Stumbling on through the dark woods,
led by his captors, Tom tried to pierce the gloom
and identify the persons who had firm grips on either
side of him. But it was useless. A little
light sifted down from the starlit sky above, but
it was not sufficient. The young inventor was
beginning to think, after all, that he had fallen
into the hands of the Happy Harry gang, and he knew
that if this was so he need expect no mercy.
But two things were against this belief.
One was that the principal members of the gang were
still in jail, or at least they were supposed to be,
and another was that there were too many of the captors.
Happy Harry’s crowd never numbered so many.
“Maybe they’re highwaymen,”
thought our hero, as he was dragged along “But
that can’t be,” he reasoned further.
“If they wanted to rob me they’d have
done it back there in the road, and not brought me
off here in the woods. Besides, I haven’t
anything for them to steal.”
Suddenly Tom stumbled over a projecting
root, and nearly fell, dragging along with him the
person who had hold of his left arm.
“Look out there! What’s
the matter with you?” exclaimed one of the throng
quickly, and at the sound of the voice Tom started.
“Andy Foger!” cried the
young inventor, as he recovered himself, for he had
recognized the voice of the red-haired bully.
“What do you mean by holding me up in this way?”
he demanded.
“Quiet!” urged a voice
in his ear, and the tones were unfamiliar. “Mention
no names!”
“I’m on to your game!”
retorted Tom. “I know you’re here,
Andy, and Sam and Pete; and Jack Reynolds and Sid
Holton,” and he named two rather loose-charactered
lads, who were often in the company of Andy and his
cronies. “You’d better quit this nonsense,”
Tom went on. “I’ll cause the arrest
of all of you if you make trouble for me. I know
who you are now!”
“You think you do,” answered
the voice in his ear, and the young inventor concluded
that it must be some lad whom he did not know.
“Nor is this nonsense,” the other went
on. “You are about to receive the punishment
due you.”
Our hero did not answer, but he was
doing some hard thinking. He wondered why Andy
and his crowd had captured him.
Suddenly the blackness of the woods
was illuminated by the fitful gleam of a distant fire.
Tom could see more plainly now, and he managed to
count about ten dusky figures hurrying along, four
being close to him, to prevent his escape, and the
others running on ahead. The light became stronger,
and, a moment later the prisoner and his captors emerged
into a little clearing, where a fire was burning.
Two figures, masked with black cloth, as were all
in the crowd, stood about the blaze, putting on sticks
of wood.
“Did you get him?” asked
one of these figures eagerly.
“Yes, they got me, Sam Snedecker,”
answered Tom quickly, recognizing Sam’s tones.
“And they’ll wish they hadn’t before
I’m done with them.”
“Quiet!” ordered an unknown
voice. “Members of the Deep Forest Throng,
the prisoner is here!” the lad went on.
“’Tis well, bind the captive
to the sacrificial tree,” was the response from
some one in the crowd.
Tom laughed. He was at ease now,
for he recognized that those who had taken him prisoner
were all lads of Andy’s character. Most
of them were Shopton youths, but some, evidently, were
strangers in town. Tom felt he had little to fear.
“Bring him over here,”
ordered one, and Tom cried out:
“You wouldn’t be giving
those orders, Andy Foger, if my arms weren’t
tied. And if you’ll untie me, I’ll
fight any two of you at once,” offered the young
inventor fiercely, for he hated the humiliation to
which he was being subjected.
“Don’t do it! Don’t untie him!”
begged some one.
“No danger, they won’t.
They’re afraid to, Pete Bailey,” replied
Tom quickly, for he had recognized the voice of the
other one of Andy’s particular cronies.
“Aw, he knows who we are,”
whispered Sam, but not so low but that our hero heard
him.
“No matter,” was Andy’s
retort. “Let’s go ahead with it.
Tie him to that tree.”
It was useless for Tom to struggle.
He was bound too tightly by the rope, and the crowd
was too many for him. In a few minutes he was
securely fastened to a tree, not far from the camp-fire,
which was replenished from time to time.
“Now for the judgment!”
called one of the masked lads, in what he meant to
be a sepulchral tone. “What is the charge
against the prisoner? Brother Number One of the
Deep Forest Throng, what is your accusation?”
“He’s a regular snob,
that’s what’s the trouble,” answered
Andy Foger, though whether he was “Brother
Number One,” did not appear. “He’s
too fresh and—and—”
“I’ll make you wish you
felt fresh when I get hold of you, Andy,” murmured
Tom.
“Quiet!” cried a tall
lad. “What’s the next charge?”
“He keeps an old colored man
on guard at his place,” was the answer, and
Tom had no difficulty in recognizing the voice of Sid
Holton. “The coon throws whitewash all over
us. I got some of it.”
“You wouldn’t have, if
you’d minded your own business,” retorted
Tom. “It served you right!”
“What is the verdict on the
prisoner?” asked one who seemed to be the leader.
“I say let’s tar and feather
him!” cried Andy suddenly. “There’s
a barrel of tar back in the woods here, and we can
get some feathers from a chicken coop. That would
make him so he wouldn’t be so uppish, I guess!”
“That’s right! Tar
and feathers!” exclaimed several.
Our hero’s heart sank.
He was not afraid, but he did not relish the indignity
that was proposed. He resolved to fight to the
last ounce of his strength against the masked lads.
“Can we get a kettle to heat
the tar in?” asked some one.
“We’ll find one,”
answered Sam Snedecker. “Come on, let’s
do it. You’ll look pretty, Tom Swift, when
we’re through with you,” he exulted.
Tom did not answer, but there was
fierce anger in his heart. The tar and feather
proposal seemed to meet with general favor.
“Members of the Deep Forest
Throng, we will hold a consultation,” proposed
the leader, in his assumed deep voice. “Come
over here, to one side. Brother Number Six, guard
the prisoner well.”
“There ain’t no need to,”
answered a lad who had been instructed to mount guard
over Tom. “He’s tied so tight he can’t
move. I want to hear what you say.”
“Very well then,” assented
the leader, “But look to his bonds.”
The lad made a hasty examination of
the ropes binding the young inventor to the tree,
and Tom was glad that the examination was a hasty
one. For he feared the guard might discover that
one hand had been worked nearly free. The young
inventor had done this while he leered at his captors.
Tom was not going to submit tamely
to the nonsense, and from the moment he had been tied,
he had been trying to get loose. He had nearly
succeeded in freeing one hand when the crowd of masked
boys moved off to one side, where they presently began
to talk in excited whispers.
“I wonder how they came to catch
me,” thought the prisoner, as he worked feverishly
to further loosen the ropes. “This looks
as if it was a put-up job, with the masks, and everything.”
Later he learned that the idea was the outcome of
a proposal of one of the new arrivals in town.
He had organized the “Deep Forest Throng,”
as a sort of secret society, and Andy and his cronies
had been induced to join. It was Andy’s
proposal to capture Tom, though, and, having seen
him depart for Mansburg on his motor-cycle, and knowing
that he would return along a road that ran near the
woods where the Throng met, suggested that they take
Tom captive. The idea was enthusiastically received,
and Andy and his cronies thought they saw a chance
to be revenged.
Tom, while he picked at the ropes,
listened to what the boys were saying. He heard
frequent mention of tar and feathers, and began to
believe, that unless he could get free, while they
were off there consulting, he might be forced to submit
to the humiliating ordeal.
He managed to get one hand comparatively
free, so that he could move it about, but then he
struck several hard knots, and could make no further
progress. The conference seemed on the point of
breaking up.
“One of you go for a big kettle
to boil the tar in,” ordered the leader, “and
the rest of you dig up some feathers.”
“I must get loose!” thought
Tom desperately. “If they try to tar and
feather me it will be a risky business. I’ve
got to get loose! They may burn me severely!”
But, though he tried with all his
strength, the ropes would not loosen another bit.
He had one hand free, and that was all. The crowd
was moving back toward him.
“My knife!” thought the
captive quickly. “If I can reach that in
my pocket I can cut the ropes! Once I get loose
I’ll fight the whole crowd!”
He managed to get his free hand into
his pocket. His fingers touched something.
It was not his knife, and, for a moment he felt a
pang of disappointment. Then, as he realized what
it was that he had grasped, a new idea came to him.
“This will be better than the
knife!” he thought exultantly. The crowd
of lads was now surrounding him, some distance from
the fire, which burned in front of the captive.
“Sentence has been passed upon
you,” remarked the leader. “Prepare
to meet thy doom! Get the materials, brothers!”
“One moment!” called Tom,
for he wanted the crowd all present to witness what
he was about to do. “I’ll give you
one chance to let me go peaceably. If you don’t—”
“Well, what will you do?”
demanded Andy sneeringly, as he pulled his mask further
over his face. “I guess you won’t
do anything, Tom Swift.”
“I’ll give you one chance
to let me go, and I’ll agree to say nothing
about this joke,” went on Tom. “If
you don’t I’ll blow this place up!”
For a moment there was a silence.
“Ha! Ha! Ho!
Ho!” laughed Sam Snedecker. “Listen
to him! He’ll blow the place up! I’d
like to see you do it! You can’t get loose
in the first place, and you haven’t anything
to blow it up with in the second. I’d like
to see you do it; hey, fellers?”
“Sure,” came the answering chorus.
“Would you?” asked Tom
quickly. “Then watch. Stand back if
you don’t want to get hurt, and remember that
I gave you a chance to let me go!”
Tom made a rapid motion with the hand
he had gotten loose. He threw something to ward
the blazing fire, which was now burning well.
Something white sailed through the air, and fell amid
the hot embers.
There was a moment’s pause,
and then a blinding flash of blue fire lighted up
the woods, and a dull rumble, as when gun-powder is
lighted in the open followed. A great cloud of
white smoke arose, as the vivid blue glare died away,
and it seemed as if a great wind swept over the place.
Several of the masked lads were knocked down by the
explosion, and when the rumble died away, and deep
blackness succeeded the intense blue light, there came
cries of pain and terror. The fire had been scattered,
and extinguished by the explosion which Tom, though
still bound to the tree had caused to happen in the
midst of the Deep Forest Throng. Then, as the
smoke rolled away, Andy Foger cried:
“Come on, fellows! Something’s
happened. I guess a volcano blew up!”