The Rover Boys on the River - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Does he live there alone?"
"Yes. He is a bachelor and don't like to go down to the village."
The girls heard this talk quite plainly, but presently Baxter, Flapp, and the two horse thieves withdrew to another part of the houseboat and they heard no more.
"We are at a place called s.h.a.ggam Creek," said Dora. "That is worth remembering."
"If only we could get some sort of a message to the Rover boys and the others," sighed Nellie. "Dora, can't we manage it somehow?"
"Perhaps we can--anyway, it won't do any harm to write out a message or two, so as to have them ready to send off if the opportunity shows itself."
Paper and pencils were handy, and the cousins set to work to write out half a dozen messages.
"We can set them floating on the river if nothing more," said Nellie.
"Somebody might pick one up and act on it."
The hours slipped by, and from the quietness on board the girls guessed that some of their abductors had left the houseboat.
This was true. Baxter and Flapp had gone off, in company with Pick Loring, to send a message to Mrs. Stanhope and to Mrs. Laning, stating that Dora and Nellie were well and that they would be returned unharmed to their parents providing the sum of sixty thousand dollars be forwarded to a certain small place in the mountain inside of ten days.
"If you do not send the money the girls will suffer," the message concluded. "Beware of false dealings, or it may cost them their lives!"
"That ought to fetch the money," said Dan Baxter, after the business was concluded.
"If they can raise that amount," answered Loring. "Of course you know more about how they are fixed than I do."
"They can raise it--if they get the Rovers to aid them."
The prospects looked bright to the two horse thieves, and as soon as Loring returned to the houseboat he and Hamp Gouch applied themselves arduously to the liquor taken from Captain Starr's private locker.
"Those fellows mean to get drunk," whispered Lew FIapp, in alarm.
"I'm afraid so," answered Baxter. "But it can't be helped."
Late in the evening, much to their surprise, an old man in a dilapidated rowboat came up to the houseboat. It was Jake s.h.a.ggam, the hermit, who had been out fis.h.i.+ng.
"How are ye, s.h.a.ggam!" shouted Pick Loring, who, on account of the liquor taken, felt extra sociable. "Come on board, old feller!"
Against the wishes of Baxter and Flapp, Jake s.h.a.ggam was allowed on board the houseboat and taken to the living room. Here he was given something to eat and drink and some tobacco.
"You're a good fellow, Jake," said Hamp Gouch. "Mighty good fellow.
Show you something," and he took the old man to where the girls were locked in.
"Better stop this," said Flapp, in increased alarm.
"Oh, it's all right, you can trust Jake s.h.a.ggam," replied Gouch, with a swagger. Liquor had deprived him of all his natural shrewdness.
He insisted upon talking about the girls and tried to open the door.
Failing in this he took the hermit around to the window.
"Nice old chap this is, gals," he said. "Finest old chap in old Kentucky. Think a sight o' him, I do. Shake hands with him."
"What are these yere gals doin' here?" asked s.h.a.ggam, with interest.
"Got 'em prisoners. Tell ye all 'bout it ter-morrow," answered Gouch, thickly. "Big deal on--better'n stealin' hosses.''
"They seem to be very nice girls," answered Jake s.h.a.ggam. He was a harmless kind of an individual with a face that was far from repugnant.
Watching her chance Dora drew close to the old man.
"Take this, please do!" she whispered, and gave him one of the notes, folded in a dollar bill.
"Thank you," answered Jake s.h.a.ggam.
"Say nothing,--look at it as soon as you get away," added Dora.
The old hermit nodded, and in a few minutes more he followed Gouch to another part of the boat.
"Do you think he will deliver that message?" asked Nellie.
"Let us pray Heaven that he does," answered her cousin.
CHAPTER x.x.x
THE RESCUE--CONCLUSION
The Rovers and the others on the steam tug could scarcely wait for the old man in the dilapidated rowboat to come up alongside.
"You have a message for us?" said d.i.c.k. "Hand it over, quick."
"The message says as how you-uns will pay me twenty-five dollars fer delivering of it in twenty-four hours," said the old man, cautiously.
"Who is it from?"
"It is signed Dora Stanhope and Nellie Laning."
"Give it to me--I'll pay you the money," cried Tom.
"All right, reckon as how I kin trust you-uns," said the old man.
It was Jake s.h.a.ggam, who had received the message the evening before.
He had read it with interest and started out at daylight to find out something about the Rovers and where they might be located. Good fortune had thrown him directly in our young friends' way.
"This is really a message from the girls!" cried Tom, reading it hastily. "It is in Nellie Laning's handwriting."