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"Are you certain of that?"
"Absolutely. I thought I heard an unusual noise, and looked out when--There! _Do_ you hear that?"
"It would be strange if I didn't," Jack replied as the creaking of the shed door swinging back on its hinges sounded remarkably loud and harsh on the still night air. "I'll get right up; go downstairs and wait for me."
"It will be better if I stay in the hall-way," Aunt Nancy said in a voice, the tremor of which told that she was thoroughly frightened.
Never before had Jack dressed so quickly, and as he did he tried to think what course should be pursued.
There seemed to be no question but that burglars were on the premises, and to encounter them single handed and alone would be the height of folly.
As may be fancied, he had not made a very elaborate toilet when he joined Aunt Nancy at the head of the stairs.
It was sufficient that he had on enough clothing to admit of his going out of doors without danger of taking cold.
"Have you got a gun or a pistol?" he asked of the little woman who was s.h.i.+vering with fear as if with an ague fit.
"No indeed, I never would dare to sleep in the same house with such things."
"What have you that I can use as a weapon?"
"There isn't a single article in this house which is dangerous except the carving knife, and that is very dull."
"It will be better than nothing."
"But you surely don't intend to go out there when desperate men may be laying in wait to take your life!"
"Something must be done; we can't stay shut up here and allow them to do as they please."
"But you'll be killed, Jack dear"; and poor old Aunt Nancy clung to the boy in a frenzy of fear. "To think that I've been expecting something of the kind all my life, and it has come at last!"
A sound as if the shed door had been closed told Jack he was wasting what might be precious time.
"Get the carving knife quick," he whispered, "and when I go out lock the door after me."
Aunt Nancy obeyed in silence.
She brought the knife much as though it was the deadliest of weapons, and put it in Jack's hands with something very like awe.
"Don't kill the men if you can help it," she whispered. "It would be better to frighten them very badly rather than stain your hands with blood."
Jack made no reply; but the thought came into his mind that he would stand a poor chance of frightening a burglar, with nothing but the well worn knife.
He opened the door softly.
Aunt Nancy stood ready to close and lock it instantly he was on the outside, and the decisive moment had arrived.
CHAPTER IX.
THE ALARM.
It must be confessed that Jack was not at all eager to face the alleged burglars.
He knew very well that if there were no more than two he would stand a slim chance of driving them away, and even one good sized man might make it very uncomfortable for him.
Had he been left to follow his own inclinations, the outer door would not have been opened, but he knew Aunt Nancy depended upon him for protection, and he must make a reputation for courage or be disgraced in her eyes.
The sky was overcast with clouds, and Jack could not distinguish objects ten paces away as he stepped on to the broad stone in front of the door.
He heard the key turn in the lock behind him, and this was sufficient to tell him he need not expect any a.s.sistance from the little woman inside.
Grasping the carving knife firmly, he moved forward slowly in the direction of the shed, and saw a shadowy form dart around the corner of the building.
Then another, or the same one, returned, approached Jack, and stooped over as if in the act of placing something on the ground.
An instant later the shadow had disappeared, and Jack saw before him a thin line of sparks, apparently coming from the solid earth, but not sufficiently large to cast any light.
Quite naturally Jack's first thought was that the miscreants were trying to set the buildings on fire, and he ran forward to extinguish what seemed ready to burst into a flame, when there was a m.u.f.fled report, the ground appeared to be a ma.s.s of coals, while at the same time a soft, sticky substance was thrown in a shower upon him.
Jack leaped back in surprise and alarm, and as he did so struck his foot against some obstruction with sufficient power to throw him headlong.
The explosion, the sudden glare of light, and the shower of he knew not what, all served to bewilder the boy to such an extent that for the moment it seemed as if the same force which caused the report had knocked him down.
The first idea which came into his mind was that he had been shot, for he remembered having heard that the victim does not feel pain for some time after a bullet enters his body, and the sticky substance on his face he thought must be blood.
"That Bill Dean meant what he said, an' has commenced drivin' me out of town," he muttered to himself, making not the slightest effort to rise, because he believed it impossible to do so.
The silence was almost oppressive after the loud report.
Jack could hear nothing to denote that there was any one in the vicinity, and was feeling of his limbs to ascertain the amount of injury done, when a shrill, tremulous voice from the doorway cried,--
"Jack! Jack dear! Are you hurt much?"
"I'm afraid I'm shot. It seems as if I was bleedin' dreadful!"
"Wait till I can light the lantern, my poor boy"; and the door was closed and locked again.
By this time Jack had fully persuaded himself he was seriously wounded, and wondered how long it would be before the pain came.
Two minutes later Aunt Nancy, partially dressed and with an odd little lantern in her hand, emerged very cautiously from the house.
The fear Jack might be fatally injured was greater than that of the supposed burglars. Her desire to aid others conquered her timidity, and the only thought was to bring relief as speedily as possible.
"Mercy on us! What a dreadful thing!" Aunt Nancy exclaimed as she arrived at the place where Jack was lying at full length on the ground.