The Rover Boys on the River - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Maybe Sam Rover was drowned."
"Oh, don't say that!"
"Bah! Don't be chicken-hearted, Flapp."
"I--I--didn't mean to--to--kill him."
"I know you didn't. Just the same that is a dangerous river. The current is swift and it's full of rocks."
"You're making me feel very uncomfortable."
"Oh, don't worry. Those Rover boys are like cats--each has nine lives.
Sam Rover will be hot-footed after you before you know it."
"Have you got that money with you, Baxter?"
"To be sure I have. I never travel without a wad."
"Then let me have some."
"You won't need it, if we are to travel together."
"We may become separated," urged Lew Flapp. He did not altogether trust his companion.
"Well, I reckon that's so, too. I'll let you have twenty-five dollars.
When that's gone you can come to me for more. But remember one thing: you've got to help me to down the Rovers."
"I'll help you to do that. But--but--"
"But what?"
"We mustn't go too far."
"Oh, you leave that to me. You've heard how they treated my father, haven't you?"
"They say d.i.c.k Rover was kind to him."
"Bah! That's a fairy story."
"But your father says the same--so I have been told."
"The old man is out of his head--on account of that fire. When he gets clear-headed again he won't think d.i.c.k Rover--or any of the Rovers, for the matter of that--is his friend."
There was another pause.
"Where do you propose to go to?"
"Philadelphia, on a little business first, and then to Pittsburg, and to that place where they have their houseboat."
"And after that?"
"I'm going to be guided by circ.u.mstances. But you can rest a.s.sured of one thing, Flapp--I'll make those Rover boys wish they had never undertaken this trip."
Dan Baxter brought out a pocketbook well filled with bank bills and counted out five five-dollar bills.
"My, but you're rich!" cried the bully of Putnam Hall.
"Oh, I've got a good bit more than that," was the bragging answer. "I want you to know that once upon a time my father was as rich as the Rovers, and he would be as rich now if it wasn't that they cheated him out of his rights to a gold mine," went on Dan Baxter, bringing up something which has already been fully explained in "The Rover Boys Out West." The claim belonged to the Rovers, but the Baxters would never admit this.
"Did they really cheat him?" questioned Lew Flapp, with interest.
"They certainly did."
"Then why didn't you go to law about it with them?"
"They stole all the evidence, so we couldn't do a thing in law. Do you wonder that I am down on them?"
"No, I don't. If I were you, I'd try to get my rights back."
"I'm going to get them back some day," answered Dan Baxter. "And I am going to square up with all the Rovers, too, mind that!"
CHAPTER XIII
CHIPS AND THE CIRCUS BILLS
It is now time that we return to Sam and find out how he fared after being so unexpectedly hurled into the river by Lew Flapp.
The youngest Rover was taken so completely off his guard that he could, for the moment, do nothing to save himself. Down he went and his yell was cut short by the waters closing over his head.
He was dazed and bewildered and swallowed some of the water almost before he was aware. But then his common-sense returned to him and he struggled to rise to the surface.
As he neared the top, the current carried him against a sharp rock.
Instead of clutching this, he hit the rock with his head. The blow almost stunned him, and down he went once more, around the rock and along the river a distance of fully a hundred feet ere he again appeared.
By this time he realized that he was having a battle for his life, and he clutched out wildly for the first thing that came to hand, It was a tree root and by its aid he pulled himself to the surface of the river and gazed around him.
He was under the bank, at a point where the current had washed away a large portion of the soil, exposing to view half of the roots of a tree standing above. To get out of the stream at that spot was an impossibility, and he let himself go once more, when he had regained his breath and felt able to take care of himself.
In a few minutes more Sam reached a point where to climb up the bank was easy, and he lost no time in leaving the river. Once on the bank he squeezed the water out of his garments. He had lost his cap, but spent no time in looking for the head covering.
"Oh, if only I had Lew Flapp here!" he muttered over and over again.
But the bully had, as we already know, made good his escape, and Sam found it impossible to get on his track. Soaked to the skin he made his way back through the cemetery.
"Hullo, so you have fallen into the river!" sang out a man who saw him coming. It was Jack Sooker, the fellow mentioned by the cemetery keeper's daughter.