<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII</SPAN><br/> <small>OVERHAULED</small></h2>
<p>“Well, I like that!” George was heard to
exclaim; and it was noticed that he seemed
to be greatly amused over something or other.</p>
<p>“What d’ye mean, George?” asked Josh; for
the two boats were so close together all this
while that those aboard could exchange comments
without great difficulty; although they
had to raise their voices considerably, because
of the furious rattling of the exhausts.</p>
<p>“It must be a joke, be the powers;” broke in
Andy, “because he’s been laughin’ that quiet
loike till himsilf this long toime.”</p>
<p>“That’s what it is, a joke!” declared George;
“and by that, I mean the wonderful Saunterer.
Our new friend, Algernon, didn’t you hear him
call his expensive craft a speed boat? Say, it’s
a wonder, that’s what! The only thing I’m
surprised at is his giving her such a gentle name.
He ought to have called her Chain-Lightning,
Blue Streak, or something like that. Why?
Because she goes like a shot—nit. A speed
boat, that thing? Well, and her doing about<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</SPAN></span>
twelve miles an hour at her best too! I could
cut circles all around her, if only you’d let me
go, Jack. And look at the Tramp walking up
on her; yet when did you call your craft a speed
boat, I’d like to know?”</p>
<p>“Oh! that’s what’s so funny to you, is it?”
Jack went on to say. “But you must remember
who owns the Saunterer, George. Perhaps,
when she’s doing her best she seems to be flying
through the water like mad to Algernon. Everybody
doesn’t happen to be built the same as
you, George.”</p>
<p>“Well, I should say not,” declared the other,
immediately.</p>
<p>“And there are a whole lot of people who are
mighty glad of it,” put in Josh.</p>
<p>“Arrah! that’s thrue, ivery word av it,”
echoed Andy. “Sure the world’d be turned
upside-down in a hurry, av there were many
Georges runnin’ around loose, thryin’ to bate
ivery other George. I do be sayin’ ’em wid
their tongues hangin’ out av their mouths and,
always lookin’ for a race. Now, belave me
the ould Comfort is a hape more to me likin’
than a boat that cuts through the wather loike
a knife; and kapes ye thinkin’ ye are sittin’ on
the sharp edge all the while.”</p>
<p>“Oh! well, there have to be different kinds of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</SPAN></span>
people in this old world,” sang out the undaunted
George, “and we happen to be built
on different models, that’s all. You never saw
a race horse, one of the thoroughbred type, but
what he was nervous, and finely strung. I
suppose that’s the way I am constructed.
Can’t help it, to save me. I’m really unhappy
to be going slow at any time.”</p>
<p>And that was really a fact, for George ate his
meals in a hurry, studied his lessons with a rush;
and when he played football was always a terror
upon the lines, carrying things with him; though
apt to prove a weak defense in the end from over-exertion.</p>
<p>While this little heart-to-heart talk was going
on, they kept drawing steadily closer to the
white boat.</p>
<p>Jack had begun to speculate on what was apt
to happen when finally the pursuers were able
to overtake the fugitive craft. He knew that
the desperate men who were aboard would not
be apt to think of surrendering easily, and
especially when they knew or suspected that
their foes consisted for the most part simply of
half-grown boys.</p>
<p>They were armed, too, which was a fact calculated
to make Jack act cautiously. True,
he carried his reliable Marlin along with him,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</SPAN></span>
and at close range a shotgun is a serious
weapon to consider, especially one of hard-shooting,
modern kind, but Jack did not much fancy
having to use this, except as the very last resort.</p>
<p>One thing surprised him not a little; he
wondered why the escaping bank thieves had
not thought to run their boat ashore, and
escape to dry land. Surely they must have
realized before now that the motor boats were
in pursuit of them, and bound to overtake them
at that, before long.</p>
<p>Perhaps they were still a little in doubt.
Then, again, it might be they scorned to show
the white feather in connection with a pursuit
conducted by mere striplings. But Jack secretly
believed there must be another and more likely
reason for their sticking to the boat. If they
landed, they were going to have a hard time of
it avoiding the many officers who, spurred on by
the reward that had likely been offered for their
apprehension, and the return of the stolen
plunder, would be on the lookout at every
cross road in the country south.</p>
<p>Now, if only they could get a chance to change
the color of their craft they might keep right
on moving down the great river, and snap their
fingers at every inquisitive person; for it would<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</SPAN></span>
be a white boat that these watchers would be
looking for.</p>
<p>Yes, these things must weigh heavily with the
two men, and make them want to stick by the
stolen motor boat as long as possible. They
may have laid out their plans, and hated to
alter them; and these had to do with a voyage
on the river, running by night, until they reached
a certain place of refuge; it might be down at
St. Louis, for all Jack knew.</p>
<p>No matter what the reason, there was the
white boat, still keeping to the middle of the
wide river, and apparently doing her best to
outrun the two pursuing craft.</p>
<p>When ten minutes had passed they had cut
down that lead to less than half; and it really
looked as if Jack’s prediction was about to come
true.</p>
<p>“What can that dark thing away ahead be,
I wonder?” Jack heard Josh saying about this
time.</p>
<p>As it was of the utmost importance that he
keep in close touch with everything that went
on, no matter how trivial it seemed, the skipper
immediately raised his head, and asked:</p>
<p>“Where-abouts, Josh?”</p>
<p>“Why, look beyond the white boat, and
you’ll see something low down on the water,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</SPAN></span>
Jack. Yes, and there’s a dark spot in the middle
of it, too, just like a cheese box on a raft.
Can that be another island, d’ye reckon; and
are they meanin’ to go ashore there, and hold
us off?”</p>
<p>“Oh! I guess not,” remarked Jack, after
taking a good look, “what you see, Josh, is what
you’d call a raft of logs floating down the river.
We’ve seen such pass up our way many a time.
And generally the two men aboard will have a
little cabin, where they take turns sleeping,
when voyaging at night, which they don’t often
do, I reckon. Yes, I believe I can see signs of
a couple of lighted lanterns. They’re to tell
steamboats to sheer off; and they always do,
because a collision with all those big logs would
go hard with any boat.”</p>
<p>“Guess you’re right, Jack,” admitted the
other, yielding readily to the argument which
he realized was convincing. “But say, d’ye
think our men see that same old raft? Could
they be making for it, now, meanin’ to board
the same, and keep us off?”</p>
<p>That idea had flashed into Jack’s mind, but
as yet he could not say; for he was unable to
see just what advantage such a course would be
to the fugitives. True, the pursuers had been
overhauling them so fast of late that it began<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</SPAN></span>
to appear as though they were having trouble
with the engine Jenks had fixed. If that
proved to be the case, then they might have been
seized with a fear that they were going to be
overhauled; and as it was too late now to reach
land, the next best thing would be to make a
floating battery of the raft, and keep their persistent
enemies off, until they could steer the
clumsy float nearer the shore.</p>
<p>“What’s the programme, Jack?” called
George, who was doubtless fairly quivering
with excitement, and eager for hostilities to
begin.</p>
<p>“You come up on the left, while we take
the right,” replied the other, just as though he
had figured all this out, as he undoubtedly had.</p>
<p>“Do we board the pirate boat?” George
went on.</p>
<p>“We’ll have to, if we expect to retake it for
Algernon,” Jack answered.</p>
<p>“They’ll put up a stiff fight, Jack, don’t forget
that,” the skipper of the Wireless went
on to say.</p>
<p>“Well, if only they’d get cold feet it’d make
it all the easier for us,” Josh broke in with, just
then. “And don’t I wish every fellow had a
gun like Jack, here. Then we’d have ’em dead
to rights, and they’d soon throw up the sponge,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</SPAN></span>
when we started in to bombard the lot with
shot. Say, Jack, you expect to use that same
little Marlin, I hope; for what’s the good of a
gun when you won’t make it squeal?”</p>
<p>“I’ll use it to let them know we’re armed,
first of all,” Jack explained, “and that might
go a good ways toward making them surrender.”</p>
<p>“But hold on, Jack, don’t do that if the two
shells are all you’ve got. A nice sort of thing
that’d be, to scare the game, and not have anything
to pink ’em with afterwards,” Josh went
on to say, in alarm.</p>
<p>“Oh! I’ve got a few more in my pocket,”
returned the other. “I was wise enough to slip
some shells in my coat before we left camp the
first time. Don’t worry about that, Josh.
There! wasn’t that a man’s head bobbing up
above the stern of the other boat just then?”</p>
<p>It certainly must have been, for immediately
there came a hoarse hail across the intervening
water.</p>
<p>“Hello! there, you in the motor boats!”</p>
<p>“Hello! yourself! what d’ye want?” demanded
George; before Jack could say a word;
for George did everything so quickly it was hard
to get ahead of him.</p>
<p>“We want you to sheer off, and mind your
own business, hear that?” replied the party<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</SPAN></span>
aboard the white boat belonging to Algernon.</p>
<p>“That’s just what we are doing,” Jack called
out. “You’ve made a mistake and gone off
with the wrong boat. Yours is up above, on
the island; and that one belongs to a friend of
ours. We want it; and what’s more, we’re
going to take it back. Do you get that?”</p>
<p>The two men could be heard talking hurriedly
together. Possibly they were trying to
figure out just what the boy meant and if it
could be that their real identity were as yet
unsuspected. If the boys simply looked on
them as boat thieves, perhaps they might manage
to deceive them in some way. But when
the man spoke once more it was evident that
they could not wholly reconcile themselves to
this idea.</p>
<p>“We want to warn you to keep off, or you’re
apt to get hurt right bad. We’re heavily
armed, and will shoot straight, take that from
me.”</p>
<p>“Oh! say you so?” called out George, mockingly,
“well, perhaps there are two who can
play at that game, mister. Guess we’ve got
firearms along, too; and can pepper your hides
with Number Seven shot till you’ll look like a
Christmas plum pudding. Jack, shall we give
’em a volley right now?”</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</SPAN></span></p>
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