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At this command the man in the tree seemed much disturbed. He tried to speak, but because of his natural stutter and his terror of the situation through which he was pa.s.sing, his effort was a failure.
"If you don't come down, we'll haul you down," ordered d.i.c.k, finally, and then, after a little more urging, the fellow finally consented to come out of the tree, and dropped into the rowboat.
"Blackie Crowden, as sure as fate!" murmured Sam, as soon as he got a good look at the fellow's features. "Well, if this isn't luck!"
"Evidently you know this fellow," came from Chester Waltham, curiously.
"We sure do!" declared Sam. "He's the man who knocked our college chum, John Powell, down on the road near Ashton and robbed him of four thousand dollars."
"I di-didn't r-r-rob any bo-body," stuttered Blackie Crowden. "It's all a mi-mis-mis-mista-ta-take!" and he ended with his usual queer whistle.
"We'll see about that later, Crowden," put in d.i.c.k, sternly. "Now you sit perfectly still or else maybe you'll go overboard and be drowned."
It would be difficult to describe the joy with which Ada Waltham greeted her brother on his safe return. She flew into his arms and, as wet as he was, hugged him over and over again.
"Oh! I was so afraid you'd be drowned, Chester!" and then she added quickly: "How grand it was for the Rovers to go to your a.s.sistance!"
"It certainly was very fine of them to do it," returned the young millionaire. And now it must be admitted that he seemed very much disturbed in mind. "I'm going to pay them back, you see if I don't," he added, after a thoughtful pause.
Blackie Crowden had done his best to make them believe that he was not guilty of the attack upon Songbird, but the Rovers would not listen to this, and put him through such a grilling that finally he broke down and confessed all.
"I wouldn't have done the deed at all if it hadn't been that I was worried over another matter," he said amid much stuttering and whistling. "I ain't a bad man naturally, even though I do drink and gamble a little. If it hadn't been for a lawyer named Belright Fogg I would never have robbed the young man."
"Belright Fogg!" came from the Rovers.
"What has that shyster lawyer to do with it?" added Sam.
"Do you know he is a shyster lawyer?"
"We sure do!" added Tom, promptly.
"Then you will understand me when I tell you how it was. Some time ago I was mixed up in a land transaction. It is a long story, and all I need to tell you is that Belright Fogg was in it, too. I did some things that I oughtn't to, and that gave Fogg a hold on me. Finally he claimed that I owed him three hundred dollars, and he said if I didn't pay up he would make it hot for me and maybe land me in jail. That got me scared and I said I'd get the money somehow.
"Then by accident I saw Powell get the money from the bank, and I followed him on horseback, pa.s.sed him, and took the cash, as you know.
As soon as the deed was done I was sorry for it, but then it was too late," stuttered Blackie Crowden, and hung his head.
"And did you go to Belright Fogg and give him the three hundred dollars?" queried Sam.
"Yes. I met him in Leadenfield, at a road house kept by a Frenchman named Bissette."
"Then I was right after all!" cried Sam. "I accused Fogg of meeting you, but he denied it."
"Well, he got the three hundred all right enough," stuttered Crowden.
"And how was it you tried to keep out of our sight in that flood?" asked Sam curiously. "Did you know us?"
"I knew you--saw you follow me to the depot at Dentonville. You thought I got on that train. But I didn't--I took a night freight."
"I see. That is why the authorities didn't spot you."
"That's it. But you were asking about Fogg," continued Blackie Crowden, speculatively.
"And did he know you had stolen the money?" demanded d.i.c.k, sharply.
"I'm pretty sure he did, although he didn't ask any questions. He knew about the robbery, and he knew well enough that I didn't have any three hundred dollars of my own to give him."
"What did you do with the rest of the money, Crowden? I hope you didn't spend it?" questioned Sam, anxiously.
"Spend it!" came in a bitter stutter from the criminal. "I didn't get any chance to spend it. All I had was two hundred dollars!"
"Then what became of the other thirty-five hundred?" questioned Tom.
"It's in a room at the Ashton hotel, unless somebody found it and stole it."
"At the Ashton hotel!" cried Sam.
"That's it. You see, after I met Fogg I stopped at Ashton for one night and put up at the old hotel on the Cheesley turnpike. I hid the money in an out-of-the-way corner of a clothes closet, because I didn't want to carry it on my person. Then, when I was on the street, I heard that you were on my trail, and I got scared and I was afraid to go back to the hotel to get it."
"Can you remember what room it was?" queried Tom.
"Yes, it was a back room--number twenty-two. I put the money in a hole in the wall back of an upper shelf."
"We had better notify the authorities at Ashton of this," said Tom to his brothers.
"Let us telegraph to Songbird and tell him to go to Ashton," suggested Sam. "If the money is there, Songbird ought to have the fun of getting it and returning it to Mr. Sanderson."
"All right, let's do it!" cried d.i.c.k; and so the matter was arranged.
CHAPTER x.x.x
MRS. SAM ROVER--CONCLUSION
"Well, that's good news and I'm mighty glad to hear it."
It was d.i.c.k who spoke, three days after the incidents recorded in the last chapter. Our friends had been staying at the farmhouse of Mr.
Barlow. Blackie Crowden had been turned over to the local authorities, the oldest Rover making the charge against him. Crowden had pleaded for mercy, but the boys, while sympathizing with him, had thought it best to let the law take its course. Chester Waltham and his sister had also remained at the farmhouse, which fortunately was a large one, so that the whole party was not particularly crowded for room.
The rescue of the young millionaire from the river had worked wonders, and he was now heartily ashamed of himself, not only for the way he had treated Grace but also on account of the instructions he had sent to his agents in Wall Street.
"You can rest a.s.sured, Mr. Rover, that my opposition to your plans in New York will be withdrawn," he said to d.i.c.k. "I am going to telegraph to my agents as soon as I get a chance. And I want you and your brothers to understand that I appreciate thoroughly your goodness in coming to my rescue. It was a splendid thing to do. I am not going to insult you by offering you any reward--all I can say is that I thank you from the bottom of my heart." And that evening Chester Waltham and his sister had taken their departure, stating that the accident at the bridge had ended their idea of touring farther, and that they were going to take the first train they could get for the East.
The thing that d.i.c.k called "good news" was a long "Night Letter" sent over the wires by Songbird. The former poet of Brill had received their message concerning Blackie Crowden, and also Belright Fogg, and had at once hurried to Ashton and to the hotel on the Cheesley turnpike. There, in room twenty-two, as mentioned by Crowden, he had found the package containing the thirty-five hundred dollars. Next he had called on Belright Fogg and had scared the shyster lawyer so completely that Fogg had returned the three hundred dollars received from Crowden with scarcely a protest. Then the happy youth had driven over to the Sanderson place. The Sandersons had been surprised to see him and amazed to learn that he had recovered so large a portion of the stolen money.
"As I had already paid Mr. Sanderson one hundred dollars,"