A FRUITLESS PURSUIT
Down through the yard Tom speeded,
in and out among the buildings, looking on every side
for a sight of the bold stranger. No one was
to be seen.
“He can’t be very far
ahead.” thought Tom. “I ought to catch
him before he gets to the woods. If he reaches
there he has a good chance of getting away.”
There was a little patch of trees
just back of the inventor’s house, not much
of a woods, perhaps, but that is what they were called.
“I wonder if he was some ordinary
tramp, looking for what he could steal, or if he was
one of the gang after dad’s invention?”
thought Tom as he sprinted ahead.
By this time the youth was clear of
the group of buildings and in sight of a tall, board
fence, which surrounded the Swift estate on three
sides. Here and there, along the barrier, were
piled old packing-cases, so that it would be easy
for a fugitive to leap upon one of them and so get
over the fence. Tom thought of this possibility
in a moment.
“I guess he got over ahead of
me,” the lad exclaimed, and he peered sharply
about. “I’ll catch him on the other
side!”
At that instant Tom tripped over a
plank and went down full length, making quite a racket.
When he picked himself up he was surprised to see
the man he was after dart from inside a big box and
start for the fence, near a point where there were
some packing-cases piled up, making a good approach
to the barrier. The fugitive had been hiding,
waiting for a chance to escape, and Tom’s fall
had alarmed him.
“Here! Hold on there!
Come back!” cried the youth as he recovered
his wind and leaped forward.
But the man did not stay. With
a bound he was up on the pile of boxes, and the next
moment he was poised on top of the fence. Before
leaping down on the other side, a jump at which even
a practiced athlete might well hesitate, the fleeing
stranger paused and looked back. Tom gazed at
him and recognized the man in an instant. He was
the third of the mysterious trio whom the lad had seen
in the Mansburg restaurant.
“Wait a minute! What do
you want sneaking around here?” shouted Tom
as he ran forward. The man returned no answer,
and an instant later disappeared from view on the
other side of the fence.
“He jumped down!” thought
Tom. “A big leap, too. Well, I’ve
got to follow. This is a queer proceeding.
First one, then the second, and now the third of those
men seem determined to get something here. I
wonder if this one succeeded? I’ll soon
find out.”
The lad was up on the pile of packing-cases
and over the fence in almost record time. He
caught a glimpse of the fugitive running toward the
woods. Then the boy leaped down, jarring himself
considerably, and took after the man.
But though Tom was a good runner he
was handicapped by the fact that the man had a start
of him, and also by the fact that the stranger had
had a chance to rest while hiding for the second time
in the big box, while Tom had kept on running.
So it is no great cause for wonder that Mr. Swift’s
son found himself being distanced.
Once, twice he called on the fleeing
one to halt, but the man paid no attention, and did
not even turn around. Then the youth wisely concluded
to save his wind for running. He did his best,
but was chagrined to see the man reach the woods ahead
of him.
“I’ve lost him now,”
thought Tom. “Well, there’s no help
for it.”
Still he did not give up, but kept
on through the patch of trees. On the farther
side was Lake Carlopa, a broad and long sheet of water.
“If he doesn’t know the
lake’s there,” thought our hero, “he
may keep straight on. The water will be sure
to stop him, and I can catch him. But what will
I do with him after I get him? That’s another
question. I guess I’ve got a right to demand
to know what he was doing around our place, though.”
But Tom need not have worried on this
score. He could hear the fugitive ahead of him,
and marked his progress by the crackling of the underbrush.
“I’m almost up to him,”
exulted the young inventor. Then, at the same
moment, he caught sight of the man running, and a glimpse
of the sparkling water of Lake Carlopa. “I’ve
got him! I’ve got him!” Tom almost
cried aloud in his excitement. “Unless he
takes to the water and swims for it, I’ve got
him!”
But Tom did not reckon on a very simple
matter, and that was the possibility of the man having
a boat at hand. For this is just what happened.
Reaching the lake shore the fugitive with a final spurt
managed to put considerable distance between himself
and Tom. Drawn up on the beach was a little motor-boat.
In this, after he had pushed it from shore, the stranger
leaped. It was the work of but a second to set
the engine in motion, and as Tom reached the edge of
the woods and started across the narrow strip of sand
and gravel that was between the water and the trees,
he saw the man steering his craft toward the middle
of the lake.
“Well—I’ll—be—jiggered!”
exclaimed the youth. “Who would have thought
he’d have a motor-boat waiting for him?
He planned this well.”
There was nothing to do but turn back.
Tom had a small rowboat and a sailing skiff on the
lake, but his boathouse was some distance away, and
even if he could get one of his craft out, the motor-boat
would soon distance it.
“He’s gone!” thought the searcher
regretfully.
The man in the motor-boat did not
look back. He sat in the bow, steering the little
craft right across the broadest part of Lake Carlopa.
“I wonder where he came from,
and where he’s going?” mused Tom.
“That’s a boat I never saw on this lake
before. It must be a new one. Well, there’s
no help for it, I’ve got to go back and tell
dad I couldn’t catch him.” And with
a last look at the fugitive, who, with his boat, was
becoming smaller and smaller every minute, Tom turned
and retraced his steps.