The Stolen Singer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 284 pages of information about The Stolen Singer.

The Stolen Singer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 284 pages of information about The Stolen Singer.

Mr. Hand made no answer.  Instead, he waded into the ditch-stream and placed a shoulder under the racing-car.  Chamberlain’s instinct for doing his share of work caused him to roll up his trousers and wade in, shoulder to shoulder with Hand, even while he was lecturing on the feebleness of man’s wits.

“Good horse running loose into barb-wire fences had to be caught, but it didn’t need a squadron of men and a forty-acre lot to do it in.  Might have known he’d give us the slip if he could—­biggest rascal in Europe!” And so on.  Chamberlain, usually rather a silent man, blew himself empty for once, conscious all the time that he, himself, was quite as much to blame as Hand could possibly have been.  And Hand knew that he knew, but kept his counsel.  Hand ought to be prime minister by this time.

When the racing-car was righted, he went swiftly and skilfully to work investigating the damage and putting the machine in order, as far as possible.  Chamberlain presently became impressed with his mechanical dexterity.

“By Jove, you can see into her, can’t you!” Hand continued silent, and left it to his companion to put on the finishing verbal touches.

“Tow her home and fill her up and she’ll be all right, eh?” said Chamberlain, but Hand kept on tinkering.  The sudden neighing and plunging of Little Simon’s poor tormented horse gave warning of the sheriff, crashing from the underbrush directly into the road.

He was voluble with excuses.  The fugitive had escaped, leaving no traces of his flight.  He might be in the woods, or he might have run to the railroad track and caught the freight that had just slowly passed.  He might be in the next township, or he might be—­

“Oh, go to thunder!” said Chamberlain.

CHAPTER XXI

JIMMY REDIVIVUS

If the occupants of the old red house felt over-much inclined to draw a long breath and rest on their oars after their anxiety and recent excitement, Agatha’s manager was able to supply a powerful antidote.  He was restlessness incarnate.

He was combining a belated summer holiday with what he considered to be good business, “seeing” not only his prima donna secluded at Ilion, but other important people all the way from Portland to Halifax.  When he heard that the man who ran off with his racing-car was also responsible for the mysterious departure of Miss Redmond, his excitement was great.

“You mean to say that you were picked up and drugged in broad daylight in New York?” he demanded of Agatha.

“Practically that.”

“And you escaped?”

“The yacht foundered.”

“And that scamp walked right into your hands and you let him go?”

Agatha forced a rueful smile.  “I confess I’m not much used to catching criminals.”

Mr. Straker paused, lacking words to express his outraged spirit

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Project Gutenberg
The Stolen Singer from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.