The Mucker eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 467 pages of information about The Mucker.
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The Mucker eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 467 pages of information about The Mucker.

“I’m not,” said Billy; “but de law says I am an’ what de law says, goes.”

He turned toward the doorway with Bridge, calling a goodbye to the woman, but as he stepped out upon the veranda the dust of a fast-moving automobile appeared about a bend in the road a half-mile from the house.

“Too late,” he said, turning to Bridge.  “Here they come!”

The woman brushed by them and peered up the road.

“Yes,” she said, “it must be them.  Lordy!  What’ll we do?”

“I’ll duck out the back way, that’s what I’ll do,” said Billy.

“It wouldn’t do a mite of good,” said Mrs. Shorter, with a shake of her head.  “They’ll telephone every farmer within twenty mile of here in every direction, an’ they’ll get you sure.  Wait!  I got a scheme.  Come with me,” and she turned and bustled through the little parlor, out of a doorway into something that was half hall and half storeroom.  There was a flight of stairs leading to the upper story, and she waddled up them as fast as her legs would carry her, motioning the two men to follow her.

In a rear room was a trapdoor in the ceiling.

“Drag that commode under this,” she told them.  “Then climb into the attic, and close the trapdoor.  They won’t never find you there.”

Billy pulled the ancient article of furniture beneath the opening, and in another moment the two men were in the stuffy atmosphere of the unventilated loft.  Beneath them they heard Mrs. Shorter dragging the commode back to its accustomed place, and then the sound of her footsteps descending the stair.

Presently there came to them the rattling of a motor without, followed by the voices of men in the house.  For an hour, half asphyxiated by the closeness of the attic, they waited, and then again they heard the sound of the running engine, diminishing as the machine drew away.

Shortly after, Mrs. Shorter’s voice rose to them from below: 

“You ken come down now,” she said, “they’ve gone.”

When they had descended she led them to the kitchen.

“I got a bite to eat ready for you while they was here,” she explained.  “When you’ve done you ken hide in the barn ’til dark, an’ after that I’ll have my ol’ man take you ’cross to Dodson, that’s a junction, an’ you’d aughter be able to git away easy enough from there.  I told ’em you started for Olathe—­there’s where they’ve gone with the two tramps.

“My, but I did have a time of it!  I ain’t much good at story-tellin’ but I reckon I told more stories this arternoon than I ever tole before in all my life.  I told ’em that they was two of you, an’ that the biggest one hed red hair, an’ the little one was all pock-marked.  Then they said you prob’ly wasn’t the man at all, an’ my! how they did swear at them two tramps fer gettin’ ’em way out here on a wild-goose chase; but they’re goin’ to look fer you jes’ the same in Olathe, only they won’t find you there,” and she laughed, a bit nervously though.

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Project Gutenberg
The Mucker from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.