登陆注册
4609300000015

第15章 TWO BLACK BEARS IN TROUBLE.(2)

When it was opened the second surprise of the evening confronted the fugitive. Jimmie McGraw stood in the hall threatening an angry waiter with his clenched fists. Although the boy was small, and no match for the waiter, he was exceedingly nimble, and the waiter was unable to lay hands on him.

"He's tryin' to throw me out," exclaimed Jimmie, grinning at sight of the boys. "Tell him it is all right.""We are expecting the boy," Fremont said. "Kindly let him alone.""I'm ordered to throw him out of the hotel," roared the waiter.

"He's a tramp."

Fremont pacified the fellow with a silver offering and, drawing Jimmie inside of the room, closed the door. Then the three boys, looking from one to the other, broke out in uproarious laughter.

For Jimmie was a sight to behold. His clothing was torn, and his hands and face looked as if they had never seen water.

"How did you get down here?" asked Fremont, after a moment.

"I left you in New York, to look after that end of the Cameron case.""Huh!" exclaimed the boy. "You didn't take the railroad iron up with you when you came down, did you? Nor yet you didn't lock up the side-door Pullmans. I got fired as second assistant to the private secretary to the scrubwoman, 'cause she got pinched, so I came on down here to help Uncle Sam keep the border quiet.""They won't let you drum," interrupted Fatty. "You're too short.""I don't want to drum," was the indignant reply. "I want to get over into Mexico an' live in the mountains. Say, if you boys have any mazuma, just pass it out. I'm hungry enough to eat the Statue of Liberty in the harbor.""I'm hungry, too," said Frank Shaw.

"I knew it," observed Jimmie. "Come on. Let's go out and eat.""Wait," said Frank, "there's something doing here. Fremont's got to get out of this room right away and I'll go with him. There is a window we can climb out of. When we get out I'll plant Fremont somewhere and circle back here with some provisions for you. Understand?""Me for the hike out of the window, too," said Jimmie. "I see myself waitin' here for you to come back with grub after you get your share.

You'll come back--not."

"Sure I'll come back," replied Frank. "Besides, some one's got to stay here. You for the bed, Jimmie," he added, with a sudden smile on his face, brought out, doubtless, by the arrival of a brilliant idea, "you for the bed, and if the cops come here you're the boy that has the room --see?" And there ain't no other boy that you know of. That will keep them guessing. They'll think they've been following the wrong kid, and we'll all get across the Rio Grande before they wake up. You for the bed, Jimmie."But Jimmie held back, saying that he did not feel in need of a bed, but did feel in need of a square meal. But the boys, laughing at the wry faces and savage speeches he made, helped him off with his clothes, turned out the lights, and dropped out of the window into an alley which ran, one story below, at the rear of the hotel.

They were none too soon in concluding their arrangements, for as they lit on the ground below a heavy knock came on the door of the room they had just left. As they slipped off in the darkness they heard Jimmie doing a pretty good imitation of a snore.

"Say," Fremont said, as they drew up on a street corner after a short run, "they'll arrest Jimmie. If the cops ask the waiters, they'll soon know that there were others in that room, and they'll arrest him for obstructing an officer. I wish we had brought him with us. Poor Jimmie!""He'll get out of it in some way," laughed Frank. "They won't hold him long if they do pinch him. Anyway, we want him around there to meet Nestor when he comes back. He'll tell some cock-and-bull story that will put him to the good with the cops."But Fremont was not so sure of the resourcefulness of Jimmie, and worried over the matter not a little as they walked the streets, quieting down now, for the soldiers had been called back to camp and the citizens of the town were seeking their homes and beds. As for Frank, he was talking most of the time of the supper he was hoping to get before long. The boys did not care to enter a conspicuous restaurant, and so they chose an obscure eating house on a side street.

At first glance the place seemed without customers as they entered, and the boys were glad to have the room to themselves, but as soon as they were seated two men came in and took seats at a table not far away from their own. The men were dusky fellows, with long hair and sharp black eyes. They ordered sparingly, as if they cared little for food, and, after glancing furtively around the room, spent their time in whispered conversation.

Fremont thought he saw something familiar in one of the men, and kept his eyes on his face until the coarse features, the sullen grin, became associated in his mind with the Cameron building in New York. It did not seem possible that this could be true, yet there was a face he had seen in the corridors of the great building, and every moment the identification was becoming more definite.

"Ever see that man before?" he asked of Frank, nudging the boy and pointing with his fork, held so low down that it could not be seen by the others.

"I'm sure I have," was the reply. "He was at the hotel when I went upstairs to your room," Frank went on. "I remember now."Before anything more could be said the two men arose and approached the table where the boys sat. Railing at the adverse fate which had brought him in contact with this man after a successful flight from the New York police, Fremont arose and darted toward the door. He gained the doorway before the other could seize him, and there turned to look back.

Shaw had not been so fortunate in escaping the grasp of the Mexican, for such he appeared to be. When Fremont looked back the fellow was trying his best to throw the boy to the floor, while his companion stood by with clenched fists. The boy was about to turn back to the assistance of him chum when he saw with joy that this would not be necessary.

同类推荐
  • 朝鲜赋

    朝鲜赋

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 回中牡丹为雨所败二

    回中牡丹为雨所败二

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 白香词谱

    白香词谱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 偶留羊振文先辈及一

    偶留羊振文先辈及一

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 唐诗纪事

    唐诗纪事

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 斗爱

    斗爱

    她只不过是个菜鸟,顺了辆豪华跑车,谁知道那么倒霉,里面竟然附赠品了一个小娃娃!她该怎么办?只能一起接管了!做牛做马做母亲,她辛辛苦苦带了四年,谁知孩子他爹找上了门!带走了孩子不说,还连她一起囚禁!不是吧!她可不可以不要啊!说什么她就是孩子的母亲!拜托,人家一直小姑独处!想要免费保姆,也别用这样的烂招!他拥有无穷的财富,却漫不经心的失去了一切!最爱的女人和她的孩子,一并在四年前失踪!当与孩子重新相认,那个小偷,竟然是……———
  • 第十六届百花文学奖:《小说月报》获奖作品集(下册)

    第十六届百花文学奖:《小说月报》获奖作品集(下册)

    百花文学奖从《小说月报》百花奖一路走来,三十年筚路蓝缕,以遴选当代文学佳作为使命,以家喻户晓的品牌期刊为平台,以具有公信力的评选方式为寄出,因其权威性和公正性,在作家与读者心目中占据重要地位。2015年,正值《小说月报》与《散文》杂志创刊三十五周年,第十六届百花文学奖华丽升级,增设散文奖。小说与散文双峰并峙,向读者展现两年间文坛佳作的完美版图。本书收入的获奖作品系自《小说月报》2013至2014年选载的三百多部作品中脱颖而出,是对近两年来国内中短篇小说创作的全面总结,为关注当代小说创作的读者、作者与研究者提供了具有公信力与权威性的小说选本。
  • 西汉宫廷演义

    西汉宫廷演义

    《中国历代宫廷演义丛书》,深入宫闱,演述帝王后妃问爱恨情仇;广涉史事,详览封建王朝之波诡云谲。读透了这套书,就读透了宫廷;读透了宫廷,就读透了历史;读透了历史,现实也就洞然胸中。
  • 伤寒来苏集

    伤寒来苏集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 帕尔哈德与西琳:维吾尔族爱情长诗(中华大国学经典文库)

    帕尔哈德与西琳:维吾尔族爱情长诗(中华大国学经典文库)

    这是我国维吾尔族优秀的古典诗人阿不都热依木·那札尔(1770~1848)根据民间传说创作的叙事长诗,是我国多民族文学宝库中的珍贵遗产。作品通过古代王子帕尔哈德富于传奇色彩的一生及其和美丽的西琳公主的恋爱故事,歌颂了劳动,歌颂了勇敢、忠诚、不贪富贵、不畏强暴的高贵品德,反映了维吾尔族人民对幸福生活和美好理想的追求,也寄托了诗人对当时黑暗的封建社会的不满。
  • 洞真太上太素玉箓

    洞真太上太素玉箓

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 摩诃止观辅行搜要记

    摩诃止观辅行搜要记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 哈利波特之天生反派

    哈利波特之天生反派

    当穿越到哈利波特的世界,却发现自己穿的是一个二世祖反派——德拉科·马尔福不对啊,我是直男啊喂!这个略晋江的设定是怎么回事?嗯,家里挺有钱的,也有地位。但是这并没有什么用,逍遥个几年之后伏地魔回来了,连家都没了,政治成分大有问题的老爹混得惨得看不下去。那么问题来了。是当个好人还是坏人呢?看样子两边的大腿都不好抱啊。
  • 月蛮圣魂之冥奢华

    月蛮圣魂之冥奢华

    “苦主大人,巨鱼涌上崖,差一点把阿萝姑娘吞掉了!是不是该派人把她看守起来呢?”“杀了吧。”“苦主您,要把阿萝姑娘......”“杀巨鱼,诛心灭族!”暗想:还好还好,还是那个宠媳妇儿的苦主。但不至于诛灭巨鱼族吧。“苦主大人......”“难道要我下令诛灭水族吗?”“不不不,属下告退!”三千年前,我身穿咱们成亲之日的红衣,一夜屠尽八荒只为你一人。你不顾情缘弃我而去,让我独自游离于三界,可曾想过我这上千年是怎么活下来的?如今你说嫁就嫁,我一定要娶你吗?“
  • 你是我输不起的明天

    你是我输不起的明天

    读你,一缕清愁的凝眸。情不知所起,一往而深。“我有江南铁笛,要倚一枝香雪,吹彻玉城霞。清影渺难即,飞絮满天涯。”或许,借倚春雪,铁笛吹彻,便是我对爱情的憧憬向往吧。如若,你,注定是我今生唯一的传奇,我愿,我愿,痴痴寻你、默默伴你,即使清影难寻,想你的日子也如飞絮飘飘,布满天涯……席慕容说,如何让你遇见我,在我最美丽的时刻。为这,我已在佛前求了五百年,求他让我们结一段尘缘……我在最美的年华里静心守候,看花开花落,观云卷云舒,不为浮华、不为惊艳,只为相遇你最美的心,共你谱一场“桃源”的落英缤纷……