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"She refused, of course. Then he got very wild and talked in a rambling fashion. Oh, d.i.c.k, I am half inclined to think he is crazy!"
And Dora shuddered.
"What did he say after your mother refused to do as he wished?"
"He got up and walked around the parlor, waving his hands and crying that we were robbing him, that the treasure was his, and that the Rovers were nothing but thieves. Then mamma ordered him out of the house and sent the girl to get the man who runs the farm for us. But before the man came Sobber went away, driving his horse as fast as he could,"
"Have you heard from him since?"
"Yes. The next day we got an unsigned letter. In it Sobber said that, by hook or by crook, he intended to get possession of the treasure, and for the Rovers to beware,"
CHAPTER XIII
THE ROWING RACE
Having told so much, Dora went into all the particulars of Tad Sobber's visit to the Stanhope homestead. She told of how Sobber had argued, and she said he had affirmed that the Rovers had falsified matters so that the Stanhopes and the Lanings might benefit thereby.
"What he says is absolutely untrue," said d.i.c.k. "Father went over those papers with care, and so did the lawyers, and the treasure belongs to you and the Lanings, and to n.o.body else."
"Don't you think Sid Merrick fooled Sobber?" asked the girl.
"Perhaps, but I guess Tad was willing to be fooled. They set their hearts on that money, and now Tad can't give it up. In one way I am sorry for him, and if a small amount of cash would satisfy him and set him on his feet, I'd hand it over. We put Dan Baxter on his feet that way."
"Oh, but Baxter isn't Sobber, d.i.c.k. Sobber is wild and wicked. I was so afraid he would attack mamma and me I hardly knew what to do. And his eyes rolled so when he talked!"
"Did he go to the Lanings?"
"No."
"Probably he was afraid of your uncle. Mr. Laning won't stand for any nonsense. I suppose your mother is afraid he'll come back?"
"Yes; and to protect herself she has hired one of the farm men to sleep in the house. The man was once in the army, and he knows how to use a gun."
"Then that will make Sobber keep his distance. He is a coward at heart. I found that out when we went to Putnam Hall together,"
"But you must beware of him, d.i.c.k. He may show himself here next."
"It won't do him any good. All I've got here is a little spending money. No, I don't think he'll show himself here. More than likely he'll try to hire some shyster lawyer to fight for the treasure in the courts. But I don't think he'll be able to upset your claim."
They had now reached Hope Seminary, and the conversation came to an end. The boys helped the girls to alight, and said good-by. Then they drove back to Ashton, where the buggy was left at the livery stable; and all piled into the carriage for the college. On the way d.i.c.k told his brothers about Tad Sobber.
"Dora is right. He is a bad egg," said Sam. "I wouldn't trust him under any consideration,"
"He is too much of a coward to attack anybody openly," was Tom's comment. "But as d.i.c.k says, he may hire some shyster lawyer to take the matter into the courts. It would be too bad if the fortune was tied up in endless litigation."
"He's got to get money to fight with first," said d.i.c.k.
"Oh, some lawyers will take a case like that on a venture."
"That's true."
Several days pa.s.sed quietly, and the Rover boys applied themselves diligently to their studies, for they wished to make fine records at Brill.
"We are here to get a good education," was the way d.i.c.k expressed himself, "and we want to make the most of our time."
"As if I wasn't boning away to beat the band!" murmured Tom reproachfully.
"I'd like to take the full course in about two years," came from Sam.
"College studies are mighty hard," broke in Songbird, who was working over his chemistry. "I don't get any chance to write poetry any more."
"For which let us all be truly thankful," murmured Sam to Tom.
"Ten minutes more," announced d.i.c.k, looking at his watch. "Then what do you say to a row on the river?"
"Suits me!" cried Tom.
"All right, then. Now clear out, and--silence!"
A quarter of an hour later the Rover boys and Songbird walked down to the river. There were plenty of boats to be had, and d.i.c.k and Tom were soon out. Songbird and Sam received an invitation to go for a ride in a gasolene launch owned by Stanley.
"Suits me!" cried the would-be poet. "I can row any time, but I can't always ride in a motor boat."
"Same here," said Sam.
A number of craft were on the river, including one containing Jerry Koswell and Bart Larkspur. Koswell scowled as he saw Tom and d.i.c.k rowing near by.
"We'll give 'em a shaking up," he said to his crony, and turned their rowboat so that it b.u.mped fairly and squarely into the craft manned by Tom and d.i.c.k. The shock was so great that d.i.c.k, who had gotten up to fix his seat, was nearly hurled overboard.
"See here, what do you mean by running into us?" demanded the oldest Rover on recovering his balance.
"Sorry, but it couldn't be helped," answered Koswell. "Why didn't you get out of the way?"
"We didn't have to," retorted Sam, "and if you try that trick again somebody will get his head punched."
"Talk is cheap," sneered Larkspur.
"Say, I heard you fellows have been boasting of how you can row," went on Koswell after a pause.
"We haven't been boasting, but we can row," answered Tom.
"Want to race?"
"When?"