“We must interview Lemoss,” said Pepper, and straightway he and Andy and Dale concocted a scheme for intercepting the boatman with the supplies.
This was an easy matter, for Lemoss was an innocent fellow and did not dream that he was being humbugged. He had been paid for the stuff and turned it over to Pepper and Dale, when they came out in a rowboat to meet him. The boys quickly “doctored” the soda water and root beer by adding to it a large dose of pepper and salt, and they also peppered the cake. Then they rowed to the shore and put the things out on a fallen tree.
Scarcely had they rowed away than they saw Ritter, Coulter and Paxton come out and look up and down the lake. The chums were behind some bushes and they heard Ritter utter an exclamation.
“Well, if the old fool hasn’t put the things out here on a log!” came from the bully. “How careless!”
“Too lazy to row in and tell us,” grumbled Coulter.
“Never mind, the stuff is here, and that’s the main thing,” said Paxton. “I’d just like to have some of the root beer now.”
“No, you’ve got to wait till to-night,” said Ritter. “There is just enough to go around.” And then the things were smuggled up to the camp and out of sight.
That evening when the cadets had an hour to themselves, Pepper and Andy were accosted by Mumps.
“You two fellows are wanted at Major Ruddy’s tent,” said the little sneak. “Hurry up.”
“Who said so?” asked The Imp, with a grin to his chum.
“Word was passed along, that’s all I know,” answered Mumps, and ran away, to avoid further questioning.
Andy and Pepper hurried to the tent. On a cot rested a neat package. It was addressed as follows:
Major Jack Ruddy:
Call in your friends, Snow and Ditmore, and treat them.
Two Lady Friends.
“Hello, so you’ve got it!” said Pepper. “I suppose the enemy is watching outside, to see developments.”
“Hush,” whispered Jack. “I was going to suggest——”
“Wait!” came from Andy. “Ritter celebrates to-night. Why don’t you postpone this—just to throw them off the track?”
The cadets held a consultation and then came outside of the tent. They saw Ritter, Coulter and several others hanging around.
“Looks like a fine cake,” said Jack, in a low voice, addressing his chums. “Must have come from the Fords.”
“Wish you could cut it to-night,” grumbled Andy.
“It will keep,” was the reply. “I’ll invite the crowd and open up the bundle to-morrow night, eight o’clock.”
“All right, we’ll be on hand,” said Pepper, and then he and Andy walked away. A little later the chums saw Ritter and his cronies slouch off much disappointed.
“We’ve got to wait for our fun,” growled Ritter.
“Maybe the hornets will be dead by that time,” said Paxton. “But I suppose we can’t help that. Ritter, how about your celebration?”
“That won’t be postponed,” chuckled the bully. “We’ll have a dandy time.”
Word was passed around and after the camp was quiet Ritter and his cronies stole away, taking with them several bundles done up in newspapers. They would have been astonished had they known what was in one of the bundles—one smuggled in by Pepper and Andy.
The crowd went into the woods, and there by the light of two lanterns Ritter brought out his cake, root beer, soda water, and other good things to eat and drink.
“Now help yourselves,” cried the bully, good naturedly.
Some cake was cut and passed around, and also the drinks.
“Wow! this is hot cake!” cried Coulter, biting into some pepper.
“I should say so!” added Paxton. “Say! my mouth is on fire!”
“Hi, give me a drink! I’ve got a mouthful of salt!” exclaimed another cadet.
“Say, are you fellows batty—this cake is all right!” declared Ritter and filled his mouth with the compound. The next instant he commenced to splutter.
“Oh! oh! I’m on fire! Give me a drink, quick! And he grabbed a bottle of soda water.
In the meantime the other lads had begun to drink. They did not, however, swallow much, for root beer and soda water with salt and pepper in them are not very palatable.
“This is a trick!” roared Reff Ritter, in a rage. “Somebody has doctored this stuff.”
“Try the other cake,” said Coulter, pointing to a bundle that had not yet been opened.
“I will, but I suppose it’s as bad as any of it,” grumbled the bully and tore the bundle apart savagely. Then it slipped from his hand and struck the ground violently.
“The ball has opened!” came in a low voice from Pepper, who with his chums, was viewing the scene from a distance—a safe distance, they hoped.
“What’s this?”
“Oh, I am stung!”
“It’s a nest of hornets!”
“Let me get out of this!”
“Ouch! Wow! This is terrible!”
So the cries rang out, as the paper bag broke and the hornets’ nest fell to the ground with a thump.
The hornets had been angry before, at being imprisoned, and now the shock evidently made them madder than ever. Out they swarmed about Reff Ritter and his cronies, who slapped right and left to ward them off.
Ritter was stung on the nose and on the chin, and every one of the other lads was attacked.
For several seconds the bewildered boys did not know what to do, and simply made wild passes through the air at their enemies. Then, with one accord, they attempted to run away. In doing this Coulter bumped into Paxton, and both went down and the hornets swarmed all around them.
“Let me get away!” screamed Gus Coulter. “I’ll be stung to death!”
“Let me up!” shrieked Paxton. “I’m stung in the eye!”
“It’s your hornets’ nest!” growled Coulter, and getting up he went after the crowd, who were scattering in all directions.
It was certainly the liveliest time imaginable and Pepper and his chums roared heartily as they saw the others doing their best to fight off the little pests. Fortunately the Ritter crowd did not come near them, so they were not bothered at all by the hornets. Ritter ran for the lake shore, and the whole crowd traveled nearly a quarter of a mile before they dared to halt, so thoroughly were they alarmed.
“Well, that’s a case of the stinger getting stung!” was Andy’s comment, after the excitement was over.
“I’ll wager the Ritter crowd won’t go back to finish that feast,” came from Dale, with a grin.
“Too bad! So much good cake and stuff gone to waste!” said Stuffer, with a sigh.
“Go on back after it, Stuffer,” said the young major. “I reckon they will let you have the whole of it.”
“Not on your life!” cried the lad who loved to eat. “Think I want an introduction to those hornets? Besides, the stuff is all doctored anyway.”
As soon as the fun was over, Jack and Pepper and the others hurried back to camp and retired for the night. They did not, however, go to sleep but kept their ears open for the return of Ritter and his cronies.
The bully’s crowd came in about an hour later. To keep the stings from hurting they had covered the spots with soft mud and so everyone was a sight to behold. All grumbled a good deal under their breath.
“They’ll be more hateful than ever now,” was Andy’s comment. “Better watch ’em.”
“I intend to,” answered Pepper.
On the following morning when Ritter and his cronies appeared at roll call everybody else had to smile. The bully had a big swelling on his nose and another on his chin. Coulter had a puffed-out cheek and Paxton had one eye closed. As they lined up for inspection The Imp could hardly keep from roaring outright.
“Ritter, what is the matter with you?” asked George Strong, as he caught sight of the bully’s face.
“Some friends and I found a hornets’ nest in the woods and the hornets got after us,” was the answer.
“Is that so!” cried the teacher. “I am very sorry to hear it. Who else was stung?”
The bully gave the names.
“We have some salve you can put on the hurts,” continued the teacher sympathetically. “I will get it for you.”
“Oh, we put salve on last night,” said Ritter. “But maybe some more will help,” he added quickly, for the stings were still painful.
Jack and the others had expected an open row with the bully and his cohorts, but it did not come. As a matter of fact the crowd that had been stung were so ashamed of their appearance that they did all they could to keep out of sight. When it was off-time they got two boats and rowed down the lake, to a refreshment resort at which they stopped whenever they got the chance.
“I’ll get square, you mark my words,” cried Reff Ritter, savagely, as all were waiting for ice-cream to be served.
“I don’t understand how they got the hornets’ nest,” said Paxton.
“They made some kind of an exchange,” said Coulter. “And we got it in the neck!” he added, coarsely.
“Yes, and in the face and on our hands too,” added another cadet, who had a swollen forehead.
The cadets were about to leave the refreshment place when they saw a carriage approaching on the road which skirted the lake shore. The carriage contained Mr. and Mrs. Ford and their two daughters.
“Come on, we don’t want to meet those folks,” said Ritter.
“I am not afraid of them,” said Paxton. “I’ll get out when I feel like it.”
Some were for going and some were for staying, and the upshot of the matter was that Paxton and two others remained. Ritter, Coulter and the rest rowed off down the lake.
When the Paxton crowd came back they were met by the others. Paxton was excited and looked at Ritter and Coulter knowingly.
“I’ve got a note for Major Ruddy,” said one of the cadets, a lad named Wilbur who had only been at the school a short while. “That gentleman who stopped at the refreshment place gave it to me.”
“What’s it about?” asked Ritter, abruptly.
“I know,” said Paxton quickly. “I’ll tell you about it later.”
As soon as the encampment grounds were reached Wilbur went off to deliver the note to Jack. Paxton called Ritter and Coulter to him, and the three walked away to a spot where nobody could hear them.
“That note to Ruddy is an invitation for the Ruddy crowd to go on a picnic with the Fords,” said Paxton. “I overheard the Fords mention it when Mr. Ford was writing the note.”
“When and where?” demanded Ritter.
“They are going up to Butterfly Island day after to-morrow, directly after breakfast. They’ll take lunch along and stay there until supper time. They’ve invited Ruddy, Ditmore, Snow and Blackmore to participate.”
“Butterfly Island, eh?” mused the bully.
“Yes. Say, why can’t we go up there too and spoil the fun?” went on Paxton.
“That’s the talk!” added Coulter.
“We can—if we can get away from the camp,” answered Ritter. “Let us watch our chance and see what we can do. How are they to go to the island?”
“Mr. Ford is going to charter a launch, the Emma, and will stop here for the others,—if they get permission to go.”
“Oh, they’ll get permission easily enough—Captain Putnam wouldn’t care to offend such a rich man as Mr. Ford.”
While this talk was going on the note was delivered to Jack. The young major read it and then sought out his chums.
“Here’s a chance for a fine outing!” cried Jack, and handed the invitation around for inspection.
“If Captain Putnam will let us accept,” said Pepper. “Let us go and ask him right now.”
They soon found the head of the school and showed him the note.
“Yes, you may go,” said he. “Only remember to be back by nightfall,—and don’t get into any mischief.”
“We’ll remember,” said Andy.
“Don’t stir up any hornets’ nests, for instance,” and Captain Putnam smiled meaningly.
“We’ll let hornets severely alone,” answered Jack with a laugh.
Word was sent to the Fords that their kind invitation was accepted, and then the four cadets waited impatiently for the time for the picnic to arrive. They went in undress uniform, and it is safe to say that never did four lads brush up more or pay more attention to their shoes, collars and ties.
“Jack is going to try to make the hit of his life,” said Pepper, with a grin.
“You needn’t say a word,” was the answer, while the young major’s face grew red. “You’re grooming up as much as anybody.”
“Andy has fixed his collar four times,” came from Dale. “Say, you keep on and you’ll have it dirty before you start.”
“Well, the collar doesn’t fit the shirt-band!” growled the acrobatic youth. “I never saw such a collar anyway!” And he threw it aside and adjusted a fresh one.
Promptly at the time appointed the launch Emma appeared at a point of the shore near the encampment. On board were the Ford family, and the girls waved their handkerchiefs gaily at the cadets, who waved their caps in return. Then the launch came closer and the boys clambered aboard.
“Oh, I am so glad the weather is fair!” cried Laura, after the greetings were over. “I thought last night it would rain!”
“We looked at the sky about every ten minutes,” answered Pepper, and this caused a laugh.
“Last night it looked as if we might not get here,” said Mr. Ford. “The engine of the launch broke down and the man had quite a time fixing it. But he finally got it to working.”
“She don’t work just right yet,” put in the man who was running the craft. “But I reckon I can fix her while you folks are having your picnic.”
Butterfly Island was a narrow strip of land lying some distance from the eastern shore of Lake Caboy. It was a well-wooded spot and used frequently by Sunday schools and societies for picnic purposes. Mr. Ford had learned that no picnic would be held that day, however, so they would have the island to themselves.
“We’ll camp out in regular hunter style,” declared Flossie. “We brought a coffee pot and a frying pan, and you boys can build a big camp fire, and we’ll set the table, and all that! Won’t it be just too lovely for anything?” And her eyes beamed brightly.
The launch ran slowly and it was nearly an hour before the island was reached. Then all went ashore, and the boys carried the things that had been brought along to a spot the girls picked out. This was on a high, grassy knoll that overlooked the southern end of the lake.
While the Fords and the boys proceeded to make themselves at home, the man who owned the launch got to work to fix his motor. A fire was lit and when it came lunch time the girls made hot coffee and fried some lake bass that had been caught that morning near the hotel. A table cloth was spread out under the trees, and all sat around it and enjoyed the coffee and fish, and the numerous good things brought along by the Fords from the hotel.
“Say, Stuffer ought to see us now!” whispered Andy to Dale, while munching on a piece of cream cake. “Wouldn’t he turn green with envy!”
“Yes, and what would Ritter and his crowd say?” answered Dale. “No hornets’ nest in this, eh?” And he smiled broadly.
When the meal was ready the man from the launch had been called up from the shore, and he was given his share of the good things and sat off by himself to enjoy them. He said he had taken off a part of one of the cylinders of the launch and hoped, when he put it back, that the engine would work better.
An hour was spent in eating, and then the man left the picnic ground to return to his work on the launch. The young folks cleared away the remains of the repast and then the boys invited the girls to take a walk completely around the island.
“Be careful and don’t get into any trouble,” said Mrs. Ford. “We’ll stay here until you return.”
The path around the shore of Butterfly Island was rough, but the young folks did not mind this. Jack led the way, and he and the other cadets helped the girls down and up the rocks, and “jumped” them over the hollows. All were in the best of spirits, and the woods rang with laughter.
“Come on out to the headland,” said Andy presently, and led the way to a narrow strip of land extending out into the lake for fully a hundred feet. All followed and Andy was about to point out some object of interest when Pepper, who chanced to glance back, uttered a cry of alarm.
“What’s the matter, Pepper?” questioned Jack, quickly.
“What did you see?” asked Andy.
“Why, I—er—I guess I was mistaken,” stammered Pepper, looking first at his chums and then at the girls.
“But what was it?” questioned Laura. “Why, you gave a regular jump!”
“Why I—er—that is—Oh, never mind,” answered Pepper. “Go on, I’ll be with you in a minute,” and he turned back on the rocks.
“Something is wrong,” muttered Dale to himself, and as Andy and Jack went on with the girls he sided up to The Imp. “What was it?” he asked in a low tone.
“I think I saw a big snake, Dale.”
“A snake!”
“Yes.”
“Where?”
“Back between the rocks we just crossed. It poked its head up and looked right at us.”
“Then why didn’t you say so?”
“I didn’t want to alarm the girls. If they thought a snake was near they’d have a fit.”
“I suppose that is so. Well, I hate snakes myself. Let us see if this one is still around.”
The boys walked back, but not for far. As they placed their feet on one of the rocks that joined the headland to the island proper they heard a vigorous hissing, and not one but three snakes of good size showed themselves.
The cadets were so startled that both let out a yell and tried to retreat. Their cries reached the others in the party, and all turned back.
“Oh, a snake! a snake!” screamed Flossie, as she caught sight of one of the reptiles. “Oh, what shall we do?”
“I see two of them!” said Laura, and gave a shudder. “Oh, dear me! And they are right between us and the island! However are we to get back to the picnic grounds?”
All of the young folks kept at a distance. Two of the snakes were still in sight, the third had disappeared.
“Maybe we had better stone ’em,” said Andy. “That’s what I’d do if I was alone.”
“If you do that they may come for us,” answered Flossie, almost tearfully.
“If we only had sticks!” sighed Dale, but there were no sticks or bushes on the headland, only grass and rocks.
The cadets talked the situation over and then, leaving the girls at the extreme end of the headland, the lads picked up a number of jagged stones and advanced with caution to where the snakes had been seen. Two were still in view and they aimed at these and hit each.
“That’s the way to do it!” cried Andy, as the snakes dropped back in a hollow and commenced to squirm around. “Give ’em some more stones!” The stones were forthcoming and one that was well-aimed took the larger of the two snakes in the head, killing it. But the other continued to whip around, and presently came out on the rocks and in the direction of the cadets.
“He’s coming this way!”
“Hit him with another stone!”
Jack was trying to get another stone when the snake made a sudden move and twined around the young major’s ankle. Jack took his free foot and tried to kick it off, but in vain.
It was now that Dale showed his nerve. Like a flash he pulled out his jackknife and opened the blade. Then he bent down and slashed away quickly at the snake, ripping open the reptile’s back. Then he struck the snake in the head.
“That’s it—give it to him!” gasped Jack, and Dale continued to use his knife. The girls screamed loudly and wrung their hands. Then the snake, cut in two, dropped down on the rocks. Andy kicked the severed parts into the water and they sank from sight. Pepper kicked the other snake into the water also.
“Oh, dear, this is terrible!” moaned Flossie.
“I wish we were back to papa and mamma,” sighed Laura. Both girls looked as if they were ready to faint.
“Don’t get scared,” said Pepper. “They are both dead.”
“But there may be others,” said Flossie. She turned to Jack. “Did the snake bite you?”
“No, he didn’t get a chance, thanks to Dale,” answered the young major, with a grateful glance at his chum.
“Shall we try to go back?” asked Laura.
“Wait until we make sure that the way is clear,” said Pepper, who had not forgotten about the third snake.
He went back with caution and made an inspection. The third snake was nowhere in sight, and what had become of it he could not tell.
“I think you girls had better let us carry you,” said Pepper. “Then the snakes won’t be able to get at you, even if they do appear.”
At first the girls demurred at being carried. But they hated to step where the snakes had shown themselves, and finally consented. Pepper took Flossie in his arms and Jack followed with Laura, and Andy and Dale, armed with stones and their jackknives, led the way. The girls might have giggled at being taken up like children, but they were too alarmed to do so.
Just as the headland was passed and Pepper and Jack had deposited their burdens on their feet, Mr. and Mrs. Ford appeared. The gentleman and his wife were greatly excited.
“Didn’t we hear the girls scream?” asked the lady anxiously.
“I guess you did, mamma,” answered Laura.
“We ran into a nest of snakes!” said Flossie. “The boys killed two of them! Oh, it was awful!” And Flossie ran to her mother and caught her by the arm.
“Snakes!” exclaimed Rossmore Ford. “Where?”
The boys pointed out the spot and told what had been done. Mr. and Mrs. Ford were much concerned.
“You had better not climb over any more of the rocks,” said the lady. “It is too dangerous.”
“I don’t think the snakes are poisonous,” said her husband. “Still, I think we had all better try to keep out of their way after this. I did not think there were any on the island.”
“The folks who hold picnics here ought to know about them,” said Jack.
“Well, snakes are to be found almost anywhere where there are rocks,” answered Rossmore Ford. “Come, let us go back to where we left our things. My wife and I were just dozing away with our backs to a tree when we heard the screams. We could not locate them at first and were much worried.”
Knowing that the girls would not care to climb the rocks after such a scare, the cadets walked back to the camping place with the Fords.
“I am glad you knifed that snake, Dale,” said Jack on the way. “It was a brave thing to do.”
“Oh, it wasn’t much,” was the modest reply. “I was once in a camp in the mountains and saw an old hunter do it.”
The party had hardly reached the spot where the campfire had been built when the man who ran the launch appeared.
“Where did you go?” he asked hurriedly of Mr. Ford. “I have been looking all over for you.”
“What do you want, Mr. Fales?”
“I came to see you about the launch. She is gone!”
“Gone!” echoed Rossmore Ford, while the cadets listened with interest.
“Yes, sir—disappeared while I was having dinner. I thought she might have drifted around the shore, but I can’t find her anywhere.”
“Did you tie her fast?” asked Pepper.
“Certainly, I always tie up when I come ashore,” answered Able Fales.
“Let us go down to the shore and take a look around,” suggested Jack.
Wondering over what had become of the boat, the entire party left the picnic grounds and hurried down to the lake front. Here was a small cove where they had landed, and Able Fales pointed out an overhanging tree to which he had secured his craft.
“Even if she got loose I don’t think she’d drift out of the cove,” said the boatman. “There is no current here to carry her out.”
“Well, she is gone, sure,” remarked Andy. He turned to his chums. “What do you make of this.”
“I’d hate to say,” said Dale.
“Then you think it is a trick?” questioned Jack.
“Doesn’t it look like it? Remember the hornets’ nest.”
“Yes, and look there!” exclaimed Andy. “If that isn’t the limit! Yes, it’s a trick all right!”
The acrobatic youth pointed to the tree to which the launch had been fastened. From a cord on the tree hung the hornets’ nest, now empty. Pinned to the nest was a bit of paper. The boys secured the sheet and read the following:
“Use this nest if you have to stay out all night.”
As the cadets read the words on the sheet of paper their faces showed their deep chagrin and mortification. Had they been alone they would have considered the affair a trick on them and nothing more, but with the Fords along it was an entirely different matter.
“What is that? Let me see it,” said Laura, and took the paper from Andy’s hand. She read the words aloud.
“I must say I do not understand this,” said Mrs. Ford. “What has this empty hornets’ nest to do with the launch?”
“It means that a trick has been played on us,” said Jack, his face growing red. “I think it’s a shame to involve you in it—and I’ll tell those other fellows so, when I get the chance!” he added, half savagely.
“But what is it about?” asked Rossmore Ford.
“We may as well make a clean breast of it,” said Pepper to his chums, and then he related the particulars of the hornets’ nest and how it had been used during the Ritter feast. The girls laughed outright and Mr. and Mrs. Ford smiled.
“Now here is where the Ritter crowd pay us back,” went on Pepper. “I don’t know how they got here, but they did—and they have either hidden the launch or made off with it. I am awfully sorry—on your account,” and he looked anxiously at the Fords.
“Well, you are in the same boat as ourselves,” said Mr. Ford.
“I guess you mean we are both out of the boat,” returned Andy, with a sickly grin. He turned to Able Fales. “Have you looked all along the shore for the launch?” he asked.
“Pretty much,” was the answer. “But I can take another look. So it was some friends of yours took the boat, eh?”
“Hardly friends,” answered Dale dryly. “They belong to our military school.”
“I know you fellers are full of tricks. Took the bell clapper of the church once,” went on the boatman.
Another search was made by the boatman and the boys and Mr. Ford joined in the hunt. But not a trace of the missing craft could be found. Jack looked at his watch and saw that it was nearly five o’clock.
“If this isn’t the worst yet!” he murmured. “Pepper, what do you think we had best do?”
“I don’t know. If they don’t bring the boat back we may have to remain on the island all night.”
“That would be a hardship on Mrs. Ford and the girls. They are not used to roughing it, and there is nothing but a shed here, and that isn’t very clean.”
“Well, what do you propose?”
“I don’t know what to say.”
“If we had a canoe, or even a raft, we might get to the mainland and hire another boat,” said Dale. “Can’t we build a raft of some kind?”
“We might, but it would take time.”
While this conversation was going on Andy had walked to some high rocks overlooking the lower end of the lake. Now, of a sudden, he set up a shout:
“Boat ahoy! Hello! Come in here, we want you!”
“Andy has sighted a boat!” ejaculated Pepper, and ran to join the acrobatic youth, and his chums followed.
All saw a launch moving up the lake. It contained a young lady of about twenty and a boy of sixteen.
“What do you want?” asked the boy, as the launch came to a standstill out in the lake.
“We want help!” called back Andy. “Will you please come ashore?”
“What is wrong?” questioned the girl, as she set the motor of the boat in motion once more and steered for the shore of Butterfly Island.
“Our boat is gone,” answered Andy.
“Why, that is Belle Penwick!” cried Laura, as she caught sight of the girl in the launch. “And her brother Roger! How fortunate!”
“Then you know them?” said Jack.
“Oh, yes, we are old friends, and they are stopping at the same hotel with us. That is Belle’s boat, but her brother Roger aids her in running it.”
The Spray, for that was the name of the craft, soon came close to the shore, and then the engine was stopped once more. The boys were introduced to the newcomers, and the latter were told about the missing Emma.
“Why, we saw that boat about an hour ago!” cried Roger Penwick. “Some cadets dressed like you fellows had her in tow and were taking her towards Hull Island.”
“Did they leave her there?” questioned Jack
“I don’t know.”
“Were the cadets in a rowboat?”
“Yes.”
“I suppose they couldn’t run the launch because of the dismantled motor,” said Pepper. “Most likely they hid her in the bushes on the shore of Hull Island.”
The matter was talked over, and the Penwicks said they would take some of the party over to Hull Island if they wished to go. It was arranged that Jack, Andy and Able Fales should make the trip.
“If the launch is there I’ll fix her up as soon as I can and run her back here,” said the old boatman.
The Spray was soon on the way. She was a light-built craft and cut the bosom of the lake like a thing of life.
“I like my sloop, but I declare I’d like a motor boat too,” said Jack. “They certainly can travel!”
“And they don’t have to wait for the wind,” added Pepper.
“It’s fine—if the motor doesn’t get out of order,” said Roger Penwick. “But sister and I have to do a lot of tinkering, I can tell you! Yesterday we spent about an hour sailing around and two hours fixing the engine.”
“Well, my spark wasn’t just right, that was all,” responded Belle. “You can’t make a boat run well without a good electric spark,” she explained.
The run to Hull Island, a small patch of land close to the upper end of Lake Caboy, did not take long, and then the island was slowly circled, while the boys and the old boatman scanned the shore with care.
“There she is, there’s the Emma!” cried Abel Fales, presently, and pointed out his craft, shoved in under some overhanging bushes. “Pretty well hidden, I must say! I would have had a hard job finding her if you hadn’t seen her being taken here,” he added to the Penwicks.
The Ritter crowd had done nothing to the launch but tow her off, and soon Able Fales was at work fixing his engine. With the cylinder repaired the machinery worked very well, and both craft started back to Butterfly Island, arriving there a little later.
“Some of you can come in my boat if you wish, it will make your run easier,” said Belle Penwick, and then it was arranged that Andy and Dale and Flossie should go with her. This divided up the weight of passengers pretty evenly, and when the two boats left the island they kept close beside each other.
“I’ve got a plan to scare the Ritter crowd,” said Jack, on the way home, and then he explained what it was.
The Fords were willing to let him carry out his idea, Rossmore Ford being especially anxious to make the boys who had taken the Emma suffer for the trick. Jack and his chums were landed at a distance up the lake shore from the encampment, and the Emma took care to keep out of sight as she swung down the lake.
“Tell ’em I’ll have ’em locked up if they don’t return my boat by to-morrow morning!” cried Able Fales, who, now that he had his boat back, entered into the spirit of the fun that was afloat.
Jack and his chums watched their opportunity and stole into camp without being noticed by anybody but one of the guards. They slipped to their tents and donned their regular uniforms, and the young major buckled on his sword.
As the cadets came out on the parade ground they saw Ritter, Coulter and Paxton directly ahead of them. They hurried on, and soon caught up to the trio, who were conversing earnestly.
“They won’t get away until morning, and I know it,” Ritter was saying.
“I’ll bet they were mad when they saw the hornets’ nest,” came from Coulter.
“If they ate up everything they carried for dinner they will have to go without supper and breakfast,” added Paxton.
“How are you, Ritter!” cried Jack, pleasantly.
The entire crowd ahead wheeled around and a look of blank astonishment came into their faces.
“Why—er—where did you come from?” stammered Ritter. He did not know what to say.
“From Butterfly Island,” answered Jack. Then he lowered his voice and added: “Ritter, you and your cronies have got yourselves in a nice mess. You stole Mr. Fales’s boat, and he says if you don’t return it to him by to-morrow morning he’ll have you all locked up!”
The announcement that Jack made filled the Ritter crowd with alarm, and they showed it.
“Have us arrested?” cried the bully, and he grew somewhat pale.
“That is just what he said,” broke in Pepper. “Fun is fun, but to steal a launch is another story.”
“We didn’t steal the boat,” came from Coulter. “We—er—What do you know about it anyway?” he demanded suddenly.
“We know all we wish to know,” said Andy. “You took Mr. Fales’s boat and did not return it. You can well imagine how angry he is. He looked all around Butterfly Island for it, but with no success.”
“We didn’t leave it at Butterfly Island,” said Paxton. We left it—” He stopped short and looked at his cronies questioningly.
“How did you get away from the island?” asked Ritter.
“A party came along in another launch, the Spray,” said Jack, and did not attempt to explain further.
“We—er—we hid the Emma on the shore of another island,” said Coulter. “We didn’t hurt the boat in the least.”
“Well, you better return her before morning, or Mr. Fales may get out warrants for your whole crowd,” said Andy. “After we found the hornets’ nest he wanted to know who you were.”
“Humph! I suppose you told him too,” sneered Ritter.
“Why not? You put us in a hole. But you’d better get the boat. Don’t you know that there are some thieves on this lake? They wouldn’t hesitate to take that launch if they found it, and paint it over and change the name—and then you’d never find the craft.”
“Yes, you’ll get into serious trouble if you don’t return that boat by morning,” said the young major, and then he motioned to his chums and all walked away. Looking back they saw the Ritter crowd get together and commence an earnest conversation.
“I’ll wager they go out after the launch,” said Andy, with a broad grin.
“Won’t they be surprised when they find the boat missing from Hull Island!” came from The Imp. “They’ll think she drifted away or was stolen!”
“If they go out they may get wet,” said Jack. “It certainly looks like rain.”
The chums joined the other cadets, and pretended to pay no further attention to the Ritter faction. But on the sly Dale watched them and after taps saw Ritter, Coulter, Paxton and Sabine steal away in the direction of the lake. They took one of the rowboats with two pairs of oars and rowed away in the darkness.
“There is a wild goose chase for you!” cried Jack, and he and his chums laughed heartily over the matter. The young major was right—it was indeed a wild goose chase. The row to Hull Island was a hard one, and when the spot was reached the search for the launch in the darkness was difficult. To add to the discomfort of the crowd it commenced to rain, and as they had no covering each of the cadets got wet to the skin. They all spent over an hour looking for the Emma, but all in vain.
“She must have drifted away, or else she was stolen!” groaned Billy Sabine. “Oh, if we don’t find her, will they really lock us up?”