The Grammar School Boys of Gridley - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"We're your mother's friends, Myra, and are taking you back to her,"
explained Dave, holding the small child on his knee and trying to quiet her.
Greg Holmes, in the meantime, was more concerned with looking out of the window.
"Why, say," muttered Greg. "d.i.c.k ain't driving to Mrs. Dexter's, not by a long shot. He seems to be heading straight into the business part of the town."
"You leave d.i.c.k Prescott alone to know what he's doing," advised Dave Darrin calmly.
"Yes; I guess that's right," a.s.sented Greg.
"d.i.c.k is the longest-headed fellow in our school."
"Except me," grinned Greg modestly.
"You? Huh! I'm glad you're not outside on the box."
"I reckon it's the first time d.i.c.k ever drove cab horses."
"He'll do it right, anyway."
"But I wonder why he isn't going to the Dexter house," pursued young Holmes.
Then Myra took fright again.
"Take me home!" she cried. "I want to see my mamma!"
From that she pa.s.sed into wild sobbing, taxing all Dave Darrin's powers to ease her mind.
[Ill.u.s.tration: The Whip Caught the Driver Roundly.]
"You're going home, Myra," he wound up. "You're going to see your mother."
"My papa is a bad man!"
"Well, he's not here now," smiled Dave. "Did you ever hear of d.i.c.k Prescott?"
"Yes; he's a nice boy."
"You're right he is," added Dave with enthusiasm. "Well, d.i.c.k is up outside, driving the horses, and he'll take us home by the way that it's best to go."
"Here we are in Main Street," announced Greg wonderingly.
Dave thought he began to understand Prescott's plan, but he said nothing. A few moments later the cab turned down one of the side streets, then halted before a cl.u.s.ter of lights.
"The police station!" exploded Greg.
"Of course," nodded Dave.
"Why 'of course'?"
"Because it's part of d.i.c.k's plan."
"Come out, fellows," called d.i.c.k. "We're at the end of our trip, thank goodness."
Greg opened the door, Dave stepping out with Myra in his arms.
"My mamma doesn't live here," cried the child uneasily.
"No, but it's all right," Dave urged soothingly. "You come right along and see if it isn't."
d.i.c.k led the way up the police-station steps. In the office three uniformed members of the force were talking excitedly. One of them was the night lieutenant, Janeway.
"I tell you, Lieutenant, the thing was done so slickly that the child ain't going to be found to-night," one of the patrolmen was saying.
"If you're talking about Myra Dexter, guess again," laughed young Prescott. "Here she is now."
Three astounded policemen turned to regard the happy-faced Grammar School boys.
"Then she wasn't stolen at all?" demanded one of the patrolmen. "Just strolled away and got lost, eh?"
"Oh, no!" d.i.c.k retorted. "Myra was stolen, all right; but we stole her back again."
"How?"
"We took her away from her father and a cab-driver," chuckled Greg Holmes.
"Stop telling us any nonsense like that," interposed the lieutenant sternly. "Tell us where you found the child."
d.i.c.k related the story briefly. The policemen were at first inclined to doubt the story, but one of them glanced outside and saw the cab.
"If you'll let me offer a suggestion," went on d.i.c.k, "there's a mother at home who is nearly crazy with grief. Hadn't you better call Mrs.
Dexter on the telephone and tell her that Myra is safe with you?"
The lieutenant quickly wheeled to his 'phone, calling for Mrs. Dexter's number. One of the policemen, in the meantime, received Myra in his arms.
"Mrs. Dexter?" called the lieutenant into the transmitter. "This is the police station. We have your little girl here, all safe and sound. How was she found? Three schoolboys, d.i.c.k Prescott, Dave Dar---- Oh, you know the names? Well, they trailed the cab to where it had stopped outside of a drug store. They knocked the driver down and got away with the cab. How did three boys manage to do such a deed? Wait! I'll let Master Prescott himself tell you over the 'phone."
The lieutenant wheeled about.
"Where in the name of mischief are those boys?" he demanded. The two policemen turned in equal confusion. Certain it was that the Grammar School boys had bolted.
So the lieutenant sent out to find a driver, and one of his policemen got inside with Myra, to take her home. The policeman was also instructed to remain on guard outside through the night, in case Dexter and his confederate should feel inclined to make another attempt to abduct the little one.
d.i.c.k and his chums, after leaving the station house silently, had run until they found themselves around the corner on Main Street.
"We don't want to be thanked any more by Mrs. Dexter to-night," d.i.c.k ventured to his friends.
"We certainly don't," agreed Dave.