THE FATE OF TWO EVILDOERS.
“Are you going to let them arrest
us?” whispered Pat Malone, as the whole party
moved through the woods towards a wagon road which
ran nearly parallel to the railroad tracks.
“Not if I can help it,”
Caven whispered back. “We must watch our
chances.”
Half a mile was covered and they came
out on the road. It was growing dark and there
were signs of a storm in the air.
“It’s going to rain,” said Joe,
and he was right.
“See here, I don’t want
to get wet to the skin,” growled Caven.
“I’ll catch my death of cold.”
“There is a barn just ahead,”
said Bill Badger. “Let us get inside.”
Joe was willing, and soon all were
in the barn. It was now raining at a heavy rate
and they were glad to be under shelter.
“With a barn there ought to
be a house,” remarked our hero. “But
I don’t see any.”
It grew still darker, and the rain
came down in perfect sheets. The roof of the
barn leaked, and they had to move from one spot to
another, to keep out of the drippings.
While this was going on Gaff Caven
was working at the handkerchief that bound his wrists
and soon had it loose. Pat Malone also liberated
himself. Caven winked suggestively at his confederate.
“Watch me,” he whispered.
“When I give the signal we’ll knock ’em
both down and run for it.”
“But the pistol—” began Malone.
“I’ll take care of that.”
In moving around the old barn Caven
spotted a club and moved close to it. Suddenly
he snatched the weapon up and hit Bill Badger on the
arm with it. The pistol flew into a corner and
went off, sending a bullet into a board.
“Run!” yelled Caven, and
leaped for the open doorway. Malone came beside
him, and both ran off through the rain as fast as their
legs could carry them.
Joe was startled and made after the
pair. But at a groan from Bill Badger he paused.
“Are you badly hurt?” he asked.
“He gave me a stiff crack on the arm,”
growled the young westerner.
Joe ran for the corner and caught
up the pistol. Then he leaped for the open doorway.
“Stop, both of you!” he called out.
“Stop, or I’ll fire!”
“Don’t you dare!”
shrieked Pat Malone, and ran faster than ever, behind
the nearest of the trees. Joe aimed the weapon,
but before he could pull the trigger both of the bad
men were out of sight.
“Go after them, if you want to,” said
Bill Badger. “I’ll go too.”
“You are not badly hurt?” queried our
hero, sympathetically.
“No, but if I catch that fellow
I’ll give it to him good,” grumbled the
young westerner.
Both now left the barn and made after
Caven and Malone. Once they caught sight of the
rascals, moving in the direction of the railroad tracks.
“They are going to catch a train
if they can!” cried our hero. “I hear
one coming.”
“It’s a freight most likely,” was
Bill Badger’s answer.
He was right, and soon the long line
of freight cars hove into sight around a bend and
on an upgrade. Far in the distance they beheld
Caven and Malone scooting for the train with all speed.
“They are going to make it,” sighed Joe.
“Too bad!”
They continued to run, but before
they could get anywhere near the tracks they saw Caven
leap for the train and get between two of the cars.
Then Malone got aboard also, and the freight train
passed out of sight through the cut.
“That ends the chase,”
said Joe, halting. “They were slick to get
away.”
“If we only knew where they
would get off we could send word ahead,” suggested
his companion.
“Well, we don’t know,
and after this they will probably keep their eyes
wide open and keep out of sight as much as possible.
Anyway, I don’t think they’ll bother Mr.
Vane any more.”
“It’s not likely.
I’m a witness to what they were up to,”
answered the young westerner.
Both Joe and Bill Badger were soaked
from the rain and resolved to strike out for the nearest
farmhouse or village. They kept along the railroad
tracks, and presently came to a shanty where there
was a track-walker.
“How far to the nearest village?” asked
our hero.
“Half a mile.”
“Thank you.”
“How is it you are out here in the rain?”
went on the track-walker.
“We got off our train and it went off without
us.”
“Oh, I see. Too bad.”
Again our hero and his companion hurried
on, and soon came in sight of a small village.
They inquired their way to a tavern, and there dried
their clothing and procured a good, hot meal, which
made both feel much better.
“I am going to send a telegram
to Mr. Vane,” said Joe, and did so without further
delay. He was careful of the satchel and did not
leave it out of his sight.
They found they could get a train
for the West that evening at seven o’clock and
at the proper time hurried to the depot.
“I’m glad I met you,”
said Joe, to his newly-made friend. “Now,
what do you think I owe you for what you did?”
“As we didn’t land the
fellows in jail you don’t owe me anything,”
said Bill Badger, promptly.
“Oh, yes, I do.”
“Well then, you can pay the extra expense, and
let that fill the bill.”
“I’ll certainly do that,” said Joe,
promptly.
As they rode along Bill Badger told
something of himself and of the mine his father owned,
and then Joe told something of his own story.
“Did you say your name is Joe
Bodley?” asked the young westerner, with deep
interest.
“Yes.”
“And you are looking for a man by the name of
William A. Bodley?”
“I am.”
“It seems to me I know a man
by that name, although the miners all call him Bill
Bodley.”
“Where is this Bill Bodley?”
“Out in Montana somewhere.
He worked for my father once, about three years ago.
He was rather a strange man, about fifty years old.
He had white hair and a white beard, and acted as
if he had great trouble on his mind.”
“You do not know where he is now?”
“No, but perhaps my father knows.”
“Then I’m going to see
your father as soon as I can,” said Joe, decidedly.
“Mind you, I don’t say
that this Bill Bodley is the man you are after, Joe.
I don’t want to raise any false hopes.”
“Did you ever hear where the man came from?”
“I think he told somebody that he once owned
a farm in Kansas or Iowa.”
“This William A. Bodley once owned a farm at
Millville, Iowa.”
“Is that so! Then he may
be the same man after all. To tell the truth,
he looked a little bit like you.”
“Was he a good man?” asked Joe, eagerly.
“Yes, indeed. But some
of the men poked fun at him because he was so silent
and strange at times. I liked him and so did father.
He left us to go prospecting in the mountains.”
Thus the talk ran on for half an hour,
when the train came to a sudden halt.
“Are we at a station?” asked Bill Badger.
“I don’t know,” said Joe.
Both looked out of the window but
could see nothing except hills and forests.
“We are in the foothills,”
said the young westerner. “Something must
be wrong on the tracks.”
“More fallen trees perhaps.”
“Or a landslide. They have
them sometimes, when it rains as hard as it did to-day.”
They left the car with some others
and soon learned that there had been a freight collision
ahead and that half a dozen freight cars had been
smashed to splinters.
“Do you think it can be the
freight that Caven and Malone boarded?” came
from our hero, on hearing this news.
“It might be,” answered
Bill Badger. “Let us take a look. Our
train won’t move for hours now.”
They walked to the scene of the wreck.
One of the cars had been burnt up but the conflagration
was now under control and a wrecking crew was already
at work clearing the tracks so that they might be used.
“Anybody hurt?” asked Joe of a train hand.
“Yes, two men killed. They were riding
between the cars.”
“Tramps?”
“They didn’t look like
tramps. But they hadn’t any right to ride
on the freight.”
“Where are they?”
“Over in the shanty yonder.”
With a queer sensation in his heart
Joe walked to the little building, accompanied by
Bill Badger. A curious crowd was around and they
had to force their way to the front.
One look was enough. Gaff Caven
and Pat Malone lay there, cold in death. They
had paid the penalty of their crimes on earth and gone
to the final judgment.