The Boys of Bellwood School Or Frank Jordan's Triumph - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Shut up--the bag!"
Quick as lightning Dan drew something from his breast and sprang forward.
It was to slip a canvas bag over Frank's head. Then each of the men pinioned an arm, and Frank was a prisoner.
This was just as Frank had calculated it would be done, and he was not in the least worried. He figured it out that these men had been sent by Brady to kidnap Ned Foreman. The light suit of clothes had deceived them, and his own verbal parrying had aided in their accepting him as the boy they had been hired to capture.
The bag hung loosely about Frank's head. It was perforated at the top, and he could breathe easily. He could not, however, see through the opaque covering.
"Don't you make any noise now, if you're wise," ordered Jem.
"I'm not doing it, am I?" propounded Frank coolly in a m.u.f.fled tone.
"Better not," said Dan. "I've got a heavy stick here, and I'd use it pretty quick."
"Who are you, anyway, and what do you want of me?" asked Frank.
"Well, lad," answered Jem, "we're going to take you on a little journey. It will take all night to do it, and we'll make you as comfortable as we can, if you behave nicely. There's a real fine man you are to see. If you do as he wants you to do, you won't be five minutes with him, and you'll leave him with good pay for all the trouble we're putting you to."
"That's fair enough; I'm agreeable," said Frank.
"He's easy enough to handle," Frank heard Jem tell Dan.
"Maybe that's all put on," suggested the other. "Don't take any risks.
You'd better leave him with me when you get to the creek, and hurry on to Middletown and get the horse and wagon."
Frank knew that Middletown was a small village not far from Bellwood. After they had proceeded a little farther there was a halt. Dan made our hero sit down on the gra.s.s and kept hold of his arm. The man Jem seemed to go away somewhere.
It must have been nearly half an hour when Frank caught the echo of rumbling wheels. Then there was a whistle as an approaching vehicle halted.
"Come on," said Dan, helping him to his feet. "We'll take a little ride."
"Anything for a change," laughed Frank. "What are you fellows up to, anyhow?"
"You're pretty cheerful for a boy in the dark," observed Dan.
"Oh, that's all right--I'm thinking of that good pay you were talking about."
"You're a sensible young fellow," commented Dan. "Don't you worry a bit.
You'll fare all right if you last through as you've begun. But if you don't, then most everything fierce is likely to happen to you."
Frank was lifted into a wagon. Its back hinged out, and it was closed again by Jem as Dan got into the vehicle after his prisoner. Frank dropped to a pile of old blankets. Then Dan lifted the bag from his head.
"Don't try to see any further than the law allows," he remarked, "and it's all right."
There was nothing to see, Frank found, but the sides, back and roof of a shut-in delivery wagon. The driver's seat was obscured by a water-proof blanket that came within a foot of the top of the wagon, leaving a small s.p.a.ce through which light and air might come.
"All right in there?" sang out Jem, and the vehicle started up.
"You can sleep or loaf, any way you like," said Dan. "If you get hungry or thirsty we'll stop at some tavern and get you some food and something to drink."
"I'm comfortable," declared Frank. "Say, look here, we've got quite friendly. Maybe I can ask you a question or two."
"Ask away, youngster," directed Dan.
"Of course I guess what you are up to, or rather who put you up to it,"
said Frank.
"You wouldn't be Ned Foreman if you didn't," chuckled Dan.
"All right. Give me a guess, will you?"
"For certain."
"You're taking--me to see a man for five minutes, you said?"
"Yes, that's so."
"I'll bet you I know his name."
"Well, what is it?"
"Tim Brady."
"You've hit it wrong, youngster," declared the man Dan in apparent good faith; "it's not Tim Brady."
CHAPTER XXI
A QUEER EXPERIENCE
Frank was a little surprised at the definite announcement of the man Dan.
The latter seemed to be telling the truth.
"If it's not Brady, who is behind this business?" began Frank.
"I didn't say that," retorted Dan.
"Why----"
"I said that it wasn't Brady you were going to meet."
"Oh!" uttered Frank vaguely.
"If you hadn't acted so sensible and handsomely," proceeded Dan, "I wouldn't talk with you at all. You've got me sort of chummy, though. I like you. I don't suppose there's any harm in telling you that it's a lawyer you're going to see. He'll explain the business to you."
"What is the business?" persisted Frank.