Ralph took the girls into the prescription room of the drug store, to see if they needed any attention, and there to the astonished drug clerk, as well as to the equally astonished proprietor, Tavia tried to relate what had happened.
“It was the same man who grabbed my papers the other day,” she said. “I saw him first as I came along William street. Joe and Roger had just gone in Beck’s with their papers, and as I saw the man watching them I was afraid he might kidnap Roger. I was just thinking who would be best to call, when he caught me watching him, and then, like a flash, he sprang into that saloon at the corner. I thought he was frightened lest he would be caught, and I hurried down here to warn Dorothy. Well, no sooner had I put my foot inside the hall than he darted at me—”
“Where did he come from?” asked the drug store proprietor.
“Probably through the alley that leads from the saloon to the end of our building,” explained Ralph. “He could easily dash into the hall from there.”
“He was after papers,” declared Tavia, “for just as he grabbed me he saw Dorothy. I was going to scream when he put that queer-smelling stuff to my nose.”
“I screamed when I saw Tavia,” ventured the frightened Dorothy, “but he had me almost before I could open—my—mouth. Tavia squeezed my hand and I knew she meant for me to be quiet.”
“And if you had not closed your eyes he might have given you another dose,” added Tavia, who somehow, seemed to know more than any one else about the wicked ways of the mysterious stranger.
“But how did he manage to get away so promptly?” asked one of the men, trying to get on the track for capture.
“Through that same alley into the saloon,” Ralph said. “I will go at once, and have the place searched.”
“As soon as he got the papers Dorothy had he went off,” finished Tavia, “just as he did when he got my notes.”
Leaving the girls to quiet themselves in the drug store, all the men, except the head clerk, started out to give the alarm.
This time a thorough search should be made, and even a reward offered by the town for the capture of the coward who went about trying to frighten helpless girls. There was certainly some hidden motive in his actions, as he had, each time, made an attack on some one connected with the Bugle’s business, and the men quickly concluded his intentions had to do with an attempt to stop the Liquor Crusade.
Miles Burlock also figured in the case they decided, although how this stranger was mixed up in matters relating to Burlock, and what connection Mrs. Douglass’ death could have with such affairs, was not plain.
The druggist warned Dorothy and Tavia not to tell their experience to any one, not even to the folks at home, for, he argued the stranger might get to hear they were after him, and so escape.
Dorothy readily agreed to keep silent, in fact it would not do for any one in her home to know of her experience, as the major was too ill to be worried, but Tavia did not see why her father should not be acquainted with the affair, as he always knew what to do. And why should other men be allowed to search for the man who had threatened her, when it was plainly her own father’s special privilege?