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"Did you look in here?" asked a soldier, approaching the alcove.
"Yes, sir; they ain't in there." She snuffed the candle out suddenly with her fingers. "Oh, oh!--my light done gone out! Mind! Let me go in front and show you the way," she said; and, pressing before, she once more led them along the pa.s.sage.
"Mind yo' steps; ken you see?" she asked.
They went down stairs, while Lucy Ann gave them minute directions as to how they might catch "Ma.r.s.e Hugh an' the Gen'l" at a certain place a half-mile from the house (an unoccupied quarter), which she carefully described.
A further investigation ensued downstairs, but in a little while the searchers went out of the house. Their tone had changed since their disappointment, and loud threats floated up the dark stairway to the prisoners still crouching in the little recess.
In a few minutes the boys' Cousin Belle came rus.h.i.+ng up stairs.
"Now's your time! Come quick," she called; "they will be back directly. Isn't she an angel!" The whole party sprang to their feet, and ran down to the lower floor.
"Oh, we were so frightened!" "Don't let them see you." "Make haste,"
were the exclamations that greeted them as the two soldiers said their good-byes and prepared to leave the house.
"Go out by the side-door; that's your only chance. It's pitch-dark, and the bushes will hide you. But where are you going?"
"We are going to the boys' cave," said the General, buckling on his pistol; "I know the way, and we'll get away as soon as these fellows leave, if we cannot before."
"G.o.d bless you!" said the ladies, pus.h.i.+ng them away in dread of the enemy's return.
"Come on, General," called Hugh in an undertone. The General was lagging behind a minute to say good-bye once more. He stooped suddenly and kissed the boys' Cousin Belle before them all.
"Good-bye. G.o.d bless you!" and he followed Hugh out of the window into the darkness. The girl burst into tears and ran up to her room.
A few seconds afterward the house was once more filled with the enemy, growling at their ill-luck in having so narrowly missed the prize.
"We'll catch 'em yet," said the leader.
CHAPTER XV.
The raiders were up early next morning scouring the woods and country around. They knew that the fugitive soldiers could not have gone far, for the Federals had every road picketed, and their main body was not far away. As the morning wore on, it became a grave question at Oakland how the two soldiers were to subsist. They had no provisions with them, and the roads were so closely watched that there was no chance of their obtaining any. The matter was talked over, and the boys' mother and Cousin Belle were in despair.
"They can eat their shoes," said w.i.l.l.y, reflectively.
The ladies exclaimed in horror.
"That's what men always do when they get lost in a wilderness where there is no game."
This piece of information from w.i.l.l.y did not impress his hearers as much as he supposed it would.
"I'll tell you! Let me and Frank go and carry 'em something to eat!"
"How do you know where they are?"
"They are at our Robber's Cave, aren't they, Cousin Belle? We told the General yesterday how to get there, didn't we?"
"Yes, and he said last night that he would go there."
w.i.l.l.y's idea seemed a good one, and the offer was accepted. The boys were to go out as if to see the troops, and were to take as much food as they thought could pa.s.s for their luncheon. Their mother cooked and put up a luncheon large enough to have satisfied the appet.i.tes of two young Brobdingnagians, and they set out on their relief expedition.
The two st.u.r.dy little figures looked full of importance as they strode off up the road. They carried many loving messages. Their Cousin Belle gave to each separately a long whispered message which each by himself was to deliver to the General. It was thought best not to hazard a note.
They were watched by the ladies from the portico until they disappeared over the hill. They took a path which led into the woods, and walked cautiously for fear some of the raiders might be lurking about. However, the boys saw none of the enemy, and in a little while they came to a point where the pines began. Then they turned into the woods, for the pines were so thick the boys could not be seen, and the pine tags made it so soft under foot that they could walk without making any noise.
They were pus.h.i.+ng their way through the bushes, when Frank suddenly stopped.
"Hus.h.!.+" he said.
w.i.l.l.y halted and listened.
"There they are."
From a little distance to one side, in the direction of the path they had just left, they heard the trampling of a number of horses' feet.
"That's not our men," said w.i.l.l.y. "Hugh and the General haven't any horses."
"No; that's the Yankees," said Frank. "Let's lie down. They may hear us."
The boys flung themselves upon the ground and almost held their breath until the horses had pa.s.sed out of hearing.
"Do you reckon they are hunting for us?" asked w.i.l.l.y in an awed whisper.
"No, for Hugh and the General. Come on."
They rose, went tipping a little deeper into the pines, and again made their way toward the cave.
"Maybe they've caught 'em," suggested w.i.l.l.y.
"They can't catch 'em in these pines," replied Frank. "You can't see any distance at all. A horse can't get through, and the General and Hugh could shoot 'em, and then get away before they could catch 'em."
They hurried on.
"Frank, suppose they take us for Yankees?"
Evidently w.i.l.l.y's mind had been busy since Frank's last speech.
"They aren't going to shoot _us_," said Frank; but it was an unpleasant suggestion, for they were not very far from the dense clump of pines between two gullies, which the boys called their cave.
"We can whistle," he said, presently.
"Won't Hugh and the General think we are enemies trying to surround them?" w.i.l.l.y objected. The dilemma was a serious one. "We'll have to crawl up," said Frank, after a pause.