The Adventures of Rover Boys: 26 Illustrated Adventure Novels. Stratemeyer Edward

The Adventures of Rover Boys: 26 Illustrated Adventure Novels - Stratemeyer Edward


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no attention. The boy was running as never before, yet the bear kept drawing closer, until Dick almost felt its hot breath on his neck. He trailed the torch behind him and the beast fell back several paces.

      The opening was now gained, and the youth ran out on the mountain side, which was covered with stubble and rocks. Glancing hastily around, Dick saw one rock that was both small and rather high and scrambled to the top of this.

      The bear gained the mouth of the cave and looked out suspiciously. Then, as it discovered the boy on the rock, it let out another growl, more terrifying than any which had gone before. Slowly it trotted toward Dick, and then began a circle of the rock, as if to determine whether or not the ground was clear for an attack.

      The boy still held the torch, but it was burnt nearly to the end and was in danger of going out every minute. Besides, in the sunshine it did not look half as formidable as it had in the gloomy cave.

      Suddenly the bear reared itself up on its hind legs and advanced straight for the rock. At this movement Dick's heart seemed to stop beating. Yet he managed to let out one long scream for help. Then as the bear came still nearer, he thrust the torch end directly into the brute's face.

      Of course the animal fell back, and down went the torch on the rocks below, and Dick was now utterly defenseless. The bear appeared to know this, and let out a growl of satisfaction, as though it had its next meal already within its grizzly grasp.

      Bang! It was the report of a gun not over a hundred yards away, and the bear dropped to all fours and shook its head wildly. Bang! came another report, and now the bear screamed with pain and fell over on its side. Dick looked behind him in amazement and beheld a stranger on horseback. The stranger had just emptied his double-barreled rifle, and now he came riding up with his pistol in his hand. The bear tried to rise up to meet him, but was too seriously wounded already, and a shot at close range finished the brute's misery.

      "Well, young fellow, reckon you was in a putty tight fix?" remarked the stranger, after he had made certain that the animal was dead.

      "I was in a tight fix," answered Dick, with a shiver. "You came in the nick of time, and I owe you a good deal for it."

      "That's all right — I never go back on a bar if I git a chance at him. But how in thunder came you in such a fix in the fust place?" went on the horseman, who was at least six feet four in height — and about as thin a man as Dick had ever seen.

      "It's a long story, sir," was the cautious response. "May I ask who it is that has saved me?"

      "Wall, my right handle are James Carson," was the answer. "But them as knows me well callers calls me Slim Jim, and it's good enough fer the likes o' a shadder like me, too, I calkerlate. An' who might you be?"

      "I am Dick Rover. I was with my two brothers and an old miner named Jack Wumble when I slipped off my horse into the river over there and nearly lost my life. But I managed to crawl out, and in climbing up the mountain side found yonder cave and came through to this end. In the cave I found the bear and he followed me to here. You know the rest."

      "Wall! wall! You have had a narrow escape, youngster, an' no disputin' the p'int. Ef I hadn't a-come as I did, thet air bar would have chawed ye up in no time."

      "I know it, Mr. Carson. Your kind —— "

      "Whoopee, Rover, don't go fer to mister me, or I'll be sorry I killed the bar for ye. I'm plain Slim Jim to all as knows me — Slim Jim the hunter an' trapper. I've spent forty year on these mountains, an' like ez not I'll spend forty more, ef the good Lord allows me to live thet long. An' whar do ye calkerlate your brothers and Jack Wumble air now?"

      "I'm sure I don't know. One of my brothers, Tom, got lost and I and Sam and Wumble were looking for him when I had the mishap. Do you know Jack Wumble?"

      "Fer sartin I do — knowned him when he war mining up on the ole Bumble Bee Creek, ez he called it."

      "Indeed!" cried Dick. "Then perhaps you knew my father, Anderson Rover? He used to be in partnership with a man named Kennedy."

      "Knew him — o' course I knew him, lad! An' so you air his son, hey? Wall! wall! shake!" And Slim Jim, as he preferred to be called, thrust forth a hand that was as hard as a piece of horn. But he had a soft heart, and Dick soon learned that he was as much to be trusted as was Jack Wumble.

      "I'll do my best to set ye right, lad," said the old hunter, after he had listened to the details of Dick's story. "I think I know about the spot whar ye took the tumble."

      Before leaving the vicinity Slim Jim set to work and cut the pelt off the bear and hung it up. He also cut away some of the choicest of the meat.

      "It's a pity to leave any o' it behind," he observed. "Some poor folks a-starvin' to deth in the city, an' thar's a meal fer a hundred!"

      It was well along in the afternoon when they started, Dick riding behind the old hunter. He felt that he could tell Slim Jim about their mission, and he mentioned how the Baxters were watching them and trying to outwit them.

      "I remember thet Baxter, too," said the old hunter. "Wumble kin tell ye how we come nigh to makin' him do a dance on nuthin' onct. I'll take your part agin him every time, hear me!" And his openness showed that he meant what he said.

      CHAPTER XXVI

       THE BAXTERS TRY TO MAKE TERMS

       Table of Contents

      For the moment after Tom found himself in the presence of the Baxters he could not speak. Then he turned fiercely upon Bill Noxton.

      "You have fooled me!" he cried hotly.

      "That's right," laughed Noxton sarcastically. "And let me add, ye was fooled putty easy."

      "It's Tom Rover!" ejaculated Dan Baxter, as he leaped to his feet, followed by his parent. "Where did you find him, Noxton; over to that fire?"

      "Yes."

      "Were the others of the party with him?" put in Arnold Baxter quickly.

      "No, he was alone. He got lost from the rest last night, when they gave us the slip in the dark."

      "Then you have seen nothing of the others?" said Arnold Baxter, and it was plain to see that he was keenly disappointed.

      "No, but I reckon they can't be far off," replied Noxton.

      Seeing that Tom contemplated running away, he made the youth dismount. "Better make a prisoner of him," he suggested.

      "By all means!" cried Dan Baxter, and brought forth a stout lariat. With this Toni's hands were bound behind him, and his feet were also secured.

      "That's number one, Roebuck," laughed Arnold Baxter, turning to the man who had thus far remained silent.

      "Tom Rover?" asked the man laconically.

      "Yes."

      "A bright-looking chap."

      "Oh, he's bright enough," growled Baxter senior.

      "But it won't help him any," put in Dan, bound to say something.

      "Is he the oldest of the three?"

      "No, Dick is the oldest. Tom comes next."

      "Then it is Dick you ought to have collared," said Roebuck, turning to Noxton.

      "I collared the one I happened to see."

      "Well, Tom Rover, how do you like your situation?" asked Dan, with a sickly smile, as the men turned away to discuss the situation among themselves.

      "Don't like it," replied Tom, as lightly as he could.

      "I guess you are sorry, now, that you didn't heed our warning and go back to Gunnison."

      "I'm not particularly sorry. I have as much right out here as anybody."

      "Oh, you needn't put on airs to me. I know you are


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