"You do your share, and that will be enough. Teddy and I propose to take a hand in this ourselves."
"Then I might as well go back."
"You can, if you want to."
It so chanced that he had no such desire, and with the air of one whose feelings have been deeply wounded he rowed steadily on, Dan steering, until they were where it was possible to have a full view of a long stretch of the creek.
[Ill.u.s.tration: "There they are!" Teddy said.]
"There they are!" Teddy said, pointing down stream to where a boat was being pulled close to the left bank. "They have stopped, and it looks as if something was being taken on board!"
"It is a portion of the goods they stole!" Dan cried. "Stop rowing, Sam, and if nothing happens we'll soon know where the whole lot is to be hidden."
CHAPTER XIV.
_THE RENDEZVOUS._
That Dan's surmise was correct could be seen a few moments after, while the boys, partially concealed by the overhanging bank, watched the proceedings with but little danger of being discovered.
On the sh.o.r.e were a number of packages in a cart, and these the supposed burglars loaded into the boat with the utmost haste.
If this lot comprised all that had been taken from Uncle Nathan his loss must have been greater than he stated, and Teddy said, after watching several moments in silence:
"I reckon this is only part of what they took; but I'm puzzled to know how it could have been brought so far. The idea of carting goods over here to find a place in which to hide them is a queer one, when all the thieves had to do was slip down the river in a skiff, an' before morning they'd be beyond reach of the officers."
It surely was strange that the men should have done so much useless labor, and the only solution to the apparent mystery was offered by Sam, who said, with an air of superior wisdom:
"They've done it to throw me off the scent. That fakir we saw in Waterville must have known who I was."
"How does it happen he had the nerve to come here when he knew you counted on showing the people who visited this fair your skill in rowing?" Dan asked, with a laugh.
"I reckon he didn't think I was tellin' the truth."
It was useless to attempt to make Sam acquainted with himself. He had such a remarkable idea of his own abilities, despite the sc.r.a.pes he was constantly getting into, that the most eloquent orator would have been unable to convince him he was anything more than a very egotistical boy, with little save his vanity to recommend him to the notice of the general public.
In five minutes the boat at the opposite bank had received as much of a cargo as her owners wished to carry, and then the men began to row leisurely down the river.
"Now, go slow, Sam, and don't turn around to look, or they may suspect we are following them," Dan said, warningly. "I'll keep you posted about what they are doing, and you can tell us afterward what ought to have been done. Pull moderately, for we don't want to get very near while it is light enough for them to see us."
The chase was not a long one. By keeping the boat's head to the bank and moving leisurely as boys who were bent only on pleasure might have done, the pursuers evidently caused no suspicions as to their purpose, and after about a mile had been traversed the burglars turned up a narrow waterway which led to a barn or shed built on the meadows for the storing of marsh hay.
There were plenty of ditches near at hand into which the amateur detectives could run their craft un.o.bserved, and as the pursued left the creek Dan steered into one of these.
Here their heads hardly came above the bank, and all three could see the men carrying their cargo to the building.
"We've got 'em now," said Sam, triumphantly, as the first of the packages was taken on sh.o.r.e, "an' the sooner we nab both the better."
"How do you intend to set about such a job?" Teddy asked.
"Go right up an' tell 'em we've been on their track."
"And in less than two minutes you would get a worse pounding than the toughs gave you last night."
Sam appeared to realize the truth of this statement, for he had no further suggestions to offer, and Dan said, after some reflection:
"I think the best thing we can do will be to go back to the fair. If those fellows find us here the jig will be up; but it isn't likely they've got the whole of their plunder with them, and intend to come here again. We'll talk with some one and find out a good plan, or keep our eyes peeled to learn what they mean to do with the goods. If they propose simply to hide them until there is a chance to get the lot away safely, we shall have the key to the situation an' can take plenty of time deciding what should be done."
Sam did not again propose to make any attempt at intimidating the men, and Teddy thought Dan's scheme a wise one.
"They'll come here more than once before the week is ended; you know they spoke of moving the stuff when the exhibitors got ready to leave, an' we'd better go back to the grounds before those fellows have finished their work."
Sam pulled out of the water-course into the creek without a murmur; but when they were on the way back, and he felt at liberty to display his true "style," courage returned.
"I knew you fellers wasn't any good on detective work," he said, scornfully. "If I'd had charge of the case we should have them men tied hand an' foot in the bottom of this boat."
"How would you have got 'em there?" Dan asked.
"That's my business. Jest because I've let you into this thing there's no reason why I should give all my secrets away, is there?"
"Not a bit of it, an' you keep them locked up in your heart, for if Teddy an' I knew the plans we might get into a bad sc.r.a.pe."
"Well, what are you goin' to do now?"
"Nothing until after we have talked with those who know more than we do about such things."
Sam immediately relapsed into silence. His superior knowledge had been scorned, and he proposed to let his companions understand that he was not pleased with them.
By the time the boys reached the bend in the creek they could see the boat in which were Long Jim and his companion, half a mile behind, and Dan said:
"Those fellows don't know me. When we land you and Sam had better keep out of sight, while I try to find out where they go after striking the fair ground."
"All right. It's time I helped Tim, an' you'll come to the cane-board if there is anything to tell."
"So I don't amount to anything, eh?" Sam asked, sulkily.
"Of course you do; but it would be foolish to make a show of yourself to Long Jim, who would remember you. Keep rowing around in the boat as if you were at work, and there'll be no chance for suspicion."
By this time the little craft was at the landing stage of the boat-house, and two of the party leaped out, leaving the third feeling that he had been unjustly deprived of a very large portion of his rights.
"If them fellers think they're goin' to get the best of me they're makin' a big mistake, an' I'll show 'em so before night. They don't know any more about bein' detectives than a cat; but both will be mightily surprised before mornin', or I'm mistaken."
Then, instead of rowing around the creek as Dan had suggested, Sam pulled out into the middle of the stream, looking wondrous wise and determined as he awaited the coming of those whose secret he had partially discovered.
Meanwhile Teddy and Dan, without the slightest suspicion of what their friend proposed to do, separated at the landing stage, the former making all haste to reach his cane-board, where he found Tim doing a thriving business, and standing near by was Hazelton.