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"Oh, I haven't forgotten it. We will serve them in the same way. All we have to do is to manufacture one more pail of punch. So here goes. And as for tying them up, that will hardly be necessary."
"Why?"
"They are good for twelve hours of solid sleep at the very least. Many of them will not waken in twenty-four hours."
"And maybe some of them will never wake up. How is that?"
"It is a chance that we had to take; but by restricting them to two drinks each, I figured that there would be no danger. No; I think we are all right. Now, help me make this extra pail of punch. After that we will carry it through the cavern to the different parties of four each."
"Suppose they get suspicious, and won't drink it?"
"No danger of that, my lad."
When the punch was made, they divided it into two lots, each carrying half, and, thus equipped, they again entered the cavern, this time just as daylight was beginning to appear.
The first party they selected to serve was the one farthest away, and the detective discovered that they were grumbling because they had not been relieved.
But when he appeared with the pail of punch, and told them what had happened--that every one had been served with the same thing--they forgot their sorrows and had their share as the others had taken theirs.
And here, in order to make doubly sure, Nick had given each of the drinks a larger dose of the sleeping draught than he had served in the valley. As soon as the men had drunk what was given them, and had been refused more, he left them, followed by Patsy, and returned through the cave to another entrance.
And here again the operation was repeated in the same manner, an idea of suspicion never once entering the head of any of the men; they were far too eager for the drink which the thoughtfulness of their mistress had provided for them.
"They'll be suspicious when they begin to feel drowsy all at once,"
suggested Patsy, as they moved away.
"Let them," replied Nick. "We won't be there, and not one of them will be able to go very far before he drops in a stupor. I have fixed it, all right."
They found the second party as eager as the first, and one of them already the worse for too many drinks from a bottle he had had in his pocket; but they took the medicine that Nick portioned out to them as the others had done, and they in turn were left alone to drop off to sleep as they would; for they had been awake all night, and now it was broad daylight. They figured that they deserved some sleep.
At the third entrance the four men were already asleep--all but one of them, and he was drowsing; and Nick, in his character of Handsome, pretended to be angry at first. He pretended to refuse to give them the punch that had been sent to them until they begged so hard that he finally relented.
"Why," said Patsy, when they left them, and took their way toward the fourth, and last, place--the hole under the Dog's Nose, near the place where Handsome and Madge were prisoners, "it's all as easy as living on a farm."
"And not half so interesting," laughed the detective.
They walked past the movable rock behind which the two prisoners were confined without so much as devoting a glance to it, for they were both intent upon accomplis.h.i.+ng this last installment of capture through the medium of the laudanum; and here they found the four men who were on duty, just about ready to mutiny because they had not been relieved.
But the presence of Handsome--or the man they believed to be Handsome--quieted them at once, for they stood in wholesome dread of him and his anger; and when they understood what had been brought to them, they were ready for anything.
And so it was that in their turns they took their medicine as the others had done. When they had swallowed it, Nick said to them:
"Stretch out, now, you fellows, where you are. I'll let you sleep for a while, at least. I'm going to sit here and smoke. I am tired myself.
Turner, sit down. We'll keep watch here for a spell."
The men did not require a second invitation, but speedily took advantage of the permission--and it was surprising how soon the laudanum took effect upon them.
Ten minutes had not elapsed before the four were sleeping soundly, and snoring as if they never expected to awake again.
"I think we can go now," said Nick, at last, rising.
"What is the next trick to be done?" asked Patsy.
"Let me see," replied Nick. "It's thirty miles from here to Calamont.
How far is it to the railway track in a direct line? That is the way you came, isn't it?"
"Yes."
"How far is it?"
"About four miles, possibly. I can make it in an hour."
"Then skip. This is the nearest point to start from. Get to the track as soon as you can. Flag the first train that comes along, no matter what it is. Get aboard it, and go to the first station. Get off there, and use the telegraph operator. Have him wire to Mr. Cobalt, the president of the road, exactly what has happened. Ask Cobalt to send a special train to us from the nearest point. We will want about twenty officers to take charge of all these prisoners, and he had better send along some chains with padlocks on them. You can figure that out yourself. We will want to make chain gangs of these men, so that they can walk to the railway, but so that they are chained together and cannot escape. You've got the idea?"
"Yes."
"Go, then, and see how quickly you can get the officers here, and we can get this crew away from here."
"And you?"
"I'll stay here. Skip, now. Don't talk any more."
"Have I got to carry these whiskers with me?" grinned Patsy.
"You'd better not stop to remove them now. I put them on to stay. Go!"
And Patsy went.
Nick remained where he was for a while, thinking deeply, and altogether satisfied with what he had accomplished; but after a little he rose, and took his way back into the cave, intending to see what Handsome and Madge were doing, and if they were making any effort to free themselves.
But after he had reentered the cave, and had covered the twenty rods that intervened between it and the movable rock, he stopped in astonishment and stared.
The rock was pushed wide open.
With a bound he darted forward and entered the place, but only to find that Madge and Handsome had both disappeared. Their bonds were lying upon the floor of the cavern, but they were no longer there themselves.
Nick did not wait to see more than that then.
He turned away on a run, and darted through the galleries with all the speed he could summon under the circ.u.mstances--and he came out into the valley, where the sun was s.h.i.+ning, directly behind his two escaped prisoners, for they had not preceded him by more than a minute, evidently.
With one wild spring he was upon them, and as Handsome turned to defend himself, Nick hit him with his fist, so that he sent him reeling across the gra.s.s, where he fell senseless to the earth.
But in the meantime Madge had turned with a scream of rage, and when she saw the real Handsome fall helpless, she broke into a run toward her own cottage, for she had no weapon to use now, Nick having deprived them both of their guns.
But the detective ran after her, and, just as she was about to leap upon the porch, he succeeded in seizing her, and in pulling her back again toward him.
She turned upon him then like a fury; but with a laugh he sprang under her extended arms, and seized her around the waist; and then he lifted her from her feet, and, still laughing, he ran across the gra.s.s to the cabin in which Patsy had once been a prisoner, and in another moment he had tossed her inside, closed the door and fastened it.