THOUGH Hal's captor spoke English, he was unquestionably Mexican. His eyes gleamed with an unholy fire. Young Overton had no doubt that he recognized the type—a man who believed that he was serving the holy cause of liberty in his own country, and who would think a Gringo life of little value if it interfered with the cause of the rebels across the river.
The sharp point of that knife pressed so insistently against Hal's neck that the Army boy realized he could not move before the weapon would be driven into his throat.
"This is where it's wiser to keep still," muttered the young lieutenant to himself. "My sentries will hear, anyway. They'll soon have this maniac subdued."
Instead of the sentries four other Mexicans came hurrying up. Nor did they seem afraid to come running down the open road. And one of these brown-skinned men was Pedro Guarez himself.
"Aha! You have the dashing young Gringo!" laughed Pedro harshly. "Bueno!" (Good.)
"Take him from me," begged the one who held the knife. "Bind him. We want no more trouble to-night."
Pedro and the three other new-comers threw themselves upon the young Army officer, rolling him over on his face and wrenching his arms behind him for tying.
Yet as he was flopped over Hal had the use of his mouth for an instant. Regardless of what the consequences might be to him he yelled lustily:
"Sentry! Lieutenant Overton—trouble!"
Instead of being angry Pedro Guarez laughed harshly.
"Gringo, if you are not more careful we shall have to gag you!"
In record time the young lieutenant's arms were bound at elbow and wrist. Hal put up a sturdy fight. Had he been on his feet, and confronting only the fists of his assailants, he might have won. But on the ground, face downward, with his assailants piling over him, he had little chance to make trouble.
"He's all right, now," chuckled Guarez. "If he tries to make any more noise throw him to the ground and gag him. If he shows fight give him the steel."
Two of the Mexicans seized Lieutenant Hal by the arm on either side, while Guarez led the way into a stretch of forest.
They were soon at the end of their walk. Lieutenant Overton gave a gasp of dismay as his gaze fell upon the recumbent forms of six of his men, every one of them bound. Twenty feet beyond them lay a heap of six rifles and as many ammunition belts. Hal's eyes roved from face to face, his men grinning back sheepishly at him.
"All of our sentries for a thousand feet on either side of the pier!" gasped the young lieutenant, in deep humiliation.
Pedro Guarez, laughing harshly, said to Hal:
"Bah! You Gringos are no men to compete with the sons of Mexico! You are like children to us, who roam always by night, in preference to the light of day. And there is much Indian blood in Mexican veins. Now, if you are wise, no harm will come to you. But if you make a noise or show fight—so!"
Guarez made a significant gesture across his throat.
"How did you men come to be taken, Simms?" asked Hal, of the nearest soldier, after his captors had forced him to lie on the ground with his men.
"A Greaser crept up behind me, sir, and threw a noose that got tangled around my windpipe," replied Private Simms. "He did it so swiftly and quietly, too, that not even Bolton on the next post heard him."
"I heard nothing, sir," confirmed Private Bolton, "until I heard a roaring in my own ears just after I got the noose trick, and then a lot of other Greasers piled on me."
Again Guarez laughed, though he added with a snarl:
"You will do well to stop the use of that word, Greaser, fellow. Otherwise you will feel the weight of a boot in your face. So!"
Guarez swung his foot back as though intending to plant a vicious kick in Bolton's face.
"Have done with cowardice, Guarez!" ordered Lieutenant Hal sternly.
"Oh!" sneered the Mexican. "Me? I do as I please, and it would give me joy to kick your head off."
"I'd bide my time, and make you swallow your own foot in time, if you did," retorted Hal undauntedly.
"Be not too bold, my very young friend," warned Guarez, "or I shall deal with you at my leisure by taking you across into Mexico with me to-night."
"Try it!" dared Hal contemptuously.
For answer Guarez struck his boot lightly against Overton's lips. It was not a hard blow, nor did it cause any pain, but the meanness of the action brought the hot blood to Lieutenant Hal's face.
"I'll wait my own time to make you apologize humbly for that, you contemptible, cowardly Greaser!" broke impetuously from the Army boy's insulted lips.
An instant after the words were out Lieutenant Hal regretted the use of the word Greaser. That word, as a term of contempt for people of another country should not have been uttered by an officer of the Army.
"Bah!" retorted Guarez. "Some other time for you, my young jaguar."
As he went away Guarez signed to his companions, who followed him. There were now left as guards over the military prisoners two Mexicans. These were each armed with a forty-five Colt's revolver, and both appeared to be wholly alert.
"If any one among you calls for help," remarked one of the guards, "my orders are to reward you with steel."
Throwing back his coat the fellow displayed the hilt of a poniard.
"What's the use of shouting?" demanded Hal indifferently, "when my other guards are beyond reach of my voice?"
The Mexican laughed quietly, adding something in Spanish in an undertone to his companion.
"I hope you don't blame us, sir?" asked Private Simms.
"How can I censure any of you?" asked Hal bitterly, "when I was caught myself by the same easy trick?"
"Don't tell me, after this," muttered Private Simms, "that a Mexican is stupid and has no brains."
Conversation, though allowed in low tones by the two Mexican guards, soon died out among the soldiers, every one of whom felt secretly disgusted and ashamed of himself.
Twenty minutes, or more, passed before Hal, lying with one ear to the ground, heard the somewhat distant sound of moving horses. Soon after the roll of wheels came to him. Then, around a corner of the road, not far away, wagons turned and made toward the shore of the Rio Grande.
"Moving day with you fellows, is it?" demanded Hal of the guard who spoke English.
The fellow chuckled quietly.
"You've outwitted us, haven't you?" demanded the young lieutenant dryly. "You're moving munitions of war toward the river. You expect to ship them soon—but perhaps you won't succeed."
"You may prevent, if you can," laughed the Mexican.
"We shall see what will happen," retorted the Army boy.
"Nothing—so far as you American soldiers are concerned," came the triumphant answer.
"You shall see," vaunted Hal, though inwardly he groaned. He had been outwitted, in his first command as an officer, and he could feel the hot shame of the whole thing.
"But I don't see how you fellows can get anything out of Guarez's barn, unless you have been able to noose the whole of the sergeant's guard posted there."
Another laugh, and one of undisguised, unmistakable merriment, escaped the Mexican.
"Eh?" wondered Hal, for that laugh set him to thinking. Yet he did not pretend to himself that he could fathom what lay behind that laugh.
"It is our night to laugh," explained the guard.
"Your merriment is ill-timed, then," growled young Overton. "Wait until you have all your war stuff on Mexican soil before you laugh again!"
"My time to laugh is every time that I look at you seven brave soldados, tied up like so many chickens for the butcher," grinned the guard. "In the meantime, our boat must now be at the pier, and soon she will be laden. Then—ah, well, there will be rejoicing on the other side of the Rio Grande!"
"I'll wager there'll be rejoicing," thought Lieutenant Hal. "And, as for me, I'm an officer with a blasted reputation. I've failed with my first chance to do my duty!"
In sheer disgust with himself, though he was really little if any at fault, Lieutenant Hal Overton, U. S. Army, rolled further over that he might cool his hot face against the cool earth.
AS he did so Hal's hands touched against the wrists of Private Simms, who lay next to him.
"Confound me, why didn't I think of that before?" the Army boy demanded of himself, a sudden, brief hope surging up in his breast.
Then he tried it, to see how well it would work.
Though he was bound at elbows and wrists, the young lieutenant's fingers were free. Wriggling slightly nearer, Hal fingered at the cords that bound Simm's wrists. That soldier felt and understood. Wriggling slightly nearer, and doing it so easily and gradually as not to attract the attention of the Mexican guard, Simms waited to see what would come of his officer's new move.
Slowly, diligently, Hal worked at the first knot. He felt a thrill of joy when his busy fingers untangled that knot. Then another one, and another one. Simms's wrists were free! The soldier, without attracting attention so far, moved himself slightly so as to bring his bound elbows within easy reach of Lieutenant Hal's fingers.
But there was no telling at what moment these fanatic Mexicans would discover what was going on, and balk it all.
Simms's wrists were free. Slowly, the soldier tried to repay his officer. Then Hal's wrists were free; then his elbows.
Two of the prisoners were now free, though they were careful not to move their arms in the least.
Yet how much had been gained? Two men there were who might leap up and fight for their lives. But they were unarmed, while the alert Mexicans had revolvers in their hands and dirks within instant reach.
Had either Hal or his man been able to roll over completely, one more comrade's knots would then be within reach. Yet, in rolling, either lieutenant or private would surely betray to the guards the fact that the cords were loosed from his arms. Nor could there be much doubt as to what the two desperate Mexicans would do in the face of any attempt at escape.
Hal lay there deliberating, trying to plan some move that would carry with it a reasonable prospect of victory. Simms, fearing to spoil any of his officer's plans, kept wholly silent, though alert for any signal.
"It's only the slimmest kind of a fighting chance yet!" muttered Hal. He would have been despondent, but his soldier's training had taught him that no situation is hopeless as long as life lasts.
Then craft, slowly, but insinuatingly, entered the young lieutenant's head.
"Confound you Mexicans," he growled aloud, "this is a bigger night for you than I had thought."
"What mean you?" demanded the guard who spoke English.
"I thought but one wagon train of your supplies would go to the water front this night."
"Eh?"
"And now, with my ear to the ground, I hear another lot of wagons in the distance, headed this way."
The guard looked non-plussed. He stood erect, listening. Then he spoke in Spanish to his fellow-Mexican, who, answering only with a nod, stepped further away to listen.
"I could tell you something, my friend, that it would be worth your while to know," continued Hal, craftily.
"Only your ear shall hear it. Bend low, if you are curious."
The guard, without fear of the supposedly bound captive, stepped closer, bending over the young Army officer.
With a quick turn and a leap Hal Overton was up and at the throat of his captor. Taken so utterly by surprise the Mexican strove to leap back. But Hal had grappled with him and wrenched the revolver away. The Mexican reached for his handy knife. It was no time for niceties. Hal dealt the fellow a swift blow on top of his head with the butt of the revolver.
Mr. Mexican crumpled and lay where he had stood. But the other Mexican was closing in now.
"Get your hands up as high as you can, fellow!" ordered Hal. Just in the nick of time he remembered Captain Foster's instructions, and spoke in English instead of Spanish. But his gesture was eloquent enough for no words to be needed.
The second Mexican showed no cowardice, yet in this threatened battle at close quarters he dropped his revolver for the more trusted knife.
"Put your hands up and stop this nonsense!" commanded the young officer, stepping forward, holding the revolver at his belt, the muzzle covering the body of the swarthy foe.
The Mexican proved to possess no mean courage. With his knife-hand uplifted he sprang at Hal.
At that very instant a form hurled itself through the air. Private Simms fell at the feet of the Mexican. Without pause the soldier wrapped his arms about the Mexican's knees, throwing the fellow backward with jarring force. In another second Simms had possessed himself of the knife.
"Good!" came a devout chorus from the five bound but watching soldiers. "Great!"
"That was a fine specimen of soldierly wit and promptness, Simms," commended Lieutenant Hal heartily.
"Not half equal to what I've heard that you've done in the Philippines and elsewhere, sir," replied Simms modestly, as he seated himself on the fallen foe. "Will you take this knife, sir, and free the other men, or shall I leave this fellow in your care while I set the men free?"
"I'll free them," agreed Hal, taking the knife. Inside of a minute the young officer had five more serviceable soldiers at his orders.
"Now, lash these two rascals," commanded Lieutenant Overton. "This fellow, first, whom I was obliged to beat with his own revolver."
The tying was done by two of the soldiers. Then the wretch whom Simms bestrode was treated to some of the same sort of consideration. The pair of Mexicans were laid side by side, after which the soldiers sprang to get their cartridge belts and rifles.
"Check and Varnum, you two stay here with your prisoners, and give them no license to shout or pass signals. Check, fix your bayonet, and stand over these fellows. If either opens his mouth, shove your bayonet into it. Varnum, make it your business to watch over Check and see to it that he doesn't get the noose from behind, as all of us did once."
While speaking Lieutenant Overton was fastening on his own recovered revolver and cartridge box.
"Now, you other four men," he concluded, "come with me. Silence and soft steps must be our watchword. Unless we have the worst sort of evil luck we'll find out what's going on at the water front."
The distance was not great. Hal did not make the mistake of moving his abridged command of four men down the road. Instead they kept to the woods or behind bushes as much as they could.
As he came within sight of the water Lieutenant Hal held up his hand—a signal to halt. Then he peered through the darkness.
"Just about as I had supposed," he whispered. "Guarez has a tug in at the pier—a steam craft that will move out, as it came in, without lights."
"Queer, sir, that some of the other men haven't acted—they must have seen the tug come in."
"But I am supposed to be on duty in this neighborhood, and so are you men as sentries," whispered Lieutenant Overton. "Our other men, up the river and down, must imagine that we have taken care of the tug, if the craft needed such attention, and so the other men are holding their own posts according to their orders. Now, come on, men. Crouch low and make no noise. If you see me run for the pier follow without waiting for orders."
The military party succeeded in getting within a hundred and fifty yards of the land end of the pier. From here Hal could make out the figures of men lifting the last two cases to the deck of the tug.
At the same instant a man on the pier caught sight of the advancing soldiers. With a shrill whistle the fellow leaped to the deck of the tug, calling out to some one.
Without loss of a second Lieutenant Hal sprinted forward, dashing on to the pier.
In the engine room of the tug a single bell sounded—the moving signal. The last two cases had just been dumped on the deck, and two men leaped ashore, rushing for the shore-ends of the hawsers.
"Lift that hawser and I'll shoot you!" warned Lieutenant Hal.
"Who in blazes are you?" roared a deep, powerful voice from the deck of the tug.
"I'll ask the same question of you, sir," shot back Hal, running up.
"I'm the master of this tug, and I give the orders here!"
"I'm an officer of the United States Army, and your boat is undoubtedly to be seized by the government," Hal retorted.
The gang-plank had been drawn in, but Lieutenant Hal, measuring the distance with the eye of an athlete, leaped on to the deck.
Two of Hal's soldiers followed him aboard, the other two remaining on the pier.
"What's your name, sir?"
"Boggs," growled the master, a thick-set, powerful-looking, red-faced man of perhaps fifty. "What's yours?"
"I am Lieutenant Overton, of the United States Army," answered Hal.
Guarez and three other Mexicans ran out from the cabin and tried to leap ashore.
"Don't let these Mexicans get away if you have to shoot them down," Hal ordered quickly. "They're United States prisoners."
"This is a high-handed proceeding, Lieutenant," stormed Captain Boggs.
"Isn't it?" jeered Hal. Then, to the soldiers on the pier:
"Drive those two deckhands aboard, and stand ready to cast off, my men, when I give the order."
"What on earth are you up to here?" blustered Boggs.
"I'll tell you about that, sir, when I have time," Lieutenant Hal answered.
The two deckhands having come aboard sulkily, the soldiers stood by the hawsers.
"Cast off!" directed Hal. "Come on board, Captain Boggs, I'll trouble you to step into your own wheel-house."
Pedro Guarez stood by the low rail, in the way of the party's progress forward.
"Guarez, I'll trouble you to step aside."
The Mexican snarled, made a move as though to reach for his knife, then sullenly obeyed and stood aside.
At the door of his wheel-house Captain Boggs hesitated.
"I don't believe I'll go into the wheel-house," he growled.
"Guess again," rejoined Lieutenant Overton grimly. "Would you rather go in of your own accord, or be jabbed in there by a soldier's bayonet?"
"You've no right to take such high-handed action," snarled the master of the tug.
"You're in no position to decide that, Captain. You're a United States prisoner, at least until I have had opportunity to communicate with my superior officer. Go inside, sir."
Boggs obeyed, and Hal stationed a soldier at the wheel-house door.
"Now you Mexicans get back into the cabin," Hal continued, stepping back amidships.
"We're going ashore," snarled Pedro Guarez.
"You're going to obey orders," Lieutenant Hal retorted, "and I've ordered you into the cabin."
Instead Guarez turned as though he would leap ashore. The tug had now drifted some six feet from the string-piece of the pier.
"Squad, load!" ordered Hal sharply.
"Shoot if you dare!" challenged Guarez. "My friends and I are going ashore." Then he addressed a few words in Spanish to his friends. The words were so rapidly uttered that Overton could not understand them.
"Squad ready!" called Hal sternly. "Aim——"
To the ears of the Mexicans it sounded as though the word "fire" trembled on the young officer's lips. Guarez led the wild rush into the cabin.
Hal smiled. He had not had the least intention of firing upon the Mexicans. His seeming firmness had been enough.
"Close the cabin doors on both sides, and guard 'em," Lieutenant Overton directed. "Simms!"
"Yes, sir."
"Run back up the road and bring Check and Varnum, and their prisoners here without delay."
"Very good, sir."
Simms measured the distance to the string-piece with accuracy, then he made a leap and landed.
The engineer and fireman stood leaning out over the closed lower half of the engine-room door.
"What do you want us to do, General?" demanded the engineer, with a grin.
"Just stay where you are," Hal answered pleasantly. "Obey the bell-signals and keep steam up, and I don't believe you'll run into any hardship."
PRIVATE Simms soon returned, bringing with him Check and Varnum and the two Mexican prisoners. The Mexicans were forced to join their kind in the cabin, and Hal had two more soldiers to back his authority.
"Simms, hurry back to camp, looking out for the noose on the way. Report to Captain Foster what you've seen here, and inform him, with my compliments, that I await his further commands. This boat will wait at some distance out in the stream."
Just before Hal gave these instructions, Captain Boggs had been directed to run his boat back against the pier. Simms, saluting, stepped ashore and went off at brisk stride.
"One bell ahead, Captain," ordered Lieutenant Hal, showing his face at the wheel-house window.
"I don't know whether I'll do that or not," growled Boggs, filling a short, black pipe and lighting the tobacco.
"You'll either obey orders, sir, or you'll go back into the cabin with the Mexicans, and let your mate run the boat. If your mate refuses he'll join in the cabin and I'll do the best I can with the boat myself. Now, sir, are you going to obey orders?"
"Where do you want to go?" growled the riverman.
"One bell ahead."
"But where are you bound for?"
"That is none of your business, as you are no longer in command here. One bell ahead, sir."
Boggs looked as though he were going to balk flat, until he saw Hal turn as though to summon a soldier. Then the tug's master reached for the bell-pull. Clang! The tug's propeller began to churn slowly.
"Throw the wheel over two points to port," Hal continued. "Now, hold her steady ahead."
Still at half speed the craft moved out into the river some four hundred feet.
"Stop your speed, Captain."
Boggs obeyed, demanding next, "What now!"
"Nothing until I tell you," Lieutenant Hal responded.
"But the drift will carry us downstream."
"If we get too far down we'll steam back. Mate!"
"Aye, aye, sir," answered the man standing beside the tug's master.
"Get your masthead light out. Then display your starboard and port sidelights. Men," called Hal to his soldiers, "I call upon you to note and remember that this craft had no lights out until I ordered them out."
"We don't need lights out at the pier," growled Boggs, comprehending the meaning of Lieutenant Overton's remark.
"I believe you do," Hal rejoined, "when you are about to leave the pier for the stream. However, that's a point for higher authority than yours or mine to determine."
The mate soon had the running lights properly displayed and returned to the wheel-house.
Very slowly the boat drifted downstream. After fifteen minutes Hal directed that the skipper take his boat far enough upstream to make up for the drift.
From time to time the Army boy turned his gaze toward the pier. Hal had no need to bother himself with discipline aboard. All the crew and the Mexicans were confined where they could be watched, for the two deckhands were Mexicans, and had been driven in with the others. Five of Uncle Sam's soldiers were enough to keep the prize safe.
Lieutenant Overton was beginning to grow impatient when he saw a squad of troops, as he judged them to be in the darkness, march out on to the pier. Then the voice of Captain Foster hailed:
"Lieutenant Overton!"
"Here, sir."
"Bring that tug in."
"Very good, sir."
Hal gave the order to Captain Boggs, who sulkily obeyed. The mate was permitted to go aft and to bring two swarthy deckhands out where he could use them.
The boat was soon berthed, and hawsers made fast. Without waiting for the gang-plank to be placed Captain Foster sprang aboard, grasping his "youngster's" hand.
"Fine work, Mr. Overton!" commended the captain heartily.
"It came near being very bad work, sir."
"So I've gained from what Simms has told me on the way down here. But you showed the real commander, Mr. Overton, in your ability to extricate yourself from a bad mess and turn it into victory."
Captain Foster had brought with him a sergeant and ten men. There were now enough soldiers to post so that there need be no fear of any of the prisoners being able to escape.
"Sergeant, have two of the cases brought ashore," directed Captain Foster. "And open them."
Some of the cases were on the deck forward. Others had been dropped into a small hold forward.
The cases opened proved to contain rifles, ten to a case. Some smaller boxes from the hold were found to hold cartridges to fit the rifles.
"A very bad business for you, Boggs," remarked Captain Foster.
"Why is it?" demanded Boggs gruffly.
"You were going to smuggle these arms and supplies into Mexico, across the river."
"Where's your proof?" demanded the tug's master cunningly.
"Our Mexican prisoners are proof enough," replied the Army captain, with a shrug of his shoulders. "That and some of the other wild doings of to-night. Captain Boggs, you will prepare to accompany us back to camp."
"Why?"
"Because you're a prisoner, charged with conspiring to break the laws of the United States."
"But who'll look after my boat?" demanded Boggs.
"She'll be under guard of a squad of my men, and your mate, deckhands and engine-room force will be enough to give the boat any care she really needs. Mr. Overton, march the Mexicans out of the cabin under guard."
Hal promptly obeyed. Guarez and his companions appeared to be furious, and contended loudly that their rights were being infringed.
"That's all a matter for higher government authorities to settle," responded Captain Foster, with a shrug of his shoulders. "I cautioned you this morning, Guarez, against any enterprise of this sort, and you did not see fit to give my suggestion any consideration. You must now take the consequences. Sergeant Raney, take six men and escort the prisoners to camp. My compliments to Lieutenant Terry, and he is directed to take all precautions that the prisoners do not escape."
"Very good, sir."
After the escort had left with the prisoners Hal saluted his superior officer, asking:
"Sir, shall I re-post the sentries who were noosed and taken away from their posts?"
"It is hardly necessary, Mr. Overton. This boat is a government prize, and I propose to use her, for to-night at least, for the patroling of the river at this point. Mate, I see that you have a search-light."
"Yes, sir," the mate admitted.
"Is it ready for operation?"
"There is plenty of current, sir, and the lamp can be switched on from the wheel-house."
"Turn the light on once for a test, then."
The mate complied, sending a glare of light out over the dark waters.
"Switch the light off," called Captain Foster, next turning to remark to his young lieutenant:
"I don't want to let him manipulate that light enough to send any signals to possible Mexican watchers, Overton."
"I was just thinking of something of the sort, sir," Hal smiled. "And there's another puzzle in my mind. Have you any idea, sir, how these Mexicans got the cases out of Guarez's barn in spite of your guard at that point?"
"The cases didn't come from Guarez's barn," replied Captain Foster, with a laugh. "Do you begin to see light, Mr. Overton?"
"I believe I do, sir," muttered Lieutenant Hal. "The cases in Guarez's barn, it may be, are only dummies, put there with a good deal of display, so that if troops came their commander would be sure to hear about them. The Mexicans probably imagined that, after an American military commander came here, heard the gossip about boxes in Guarez's barn, and then guarded that barn, that the commander would then feel that all needed precautions had been taken. That was Mexican craft, but Guarez failed to understand that he was dealing with American thoroughness."
"That was about the size of the shallow trick the Mexicans tried on us," laughed Captain Foster.
"Are you going to send these cases ashore, sir?"
"Not until daylight. We must not forget that there may be another expedition attempted at some other point. Mr. Overton, I begin to think that this may be the point chosen for the shipment of arms enough for fitting out a whole rebel army in Mexico. I think I will go back to camp, now, and question Guarez. I may find him in a mood to talk."
"And my orders, sir?"
"Make this boat your headquarters. Do not leave here until I return, Mr. Overton."
"Very good, sir."
"It was a pretty slick way that you caught us," began the mate, lounging near Hal as he stood on deck.
"Then you admit that this boat was engaged in an attempt at smuggling arms over the border?" demanded the young lieutenant, wheeling quickly.
"What's the use of denying it," questioned the mate, "with such cargo as we have?"
"Very little use indeed," Hal rejoined. "How much were you to get as your share of the night's work?"
"Oho! I didn't say that I had even a suspicion of what the game was," retorted the mate coolly. "I could only suspect, at best. You can't trap me into saying anything that would send me along to share Captain Boggs's fate."
"You're smooth enough," nodded Lieutenant Overton, "but don't try to play any further tricks."
"With United States troops aboard? What do you take me for?" grumbled the mate.
Hal didn't feel much inclined to talk with the fellow, so he stepped forward, leaving the mate by himself.
Half an hour passed. Truth to tell, the young Army officer felt the monotony of his present position, confined to the boat and the pier. Passing the sentry at the gang-plank, who stood at present arms in salute, Hal Overton walked forward to the outer end of the pier. He had stood there some ten minutes, when, two or three miles up the river, he thought he saw a brief flash.
"That might have come from a search-light, swiftly operated," thought Lieutenant Hal, with a start. After a moment's reflection, he hurried on board the boat.
"Mate," he directed, "shove off and steam out just past the end of the pier."
"Why——" began the mate wonderingly.
"Obey the order, sir!"
As the boat moved slowly into open water Hal, standing by the search-light, gave another order:
"Switch on this light, mate."
"But your captain said——"
"Switch on the light, man! Be quick about it!"
As the light gleamed out Lieutenant Hal turned its broad flare up the river. Just on the edge of the beam he picked up a motor boat of considerable size. The other craft was some three miles up the river, headed due south across to the Mexican border.
In the instant that the man in charge of the motor boat discovered the search-light, he crowded on more speed.
"My plain orders are to remain here," quivered Lieutenant Hal to himself. "If I obey, even during a five minutes' delay, that craft will outfoot us to Mexico, and a cargo of arms will be on the other shore. There's no time to communicate with Captain Foster. What on earth shall I do—disobey and face the chance of trial for disobedience of orders?"
IT was a ticklish position, and one that called for quick decision.
If Lieutenant Overton ordered the tug back to the pier and remained where he was, he would be but obeying explicit orders. No blame could afterward attach to him, no matter how many boats got across.
At the same time the young Army officer knew that he was stationed here for the express purpose of preventing any arms being smuggled over to Mexico.
"Even though I capture a boat with ten thousand stands of arms aboard," flashed swiftly through the Army boy's mind, "Captain Foster can still say that I disobeyed orders. Yet if I obey orders there's no telling what mischief may be done."
"Yet it seems to me that, when I am set to watch a violation of the national law, my first duty is to try to catch any one who attempts to violate the law," quivered the lieutenant.
Suddenly Hal turned to the mate.
"Go ahead, man—full speed! Catch that boat yonder!"
No reply did the mate make, but he rang one bell for half-speed ahead. This he presently followed with the signal for full speed. The tug's propeller churned the water astern. For a craft of this kind the tug was now moving fast. Hal steadily held the ray of the search-light on the stranger.
"Can't you hump a little more speed out of this tub?" the young officer demanded.
"I can't signal for any more," replied the mate, his hands on the spokes of the wheel. "Why don't you ask the engineer?"
Young Overton quickly summoned a soldier and sent him to the engineer with a message calling for more speed. After another minute the increase in speed was easily discernible.
"But that boat's getting away from us," cried Lieutenant Overton, with irritation in his voice.
"Of course she is," spoke the mate gruffly. "I could have told you that she'd show us a clean pair of heels."
"I don't know," the mate replied.
"Then how do you know she can beat us?"
"By her build. She's a costly gasoline boat, and such craft usually have high-power engines in 'em."
Hal sent another message to the engineer, who, however, sent back word that he was doing the best he could until draft made the fires under the boiler hotter.
"Is the engineer dealing frankly with me, mate?" Hal asked.
"I think he is. The engineer hasn't any object in seeing you lose this race."
"We're losing it all right, anyway," grunted the young officer, noting the rapidly increasing distance between pursuer and pursued.
"There ain't really any use in your trying to finish the race, sir?" hinted the mate.
"We'll keep it up to the end."
"Right to the Mexican shore?"
"If we have to," rejoined Hal. "We may at least overhaul that boat before it has all its cargo ashore."
"But you can't perform police duty on Mexican territory," urged the mate.
"True," replied Hal, biting his lip, for in his haste and eagerness he had overlooked that point of law.
"Besides," continued the mate, "you might butt right into a lot of assorted trouble. There may be a big force of Mexican rebels on hand to receive the arms. As they're already outlaws against their own government they would not hesitate about shooting into a small force of United States soldiers."
"My men are not cowards," uttered Hal. "They can shoot back, and straight enough, too."
"But you might be wiped out just the same, and, with you, the crew, who are not interested in such a fight."
"Nothing would stop me," retorted Hal, "if I had the legal right to pursue to the Mexican shore and make such a seizure there. But it's pretty clear to me that I have no such right, and that I'd only get into trouble with my own government, though really doing the government of Mexico a big favor."
"Then shall I put about, sir?" asked the mate.
"Not until you get the order plainly," Lieutenant Overton returned dryly. "I've heard of such things as gasoline boats breaking down. The boat we're after may have that kind of luck before she gets out of United States jurisdiction."
No such fortune for the young soldier happened, however. The gasoline boat, still followed by the rays of light from the tug, entered a cove on the Mexican side. Hal turned the light full on some moving objects on the bank of the cove. A score of figures were dancing there, and shouting derisively at the out-distanced American tug. From where he stood forward Hal could make out other men hurriedly lifting cases to the shore.
"You got the best of us, for once, you brown-faced men," Hal laughed. "Head about, mate. We can do no good here. Do you recognize that motor boat yet?"
"I do not, of course, and I note that her name has been removed from under the stern."
Having turned about the mate headed back for the village of Agua Dulce.
Just as the tug was making in at the village pier, Hal descried the figure of Captain Foster just stepping on to the pier.
"My captain won't keep me guessing long, if he's really displeased," reflected Hal, with an inward quiver.
"Tug ahoy, there!" hailed Captain Foster in a displeased voice.
"Ahoy, sir!" Hal shouted back.
"Haven't you been away out in the stream, sir?"
"Yes, sir."
Captain Foster asked no more for the moment, so Hal offered no further information.
On the instant, however, when the deckhands leaped ashore with the hawse-lines Captain Foster called quietly, even if coldly:
"Come ashore, Mr. Overton, as soon as you can."
"Now I rather reckon I'm in for it," thought the young lieutenant, ruefully, though he was really torn with the fear that he had exceeded his own authority to a dangerous point.
CAPTAIN FOSTER, too just a man to condemn without a hearing, let his young officer explain at length. All through this the older man preserved an unchanged countenance.
"Mr. Overton," spoke the captain, at last, "had I thought it likely that you would have such an experience, I would have given you leave to pursue in such a case. As I did not give such permission your conduct amounted to a breach of orders. At the same time, it was a breach very likely to be committed by a younger officer, and the intentions back of your conduct were unquestionably good and for the best interests of our mission here. I shall, therefore, neither approve nor disapprove of your conduct. I will add only the hint that, at another time, you will do well to stick literally to the orders you receive. To that advice there is only one exception. In spite of the orders you would have been fully at liberty to have moved your position had the lives of your men been needlessly and senselessly exposed by remaining. Such, however, was not the case."
"May I speak, sir?" inquired Hal.
"Certainly, Mr. Overton."
"If my conduct amounted to a fault, sir, it was not a deliberate one. I debated with myself as fully as I could in the few moments that were left to me in which to come to any decision. It seemed to me, sir, that my duty lay in chasing that motor boat. I feel, Captain, that my greatest fault was in judgment, and I had no experience to guide me in the matter."
"Your defense is a very manly one, Mr. Overton. I like you better for the way you have stated it."
"I trust, sir, that the mistake I have made to-night will not lessen your confidence in me, hereafter."
"It will not," replied Captain Foster heartily, holding out his hand. "And now, let us say no more about it. You were not able to make out the name of the boat, but you must have had a good look at her for descriptive purposes."
"Not very, sir; the boat had canvas over its woodwork. I am afraid, sir, that, if I saw the same boat in daylight, I couldn't positively identify her."
"We have duties to perform, now, Mr. Overton. Instruct your sergeant that he is, under no circumstances, to allow the tug to leave the pier, except under orders. Then come with me."
A minute later Hal and his superior officer were walking briskly up the street.
"There's a telephone cable under the river to Tres Palmas," explained Captain Foster. "You will therefore call up the operator there, and you will explain to-night's incident of the motor boat, and ask him to notify the Mexican federal authorities. That's all that's left to us now. While you are doing that I will telephone both up and down the river, calling on the state authorities to seize that fast motor boat, if they can catch it on the American side."
The telephone messages were sent, and the two officers retraced their way to the tug. The message that went under the river to Mexico, as Captain Foster learned long afterward, did not reach the federal government of that sister republic, for the telephone office, for three hours that night, was held by a roving band of Mexican rebels who succeeded in intercepting many government messages and in learning the plans of the Mexican government for crushing these same rebels.
"Mr. Overton," said Hal's superior officer, when they reached the boat, "you will find berths in the cabin of the boat. Get into one of them and sleep until breakfast-time unless you are called earlier. I will now make myself responsible for the watch along the river."
It was full breakfast-time, at eight in the morning, therefore, when one of the soldiers touched Hal on the shoulder.
"Captain Foster's compliments to Lieutenant Overton, who is directed to report on deck to the captain."
"Mr. Overton," announced the superior officer, as soon as his "youngster" appeared on deck, "I am going up to the camp for the day, unless you send me word that I am needed. I have just breakfasted, and the cook of this craft will take your orders as to your own breakfast."
"Have the men breakfasted, sir?" was Hal's first thought and question. A really good officer always thinks first of his men.
"They have all breakfasted, Mr. Overton. I do not imagine you will have much to do in the day-time. You have only your boat guard of six men under Sergeant Raney. The water-front patrol I have called in and sent to camp."
Hal ate his breakfast in leisurely fashion. He had slept well and was refreshed, but he believed that he had a long and dull day before him. And so it proved. The day passed on with absolutely nothing to do but eat and lounge, save for the one sentry who watched both boat and shore end.
It was almost dark, and Hal had just seated himself in the cabin to eat his supper when the sentry hailed:
"Lieutenant Overton!"
Hal showed his head at the cabin door.
"A detachment of troops approaching, sir."
"Well, they're our own men, aren't they, sentry?" Hal inquired.
"I think not, sir."
Hal stepped back into the cabin, picked up and donned his cap, then stepped out on deck. The approaching troops were on the dock by the time that the young lieutenant had returned to the open.
"Two officers and ten men!" flashed through Hal's mind.
Then, of a sudden, he felt like giving a whoop of joy. Instead, however, he darted down the gang-plank, then caught himself and walked forward with dignity just as one of the approaching officers called out with military crispness:
"Squad halt! Break ranks!"
"Mr. Prescott! Mr. Holmes!" cried Hal, going up to the two lieutenants who had just arrived.
"Hullo, Overton," responded both newly-arrived officers, extending their hands, while Prescott added:
"By Jove, I didn't count on finding you here, though I heard that you had won your commission. Where's Terry?"
"Up at our camp, Mr. Prescott."
"Drop the formal 'Mr.,' Overton, do," urged Lieutenant Prescott. "We have known each other long enough not to stand on ceremony."
"We've known each other in other times," laughed Holmes, "and in much more stirring times, I take it, than these are likely to be."
"Don't be too sure about the present being tame times," urged Hal. "From what we have seen here so far I believe that we are right in the middle of a district that is heavily engaged in sending arms over into Mexico. We may have a fight with a lot of these desperate, fanatic Mexican rebels at any moment."
"Let it come, then," laughed Holmes indifferently. "We need a bit of practice, now and then, to keep us in handy touch with our work."
"But how does the Thirty-fourth happen to be down here?" Hal asked curiously.
"Ordered away from Fort Clowdry. That's all I know," Prescott answered. "At least B and C companies were sent. We detrained at Spartansburg, eighteen miles from here. The two companies are now about six miles above, save for this little detachment, which was sent down to report to Captain Foster for some co-operation with you on the water."
"Lieutenant," spoke a sergeant of B company, approaching and saluting, "may I ask, sir, whether the men are to eat field rations or whether they're to be fed on the boat?"
"What do you say, Overton? How much food is there on the boat?"
"I'll find out from the cook," Hal answered. "Sergeant Kelly, are you going to forget me in that fashion?"
"You're an officer now, sir," replied Sergeant Kelly, saluting. "I awaited your pleasure, sir, about speaking."
"I can't see that you've changed any, Sergeant," smiled Hal, extending his hand. "But for the difference in some of the stage-settings we might seem to be in the Philippines instead of in Texas."
"This is 'God's country,' sir," replied Kelly, with an air almost of reverence. "There's nothing in the Philippines as restful to the eye as the meanest stretch in the United States."
Only a few months before while Hal and Noll were still in the Philippines Kelly had been made a corporal. Kelly was one of the staunchest souls in the Army. Many a time had he, with Noll and Hal, braved death side by side when facing the treacherous Moros. Since that time he had won the higher grade of sergeant.
"I'm heartily glad to see you again, Sergeant Kelly," Hal went on.
"Not more, sir, I'll be bound, than I am to see yourself," rejoined the sergeant.
Then, with a final salute, Kelly fell back, muttering to himself:
"'Tis come, the time when I must be saying 'sir' to two broths of boys that I've cooked bacon and coffee with over the same fire. But I don't begrudge either boy his honors. The two of them, they're the best of fine soldiers and true."
Hal hurriedly learned from the tug's cook that the provisions on board were equal to furnishing all the newly arrived soldiers with breakfast within an hour.
"And can I serve the two officers now with you, if you want, Lieutenant," said the cook.
"Then please do so."
Hal led his two brother-officers to the cabin, where Prescott and Holmes, after having removed their swords and belts, made hasty toilets and seated themselves.
"I imagine a good many more commands will be ordered into the field," Prescott continued. "Every few years a lot of discontented fellows over in Mexico start some kind of a revolution, but this present one appears to be the strongest one yet. Colonel North, I know, had a report to the effect that Mexicans enough were waiting on the other side of the river to organize a large army corps as soon as they can get guns enough from this side."
"Any arms captured on this side, yet, that you know of, Overton?"
"No," Hal answered. "But I guess a cargo got across all right. We got this boat, and a lot of cases on board, but the cases have been carted up to camp. If the cases have been opened yet I haven't heard what they contained."
"Arms or ammunition, or both, undoubtedly," nodded Lieutenant Holmes. "The Mexicans would hardly go to the trouble of sending a cargo of anything else out in the dead of night."
"Yes; I imagine they were arms, but I don't want to say so. Captain Foster did find war supplies in two of the cases that he opened, I ought to add. But I guess I've been rattled by meeting you two so unexpectedly."
"Getting rattled is a highly unmilitary form of conduct," retorted Prescott, with a look of mock sternness.
While the young officers were still at the table Captain Foster boarded and entered the cabin.
"Keep your seats, gentlemen," directed Captain Foster, throwing himself into a corner seat. "I've just eaten. Mr. Overton, your present detachment will march ashore presently, when a sergeant and nine men relieve them here. The two companies of the Thirty-fourth are to watch the water front to the west of us. When you go on the water to-night you'll carry officers and men from both regiments. If you have to land anywhere within the territory guarded by the Thirty-seventh, Mr. Overton, you'll be in command. If within the territory of the Thirty-fourth Mr. Prescott is detailed by Captain Cortland to command on landing. While pursuing on the water, Mr. Overton, you will be in command at all times, as our regiment is furnishing the boat. Mr. Terry will accompany you also."
"There's a Navy officer, Ensign Darrin, who was visiting at Fort Clowdry, and who accompanied us, sir," announced Lieutenant Prescott. "Mr. Darrin stopped up in the village for supper and to send a telegram or two. If Mr. Darrin reaches us here in time, sir, I request permission to take him on board as a passenger."
"Who's taking my name in vain?" demanded a hearty voice from the cabin doorway.
Ensign Dave Darrin, U. S. N., as fine a looking young naval officer as ever trod bridge or quarter-dock, stood looking in.
"Come in, Darrin," cried Prescott, leaping up and moving forward. "Captain Foster, permit me to present Mr. Darrin, of the Navy."
Captain Foster made Darrin wholly welcome in a few words.
"Hullo, Overton. Where's Terry?" cried Ensign Dave.
More greetings were in order.
"Just as you announced yourself, Mr. Darrin," said Captain Foster, "Mr. Prescott was asking permission to take you on the water as a passenger to-night. I beg to assure you that you will be most heartily welcome to go anywhere with this very small slice of the Army."
Darrin expressed his thanks.
Readers of the third volume of this series are sure to remember Ensigns Darrin and Dalzell, then midshipmen, who visited Prescott and Holmes in the Rocky Mountains and took part in a famous hunting trip. Hal and Noll, then sergeants, then made their first acquaintance with Darrin and Dalzell.
All readers of the "High School Boys' Series" know full well that Darrin and Dalzell were famous members of the Dick & Co. of bygone school days, while readers of the "Annapolis Series" have followed Dave and Dan all through their days at the United States Naval Academy.
"As all you youngsters know each other from old times I fancy you'll have a most agreeable time on the water to-night, if there proves to be nothing to do but swap yarns of former days," smiled Captain Foster.
"Don't you go with us on the water, sir!" inquired Ensign Darrin.
"No; I am on shore. Mr. Overton, however, will give the best account of my hospitality that the limited resources of this boat permit."
"Where's Mr. Dalzell?" asked Lieutenant Hal, as he finished his coffee.
"Why, he's up at Fort Clowdry—waiting—to—well, I guess I'll let Prescott tell it," finished Ensign Dave.
For some reason Prescott blushed slightly, opened his mouth as though to speak, and then failed to do so. The reason for his confusion will appear later.
By this time darkness had come on, and the cook, who was also the only cabin attendant, had switched on the electric lights in the snug cabin. The young officers, however, felt that they had so many matters to discuss that the deck would give them more room, so they adjourned.
Some of the officers noted that Captain Foster frequently glanced down the river through the darkness, but none asked him his reasons.
Finally, however, Sergeant Havens and ten men from F company marched on to the pier, followed by Corporal Shimple of H company and four men. In the wake of the two detachments walked Lieutenant Noll, who was soon shaking hands heartily with three of his brother officers of the United Services.
"May I ask what you see coming, gentlemen?" inquired Captain Foster, suddenly, pointing down the river.
"It looks like some pirate craft, sir," replied Hal, after peering hard through the darkness. "At least, that seems like a fair guess, for she's moving along without lights."
"She's engaged in United States service of a somewhat stealthy nature," replied Captain Foster. "That's why the craft shows no lights. Mr. Overton, how do you like the idea that you're to command a gasoline boat yourself to-night, and one that is reputed to be exceedingly fast?"
Hal Overton felt a sudden glow of exultation as the situation dawned on his mind.
"I wired, last night, for a fast gasoline boat to be sent here to aid us," continued Captain Foster. "This coming craft is the answer to my prayer, and the nearest collector of customs informs me that she's the swiftest thing he could charter for the government in these waters."
"Then, sir, if the Mexicans try to put their motor boat across the river to-night there'll be some real doings!" promised Lieutenant Overton.
"Real doings," indeed! The border excitement was about to break loose in deadly earnest, but that was more than any of them knew at that time.