine!"
"You get away from your weapon," Prescott urged, "and I'll give you my word of honor not to touch it without your leave."
"Your word of honor?" asked Tag, driven to wonder despite himself.
"What good would your word of honor be?"
"It would be as good as anything I'm capable of," Prescott responded.
"Tag, didn't you ever have any respect for a man's word of honor?
Didn't you ever respect your own?"