<h2 id="c19">CHAPTER XIX. <br/><span class="small">JOINING FORCES.</span></h2>
<p>“Oh! Thad, did you hear what he said?” whispered
Giraffe, in the ear of the scout-master.</p>
<p>“Keep still, Giraffe, and let me manage this affair,
please!” was what Thad replied; and accordingly
the tall scout, quickly grasping the situation,
relapsed into silence; for he had the utmost
faith in the ability of the patrol leader to whip
things into shape.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_166">166</div>
<p>“What was that you were telling us, Mr. Sheriff,
about this man robbing some one?” Thad asked,
before the other could turn fully away.</p>
<p>“It’s this way, son,” came the obliging officer’s
reply; “a very wealthy planter by the name of
Richmond had occasion to employ a secretary to
conduct some literary work he was head oveh ears
interested in. So in New Orleans he comes across
a smart gentlemanly fellow who gives the name
of Jasper. Fo’ a long time they seem to get on
right well. Then all of a sudden the kunnel he
finds that his secretary suh, done disappeah, as also
the contents of his safe, includin’ some family
jewels that had been fetched oveh from France two
hundred yeahs ago by his ancestors, and which he
values above anything he possesses.”</p>
<p>“Oh! and that is why he is willing to put up so
much money to try and recover these things, I
suppose?” Thad went on, for the purpose of drawing
out still more information rather than because
he failed to understand.</p>
<p>“That accounts fo’ the milk in the cocoanut,
son,” the officer admitted. “He then and there
calls me in fo’ a consultation, and immediately
afterwards issues that offer of reward, as also the
promise to pay every man and boy who would join
my posse, and hunt fo’ the thief.”</p>
<p>“And then word came to you that some one had
seen a man answering the description of this Jasper
down here—was that it, sir?” Allan asked.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_167">167</div>
<p>“You have described it to the lettah, suh. And
as the thief must be hiding in Alligator Swamp,
you can understand how we’ve made up our minds
to clean the old pest hole out, once fo’ all.”</p>
<p>“But we are told that a stranger never could
make his way in and out of here, because there are
so many treacherous passages; and that more than
a few men have met their death trying to escape
from the endless succession of watery trails?” the
scout-master continued, still trying to pick up information
without betraying his side of the case
to the other.</p>
<p>“Perfectly correct, suh,” the sheriff told him;
“but that fact only made me look deeper into the
case. What do you think I discovered, but that
yeahs ago a family by the name of Jasper lived
close by this region. If that is so, then we sorter
reckons this heah thief might be a son of the ole
man; and in that case don’t ye see, he’d know every
part of the swamp as well as Tom Smith heah?”</p>
<p>It gave Thad a strange thrill to hear this spoken;
because had he not actually covered the identical
ground himself when figuring out just how the man
with the girl should be able to go and come with
such little concern?</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_168">168</div>
<p>“Why,” he exclaimed, suddenly meaning to go
further, and learn more, if possible; “seems to me
we heard something about a strange white man
who had been seen going into the swamp here, Mr.
Sheriff; and perhaps now it may have been the
same Jasper. But this party had a little girl about
ten years old with him. Was the Jasper you
wanted the father of such a child, sir?”</p>
<p>“He done told the kunnel that he had a daughter
in a school in New Orleans; so p’raps now he went
an’ took her out, so she could cook his meals fo’
him all the time he was ahidin’, till the trail got
cold, an’ it was safe fo’ him to head no’th,” was
what the sheriff told him.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Thad had been quickly figuring in his
mind whether it would not be best for him to take
the officer wholly into his confidence; and being a
boy who could cut the Gordian knot, and decide
quickly on his plan of campaign, he immediately
settled this matter in the affirmative.</p>
<p>If the objective point of the sheriff’s posse was
the retreat where Felix Jasper was supposed by
Tom Smith to be hidden, how foolish it would be
for them to try and attain their object while there
was a rival expedition in the field that might in
some way interfere with the successful carrying
out of their plans.</p>
<p>Yes, far better to combine, and pool their issues.
Besides, with such a formidable backing would not
success be more apt to perch upon their banners
than should they keep on trying it alone?</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_169">169</div>
<p>“I’m going to tell you something, Mr. Sheriff,”
he said, hastily; “and while it may hold you up a
few minutes, in the end you’ll admit that the time
has been profitably spent; because we might as well
join forces with you. Fact is, sir, we have come
all the way down from the North in the hope of
rounding up this same Jasper you’re looking for;
because the girl he has with him, I have great reason
to believe, is my own little sister, stolen away
from my mother’s home years ago by a man named
Felix Jasper, once from New Orleans, and who
wanted to have revenge upon the Brewster family
on account of some fancied wrong done him.”</p>
<p>Of course upon hearing this remarkable statement
the sheriff no longer evinced a nervous desire
to be on the go. He seemed to realize that his
interests were bound up with those of the manly
leader of the scouts, who had just thrilled him with
so strange a story.</p>
<p>And as for his posse, they were crowding around
so densely, anxious not to lose a single word of
what was said, that, as Giraffe afterwards declared,
they looked like “sardines packed in a can;” every
face filled with eagerness, and many of them seeming
hardly to breathe lest they lose some of the
story.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_170">170</div>
<p>Thad, knowing that now he had broken the ice
it would be better to explain more fully, started in
to tell how his guardian received the news, and
could not himself undertake the long journey, but
had readily agreed that the scouts should come, because
they had shown themselves so capable on
many other occasions.</p>
<p>“We entered the swamp by ourselves, though I
understood it was a dangerous thing to attempt,”
Thad concluded; “but we were lucky enough to run
across a guide in Tom Smith here. He thinks he
can give a pretty good guess where this Jasper
will be apt to hold out, Mr. Sheriff; and now that
we’re all on the same business, why not combine
forces, and let him show us the way?”</p>
<p>A number of the planters and others exchanged
knowing glances.</p>
<p>“Best thing that ever happened for us, Mr.
Sheriff!” one man declared stoutly.</p>
<p>“Truer words never were spoken,” observed
another. “I’ve heard that Alligator Tom Smith
knows more things about this same swamp than any
man living. I told you in the beginning that we
had ought to hunt him up, and make him join the
posse. Luck is playing your way, Sheriff, believe
me.”</p>
<p>The officer of the law seemed to think the same
way, for he immediately turned upon the scouts’
guide and demanded:</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_171">171</div>
<p>“Are ye willin’ to come in with us, Tom, and
trust to me to make it right with ye, when I gets
that reward in my hands? ’Case if ye ain’t, I’m
agoin’ to draft ye in the posse all the same, an’ ye
just cain’t hold back. The State gives me that
power, ye understand!”</p>
<p>“Oh! I’ll let yuh set the price accordin’ tuh
how yuh sees fit,” remarked the wise and far-seeing
Tom, quickly; if he had the name he might as well
have the game too, he undoubtedly thought; “but
I hopes as how my employer heah, Mr. Scoutmaster,
won’t go fo’ tuh think I purposely deserted
him.”</p>
<p>“Why, you’re working for us just the same,
Tom,” observed Thad, quickly; “and your wages
will be going on all the time, no matter what you
get from our friend the sheriff. And so we may
call it settled; is that so, sir?”</p>
<p>“Just as ye say, son; and I consider that I’ve
certain got the best part o’ the bargain as it is,”
the other replied.</p>
<p>“We won’t quarrel over the proceeds, for you
want to get the man and the stuff he stole; while
all we’re after is the little girl,” Thad went on to
say.</p>
<p>“I sure hopes it may turn out all right to you,
son, and the gal be thet same little sister you lost
long ago,” the sympathetic sheriff went on to say;
“I done got five gals, an’ I understand just what
it must have been fo’ your mammy to a lost her
on’y one. Yes, we-all hopes as how you’ll find
it ain’t a mistake. But since these matters are
fixed, let’s figure on headin’ that way, Tom Smith.
Now, what might ye advise, to begin with?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_172">172</div>
<p>“Hit’s thisaway, Sheriff,” began the swamp-hunter;
“dawgs is good in ther way; but sumtimes
they mout seem tuh git in ther road, an’ guv warnin’
tuh theh party yuh was awantin’ tuh s’prise.
Hain’t thet so, suh?”</p>
<p>“Reckon ye knows best, Tom; an’ let me say
that I sees what yer drivin’ at,” the officer told
him. “Ye believes as ye knows whar this Jasper’d
most likely be aholdin’ out, an’ ye kin take us thar
without the use of the hounds? Is that it, Tom?”</p>
<p>“Close tuh what I war meanin’ tuh say, Sheriff,”
the alligator hunter went on to remark; “an’ if so
be now yuh kept the dawgs back heah a bit till we
seed if we cud round-up our man, it’d be better.
Then, if he wa’n’t whar I laid out tuh find him, yuh
cud call up the critters agin, an’ start in fresh.”</p>
<p>“That’s settled, then,” asserted the other; and
turning to one of the posse who seemed to be in
charge of the brace of hounds he continued:
“Townley, ye heard as what was said, didn’t ye?
Well, pick out another to help, and stay heah till
ye gets the signal to come on; or we-all joins ye
later.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_173">173</div>
<p>He spoke with such authority in his voice that
the man dared not evince any disposition to disobey,
though doubtless he secretly groaned in spirit
at being left out of the deal at such an important
juncture.</p>
<p>“And now, Tom Smith, lead us on; everybody
keep quiet, and let’s play this game fo’ all she’s
worth. If so be we brings the critter to bay, they’ll
be fightin’ in plenty, I reckons, if what the kunnel
says about this man is only half true. And in case
we have to take to the boats, p’raps now some o’
us’ll be let crowd in with these plucky scouts. Fo’
the last word, then, here’s hopin’ we’ll have the
best o’ success.”</p>
<p>The alligator-hide hunter again took the lead;
but now he had a following that must have given
him a strange thrill every time he turned his head
to glance backward, for quite a flotilla of boats
came in his wake; while on the nearby land a swarm
of figures flitted, reminding one somewhat of a
pack of silent wolves chasing relentlessly after a
wounded stag.</p>
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