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d.i.c.k had already told Dr. Bentley of the fugitive, Tag Mosher, and the fact that that young offender was at large in the woods, and armed.
"I'm not afraid of him," declared the doctor bluntly, "and I shall always be within sound of the camp. It wouldn't take you boys long to get over here, either, at need."
d.i.c.k now reluctantly called his chums away, as Mrs. Bentley and the high school girls might want a little time to themselves.
"It's going to be great to have such company right at hand," declared Darry gleefully.
"Only I must warn you of one thing," retorted d.i.c.k.
"What?"
"You remember the errant that brought us into the woods?"
"Football training!"
"Exactly, and even the welcome presence of the girls mustn't be allowed in the least to interfere with the serious and hard work that we have ahead of us for the honor of good old Gridley High School!"
"That goes, too," nodded Greg. "Though I am afraid the girls will feel almost neglected."
"No, they won't," Darry retorted. "The girls all belong to Gridley High School as much as we do, and they're just as big football boosters when it comes to that. They'll endure a little neglect when they know it's for the honor and glory of our school."
"Besides," suggested d.i.c.k, "they may be glad to put in a little time watching us train."
There will be no objection to that, will there?"
"Not a bit," declared the others.
Tom Reade, having been left in charge of the camp, had also taken upon himself the preparing of the dinner, though this was not his day for such service. The others now turned to help him.
"I'm glad the girls have come, and I'm also sorry," declared Reade.
"If we stick to training as conscientiously as we ought to they'll feel that we're not showing them all the attention they've a right to expect."
"We won't neglect training," d.i.c.k retorted, "and the girls won't feel neglected, either. We've talked that over on the way here, and we'll explain it to the girls when we see them again. They're Gridley High School girls, and they're sensible."
It was not long ere dinner was ready. Six famished boys sat down at the table.
"I wonder what on earth is the reason that we haven't heard from Mr. Hibbert, or from the Blinders agency, either?" spoke d.i.c.k, when the meal was half over.
"I had almost forgotten about those parties," Tom rejoined. "Not hearing from Hibbert, as I take it, means that that generous young friend of ours has broken off communication with the Eagle Hotel in Gridley. But I can't understand why the agency hasn't communicated with us in some way."
Dinner was eaten in quicker time than usual. d.i.c.k and Dave, perhaps some of the others, felt a secret desire to slip over to the other camp, but no one mentioned any such wish. Instead, the dinner dishes were washed, the cooking utensils cleaned, and the camp put in a very good semblance of order.
"In forty-five minutes more," remarked Prescott, glancing at his watch, "we must be back at training work."
"Not to-day," replied Tom.
"What's the matter?" demanded d.i.c.k, looking sharply at him.
"In forty-five minutes more," exclaimed Reade, "we'll be sitting inside the tent, looking out at the weather."
"What are you talking about, Tom?" asked Darry.
"Read your answer in the skies," retorted Reade.
Though none of the other five boys had noticed it, the sky had been gradually clouding. The wind was becoming brisker, too, and there was more than the usual amount of moisture in the air.
"Pshaw! That's a shame," muttered d.i.c.k.
"I wish we might arrange it with the weather clerk to have it rain at night, after ten o'clock, and have dry ground in the day time," sighed Dave Darrin.
Yet none of the boys spoke the thought that was uppermost in more than one mind---the wish that they might go over to the Bentley camp to spend the time that it rained in the society of the girls.
It was Reade, who was perhaps less attracted by girls' society than the others who finally suggested:
"We ought to send someone over to the other camp to see if they are all fixed to stand the coming rain."
"Good idea!" nodded d.i.c.k. "You run over, Tom."
Reade was away less than ten minutes.
"Dr. Bentley says they'll be as snug as can be in the biggest kind of a summer rain that the weather clerk has on tap," Tom reported.
Flashes of lightning were now illumining the gradually darkening sky. Distant rumblings of thunder also sounded.
"I hope it won't be much of a thunderstorm," sighed d.i.c.k. "Some girls are very uneasy in a thunderstorm."
"Laura is afraid of one, I know," said Dave.
In a few minutes more the big drops of rain began to fall. Soon after swirling sheets of water descended. d.i.c.k & Co. had all they could do to keep dry in such a downpour.
"This is where the portable house has the advantage of a tent,"
grunted Tom. "The portable houses yonder are even equipped with some kind of rubber roofing. If this storm keeps up through the night at this rate, we'll be washed out long before daylight."
"I can stand it," retorted Prescott, "as long as I know that Mrs.
Bentley and the girls are protected from the weather. Yet I won't mind if the storm does let up after an hour or two."
Conversation ceasing, after a time, all but Reade and Dalzell got out books to read from the slender stock of literature that they had brought with them into the woods.
The heavy storm made it a dull afternoon, where there might have been so much fun.
But not one of d.i.c.k & Co. had the least idea of the excitement in store for them. The storm held more than rain for many people.
CHAPTER XVIII
MR. PAGE'S KIND OF FATHER