Dave Dashaway and His Hydroplane; Or, Daring Adventures over the Great Lake by Roy Rockwood


  CHAPTER XXII

  DAVE A CAPTIVE

  It took Dave an hour to find out just what had happened to him. Heroused up to find two men carrying him, one at his feet, one at hisshoulders. All that he could guess was that they were on land. Howhe had been fished out of the water, and what had become of theDrifter, the young aviator had no means of knowing.

  The two men were rough looking fellows and reminded Dave of docklaborers or loiterers. They were big and sturdy, and as Davestretched out and showed signs of life, one of them remarkedgruffly.

  "None of that--no squirming, now."

  Dave's clothes were soggy and dripping. He felt somewhat sore onone side of his head, but so far as he could figure it out he wasnot crippled; or seriously hurt.

  The young aviator cast his eyes about him to, learn that they weregoing through a patch of timber. Then came a meadow-like stretch,and then a thicket. They had not gone far into that before the mendropped him on the ground and stood over him.

  "Can you walk?" asked one of the two.

  "I think I can," replied Dave, arising quite nimbly to his feet.

  The instant he did this both of the men reached, out and seized anarm. Dave was thus pinioned tightly as the men forced him along.

  "Most there," growled one of them gruffly.

  "Good thing," retorted the other.

  Finally they came to a dense thicket that covered a rise. Abouthalf way up this, almost hidden by saplings and vines, Dave madeout a grim looking patched-up building.

  It was an old hut to which various additions had been made. One ofDave's companions uttered a peculiar whistle. The door of the placewas opened, and a disreputable looking fellow like themselvesadmitted them.

  "Hello, who's this?" he spoke in a tone of curiosity.

  "Oh, some one to take care of," was the short reply.

  "He don't look like a revenue."

  "Worse than that. Ridgely will tell you when he comes," was theindifferent retort. "Have you a place to keep him tight and safe?"

  "I guess so," laughed the other, "a dozen of them."

  "One will do."

  Dave was led through several rooms. Then they came to a partitionformed of heavy timbers. In its center was a stout door with animmense padlock.

  "Get in there," spoke the most ferocious of his captors, giving Davea push.

  Then the door was closed with a crash that showed how heavy it was.Dave could hear those outside securing the padlock.

  "A prisoner, eh?" mused Dave, looking about him. "Yes, it is,indeed, tight and safe."

  Dave's prison place was gruesome in the extreme. On three sides wassolid rock, forming a semicircular back to the room. The partition,closed the entire front. Near its top in several places were cutout apertures, admitting air and a little light.

  There were some broken boxes in the place and a heap of burlap.Dave decided that it had been used at some time or other as a placeof storage. He did not yet feel normal, so he sat down on one ofthe boxes and felt about his head.

  "Just a bruise," he reported. "I suppose they, dragged me aboard ofthe Drifter from the water, but what about Hiram and the MonarchII?"

  Dave started up, all weakness and dizziness disappearing as if bymagic, as he thrilled over the possible peril of his comrade. Witha recollection only of his last sight of Hiram grid the Monarch II,he feared what might have happened to either or both.

  It worried Dave a good deal and made him restless and unhappy, butfinally he figured out a theory. In some unaccountable way theMonarch II had no sooner glided along on its pontoon, than it hadrun straightway up into the air, as though the self starter was inperfect action. Dave recalled Hiram struggling to reach the pilot'sseat. Then he had witnessed the disappearance of the Monarch II.

  "I doubt if Hiram could manage the machine--I even doubt withsomething wrong with it, as there surely was, if he could keep itadrift," decided Dave. "What then?"

  The young aviator pictured Hiram and the machine in a tangle amongthe trees, or dropping upset among the rocks. He had not seenanything of the Dawsons or the Drifter since he had fallen into thewater of the bay. Perhaps, he reasoned, they had resumed an airchase of the fugitive.

  Dave had several hours to himself. He detected no sound or movementoutside of the strange room he was in. It was dreadfully dull andlonesome, and he wondered what the outcome of his present adventurewould be.

  It was well along in the day, when Dave from sheer weariness andworry had lain down among the heaps of burlap, that a diversion cameto monotony. He started up as he heard voice outside of the door.Then the padlock rattled, the door opened, and some one steppedacross the threshold. The visitor stared about to locate Dave, andspoke the words:

  "That you, Dashaway?"

  The room was lighter now, with the door half open. Dave rubbed hiseyes and strained his gaze, and took a good look at the speaker.

  "Don't you know me?" challenged the latter.

  "Oh, yes," replied Dave, "I see now. You are the gentleman werescued from the lake at Columbus."

  "I don't suppose you think me much of a gentleman just now,Dashaway," spoke Ridgely, for, he was, in fact Dave's visitor.

  His tone was somewhat regretful, and not at all unfriendly. Davewas shrewd enough to discover this, and politic enough to take quickadvantage of it.

  "Oh, I don't know," he said. "Of course you are with the crowd whohad me locked in here."

  "I'm sorry to say that's true," responded Ridgely.

  "It's not pleasant here, I can tell you," said Dave, "and the wholething is pretty high handed, don't you think so, Mr. Ridgely?"

  "I don't think it, Dashaway, I know, it. See here, I've got nothingagainst you. On the contrary, I owe you a good deal. I'm notforgetting that you saved my life when my launch struck the rocksnear Columbus."

  Dave was silent, resolved to let the man have his say out.

  "I was in a fix then, I was in a fix before I got there, and I'mafraid I'm in a fix now," continued Ridgely. "I've come to see youin the right spirit, Dashaway."

  "How is that?" inquired Dave.

  "Sick of the whole combination. I thought I was smart, but you andyour people are smarter. Young Dawson convinced me that we couldrun things so our airship could make trips for a long time, and hereyou are on our trail within seventy-two hours."

  "Yes, Mr. Ridgely," acknowledged the young aviator. "They found aclew and started pursuit right after you stole the Drifter."

  "You mean you did. Don't be modest, Dashaway. I've learned a gooddeal about you, and if I hadn't about decided to quit business I'doffer you a job."

  "What!" smiled Dave--"smuggling?"

  "Well, it pays pretty big, you know."

  "Does it?" replied Dave. "I fail to see it. I wouldn't like to bein a position where I was being chased half over the country."

  "H'm, we won't discuss it," retorted Ridgely in a moody tone. "Icame to tell you that you won't be hurt any."

  "But I want to get away from here," insisted Dave.

  "That will be all, too," Ridgely assured him. "You see, we know nowthat things are going to break up. I don't suppose you would tellme how closely the revenue officers are on our track."

  "So close," replied Dave gravely, "that you won't dare to cross theborder any more."

  "Are they on the Canadian side yet?" questioned Ridgely anxiously.

  "I don't know that, and I shouldn't feel right in telling you if Idid," replied Dave. "You had better let me go, Mr. Ridgely. Itwon't sound well, when things get righted, that you kept me aprisoner here."

  "I haven't all the say about that, Dashaway," confessed Ridgely in arueful way. "I don't think the Dawsons will let you go until theyare sure of making themselves safe."

  "Do you know what became of our airship, Mr. Ridgely?" Dave askedpointedly.

  "No, I don't--none of us do. Young Dawson is pretty good in theair, but he didn't seem to know how to get off the water quickly.After we got you ab
oard, we lost a lot of time getting you ashore,and, up in the air again, when we started in the direction we hadseen your airship go, we could find no trace of it."

  "I hope nothing his happened to Hiram," thought Dave, veryanxiously.

  "If I get away," resumed Ridgely, "I want you to tell the peopleafter me, if you can, that I'm all through with the smugglingbusiness. I've had my fill of it."

  The speaker turned to leave the room, but Dave halted him with thequestion:

  "What are you going to do about me, Mr. Ridgely?"

  "I am going to order the people here to treat you the best they knowhow," was the prompt response.

  "That's all very well enough," said Dave, "but I have business toattend to."

  "What business, Dashaway?"

  "Our airship and my friend."

  Ridgely looked troubled. He was thoughtfully, silent for a momentor two. Then he said:

  "Look here, Dashaway, our men are looking for your airship, and thatmeans your friend, too, of course. I've got to go to Brantford, butI shall leave word that they must look after your friend, and letyou go the minute I send back word that the coast is clear for themto scatter."

  "But what about the Drifter, Mr. Ridgley?" persisted Dave. "It isthe property of my employers. I came after it, and I want it."

  A faint smile of mingled amusement and admiration crossed the faceof Ridgely. Reckless fellow that he was, he could not fail torecognize the fact that Dave, indeed, had business to attend to.

  "You take it pretty cool, Dashaway," he observed.

  "Because I am in the right," asserted Dave, "as you well know. TheDawsons are malicious people. I want you to warn them that if theydo, any unnecessary injury to the Drifter, it will make it the worsefor them in the final reckoning that is bound to come."

  "I don't think they will do the airship any injury."

  "You don't know them as I do. Desperate fellows like the Dawsonswill do anything at times."

  "Dashaway, don't you think you are rather hard on them--and on me?"

  "I know the Dawsons--I don't know much about you."

  "I am not so bad as you think I am."

  "Then why don't you set me free?"

  "We won't discuss that, now. You had better think it over."

  "I have thought it over. I am grateful to you for saving me,but--well at present I can't do anything."

  "You mean, you won't."

  "Well, have it that way if you wish."

  "You'll be sorry some day," said Dave, bluntly.

  Ridgely left the room. He closed the door after him with anassurance to Dave that things would be "all right." Just then therewas the sound of some one hurrying into the next room, and anexcited voice shouted out in an exultant tone:

  "Say, father, we've got the other one, too!"

 
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