Using ugly language under his breath, Dan Jaggers turned and shuffled off through the woods, well knowing that he would suffer from his uncle’s heavy hands if he did not.
Josh now extinguished the light by shutting off the slide of his dark lantern. Then, after taking a look at the boys, he seated himself near them, filling his pipe once more while he muttered:
“Subsequent happenin’s clean drove them shoes outer Danny’s mind. An’ I don’t wonder!”
Having gotten his pipe comfortably lighted, Josh could not resist the temptation to open the slide of his lantern ever so little; in order that he might have another look at the money.
“Wonder how ye came to have it?” he muttered, looking at the boys, who, being gagged as well as bound, could not have answered anyway. “I guess likely Farnum must ha’ been fool enough to let ye do some collectin’ for him,” grinned Josh. “In that case, younkers, Danny an’ me are makin’ it pretty hard for ye all ’round, ain’t we?”
That thought appeared to bring Owen around into a state of good humor. He looked at the chuckling, and two or three times broke out into a hearty guffaw.
Jack Benson’s mental torment grew as the time passed. Hal Hastings was in no more enviable frame of mind.
“And we brought this upon us by being sympathetic. We wanted to help that infernal little boy out, and carry relief to his injured mother!” thought Jack, squirming. “Confound it, I feel, just now, as though I would never caught trying to do another kind act! All this fearful luck just because we had to have more sympathy than brains! What fools we are!”
Later came this terrifying thought:
“Mr. Farnum won’t believe us, of course. The story will sound altogether too absurd.” “What will he do—have us sent to jail as common thieves?”
“Ain’t very comfortable in yer mind, are ye, younker?” leered Josh Owen, hearing the muffled groan that escaped the boy.
Though Josh Owen smoked many pipefuls, time soon began to drag on that worthy’s hands. Hours slipped by.
“I’d no business to let Danny go,” growled Owen, uneasily, time after time, often rising and pacing about, though never straying away from the two boys. “That young feller thinks a heap too much o’ liquor for one so young. He’s spendin’ time, as well as money, over in Dunhaven. It won’t be so bad if he don’t take too much, and get talkative.”
Two or three times Josh thought he heard someone moving in the woods. Each time he called softly, or signaled, but there came no response.
Despite his inward suffering, Jack Benson dozed at last. So, as he afterwards learned, did Hal. Yet these drowsings must have been short. They were filled with horrible dreams of disgrace, imprisonment, and all the misfortunes that healthy young minds in torment could bring up.
At last Jack awoke, with a start, to realize that it was daylight.