HIS FRIENDS***


E-text prepared by David Edwards, Demian Katz, and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
available by Villanova University Digital Library
(http://digital.library.villanova.edu/)



Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
      file which includes the original illustrated book cover.
      See 46257-h.htm or 46257-h.zip:
      (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/46257/46257-h/46257-h.htm)
      or
      (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/46257/46257-h.zip)


      Images of the original pages are available through
      Villanova University Digital Library. See
      http://digital.library.villanova.edu/Item/vudl:300153


Transcriber's note:

      Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).

      Text enclosed by equal signs is in bold face (=bold=).





Motor Stories

Thrilling Adventure Motor Fiction

No. 2 Mar. 6, 1909

Five Cents

MOTOR MATT'S DARING

OR TRUE TO HIS FRIENDS

by

STANLEY R. MATTHEWS


[Illustration: _"Steady!" cried Motor Matt, reaching
for the head of the runaway
horse._]







Street & Smith,
Publishers,
New York.




Motor Stories

Thrilling Adventure      Motor Fiction


_Issued Weekly. By subscription $2.50 per year. Entered according to
Act of Congress in the year 1909, in the Office of the Librarian of
Congress, Washington, D. C., by_ STREET & SMITH, _79-89 Seventh
Avenue, New York, N. Y._

No. 2.      NEW YORK, March 6, 1909.      Price Five Cents.

MOTOR MATT'S DARING;

OR,

TRUE TO HIS FRIENDS.


By the author of "MOTOR MATT."




CONTENTS


  CHAPTER I. THE RUNAWAY MOTOR-CYCLE.
  CHAPTER II. UNDERHAND WORK.
  CHAPTER III. M'READY'S "STRIKE."
  CHAPTER IV. DACE PERRY'S DUPLICITY.
  CHAPTER V. A DISAGREEABLE SURPRISE.
  CHAPTER VI. OVERHAULING THE THIEF.
  CHAPTER VII. BACK TO THE BLUEBELL.
  CHAPTER VIII. TOO LATE!
  CHAPTER IX. HELD AT BAY.
  CHAPTER X. A DARING ESCAPE.
  CHAPTER XI. A HARD JOURNEY.
  CHAPTER XII. A STOUT HEART AND PLENTY OF HOPE.
  CHAPTER XIII. MATT WINS--AND LOSES.
  CHAPTER XIV. A QUEER TANGLE.
  CHAPTER XV. THE LAST SURPRISE.
  CHAPTER XVI. MOTOR MATT'S TRIUMPH.




CHARACTERS THAT APPEAR IN THIS STORY.


  =Matt King=, concerning whom there has always been a mystery--a lad
  of splendid athletic abilities, and never-failing nerve, who has won
  for himself, among the boys of the Western town, the popular name of
  "Mile-a-minute Matt."

  =Chub McReady=, sometimes called plain "Reddy," for short, on account
  of his fiery "thatch"--a chum of Matt, with a streak of genius for
  inventing things that often land the bold experimenter in trouble.

  =Welcome Perkins=, a one-legged wanderer who lives with Chub and his
  sister while their father prospects for gold--Welcome is really a
  man of peace, yet he delights to imagine himself a "terror," and is
  forever boasting about being a "reformed road-agent."

  =Dirk Hawley=, a sporting man who usually gets whatever he goes
  after; and being both rich and unscrupulous is reckoned a dangerous
  character to have for an enemy.

  =Dace Perry=, a school companion of young King, who has learned to
  hate Matt so furiously that he is ready to go to almost any length in
  order to do our hero an injury.

  =Tom Clipperton=, known generally as "Clip," a quarter-blood, who is
  very sensitive about his Indian ancestry.

  =Susie McReady=, the small sister of Chub.

  =Edith Hawley=, the gambler's daughter.

  =Mr. McReady=, a prospector.

  =Delray=, a watchman in charge of the abandoned "Bluebell" Mine.

  =Jacks=,  }
  =Bisbee=, } two ruffians in the employ of Hawley.

  =Pedro Morales=, a Mexican wood-hauler.




CHAPTER I.

THE RUNAWAY MOTOR-CYCLE.


"Shade o' Gallopin' Dick! Say, allow me to rise an' explain that I kin
ride anythin' from a hoss to a streak o' greased lightnin'. I don't
take no back seat fer anythin' on hoofs, 'r wheels, 'r wings. If ye
think ye kin make Eagle-eye Perkins, ex-Pirate o' the Plains, take
to the cliffs an' the cactus jest by flashin' a little ole benzine
push-cart onto him an' darin' him to git straddle, ye're goin' to be
fooled a-plenty. Shucks! Here, hold my hat."

"You don't have to shed your hat, Perk."

"Got to cl'ar decks fer action. When a man with a wooden leg goes
gallivantin' around on a two-wheeled buzz-wagon, the less plunder he
keeps aboard the better. Hold the hat an' hesh up about it. Which crank
d'ye turn to make 'er start?"

Ed Penny, on his one-cylinder motor-cycle, had come _chug-chugging_
across the bridge over the town canal and stopped in front of the
McReady home. While he was out in front, talking with Chub McReady,
Welcome Perkins, the self-called reformed road-agent, had stumped out
of the house and walked around the hitching-post against which Penny
had leaned the machine. Welcome had snorted contemptuously. Penny had
then whirled on the old man and had asked him if he thought he could
ride the motor-cycle. This led to Welcome's outburst and the jerking
off of his sombrero, which he handed to Chub.

Both boys were enchanted with the prospect ahead of them. There was
never anything Welcome hadn't done or couldn't do--to hear him tell
about it--and this looked like a good chance to take some of the
conceit out of him.

"Ever ride a bike, Welcome?" asked Penny, his enthusiasm palling a
little as he thought of what might happen to his machine.

"Ride a bike!" exploded Welcome; "_me_! Why, I was raised on 'em. Never
was scart of a reg'lar bike yet, so I reckon two wheels an' a couple
o' quarts o' gasoline ain't goin' to make me side-step none. How d'ye
start 'er, I ask ye? What knob d'ye pull?"

Penny showed him how to start the gasoline and to switch on the spark.
Welcome puffed himself up and patted his chest.

"Nothin' to it," he rumbled. "Watch my smoke, will ye, an' see how easy
ridin' a contraption like that comes to a feller that's knowed how to
do things his hull life."

He pulled off his coat and gave it to Chub to hold, along with his hat.
Then he rolled up his shirt-sleeves.

"Snakes alive!" he muttered, with a sudden thought. "How am I goin' to
keep that wooden pin on the pedal?"

"We'll tie it there, Perk," answered Chub promptly. "Wait a minute."

He hung the coat and hat on the hitching-post and started off into
the yard. While he was gone, Welcome began pulling up the strap that
secured the pin to his stump of a leg. By way of showing how calm and
self-possessed he was, he sang as he worked.

    "I oncet knowed a gal in the year o' '83,
    A han'some young thing by the name o' Em-eye-lee;
    I never could persuade her for to leave me be,
    An' she went an' she took an' she married me."

When Chub got back with a piece of rope, Welcome was astride the
saddle, his foot on the ground, with Penny, who was shaking with
suppressed joy, helping to hold up the machine.

"Tie 'er tight, son," said Welcome.

"Don't you fret any about that, Perk," answered Chub, with a wink at
Penny as he lifted himself erect. "Remember how to start?"

"Think I'm an ijut?" demanded Welcome indignantly. "I got a head fer
machinery, anyways, an' I could hev studied it out all by myself if
ye'd given me time. Are we all ready?"

Chub helped Penny pull the machine upright.

"All ready!" they answered, in one voice, with sly grins at each other
behind the old man's back.

"Then see me tear loose."

Welcome worked the requisite levers, the machine began to sputter,
and the boys gave it a shove. There was a good deal of wabbling, at
first, but as the machine gathered headway it got steadier, and Welcome
dwindled away down the road.

"Not so much of a joke, after all, Penny," observed Chub, in gloomy
disappointment. "The old freak seems to know how to stay on and keep
right side up. I thought he'd scatter himself all over the road right
at the start."

"One on us, Chub," returned Penny. "Ah," he added, his eyes on Welcome,
"he's turning 'round in that big open space near the canal bridge.
Gee-whiz! but that was a short turn. Watch him, will you! He's comin'
this way like the cannon-ball limited."

"What's he yellin' about?" queried Chub excitedly. "Something must have
gone wrong."

Both boys watched the approaching Welcome with growing wonder. He was
coming like a house afire, his long hair blowing out behind him, and he
was howling like a Comanche. There was a look of helpless consternation
on his face.

"Gosh-all-Friday! How d'ye stop 'er? Ye didn't tell me how ter stop
'er!"

Welcome shot past them like a bullet out of a gun, his voice trailing
out behind him and becoming all jumbled up in the distance.

"He can stay on, all right," whooped Chub, "but he can't stop! Why
didn't you tell him how to stop, Penny?"

"He never asked me!" answered Penny.

"The thing is runnin' away with him!"

Welcome described another hair-raising turn at another place that
allowed him to circle, and came whooping back.

"What'm I goin' to do?" he howled; "how long've I got to keep this
thing up?"

"Jump off!" suggested Chub.

"Can't! Ye tied me on! Wow!"

By that time Welcome was out of talking distance again. When he circled
back on the next frantic round, it was plain that his gorge was
beginning to rise.

"I'll skelp somebody fer this!" he roared. "Ye framed it up between ye,
that's what ye done! Dad-bing the pizen ole thing-um-bob!"

Welcome was now tearing toward the bridge over the canal. A man was
coming across the bridge on foot.

"Great Caesar!" exclaimed Chub, staring toward the bridge, "that's Dirk
Hawley, the gambler, comin' this way?"

"Welcome ain't makin' any move to turn around," answered Penny. "Looks
to me as though he was going to knock Hawley into the canal."

By a common impulse the boys started on a run toward the scene of
threatened disaster. Hawley had come to a standstill in the middle of
the bridge.

"Slow down, you old catamaran!" he cried. "What d'ye mean by scorchin'
like that?"

"Head me off!" begged Welcome. "Can't stop--don't know how to stop!
Trip me up 'r somethin'!"

By the time Hawley had got this through his head Welcome was upon him.
With a shout of anger, Hawley hurled himself to one side. He escaped
being struck, and missed going into the water of the canal by a scant
margin; but he had been obliged to throw himself flat down on the
bridge, and in doing so he had jarred his body a little and jolted his
temper a good deal.

As he picked himself up he said a good many unkind things about
Welcome, but the old fellow was plunging on beyond the bridge and had
other troubles that took up his attention.

Just as he had about made up his mind to run into the side of a
building, or a fence, and bring himself to a halt at any cost, his
frenzied eyes caught sight of another motor-cycle, sailing toward him.
A thrill of hope darted through his breast.

"Matt!" he yelped. "Stop me! The blamed thing's got the bit in its
teeth an' I can't do nothin' with it!"

Matt King slowed down, stared a moment at the frantic old man, laughed
a little, then described a half-circle, put on more power, and raced
along beside the runaway machine. It took him but a moment to lean over
and shut off the engine.

"How did you happen to get in a fix like this, Welcome?" he asked, when
both machines were at a halt and the old man was standing on one foot
and trying to jerk his wooden leg loose from the pedal.

"Can't ye guess what onnery limb put this up on me?" glared Welcome.
"Not sence I reformed hev I ever felt like p'intin' fer All Outdoors
an' becomin' a hootin', tootin' border ruffian, as I do this here
minit! Wow! The ole sperrit is a-bubblin' an' a-stirrin' around in me
like all-possessed, an' I don't reckon I kin hang out agin' it."

"Buck up, Welcome," said Matt, who knew the old fellow's eccentricities
as well as any one, and understood just how much of a false alarm
he was. "It won't do for you to backslide now, after you've lived a
respectable life for so long. Here, I'll get the lashing off that
wooden leg of yours."

Leaning his motor-cycle against a tree by the roadside, Matt bent down
and got busy with the rope. As soon as Welcome could jerk the pin
loose, he whirled and stumped furiously back in the direction of Chub
and Penny. Matt grinned a little as he looked after him.

"I never saw the old chap stirred up as bad as he is now," he muttered.
"I wonder what Dirk Hawley is doing over in this direction? Welcome
came within one of knocking him into the canal. If _that_ had happened
there'd sure have been fireworks."

After leaning Penny's machine against the tree, Matt mounted his own
and started for the bridge. As he crossed the bridge he saw something
white lying on the planks, and halted to pick the object up. It proved
to be an old envelope with an enclosure of some sort, and was addressed
to James McReady, Phoenix, A. T. This address was in ink, but the
"James McReady" had been scratched out and the name of "Mark McReady"
penciled above it.

James McReady was a prospector, and was in the hills looking for gold
most of the time. He was Mark's father, and Mark's nickname was "Chub."
Evidently this letter was intended for Chub, and had fallen from Dirk
Hawley's pocket when he threw himself out of the way of Welcome and the
charging motor-cycle. But how was it that such a letter happened to be
in the possession of Hawley, the gambler? While Matt was puzzling over
that phase of the question, a heavy step sounded on the bridge, and a
gruff, commanding voice called out:

"What are you doin' with that letter? Hand it over here; it belongs to
me!"




CHAPTER II.

UNDERHAND WORK.


That was not the first time Matt King had met Dirk Hawley. The man was
highly successful in his nefarious profession, owned a gambling-house
in Phoenix, and Matt knew, from personal observation, that he was both
tricky and unscrupulous. During the recent Phoenix-Prescott athletic
meet Hawley had tried to bribe Matt to withdraw from the bicycle-race,
and had even gone so far as to have him abducted from Phoenix, in
order to keep him out of it. The gambler, in conjunction with an enemy
of Matt's named Dace Perry, had "plunged" heavily on the Prescott
contestant, and only Matt's timely arrival at the track had saved the
day for Phoenix.[A]

[A] See MOTOR MATT WEEKLY NO. 1 for an account of Matt's exciting dash
of twenty miles from the hills into Phoenix, and his arrival at the
track in time to race with O'Day, the Prescott champion, and win the
prize in the bicycle contest--a seven-horse-power motor-cycle. The
story was entitled "Motor Matt; or, The King of the Wheel."

Because of all this, there was little love lost between Hawley and
Matt. The gambler's face, as he stood on the bridge with one hand
outstretched, was full of anger and determination. Matt eyed him
coolly. With a muttered imprecation, Hawley snatched at the letter, but
Matt stepped back quickly and thrust the missive behind him.

"What d'you mean?" panted Hawley savagely.

"I mean that this letter isn't yours," replied Matt. "It's addressed to
my chum, Mark McReady."

"Never you mind who it's addressed to. I say it's mine, and that's all
you need to know. Give it here! This ain't the first time your trail's
crossed mine, young feller, an' I'm gittin' mighty tired of havin' you
butt in an' try to give me the double-cross. If you know when you're
well off you'll mind your own business--if you've got any to mind.
Gi'me that, an' no more foolishness!"

Hawley finished with a snap of his big, protruding lower jaw. He was a
man accustomed to having his way, and from his manner it was plain that
he intended to have it now. But if he was determined, so was Matt; and
there was a glint in Motor Matt's gray eyes which Hawley would have
done well to heed.

Chub and Penny had approached the bridge from behind the gambler, drawn
to the scene by the other's loud voice and blustering manner. Matt's
face was toward the boys, but Hawley had his back to them and did not
know they were so close.

As Hawley made his last fierce demand for the letter, he sprang
forward, intending to take it by force if he could not get it in any
other way. Matt, who was watching him warily, leaped back and jerked
his motor-cycle in front of him. Hawley came into violent collision
with the hundred-and-fifty-pound machine, barking a shin on one of
the pedals and getting a sharp dig in the stomach with one of the
handle-bars. Matt hung to the motor-cycle and kept it from going over,
for he was not taking any more chances with the _Comet_ than he was
obliged to.

Breathless and fairly boiling with wrath, Hawley fell back.

"Confound you!" he fumed, doubling up with both hands on the pit of
his stomach, "I'll make you sorry for this! If you don't give me that
letter, I'll----"

"There it goes!" cried Matt, flipping the letter deftly over the
gambler's head. "Catch, Chub!" he added. "That's addressed to you, but
it dropped out of Hawley's pocket, here on the bridge. Take care of it."

Chub grabbed the letter out of the air.

"You bet I'll take care of it," he answered. "It was dad who scratched
out his own name and wrote mine over it--I can tell his fist as far as
I can see it. How in Sam Hill did Hawley happen to have this?"

The gambler turned on Chub with an angry snarl.

"I reckon it is yours," said he, with a puzzling change of tactics that
Matt could not understand, "but that's no reason I should give it up to
that young cub," and he turned to glare at Matt. "The letter came into
my hands by accident, an' I was takin' the trouble to walk out here an'
bring it to you when that old freak, Perkins, came within an ace of
running me down."

"Why didn't you give it to me, then?" demanded Chub. "You had plenty
of chance while Matt was racin' after Welcome an' stoppin' the other
machine."

"How could I give it to you," scowled Hawley, "when it was layin' on
the bridge?"

"You never made a move to take it out of your pocket," scored Chub,
"an' you didn't know you'd dropped it on the bridge till you'd turned
around an' saw Matt pickin' it up."

"Aw, what's the use of chewin' the rag with a lot o' kids, anyhow?"
snapped Hawley, whirling around and starting across the bridge toward
town. As he passed Matt he gave him a hostile look. "I've got a big
score to settle with you, my bantam," he said, between his teeth, "an'
you can chalk it up that you're goin' to get all that's comin' before
I'm done."

Matt did not reply, but returned the gambler's look steadily. Then he
watched him as he limped off down the road.

"Here's a go!" exclaimed Chub, as soon as Hawley was out of ear-shot.
"He never intended to give me the letter. I'd never have got it if
Welcome hadn't come so near runnin' him down, an' if you hadn't
seen it, Matt, an' got hold of it first. What sort of a game do you
calculate he was tryin' to play?"

"What did he say to you while I was sailing after Welcome?" asked Matt.

"Why, he asked if I had heard anythin' from dad lately--wanted to know
if anythin' had come by wireless from Delray at the Bluebell."

Chub was of an inventive turn, and had constructed a wireless apparatus
that enabled him to communicate with the Bluebell Mine, twenty miles
away in the hills. Delray, the watchman at the Bluebell, was an old
telegraph-operator, and a good friend of Chub's and Matt's.

"He didn't say anything about having a letter for you?"

"Not a yip. What's he developed such a sudden an' overwhelmin' interest
in dad for? Why, he wouldn't even pass the time of day with dad, even
if dad was willin'--which he wouldn't be, not havin' a very high
opinion of Hawley anyhow. And yet, here's Dirk Hawley, walkin' 'way out
here to bat up a few questions concernin' dad. But he wasn't intendin'
to give me that letter, that's a cinch."

"I'm dashed if I think he was, either," mused Matt. "He made a sudden
shift, after I got the letter into your hands, Chub."

"Take it from me," chimed in Penny, "Dirk Hawley's up to some underhand
work. Mebby you two can figure it out, but I've got to be goin'. Hope
old Perk'll get over his mad spell, Chub," he added, with a grin.

"Susie'll smooth him down, Ed," laughed Chub, "but I guess he won't buy
that gasoline push-cart of yours for me, now."

"Was Welcome thinking of doing that?" put in Matt.

"That's what he had in his mind, but after that wild ride, and the way
he felt when he got through with it, I guess that little Reddy McReady
will have to pass up the motor-cycle."

"Well," said Penny, starting off, "a hundred takes 'er, Chub, if the
reformed road-agent changes his mind."

When Penny got over the bridge, and had headed for the place where his
motor-cycle had been left, Chub and Matt went on with their talk about
Dirk Hawley and the letter.

"It's the biggest mystery I ever went up against," declared Chub.

"Maybe there's a way you can clear it up," said Matt.

"How?"

"Why, by reading the letter," laughed Matt, "instead of standing there
and bothering your head about it."

"Sure," returned Chub. "That's the one thing to do, and it's the one
thing I hadn't thought of."

Just as he started to take the letter out of the envelope, a shrill
voice reached the boys from along the road.

"Mark! Come here, Mark--and _hurry_!"

Chub and Matt shifted their gaze to the front of the house. Chub's
sister Susie was standing by the gate and seemed to be considerably
excited. As she called to her brother, she waved her hands frantically.

"Gee-whiskers!" exclaimed Chub, pushing the letter into his pocket.
"What's to pay now?"

"Perhaps Welcome refuses to be smoothed down," suggested Matt.

"It's somethin' besides that," declared Chub.

Matt mounted the _Comet_ and kept abreast of Chub as he hurried back
toward the house.

"Come around to the kitchen--quick!" called Susie, retreating hurriedly
through the gate as the boys came close.

Matt took his machine into the yard and leaned it against the wall.
Chub had already followed Susie into the kitchen, and they were
standing in one corner of the room, looking down at the wreck of Chub's
wireless apparatus when Matt ran in.

"What d'ye think of that?" wailed Chub, waving his hand toward the
smashed instrument.

"Who did it?" queried Matt.

"I don't know, Matt," answered Susie. "I was in the front part of the
house when I heard a smash out here in the kitchen. I came as quick as
I could, but there was no one here. The kitchen door was open, and I
ran and looked out. I heard some one running through the bushes, but I
couldn't see who it was."

It had taken Chub several weeks to get together the materials for that
wireless-telegraph apparatus. Induction coils and batteries he had sent
away for, but all the rest of the material he had picked up here and
there, wherever he could find them. The instruments had been crude, but
they served their purpose and had been the pride of Chub's heart.

As he stared at the wreck, Chub clenched his hands and his lip trembled.

"Too bad, Chub," sympathized Matt. "Have you any idea who could have
done it?"

"This seems to be Dirk Hawley's day for underhand work," muttered Chub.

"But Hawley couldn't have done this--he was hiking for town when it
happened. Still, it may be that he was mixed up in it. Read that
letter, Chub. There's a chance that it may give us a clue to the
mystery."

Chub dropped into a chair and pulled the letter out of his pocket.




CHAPTER III.

M'READY'S "STRIKE."


"Why, it's from dad!" cried Susie, looking over her brother's shoulder
as he opened out a brown, greasy-looking sheet of paper.

"That's what, sis," returned Chub. "Dad scribbled this on a piece of
candle-wrapper."

"How did the letter get here? Where did it come from?"

Matt explained how the letter had been dropped by Dirk Hawley and found
on the bridge. The girl's face flushed angrily.

"What business had Hawley with a letter of Mark's?" she asked.

"That's just what we're tryin' to find out, sis," replied Chub. "Matt
and I are pretty much up in the air, an' if this candle-wrapper don't
give us a clue I guess we'll stay up. If you'll subside for a brace of
shakes, I'll read this aloud, and we'll see where it lands us."

"Go on," said the girl breathlessly. "I _do_ hope there isn't anything
the matter with dad."

There is always more or less peril attending the work of a prospector.
Mr. McReady had been gone for several weeks on his present trip, and
this letter, which had fallen thus strangely into the hands of Chub and
Susie, was the very first news they had had from him since he had left
home.

"It was written in the Phoenix Mountains," said Chub, examining the
sheet, "five days ago. It's hard to read, as the pencil didn't make
much of a mark on the grease-spots, but I guess I can puzzle it out."

Chub read slowly, pausing from time to time to get over some difficult
point in the writing. The letter was as follows:

  "MY DEAR SON: I am writing this in the Phoenix Mountains, about five
  miles northwest of the Bluebell Mine and a quarter of a mile to the
  left of the old pack-trail leading from Yuma to Prescott. Above me
  is a peak with a 'blow-out' of white quartz in the form of a cross.
  You can see the peak and the cross easily from the pack-trail. At
  the base of the peak I have piled my monuments on a gold claim which
  promises big things for the McReady family--in fact, I am sure it
  is the 'strike' which I have been trying to make for years. The
  discovery is mine, but if I get it safely located you will have to
  help me. I have lost the blank location notices I had with me, and I
  can't leave the claim to come to Phoenix after any more. A prospector
  named Jacks--grub-staked by Hawley, of Phoenix--was spying upon me
  when I made the 'strike.' Jacks is a ruffian, and if I left the claim
  for any length of time, he would put up his own location notice and
  rush to Phoenix to put another on record.

  "I am sending this to you by a Mexican wood-hauler named Pedro
  Morales. He's not the sort of messenger I'd like, but he's the only
  one I can find. I hope you'll get this all right. If you do, hire a
  horse somewhere and come out here at once with the two blank location
  notices. It is just as well to be careful when you come, so as not
  to have any trouble with Jacks. If your wireless-telegraph line is
  working, I may try to reach Delray at the Bluebell and have him
  forward a message to you confirming this letter.

  "Now, Mark, the McReady fortunes are at stake, and it's up to you to
  make good. And, whatever you do, _hurry_. From

                                                        YOUR FATHER."

There were many comments from Matt and Susie while Chub was reading.
Chub's eyes lighted with exultation as he read of his father's
"strike," and the face of his sister glowed with happiness.

"What d'ye think of that, sis?" cried Chub, when he had finished with
the letter. "Hurrah for dad! It won't be long, now, before the McReadys
move over on Easy Street."

"Oh, it's great!" murmured the delighted girl. "Don't you think so,
Matt? I just _knew_ dad would strike it, one of these days."

"We'll move back East, that's what we'll do," went on Chub, tramping
excitedly around the kitchen; "we'll get right back to old Connecticut,
where we came from, and dad will stop his crowhopping around these
Arizona hills. Hoop-a-la! I'm so tickled I can't stand still. Ever feel
like you was a brass band, Matt, an' had to toot? Well, that's me,
right now! Where's Perk? The Old Joke ought to be around here and help
us rejoice."

"I hate to be the original and only wet blanket, Chub," put in Matt,
"but you're side-stepping a whole lot of things you ought to be looking
square in the face. First off, your father has got to have a couple
of location notices before he can get a firm grip on that claim. That
letter has been five days on the road--and when your father wrote it
_he asked you to hurry_."

Chub stopped prancing around the kitchen and came to a sudden halt.

"Gee!" he gasped, with a wild look at his sister, "I was forgettin' all
about that." Making a jump for the wall, he grabbed his hat off a nail.
"Me for town after a couple of location blanks," he went on, "and then
a hot-footed getaway into the Phoenix hills."

Matt grabbed his arm before he could get through the door.

"Easy, Chub," said Matt. "You may gain time in the end if you delay a
little to talk the thing over and find out just what you're up against."

"Why," returned Chub, "dad's in the hills waiting for location notices.
All I've got to do is to get 'em an' take 'em out to him."

"Sounds easy enough, I admit, but there's been underhand work already,
Chub, and I'll warrant there's going to be more. It might only take a
few minutes to figure this thing out as well as we can, and it will be
a big help to know what's ahead of you."

"Matt's right," nodded Susie.

"As per usual," answered Chub. "What do you figure out from the letter,
Matt?"

"Hawley 'grub-staked' this fellow, Jacks," went on Matt. "That gives
Hawley an interest in whatever Jacks finds, don't it?"

"A half-interest," said Chub.

"Well, somehow Hawley got that letter from the Mexican wood-hauler, who
was bringing it to you. Jacks, from out in the hills, may have sent
Hawley a tip to be on the lookout for the Mexican, for all we know.
Anyhow, Hawley got the letter. He knew at once, from reading it, that
if Jacks got the claim from your father it would be a good thing for
Hawley."

"Great Scott!" muttered Chub, staring at Matt with falling jaw. "The
gambler's out for a big graft, all right."

"I'd believe anything of Dirk Hawley," put in Susie.

"If dad left that claim," went on Chub, "this fellow Jacks could slap
up his own location notice and then ride for Phoenix with a duplicate.
If he got the duplicate on record before dad got his own notice to the
recorder's office, the claim would belong to Jacks and Hawley. I'll bet
a dime against a chalk-mark that's what Hawley's workin' out! But what
did Hawley come over here for, this morning?"

"No trick at all to figure that out, Chub," said Matt. "Hawley asked
you if you'd got any word from your father by 'wireless'----"

"That's what he did!"

"Your father said in the letter that he'd try to reach Delray and have
him communicate with you. Hawley wanted to find out whether he had, and
whether you had sent or taken the location blanks out to the hills.
That means a whole lot to Hawley, if he's working to cheat your father
out of his 'strike.'"

"And it was Hawley who had some one sneak in here and wreck the
wireless machine!" cried Susie excitedly. "If the instruments were
smashed he knew Chub couldn't get any word from the hills."

"What d'you think o' that!" growled Chub. "I wonder what Hawley has
done already, and how long he's had that letter."

"He hasn't had it long," averred Matt. "Take it from me, Chub, he
wouldn't wait long, after he got hold of the letter, to come out here
and see whether your father had been flashing any messages from the
Bluebell."

"Somethin' has got to be done, an' done quick!" declared Chub. "We're
fightin' a man that's as full of tricks as a 'Pache Injun, an' he's not
going to let the McReadys beat him out if he can help it. What's our
next play, Matt? You've got a whole lot better head than I have for
planning a thing like this."

Before Matt could answer, there came a rap at the front door. Susie
gave a startled jump.

"Do you think that's--that's Hawley?" she whispered.

"Hawley's done at this end of the line," said Matt. "If I'm any
prophet, he'll pull off the rest of his work in the hills."

Chub was already on his way to the front door, and Susie and Matt
followed him from the kitchen. When Chub pulled the door open, all were
surprised. Tom Clipperton, a quarter-blood Indian, a school friend of
Matt's and Chub's, was standing in the doorway. Beside Clipperton was a
disreputable little Mexican with gold rings in his ears.

"Howdy, Clip!" called Chub. "Come in, and bring your friend. You'll
excuse me if I duck. Important business, you know."

"Wait," answered Clipperton, in his quick, disjointed fashion. "This
man's a wood-hauler. Hear what he's got to say. It's got a lot to do
with you."

"What's his name, Clip?" asked Matt, pressing forward.

"Pedro Morales. I've known him for a long time. Helped him out of a bad
scrape, once. He's never forgot it."

There was an air of suppressed excitement about Clipperton, and a
smoldering light in his black eyes. Catching Morales by the arm, he
pulled him into the sitting-room.

"Pedro Morales!" exclaimed Matt, turning to Chub and Susie. "Why, he's
the man your father gave the letter to. You'd better wait and hear what
he has to say, Chub. We're getting at the nub of this thing in short
order."

"Who told you?" demanded Clipperton, peering at Matt. "About the
letter, I mean," he added.

Matt explained briefly how Hawley had dropped the letter and how he had
picked it up.

"Hawley," scowled Clipperton. "Dace Perry must have given it to him."

"Perry?" returned Matt and Chub, in a breath.

"Yes, Perry," hissed Clipperton. "There's a plot. He's in it as well as
Hawley. Tell 'em, Morales," Clip added, nodding to the Mexican.




CHAPTER IV.

DACE PERRY'S DUPLICITY.


Pedro Morales was not feeling very easy in his mind. That fact was
plain to be seen. With bent head, and holding his ragged hat in his
hand, he shuffled from one foot to the other and shot shifty glances at
Matt and Chub.

"Me, I was all same good Mexicano," said he. "Clipperton, he know; he
always been good friend with me."

"Stow it, Pedro," growled Clip. "Tell about the letter."

"_Si_," exclaimed Pedro. "I haul de wood from de hills, from de Phoenix
Mountains, _si_. I come dat way two day ago, and some mans he geeve me
de letter, and say I bring him by Phoenix and geeve him to some odder
mans dat was call McReady, Mar-r-r-k McReady. _Madre mia_, me, I no
_sabe_ Mar-r-r-k McReady; I say I ask for him when I reach Phoenix and
sell de wood yesserday. Den I come, make some question on de street,
and feller say he know Mar-r-r-k McReady and take de letter to him.
'_Bueno!_' I say, and geeve him it."

"It was Dace Perry he gave it to," said Clipperton. "Perry was across
the street from the City Hall Plaza. I was in the Plaza. Saw Pedro
talking with Perry. Was too far off to hear what they were chinning
about. Didn't think much about it then. Saw Pedro this morning. He told
me about getting a dollar for bringing in the letter. I wasn't long in
finding out he'd given it to Perry. Some crooked work about it--I knew
that."

"Perry thinks about as much of Chub as he does of me," spoke up Matt,
"and when Pedro tackled him about the letter, he thought he saw a
chance to do something crooked."

"He never intended to give the letter to me," put in Chub, "an' it's a
dead open an' shut he read it."

"Of course he read it! When he found out what it had to say about Jacks
and Hawley, why, he made a bee-line for the gambler and turned it over
to him. That's the kind of a chap Perry is."

A fierce expression had crossed Clipperton's face during this talk
about Perry. He felt that he had more cause to hate Perry than either
Matt or Chub; and Matt was constantly fearing that Clip, who had Indian
blood in his veins, would get himself into trouble by making some rash
and desperate move against Perry.

"He's a two-faced schemer!" growled Clipperton. "They say he owes
Hawley a lot of money. Mebby that's why he's trying to help him."

"Hang his reasons!" scowled Chub. "Perry turned the letter over to
Hawley and that's enough for me to know. I'll get a hustle on and hit
only the high places between here and dad's new 'strike.'" Chub started
for the door. "See you again, Clip," he added; "Matt'll tell you why
I've got to tear away like this."

"Hold up a minute, Chub," called Matt.

"I've lost a good deal of time now, old chap," returned Chub, pausing
at the door.

"Don't get a horse," went on Matt. "Borrow Penny's machine. You can get
out there quicker with that."

"That's a prime idea!" declared Chub. "I'll get the location blanks and
then go for the motor-cycle."

"When you get it, come back here, and I'll take the _Comet_ and go with
you."

"Why," cried Chub, "I thought you were going to point the _Comet_ for
Denver?"

"My friends seem to need me," said Matt quietly, "so I'll let Denver
wait."

Chub ran back to grip Matt's hand and wring it warmly.

"Motor Matt's a chum worth having!" he cried enthusiastically. "With
you alongside of me, and two good motor-cycles under us, we'll win
out against Hawley and Perry with ground to spare. I'll be back with
Penny's machine just as soon as I can get here, Matt!"

With that, Chub bolted through the door and made a rush for the road.

"What's up, Matt?" queried Clip.

Matt cast a significant look at Morales, and Clip took the Mexican by
the arm, led him out on the porch, and bade him good-by. When Clip
returned, Matt and Susie showed him the letter from Mr. McReady, and
told him everything they knew connected with the situation, including
the villainous smashing of the wireless apparatus.

"Perry broke the machine," said Clip promptly. "Hawley told him to. He
watched his chance, stole into the kitchen, and caused the wreck."

"It looks that way, Clip," admitted Matt; "still, it's only a guess. We
don't know for sure."

"Wish I was as sure of some other things as I am of that," answered
Clip darkly. "Dace Perry's a cur."

"He got a wrong start, Clip, that's all that ails him."

"I'd like to go with you and Chub. You may need me."

"It's a cinch I'd like to have you go, Clip, but there are only two
motor-cycles in town, and you couldn't keep up with us on a horse."

"Well," said Clip, after a few moments' thought, "if I can't go with
you I'll stay in town and watch Perry."

"It's all right to watch him, Clip, but keep your hands off him. Hawley
would like nothing better than to land you behind the bars, if he
could."

Clipperton took this advice in moody silence. He and Matt walked out on
the porch to wait for Chub, and, while they were sitting on the steps,
Welcome Perkins turned in at the gate and came stumping toward them
along the front walk.

There was an aggrieved look on Welcome's face. He carried a stick over
his shoulder, and at the end of it swung a small bundle tied up in a
red bandanna handkerchief.

"What's the matter, Welcome?" asked Matt, casting a quizzical look at
the old fellow.

"Blamed if I ain't stood it jest as long's I'm goin' to," answered
Welcome. "That onnery limb has played tag with me 'bout long enough. I
been driv out o' my home, an' I'm goin' into the hills an' git lawless.
That red-headed bandicoot of a Chub has got into a habit o' playin'
football with me an' usin' me fer the ball. I'm plumb tired, an' there
ain't no use tryin' to be respectable, no-how. When I'm the Terror o'
the Hills, an' everybody 'most is huntin' of me, an' there's a price on
my head, Chub McReady'll hev it to think about."

"Well," said Matt, with a wink at Clip, "if you've got to go, Welcome,
good-by and good luck. Don't be any more lawless than you can possibly
help."

Welcome looked disappointed. This was his usual "bluff" whenever things
failed to go as he thought they ought to. He wanted Matt to get excited
and argue with him to stay away from the hills.

"Whenever I cut loose," went on Welcome morosely, "I allers go the
limit. That's my natur', an' ye can't git away from a feller's natur'
anyways ye try. I'm plumb sorry fer law an' order now that I've
backslid, an'----"

"Don't let us keep you, Welcome," said Matt. "I guess you're in a big
hurry, and you've got a long walk before you get to the place where you
can begin your depredations."

"That's right," returned Welcome. "I'd a-been gone long before now if I
hadn't had to go over town arter some things I need." He pulled a can
of sardines out of one pocket and looked at it moodily for a second,
and then drew a can of salmon out of another pocket. "I've heern tell,"
he continued, "that a fish diet is pacifyin'. I jest drapped in ter
say good-by to Susie. She's allers been good to me, Susie has. Jim
McReady's a mighty good friend o' mine, too, an' he's trusted me to
stay here an' look arter Susie an' Chub while he's prospectin'. I want
ye to tell Jim, Matt, how blamed hard I tried to do my duty, but that I
jest couldn't stand the brow-beatin' an' bullyraggin' I got from Chub."

At that moment Susie came out on the porch.

"Why, Welcome!" she exclaimed; "what's the matter?"

The old man gave a plaintive sniffle.

"Been driv out ag'in, gal," he answered, "an' this here's the last
time. I stood enough to drive a preacher to drink, but never no more,
never no more. Good-by, Susie. You've allers been good to me, you hev,
but that brother o' your'n 's a case."

Welcome swung his stick over his shoulder and stepped forward to shake
hands with Susie.

"Welcome Perkins," she cried, "you go right into the house and stop
this foolishness!"

"Oh, let him go, Susie," said Matt. "Right now, when the McReady family
have a big fight on their hands, Welcome makes up his mind he wants to
leave. I didn't think it of him, but, if he's bound to go, tell him
good-by and let him start."

"What's that I'm hearin'?" queried Welcome, pricking up his ears. "The
McReadys got a fight on?"

"Never you mind about that, Welcome," returned Matt cheerfully. "Just
hike right along. What do you care for the McReadys, anyhow? After the
way you've been treated here, I should think you'd be glad to cut the
whole family and dig out. Good-by!"

"You dry up!" glared Welcome. "I'm talkin' to Susie. What's this about
a fight, gal?"

At that moment Chub came dashing up to the front gate on Penny's
motor-cycle.

"All ready, Matt!" he sang out.

Welcome whirled around. When his eyes alighted on that motor-cycle of
Penny's, unpleasant memories were revived, and he turned his back and
stumped around toward the rear of the house.

"Welcome is making a good bluff of it this time, Susie," chuckled Matt,
getting up and starting to get his wheel, "but he'll calm down when you
tell him the business Chub and I have in hand."

"You and Chub be careful, Matt," implored the girl. "Hawley is capable
of doing almost anything, and he has a grudge against you both."

"And me," interpolated Clip. "But I'll watch him. And Perry, too."

Susie stood on the porch, watching anxiously while Matt trundled the
_Comet_ down the walk and out of the gate. Welcome, anxious to know
what was going on, but in his present temper not caring to make any
inquiries of Chub or Matt, stood peering around a corner of the house.

"Don't fret, sis," called Chub encouragingly. "Motor Matt is helping
the McReadys, this trip, and you can bet we're goin' to win out. We'll
cinch that 'strike' of dad's, and Hawley'll be so badly beaten he'll
never know what struck him. So-long!"

Matt waved his hand, and the sharp explosions of the two motor-cycles
merged into a steady hum as the boys vanished up the road.

Chub had no suspicion as to what sort of a hard fight lay ahead of
them, or he might not have been so sanguine of success.




CHAPTER V.

A DISAGREEABLE SURPRISE.


Penny's motor-cycle was a one-cylinder machine, and not a very late
model. It weighed as much as the _Comet_, which had two cylinders and
twice as much horse-power. Matt's machine, however, was the very last
word in motor-cycle construction. In a pinch, it could streak along at
sixty-five miles an hour, or, on the low gear, would do five just as
readily. It was somewhere between these two extremes that Matt had to
travel in order to let Chub keep alongside, but at no time were they
doing less than a mile every two minutes.

A highway known as the Black Canyon road led to the Bluebell Mine, and
by taking a cross-thoroughfare shortly after leaving the house the boys
whirled into their direct course. It was about eleven o'clock when they
started, and they were planning to make their first halt with Delray at
the Bluebell.

"You could double the pace, Matt, if it wasn't for me," said Chub,
leaning over the handle-bars and opening his machine up for all it
would stand. "This thing-a-ma-jig of Penny's ain't in the same class
with yours."

"Oh, well, it's not so bad for a back number," answered Matt. "We're
doing our thirty miles an hour just now, and I guess that's plenty.
We'll make the Bluebell easily by noon," he added, cocking his eye at
the sun.

"I hope nothing has gone wrong with dad since he wrote that letter,"
went on Chub, after a brief silence. "He's able to take care of
himself, so far as Bill Jacks is concerned, but if Hawley sends any
roughs out there, something is sure goin' to happen."

"I don't believe in crossing any bridges before you get to them, Chub.
We'll just push hard for the place where your father made his strike,
and hope for the best."

It was half an hour after they left Phoenix when they crossed a new
plank bridge over the Arizona canal, fifteen miles out.

"They weren't long getting another bridge over the canal," observed
Chub, as the machines left the planks and started up a gentle <DW72>
beyond. "That was one bridge, Matt, you came pretty near not crossing,
even when you got to it."

Chub referred to the time Motor Matt was racing for Phoenix to take his
place in the bicycle contest. A hireling of Hawley's had blown up the
bridge in front of the _Comet_, and Matt had been obliged to cross the
chasm on a narrow stringer.

From the canal it was only five miles to the Bluebell Mine, and the
distance was rapidly covered. As the boys drew close to the derrick,
the ore-dump, and the little house where the watchman usually kept
himself, they slowed down their machines and looked around expectantly.
There was no sign of life about the place.

"Probably Del's in the shack, gettin' his dinner," hazarded Chub. "I
guess we could take time to eat a little something ourselves before we
go on to the 'strike,' eh, Matt?"

"Del's not getting dinner, Chub," answered Matt, coming to a halt
and slipping out of his saddle. "There's no smoke coming out of the
chimney, and that means there's no fire in the stove. I'll bet a
picayune against a last year's bird's nest that Delray isn't here."

"Hang it all!" returned Chub, leaning his machine against the wall
of the house, "he's the watchman, an' he's _got_ to be here. We'll
investigate."

They went into the house. The door had not been locked, but there was
no sign of the watchman in the cabin's single room.

"He can't be far away," averred Chub, "or he wouldn't have left the
door like that."

"Whether Delray's here or not, Chub, that doesn't cut much of a figure
with our work," said Matt. "We know where we want to go and how to get
there."

"Sure, but I'd like to see Del and ask him if dad has tried to shoot
anything into Phoenix by wireless. We can lose a little time here, I
guess, without spoilin' the big end of our game."

An exclamation from Matt drew Chub's instant attention.

"Great Scott, Chub, look there!"

Matt was pointing toward the table which supported the Bluebell end
of the wireless apparatus. Sending and receiving-instruments had been
completely wrecked, and parts of them were scattered over the floor.

"Well, what d'you think of that!" muttered Chub. "Hawley was bound dad
wouldn't get any message through to me by way of the Hertzian waves.
Wonder if Dace Perry did this, too?"

"Not much, Chub. These instruments, like those at your house, must have
been broken some time to-day--you see, Del hasn't even had time to pick
up the scrap. If Perry smashed the apparatus at the Phoenix end of
the line, he'd have to be chain-lightning to get here and wreck these
instruments, too. No, it wasn't Perry."

"Think it was Jacks?"

"One guess is as good as another. I'd like to hear what Del has to say
about this. Maybe he's down in the mine?"

"We'll take a look," said Chub, starting for the door.

The ore-dump and derrick were only a little way from the house, and
the boys were soon climbing the dump to the platform at the mouth of
the shaft. Kneeling down at the opening in the platform, they leaned
over and shouted Delray's name into the pitchy darkness below. No
answer was returned.

"He couldn't hear us if he was in some of the levels or crosscuts,"
remarked Chub. "Del was hired to keep a sharp watch on this mine while
it's lying idle, an' I don't think he'd go 'way. He _must_ be down
there. I'll go back to the house for a candle, and we'll take a hunt
through the workings."

Chub was but a minute in getting back with a couple of candles. These
were lighted, and the boys started down the rickety ladders, Matt
leading the way.

The shaft was a hundred feet deep, and there were two levels opening
off it--one half-way down, and the other at the bottom.

Matt and Chub got off the ladders at the first level, walked to the
end of the passage, and there, by means of a winze connecting the
two levels, descended to the bottom of the mine and made their way
back to the shaft again. Thus they made the complete circuit of the
workings--and without finding any trace of Delray. They climbed
disappointedly up the shaft, after having been in the mine for about
half an hour.

"This is tough luck, Matt," muttered Chub. "I wonder if there has been
any foul play here? When Hawley is out for a big winning, it isn't much
that he'll stop at."

"He wouldn't have the nerve to go too far with Delray," answered Chub.
"Hawley is unscrupulous, all right, but he's not going to get the law
down on him if he can help it."

"He might have had some of his roughs run Delray off while those
wireless instruments were bein' smashed."

"No, I don't think he'd do even that. It looks to me as though some
villain had stolen into the house and wrecked the instruments while Del
was out--just as the job was done at your place in Phoenix."

"The farther we go in this thing the more mysterious it gets."

"And the more we see that Hawley is leaving no stone unturned to beat
your father out of that mining-claim. We'd better make a quick run to
the 'strike,' Chub, and see what shape matters are in there. From the
looks of things this far, the prospect worries me."

"I'm some worried myself," admitted Chub, "and I'm gloomed up a heap
because we can't find Delray. I know where that pack-trail is, though,
and we'll hit it good and hard."

While they were talking they were stumbling down the ore-dump and
making their way to the place where they had left their motor-cycles.

"There's a lot of shady characters in these parts," Chub went on, "who
wouldn't pass up a ten-dollar bill if Dirk Hawley wanted any crooked
work done. Hawley's friends are mainly among that class."

"Bad as he is, though," said Matt, "there are some good things about
the gambler. They say he has a daughter in school in 'Frisco, and that
he keeps her there so that neither she nor her friends will find out
what sort of a man he is."

"That's Edith Hawley you're talkin' about, Matt. I've heard the same
yarn, but if Hawley's keeping the girl in 'Frisco an' tryin' to make
her and her friends think he's a saint, he's going to get fooled. The
girl's here on a visit, and if she's as bright as they say, she'll
find out that----"

The words died on Chub's lips. He and Matt had rounded the corner of
the house, and had come to a halt facing the spot where they had left
their machines.

_The motor-cycles were not there!_

"Stung!" gasped Chub, staring at his chum in consternation. "Am I in a
trance? Didn't we leave our machines here, Matt?"

"We did," answered Matt excitedly, "and they're gone."

"Somebody must have come here an' rode 'em off while we were in the
mine!" cried Chub. "More of Hawley's work, and I'll bet my hat on it.
He's got us now. That's the one thing he could do that would knock us
out entirely. Oh, what a pair of dubs we were!"

Chub, in despair, dropped over against the side of the house and banged
at the adobe wall with his clenched fists. Matt, after a moment's
thought, darted away toward the road.

"Where you goin', Matt?" cried Chub.

"To see which way the thieves went," called back Motor Matt.

"What's the use? Think we could overhaul 'em on foot? This is where
Johnny Hardluck puts us down and out, an' no mistake!"

Chub, terribly cast down, continued to lean against the house and say
things to himself. He watched Matt absently as he ran up and down the
road, reading the signs left in the dust.

Suddenly Matt halted, turned sharply about, and called to Chub.

"We've got a fighting chance!" he yelled, peeling off his coat and
casting it by the roadside. "Strip, Chub, and unlimber those short legs
of yours. There's a good hard run ahead of us."

The bewildered Chub got out of his coat and dropped it where he stood,
then he started in Motor Matt's direction, wandering what was in the
wind. How were the two of them, on foot, ever going to catch up with
the motor-cycles?




CHAPTER VI.

OVERHAULING THE THIEF.


Matt, headed in the direction of the canal and Phoenix, set the pace.
It was a fast one, and Chub was blowing before they had covered a
hundred yards.

"If you want me to travel with you," puffed Chub, "you'll have to be
a little less hasty. What's the good, anyhow? Those motor-cycles are
going a dozen feet to our one."

Matt pulled down to a dog-trot in order to explain and to give Chub a
chance to get back his wind.

"You're wrong, Chub," said he. "Even at this rate, we're traveling
faster than the motor-cycles, or at least as fast."

"The thieves can't be in much of a hurry to get away."

"No one is riding the motor-cycles. There are only two motor-cycle
tracks leading this way, and we made 'em ourselves when we rode to the
Bluebell."

"Mebby the thieves went the other way?"

"No tracks on the other part of the road at all."

Chub dropped his eyes to the road and scanned it as he jogged along.
The marks left by the pneumatic tires of the motor-cycles could be
clearly seen; and on either side of them was a heavier mark.

"Put me wise to it, Matt. Has a wagon been along here since we got to
the Bluebell?" gasped Chub.

"A broad-tired freight-wagon from some of the mines," added Matt.
"There were four horses hitched to it and it was going to Phoenix."

"Oh, slush!" exclaimed Chub admiringly. "You've hit it off straight as
a die, Matt. Why, thick-headed as I am, I can count the hoof-tracks of
the horses and see which way they were headed, now that you've given me
the tip. But what has the freight-wagon got to do with the machines?"

"The wagon stopped close to the house on the Bluebell," went on Matt.
"I could tell that by the way the hoof-tracks were all cluttered up.
And then, too, around the place where the wagon stopped there were
boot-marks. It's a cinch the freighter took our machines."

"It can't be that freighter is graftin' on his own hook, Matt, an' yet
I'm a Navajo if I can see how Hawley ever put it up to have him run off
with the wheels. I don't believe the gambler is keepin' track of us as
close as all that."

"The freighter has the two machines," averred Matt. "Why he took 'em
needn't bother us very much just now; we know they're in his wagon,
and that's the principal thing. It's up to us to get the motor-cycles
back. A four-horse freight-wagon, even when it's empty, can't travel
very fast. About all we've got to do is to outrun the gait of a walking
horse. The faster we beat it, the quicker we reach the wagon."

"It looks good to me," said Chub. "Say, I would have been up in the
air, wouldn't I, if you hadn't been along? But for this mix-up in the
hills, you'd have been starting for Denver."

"I was going to start for Denver to-morrow," returned Matt, "but I'm
not particular about a thing like that, Chub, when my friends need me."

"True to your friends always, eh?" said Chub, his blue eyes glistening.
"No wonder Motor Matt makes a hit with everybody."

"And connects with a few hits himself, now and then," added Matt dryly.
"How about another spurt, Chub? That wagon didn't have much the start
of us, and when we get to the top of the next 'rise,' I think we ought
to see it."

"Spurt away! My legs are too short for sprinting, but I'll work 'em the
best I can."

Elbows close to his sides, head up and shoulders back, Matt dug out
once more. Chub rambled along beside him and bounced up the slight
ascent. From over the "rise," and before they reached the top of it,
the boys could hear the creaking of a heavy wagon, and the hoarse voice
of a driver swearing at his horses. A few moments more and they were
looking breathlessly down on the freighting outfit, trekking slowly
Phoenixward and not more than a hundred feet from where they were
standing.

There was one red-shirted, rough-looking man on the driver's seat--just
one. The freighter had a long black-snake whip, and was snapping it
about the ears of the leaders. But what appealed to the boys most was
what they saw in the rear of the wagon.

From their elevated position they were able to look down into the high
box of the vehicle. Evidently the freighter was going "empty" into
Phoenix after supplies for some mining-camp; but there was more in the
box than there had been when it started from the mine, for the two
motor-cycles were there, lashed with ropes to the sides of the high box.

"There he is!" panted Chub, "and thank our stars there's only one. But
if he gets hostile--and if he happens to have a gun----"

"Peaceful freighters are not carrying guns," said Matt, "and if he gets
hostile--well, there are two of us."

"Sure," cackled Chub, "and if we have a set-to, Matt, you can count on
me to make a noise like a prize-fighter, anyhow."

The freighter's conscience did not appear to trouble him in the least,
for he was not paying the slightest attention to the trail behind him.
With one foot on the brake, he was whoa-hawing his four-horse team and
talking like a pirate.

Matt and Chub ran swiftly down the <DW72>. When they were close to the
wagon, Matt swerved to pass around it and get to the heads of the
horses, while Chub, getting suddenly reckless, jumped up on the end of
the "reach" and slammed into the end gate.

The noise Chub made drew the freighter's attention. The man turned and
gave a savage yell when he saw Chub.

"Git off'n thar, you!" he whooped, and with the words his long whip
leaped backward in a sinuous coil.

_Snap!_ went the lash, like the report of a pistol, and Chub tumbled
into the road, holding both hands to the side of his throat.

Matt's temper began to mount at the brutal way Chub was treated. The
incident, while unpleasant for Chub, afforded Matt time to pass the man
and gain the heads of the leaders of the team.

"Stop!" he shouted, grabbing the bits of the horses and pushing them
back on the "wheelers."

The freighter had already clamped the brake-shoes to the wheels,
so that the wagon, although on a <DW72>, did not run down on the
wheel-horses. Taking his attention from Chub, the man turned in the
seat and glared at Matt.

"Git away from them hosses!" he shouted, jumping to his feet, with the
whip in his hand. "Git away, I tell ye, or I'll snap out one o' yer
eyes with this here whip-lash. I kin do it--don't you never think I
can't."

"You'd better cool down," cautioned Matt, his gray eyes glimmering, "if
you don't want to get into more trouble than you can take care of."

"I ain't goin' ter take none o' yer back-talk, nuther," whooped the
man. "Le'go them bits!"

He began lifting the handle of the whip, preparatory to using the lash.

"You've got two motor-cycles in the back of your wagon," said Matt,
keeping wary watch of the freighter, "and they belong to my chum and
me. What business have you got taking them off?"

"Belong to you, eh? Well, I reckon not. Young Perry told me they
belonged ter him an' a pard o' his, an' he tucked a dollar bill inter
my hand fer takin' 'em ter town."

Matt was astonished at this piece of information.

"Where did you see Perry?" he demanded.

"I don't know as I got ter palaver with you, but I don't mind sayin'
that young Perry was on a hoss clost ter the house on the Bluebell as I
come by. He stopped me an' told me ter take in the machines, jest as I
was tellin' ye. Now, drop them bits, or thar's goin' ter be trouble."

"Say," called Matt earnestly, "you've been fooled. Perry don't own
those machines, but was---"

"Perry's a friend o' Hawley's, an' Hawley is a friend o' mine," roared
the freighter, "an' I'm takin' his word agin' your'n. Git away from
thar. Last call!"

Matt did not get away. A second more and the whip-lash leaped at him
between the heads of the leaders. Quick as a flash he ducked to one
side, and the lash snapped harmlessly in the air. Then, as the lash
flickered for an instant on the neck-yoke, Matt executed another quick
move. Reaching out, he caught the end of the writhing whip firmly, and
gave it a jerk, in the hope of pulling it out of the freighter's hands.

What happened was more than Matt had expected.

The whip did not come away, but the freighter was toppled out of the
wagon-box and took a header earthward alongside the off wheel-horse.

He gave a convulsive movement and then became quiet.

"You've killed him, Matt!" cried Chub frantically.

"Rot!" flung back Motor Matt, hurrying around to where the freighter
was lying and hauling him away from the hoofs of the horses. "He's just
stunned, that's all. Jump into the wagon, Chub, and untie the wheels.
When you're ready, I'll help you get them into the road. Sharp's the
word now, old chap. I'll watch the freighter while you're working with
the machines."

Chub, chuckling to himself over the neat way fortune was coming to
their aid, once more climbed into the wagon.

Matt, noticing a movement on the part of the freighter that told of
returning consciousness, drew his big, ham-like hands behind him and
twined the whip-lash about the wrists.

It was well Matt took this precaution, for, a moment after the tying
was completed, the man's eyes opened.

"Tryin' ter kill me, was ye?" he snarled.

"Not at all," said Matt coolly. "I was trying to take the whip away
from you, and you fell out of the wagon."

"All ready, Matt!" called Chub.

Matt whirled away from the freighter, to help Chub get the motor-cycles
down. Hardly were the two machines on the ground, when the boys
heard the freighter yell and saw him charge toward them. It had been
impossible for Matt to tie his hands securely with the whip, and he
had freed himself and was hustling toward the rear of the wagon, to
intercept the boys and prevent them from getting away.

"Quick, Chub!" yelled Matt. "Get into the saddle and let your machine
out for all it's worth. We've lost too much time as it is."

There followed a wild scramble, a half-dozen revolutions of the pedals,
and then the motors began to work. The two machines glided up the
<DW72>, leaving the baffled and swearing freighter far behind.




CHAPTER VII.

BACK TO THE BLUEBELL.


"Nothin' hard about that!" gloried Chub, taking a look over his
shoulder from the top of the "rise." "Mister Man had a little
surprise-party sprung on him that trip. Now it's down-hill--see us
scratch gravel here! You're the clear quill, Matt. The way you worked
through that trick was some fine!"

"Luck," answered Motor Matt. "It's bound to come a fellow's way now
and then. Tie something around the side of your throat, Chub. That
whip-lash knocked off a piece of skin."

"Felt like it had knocked off my head, at first. I'll tie it up when we
get back to the Bluebell."

"What's the good of stopping at the Bluebell? Dace Perry is somewhere
ahead of us on a horse. You heard what the freighter said about Perry?"

"There didn't any of that get away from me, Matt. Gee! but that was
somethin' of a jolt. If Perry smashed that wireless machine in Phoenix,
he didn't waste any time coverin' the twenty miles between there and
the Bluebell."

"He must have reached the mine while we were down in the workings,
looking for Delray. He saw the two motor-cycles leaning against the
wall of the house, and he didn't have to guess very hard to know who
was around. The freighter came along just at the right time--for Perry."

"Funny thing to me, Matt, that Perry didn't slash the tires."

"Probably he didn't have any too much time. Besides, he might have
thought we could fix the tires, while if the motor-cycles were sent
on to Phoenix, we'd be a lot worse off than if we had the crippled
machines."

"Hawley's mighty clever--and don't you let that get past your guard for
a minute! Whenever he lays out to do a thing, he's right on the job
from start to finish. What d'you suppose he's sent Dace Perry out here
for?"

"The way I size it up, Hawley wants to get some word to Jacks. Perry
must have been on his way to the hills when he stopped off at your
place, Chub, and smashed the wireless instruments. The way we got hold
of that letter on the bridge has raised trouble with Hawley's plans,
and now he's rushing things for a quick finish. That means that we've
got to hustle, too, if we save the 'strike' for the McReadys!"

"Well, I guess we can. You're a reg'lar whirlwind, Matt, when you start
the gasoline and switch on the spark. I'm not built for rapid work, but
I guess I'll do with you for pacemaker. But see here, why didn't we
pass Perry on the road? He left Phoenix before we did, and got to the
Bluebell behind us--and he had to come the Black Canyon road."

Matt had been thinking of that.

"It's a cinch we had to pass him, Chub," said he, "and we probably did
it in the hills this side of the canal. If he saw us coming, it would
be easy for him to duck out of the way among the rocks."

"That's what he did!" declared Chub. "He had some reason to expect we'd
be at the Bluebell."

"And after helping load our machines into the wagon," continued Matt,
"he spurred off to find Jacks and tell him we were on the way with the
location notices." A grave look crossed Matt's face. "Something's going
to happen at the 'strike,' and we better not stop at the Bluebell any
longer than it takes to snatch up our coats."

They were now close to the Bluebell again, and were surprised to see a
man run out of the house and wave a hand in their direction.

"It's Del!" cried Chub. "He's got back from wherever he was just in
time to miss the fun."

"He's making a dead set for us," added Matt, "and is bringing our
coats."

"Great glory!" exclaimed the watchman, as he drew near the place where
the boys had stopped, "I've been doing a pile of guessing ever since I
picked up these coats. What did you leave 'em for?"

"We haven't got much time to talk, Del," answered Matt. "While we were
in the mine looking for you, Dace Perry rode up on horseback, and a man
in a freight-wagon happened along at the same time. Perry hired the man
to carry our machines to Phoenix, and Chub and I sprinted after him and
got them back. That's how we happened to leave our coats."

"Well, I'm blamed!" muttered Delray. "There's been a lot of strange
doings around here. This morning, while I was off to the spring getting
some water, some one sneaked into the house and smashed the wireless
instruments. What's goin' on, anyhow? Why should Dace Perry try to take
the motor-cycles away from you? Same old grouch, or is it something
new?"

"Have you heard anythin' from dad, Del?" put in Chub anxiously.

"No. Was he expecting to drop in here?"

"I got a letter from him sayin' he might, just to send me a wireless
message. He's five miles northwest of here," and Chub went on briefly
to tell of his father's "strike," the impending trouble with Jacks, and
what Hawley was trying to do.

"That gambler seems to be botherin' you boys a whole lot lately,"
remarked Delray. "If you've got those location blanks, Chub, you and
Matt'd better hike right on and help your father out of his difficulty
before it gets any worse. And keep your eyes open, too. You've both had
experience with Hawley, and know the kind of a man he is. If I can help
you any here, count on me."

"We'll pull right out, Del," answered Chub. "Where were you when we
were going through the mine?"

"Taking a little _pasear_ through the hills, trying to see if I could
locate the scoundrel that smashed the wireless instruments. You know
how to get to the old pack-trail?"

"I was over part of it with dad once."

"Then hustle--and don't forget to keep your eyes skinned. I've got a
gun in the house if you'd like to borry it."

The boys were away before the last suggestion reached them, and Matt
did not think it worth while to turn back.

About a quarter of a mile north of the Bluebell, at a place where the
Black Canyon road ran through a small _barranca_, the boys came to the
old pack-trail. A gully cut through the walls of the _barranca_ at a
sharp angle, and the pack-trail followed the bottom of the depression.

"Here's where we leave the main road, Matt," announced Chub. "That old
trail ain't much more than a bridle-path, an' I don't know what sort of
work our machines are going to make on it, but we'll go ahead and see."

"Sure," said Matt. "If Perry could get over the pack-trail on a horse,
I guess we can get over it on our wheels."

"I'll take the lead," went on Chub, turning into the gully. "I don't
know such a terrible lot about the trail, Matt, but I've been over a
little of it, and that's more than you have."

"All right, Chub," assented Matt, falling behind. "Keep a good watch
ahead. If you see Jacks blocking the path, don't run into him, that's
all."

The old trail had never been used for wagons, but had been exclusively
given over to pack-burros. Consequently it was narrow, and there were
places where bunches of cactus grew so close that the boys had to leave
their saddles and trundle their machines past by hand, in order to keep
the sharp spines from puncturing the tires.

When the cactus bunches ceased to bother, the pack-trail swung into
rocky ground, and the boys had to do some hair-raising stunts in
following a bit of shelf with a sheer drop of thirty or forty feet on
one side of them and a straight up-and-down wall on the other.

At last the trail climbed over a ridge and into easier ground. Huge
piles of rocks flanked both sides of the way, but the going was smooth
and level.

While they were passing through this strip of country, Matt suddenly
heard voices behind him and to the left of the trail. The voices came
from a considerable distance, and were muffled and indistinct, but Matt
heard them plainly enough.

"Chub!" he called in a guarded tone, "ride around that pile of rocks on
the left. Some one's coming behind us and we'd better wait and see who
it is."

Without pausing to ask any useless questions, Chub swerved from the
trail and guided his motor-cycle around the heap of boulders referred
to by Matt. Matt followed him, and they screened themselves and their
wheels as well as they could and peered curiously back along the trail.




CHAPTER VIII.

TOO LATE!


As the boys breathlessly watched, they saw a burro emerge from
among the rocks on the left of the trail. There was no load on the
burro's back, and the shaggy little animal was being driven by two
ruffianly-looking men. One of the men had a club, and every once in a
while he would reach over and hit the burro a heavy blow. The burro
would flinch and leap ahead; then, apparently forgetting what had
happened, would lag again and the blow would be repeated.

"The brute!" muttered Chub.

"Two brutes besides the burro," whispered Matt, "if I'm any judge of
faces. Listen!"

The men had headed the burro along the trail, and would soon pass
the point where Matt and Chub were hiding. They continued to talk as
they approached. Evidently they were well pleased over something, for
occasionally one of them would give a hoarse laugh.

"Hawley ort ter pay me well fer this," said one of the scoundrels.
"You git half the claim, Jacks, purvidin' Hawley don't beat ye out o'
it, but I'm only gittin' what I airn."

"Don't ye be in no takin', Bisbee, erbout Hawley beatin' me out o' my
share in the 'strike,'" replied Jacks. "He's an' ole fox, but he ain't
no more of a fox'n what I am."

"Waal, I kin split on his game if he don't treat me right," scowled
Bisbee; "I kin tell about smashin' that machine at the Bluebell this
mornin', on my way out yar, an' I kin tell about what we done at the
ole Santa Maria, with----"

At that interesting point the two rascals passed out of ear-shot. Chub,
awed by what they had heard, stared excitedly at Matt.

"One of 'em was Jacks!" he muttered; "the four-flush with the club was
the prospector who was threatenin' dad with trouble!"

"And the other's name is Bisbee," said Matt, "and he came out here this
morning and smashed that wireless apparatus on his way. Hawley didn't
lose much time getting busy after Perry gave him that letter!"

"They're goin' after dad now, that's a cinch!" exclaimed Chub. "Let's
follow 'em right up, Matt, an' have a hand in what happens--that is, if
anything is goin' to happen. I guess dad and you and me can take care
of those two handy boys, all right."

By that time the two men and the burro were well out of sight, and
the boys, mounting their machines, started slowly after them, working
laboriously at the pedals, so that their presence in the vicinity might
not be betrayed by the volleying of explosions.

As they proceeded, the rocks gradually disappeared from the sides
of the trail and the country flattened into a level mesa. To the
astonishment of Matt and Chub, nothing was to be seen of the two men on
this level stretch.

"Where'd they go?" queried the puzzled Chub, stopping his machine for a
few words with his chum.

"They must have left the trail again, back somewhere among the rocks,"
replied Matt.

"Then maybe we're off the track," suggested Chub anxiously. "If Jacks
and Bisbee were going to the scene of dad's 'strike,' why----"

"We're not off the track," interrupted Motor Matt. "Look over there,
Chub!"

Matt pointed as he spoke. Chub, following his chum's finger with his
eyes, saw a dun- peak rising to the left of the trail, and
half-way up the side of the uplift, the sun glimmered on a couple of
intersecting lines that formed a cross.

"The white cross!" whispered Chub. "We're headed right, Matt, and no
mistake. But where in Sam Hill are Bisbee and Jacks? If they weren't
coming here, where _were_ they goin'? Put me wise."

"Let's stop fretting about Bisbee and Jacks. The fortune of the
McReadys lies over there, at the foot of that peak, and now's our
chance to cinch it."

The words sent a thrill through Chub. Once more he remembered what this
"strike" might mean to his father, and Susie and himself. Their years
in Arizona had been lean enough, and all of them had felt the bitter
pinch of poverty. Now, suddenly, Fortune had shown them her smile, and
if they were to profit by it, they must beat down the evil schemes
of the gambler. Hawley and his confederates alone stood between the
McReadys and the goal toward which the prospector had been struggling
for so long.

With a bounding heart Chub turned from the trail and headed straight
for the white cross on the peak.

"It takes you to ginger a fellow up, Matt!" cried Chub. "Dad's claim
is almost in sight, and it won't be long before we're racing back to
Phoenix with a location notice. I was beginnin' to feel discouraged,
an' that's a fact, but I'm right on my toes now and sure we're goin' to
win. Hurrah for the McReady strike!"

There was no trail where the boys were riding, but the ground was
smooth and level and there was nothing to prevent them from making good
speed. Only a quarter of a mile lay between the pack-trail and the
claim, and the distance was soon covered.

"There are the monuments!" called Chub, waving his hand.

Matt looked ahead and saw a collection of stones. There were five of
these piles, four standing at the corners of an oblong square, and
marking the limits of the claim. In the center of the square was a heap
as large as two of the others, and Chub kept on toward it.

As Matt followed, he saw that this large heap of stones had a short
pole protruding from the middle. A board was fastened to the top of the
pole, and there was a square, white paper tacked to the board.

When Chub reached the center monument he tumbled off his motor-cycle
in the midst of a rude little camp. A pack-saddle lay on the ground,
and near it was a canvas-wrapped bundle. A pile of wood was heaped near
some smoke-blackened stones, and to one side were a dingy coffee-pot
and a skillet.

"Dad's camp!" muttered Chub. "He bunked right down by his center
monument and was bound Jacks shouldn't get the best of him. Plucky
old dad!" Chub's voice trembled a little. "He's fought hard for this,
Matt--nobody, not even Susie and me, knows how hard."

"It's a long lane, Chub," said Matt, "that has no turning. Hard luck
can't dog a fellow always. Is that your father's pack-burro?"

Chub looked in the direction Matt was pointing. Off beyond the confines
of the claim, a burro was grazing on the mesquit-bushes. A small spring
was close by. The burro was hobbled so that he could not stray far from
the camp.

"Sure enough!" laughed Chub; "that's old Baldy himself. When we come
into our money, we'll put Baldy in a gold barn and let him stuff his
old hide with patent breakfast-food."

"Maybe Baldy'll like that," laughed Matt, "and maybe he won't."

"Anyhow," grinned Chub, "he looks like he could stand a little stuffing
with just plain hay. He's helped dad through the hills for the last
five years--the two of them have gone thirsty and hungry together, and
knocked into more hardships and out of them again than anybody'll ever
know. But right here's where they win. Look at that 'blow-out,' will
you, Matt?"

By "blow-out," Chub meant a lot of white quartz that was littering
the ground in every direction. He picked up a piece and held it under
Matt's eyes. The stone was flecked with little yellow grains.

"Gold!" cried Chub; "the rock's just full of it. Say, it's a wonder
this claim's laid here as long as it has. I'll bet that dozens of
prospectors have been around it--but it was dad that found 'er!
Whoop-ee!"

Chub jerked off his cap suddenly and hurled it into the air; then, in
the excess of his joy, he caught hold of Matt and whirled him around
and around in the wildest kind of a dance.

But there were some things about the situation which Matt couldn't
understand. He hated to throw any cold water on Chub's effusive
spirits, and yet he knew that they ought to probe to the bottom of the
situation.

"Where's your father, Chub?" Matt inquired, as his chum let loose of
him.

"Why, he must have set out for Phoenix to file the duplicate location
notice," replied Chub, sitting down on the side of the rock pile. "You
see, Matt, that letter was five days gettin' to us. Hawley had it
for a day, and the Mexican must have had it longer than he admitted,
or else dad was wrong in his dates when he wrote it. I guess dad got
tired waiting for me to come out, and so he began to scratch gravel for
Phoenix on his own hook."

Matt was wondering why Jacks and Bisbee had appeared so delighted
during their talk on the pack-trail. From their manner, and what they
had said, he had got the idea that they had accomplished something for
Hawley.

"I thought your father didn't have any location blanks," went on Matt,
"and that he wanted you to come and bring them."

"He must have found some blanks somewhere," returned Chub.

"Did he have a horse with him, besides the burro?"

Chub stared.

"Why, no, Matt," said he. "Prospectors don't ride. They just walk, an'
drive their pack-burros ahead of them."

"Your father only had one burro?"

"That's all. What's buzzin' around in your nut, anyway, Matt?"

"I'm wondering why your father should pull out for Phoenix and leave
old Baldy behind. He wouldn't walk all the way to town, would he, and
leave the burro and his camp-truck here?"

The words startled Chub. A look of alarm drove all the joy out of his
freckled face.

"Oh, slush! That's me, all right!" he muttered. "I'm goin' off
half-cocked, as per usual. There's a whole lot of things I'm
forgettin'. For instance, that talk we overheard between Jacks and
Bisbee. That lacked a good deal of being encouraging to the McReadys.
And then, again, where's Dace Perry? He ought to be around here
somewhere, but I'm not seeing much of him. Anyhow," and Chub looked
up at the board on top of the pole, "dad found his location notice
somewhere, and we can't be euchred out of the claim."

"Look at the notice, Chub," suggested Matt. "See what sort of a name
your father gave the claim."

"I'll make a guess that it's 'McReady's Pride,' or 'McReady's Hope,' or
something like that," said Chub, climbing to the top of the rock pile.

Hanging to the pole, he brought his eyes close to the notice. Matt saw
his hands grip the pole hard, while a cry of savage disappointment
escaped his lips.

"What's wrong?" asked Matt.

Chub looked down dazedly at his chum.

"Why--why," he faltered huskily, "dad didn't put up this notice at all.
The claim is named the 'Pauper's Dream,' and the locators are down as
'Jacks and Hawley.'"

"Jacks and Hawley?" echoed Matt.

"Yes," roared Chub, grabbing the notice and jerking it fiercely off the
board, "the gambler's won out on us, Matt. Jacks has put up his notice,
and some one is now on the way to Phoenix to file a duplicate."

Chub tumbled off the rock pile, sat on the ground at the foot of it,
and covered his face with his hands.

"We got here, old fellow," said Chub brokenly, "but we got here _too
late_!"

A wave of consternation rolled over Matt.

He had been fearing that something was wrong, but up to this moment he
hadn't entertained the least notion that Hawley's dastardly plans had
already succeeded.

"And the worst of it is, Matt," whispered Chub, looking up, "we don't
know anything about dad. What have they done with him?"




CHAPTER IX.

HELD AT BAY.


"Don't worry about your father, Chub," said Matt. "Hawley will steal
this claim if he can, but it's a cinch he'll do it in such a way the
law can't get a hold on him. Your father has been trapped in some
way, in order to get him off the claim so Jacks could put up his own
location notice. You can be sure, though, that Jacks hasn't done
anything very desperate. Brace up, old chap!"

"I can't," groaned Chub. "It's back to the woods for me. The gimp has
all been taken out of me. Everybody in Phoenix always has a joke to
crack at the McReadys. They call dad a 'rainbow-chaser,' and say he
never can find any pay-rock the way he potters around. And now he's
lost this chance! Maybe we'll never get another."

"Look here, Chub," said Matt, walking over to his chum and pulling him
to his feet, "you're not a quitter and never have been. Don't try to be
one now. Pull yourself together and face the music. _There's a chance
yet!_ But you're not going to help that chance any by acting like this."

"Chance?" repeated Chub dully, lifting his hopeless, freckled face to
Matt's.

"Yes. You've got two location notices. Fill 'em out. Tack one on that
board in place of the one you just pulled down, and we'll hustle the
other one to the recorder's office in Phoenix."

"It's too late, I tell you!" insisted Chub. "Don't you understand
what's been done? Jacks tacked his own notice up, and Perry is already
on the way to Phoenix with a duplicate."

"Perry hadn't started, up to the time we got here," pursued Matt
quickly. "If he had started, he'd have had to pass us. But suppose he
did; suppose he has two hours the start of us--why, he's riding a horse
that has already done twenty-five miles to-day, and a _motor-cycle can
beat him out_!"

Matt's hopefulness and splendid confidence electrified Chub.

"You're a chum worth having if any one asks you," he burst out. "You're
right, Matt; there is a chance yet, and this is no time to pull off
any baby-act. I was rattled, that's all. The idea that a fortune had
side-stepped the McReadys had got onto my nerves. Give me a pencil.
Hanged if I don't jump dad's claim myself, just to save it from Jacks
and Hawley."

Chub was now all energy and determination. Sitting down on the rocks
once more, he took two folded blanks from his pocket and laid them over
a smooth, flat stone in front of him.

"We'll call this claim the 'Make or Break,'" he went on, taking the
pencil from Matt and beginning to fill in the blank spaces; "it's in
the Winnifred Mining District, and it's located by Mark McReady."

"Hold up, Chub," interposed Matt, "before you write your name down as
the locator. You're several years this side of twenty-one. Would that
make any difference?"

"It might," said Chub thoughtfully. "It'll be safer to put in dad's
name, and then we'll be sure not to get stung. I'll fill out the two of
them; then, while I'm tacking one to the board, you can take the other
and make a getaway for Phoenix."

"What are you going to do?"

"I'm goin' to hang around here an' look for dad. You'll make a quicker
run to town than you would if I was along with that one-cylinder
machine, anyhow."

Matt, whose mind was busy with the conversation he and Chub had
overheard between Jacks and Bisbee, evolved a sudden idea.

"Is there a mine around here called the Santa Maria?" he asked.

"Seems to me I've heard of an old, played-out proposition by that
name," answered Chub. "Why?"

"Do you remember what Bisbee said to Jacks while they were coming along
the pack-trail? '_I can tell what we done at the old Santa Maria._'
Those were his words, Chub, and I've got a hunch that that's the place
to go and look for your father."

"Bully!" said Chub. "You've got more horse-sense in a minute, Matt
King, than Reddy McReady has in a year. Get ready to hike, old chap.
I'll have this for you in about a minute."

"I'll go over to the spring and get a drink," answered Matt, "and then
I'll turn the _Comet_ loose."

The spring was some little distance away from the center monument where
Chub was doing his writing. Matt hurried toward it, gave old Baldy a
friendly slap as he passed him, and then went down on his knees at the
edge of the rocky pool.

Matt was feeling tolerably easy in his mind. He knew what the _Comet_
could do, and in order to help his friends, the McReadys, he would make
the miles spin out from under the pneumatic tires as they had never
done before.

It is usually at just such a time as that, when one feels as though
he is about to accomplish something really worth while, that the
unexpected bobs up to play hob with all his well-laid plans.

While Matt was on his knees, refreshing himself with the cool
spring-water, a wild yell came from Chub. Matt was on his feet in a
jiffy, and whirled just in time to see Chub take a header from the rock
pile.

He must have finished filling out the notices and climbed to the top
of the center monument to tack one of them to the board, when the
unexpected arrived.

Matt saw Jacks on top of the stone heap, and it was he who had given
Chub the shove that landed him on his hands and knees at the bottom of
the pile. Chub got up angrily, and gathered in a scrap of paper that
had dropped beside him; then he turned and faced the prospector, who
was roaring and shaking his fist.

"What d'ye mean, ye red-headed whelp, by tamperin' with my location
notice? Tryin' ter jump this here claim, hey? Waal, you scatter, an' do
it quick! If ye don't, I'll kick ye clean off'n the map!"

Jacks was not the only enemy that had come to work havoc with the plans
of Matt and Chub. Bisbee was there, also, and so--to Matt's intense
amazement--was Dace Perry.

Perry was standing beside a saddle-horse. The animal had been ridden
hard and was plainly far gone with fatigue.

Jacks and Bisbee, it now seemed to Matt, had gone off somewhere among
the rocks to meet Perry. Jacks probably had pitched a camp near-by,
where he had stayed while watching Chub's father; and, naturally, it
would be to this camp that Perry would go to meet the ruffian. Having
joined forces, all three of the plotters had advanced covertly upon
Matt and Chub.

Matt ran forward, to place himself shoulder to shoulder with Chub.
Perry saw him coming, and called Bisbee's attention to him.

"You stay whar ye aire!" yelled Bisbee.

As he gave the warning he lifted his hand, and Matt saw the sun glimmer
on a piece of blued steel.

"Git over thar ter whar yer friend is," ordered Jacks, from the top of
the stone pile. "We mean bizness right from the drop o' the hat, young
feller, an' if that red skelp o' your'n is of any valley to ye, ye'll
jump mighty prompt whenever I tune up!"

Chub held his ground, however, and Matt continued to come on.

"You're a pack of thieves," clamored Chub, "that's what you are! You're
trying to steal this claim away from my father, but we're going to fool
you."

"Ye're McReady's son, aire ye?" yelped Jacks. "Waal, now, McReady tried
ter steal this claim away from me, an' when I git back, along comes you
an' makes a similar kind o' break. Git away from here! My mad's up, an'
I'm li'ble ter do ye damage. What's that ye got in yer hand? Grab it
away from him, Bisbee, then kick him off'n the claim."

Bisbee executed a rush in Chub's direction, but Matt was close enough
by then to push out a foot and throw the ruffian heavily.

Bisbee, swearing furiously, arose to his knees and leveled the weapon
he still clutched in his fingers. Before he could use it, Jacks had
scrambled down from the rock pile and caught his wrist.

"None o' that, Bisbee!" said Jacks. "So long as the young whelps don't
try ter interfere with us."

Matt and Chub ran back a few steps.

"It's the location notice, Matt," Chub whispered, "that I wanted you to
take to town."

"Give it here, Chub," returned Matt, and took the paper and thrust it
into the breast of his leather coat.

"It's a location notice!" sang out Perry. "I heard McReady tell King it
was. Better take it away from him."

"I know a trick wuth two o' that," laughed Jacks hoarsely. "Kin you
ride one o' them new-fangled bicycles, Perry?"

"Yes," replied Perry.

"Then pick out the best 'un an' ride fer Phoenix with that notice o'
mine."

Perry gave an exultant laugh and jumped for the _Comet_. Matt started
forward.

"Keep away from that machine, Perry!" he cried.

"Draw a bead on him, Bisbee," said Jacks. "If he tries ter keep Perry
from gittin' away, you know what ter do."

The gleaming weapon arose to a level with Bisbee's wicked little eyes,
and Matt halted uncertainly. The pounding of the _Comet's_ motor was
already in his ears, and Perry was starting for the pack-trail.

While Matt stood there, wondering what he could possibly do, the
_Comet_ did something it had never done before. With a wheezy sputter,
it stopped dead, refusing to answer the frantic twists Perry gave the
handle-bars.

"Thought ye said ye could run it?" scoffed Jacks.

"Something's loose or broken," replied Perry, leaping from the saddle
and letting the machine drop. "The other belongs to Ed Penny and I know
it better. I'll take that."

A few moments later he was on the other motor-cycle and scurrying
toward the trail. Jacks turned on Matt and Chub with a taunting laugh.

"I reckon you won't file no location notice ahead o' Jacks an' Hawley
_this_ trip!" he yelled.




CHAPTER X.

A DARING ESCAPE.


There had been so many ups and downs for Chub during the few hours he
and Matt had been fighting for the claim that his discouragement now
took a philosophical turn.

"There goes our last chance, Matt," said he, with a grim laugh. "It's
what they call stealing your own thunder, ain't it, when a swift bunch
of toughs act like that?"

Matt was mad clear through. His eyes snapped vindictively as he watched
the exultant ruffians.

"The recorder closes his office in Phoenix at six o'clock?" he asked.

"Yes."

"Then Jacks has played his trump card. The only way that location
notice could be got to Phoenix in time to be recorded to-day was
by sending Perry on the motor-cycle. When we left Delray, he said
something about lending us a gun. I don't believe in guns, as a
general thing, but if we had borrowed Delray's we could have met these
scoundrels in their own way."

Matt's voice was low, but it throbbed with a fierce desire to do
something--anything--which might still win the day for the McReadys.

"The biggest steal on record, that's what it is!" breathed Chub.

"You could prove it in any court in the country, Chub. With your
father's testimony, and ours, you'll have a good case against Jacks and
Hawley."

"It takes money for lawsuits," said Chub bitterly, "and the McReadys
have been living from hand to mouth for more years than I care to think
about. There's no use talking about a legal fight, Matt. Possession is
nine points of the law, and the man who files his location notice first
always holds the ground. We'll just sponge the 'Make or Break' off the
McReady slate right now. For the rest of it, all I'm worrying about is
dad."

"If you fellers hev got through with yer confab," shouted Jacks, "ye'll
jest turn face-about an' jog fer that scooped-out place in the foot o'
the hill, right behind ye."

Matt looked around. The spot mentioned by Jacks was a jagged notch
among the rocks, twenty-five or thirty feet long by a dozen wide, and
with precipitous walls on all sides, except, of course, at the opening
in front.

"What are you driving us into that hole in the rocks for?" demanded
Matt.

"We like yer comp'ny so all-fired well," answered Jacks, with a hoarse
laugh, "that we're goin' ter keep ye with us all night. Arter it gits
dark, we kin hang onter ye easier if ye're bottled up in that cut-out."

"You're a nice pair of grafters--I don't think," flared Chub.
"Somebody's goin' to settle for this business, and the more you pile it
on the more you'll pay."

"We're able ter pay all we'll have ter," grinned Jacks, "but jest now
you're follerin' my orders, _sabe_? Chase 'em in, Bisbee," he added, to
his companion.

"Shoo!" said Bisbee, and started forward, waving his weapon.

"You're a couple of cowards!" yelled Chub, doubling up his fists. "You
wouldn't dare shoot!"

"Come on, Chub," said Matt quietly, taking his chum's arm and leading
him into the notch. "We'll have our innings later."

"But I don't want to be hung up in here all night," demurred Chub.
"There's no tellin' what kind of a fix dad is in. We ought to be
hunting for him."

"Don't fret. They've left your father so he'll be all right until you
can find him, even if you can't take up the hunt until to-morrow. Just
let 'em think their bluff is working, that's all."

Bisbee, with the revolver on his knees, had taken up his position at
the front of the notch. From this position, even after it grew dark, he
would be able to keep the boys from emerging from the cut-out.

Matt and Chub sat down on a couple of stones and leaned back against
the steep wall behind them. Through the opening they could look out
toward the claim and see Jacks taking Perry's horse to the spring.
Saddle and bridle were stripped from the horse, and the animal was
secured with a long rope and picket-pin. After taking care of the
horse, Jacks went back to McReady's camp, started a fire, and began
getting supper.

"Consarn 'em!" growled Chub, "they're taking everything in sight."

"We'll not make any kick," answered Matt, "so long as they give us our
supper. I feel as though I'd been through a famine. Besides, we need
food for our night's work."

He dropped his voice, to make sure Bisbee could not hear.

"Night's work?" echoed Chub. "About all the work we'll do to-night,
Matt, will be to sit on these boulders and try to sleep."

"That's where you're wrong. When it's dark enough, and everything's
quiet, I'm going to climb out of here, fix up the _Comet_, and take
this location notice to Phoenix."

"Shucks! What's the use? Even if you succeeded, you couldn't reach town
before to-morrow. The other notice will have been recorded long before
then."

"I'll not say we're beaten until the recorder himself tells me it's too
late."

Admiration for his chum rose in Chub's eyes, although he shook his head
hopelessly.

"That's your style, Matt--you never seem to know when you're down and
out. How're you goin' to get out of here?"

Matt called Chub's attention to one of the side walls of the notch.
There was more of a <DW72> to the wall there than anywhere else, and
Matt had already marked out his foot and hand holds, fixing half a
dozen projecting stones and two or three straggling bushes firmly in
his mind.

"In broad day," said Chub, "that climb would be hard enough, but at
night you'd be sure to fall and break your neck. Cut it out."

"I'm going to make a getaway to-night," declared Matt firmly.

"Why couldn't the two of us get the better of Bisbee? We could drop
on him during the night, and if we worked it right, that gun of his
wouldn't cut any figure."

"I'd thought of that," said Matt, "but I've got to skirmish around the
camp a little, you know, and tinker with the _Comet_. All that will
have to be done secretly. My way's the best, I think."

"You'll have to excuse little Chub from prancing up that precipice. He
thinks too much of his neck to risk it on any such fool stunt."

"When I'm ready to go I'll set up a yell. That will draw Bisbee and
Jacks after me, Chub, and you can walk out of this hole in the hill as
neat as you please."

That ended their talk for a while. Just then Jacks came to the opening
of the notch, and set down a tin cup of coffee and a plate of soaked
hardtack and fried bacon.

"Ye'll hev ter eat out o' the same dish an' drink out o' the same cup,"
said he. "This hotel's kinder short on plates an' cups. Howsumever, I
don't reckon ye're anyways partic'ler."

He withdrew with a jubilant flourish, and the two chums fell to on
their food. After it was eaten, both of them felt a hundred per cent.
better.

Night comes suddenly in that part of the Southwest. One minute it is
daylight, and almost the next the stars are out and the coyotes yelping.

As night advanced a deep quiet fell over the captives and their
captors. The horse and burro could be heard tramping around the spring,
but these sounds, and the occasional bark of a coyote, were all that
broke the stillness.

Bisbee, sitting by the entrance into the notch, was as upright and
silent as a black statue. Jacks, with a blanket under him, was lying
across the entrance and snoring. Midnight was passed and the hour had
come for Matt to make his attempt, so he reached over and touched his
chum on the shoulder.

"I'm off, old chap!" he whispered, his lips close to Chub's ear. "I've
tied my shoes together by the laces and they're hanging around my
neck--I can climb better and make less noise in my stocking-feet."

Chub reached out his hand and wrung Matt's fervently.

"I think it's foolish for you to try to get that notice to Phoenix, old
chum," he answered, "but I appreciate what you're tryin' to do for the
McReadys, just the same. If ever a fellow was true to his friends, it's
a cinch that it's Motor Matt."

"I hate to pull out and leave you, Chub," went on Matt, "but there's
only one motor-cycle, you know, and, besides, you can't leave here
until you find out about your father."

"That's all to the good. We've got to separate. Good-by and good luck."

"Be ready to run when you hear me yell," finished Matt. "So-long, Chub."

It was as dark as a pocket in the notch, and Chub could not see Matt as
he moved noiselessly across to the other wall. Presently, by straining
his ears, Chub could hear muffled sounds--a sifting downward of sand,
the faint crunch of a loose stone under a stockinged foot, a stifled
breathing, as of some one working hard and trying to work quietly.
Steadily the sounds mounted up and up. Chub, holding his breath, fixed
his eyes on the blank darkness and waited. He almost fell off his
boulder when he saw the blurred form of Bisbee lean forward, and heard
him call:

"What ye doin' in thar, you two?"

"What's the matter with you?" retorted the quick-witted Chub. "We're
tired out and want to sleep. Move over a little, Matt," he added, as
though speaking to his chum, "you're takin' up more'n your half of the
wall."

The blurred form straightened again, and once more Chub began to
breathe. The sounds on the wall had ceased, and Chub began to count the
seconds and mentally to check off the minutes.

Five minutes--ten--fifteen. Chub wasn't at all sure he was reckoning
the time properly, but he began wondering what had become of his chum.
The opposite side of the notch was the <DW72> of the hill itself, and
only child's play for Matt to get down. If he had got down, where was
he?

Chub reckoned up fifteen minutes more. His nerves were in rags and he
was imagining all sorts of wild things, when a booming shout came from
the distance.

"Good-by, Jacks! You thought you had us, but you've got another guess
coming!"

Bisbee leaped to his feet with a yell. Jacks broke off his snores
suddenly and lifted himself up.

"What's the matter?" he demanded.

"Them kids hev got away!" cried the startled Bisbee.

A clatter of hoofs, rapidly receding in the direction of the
pack-trail, could be heard.

"They've took the hoss!" yelped Jacks. "Consarn 'em, anyways! Why
didn't ye watch, hey? Come on! Mebby we kin stop 'em yit!"

Bisbee and Jacks scampered off into the shadows, talking and snarling
at each other as they ran. Chub, losing no time, laughed softly to
himself and hurried out of the notch.

It tickled him to think that Motor Matt's daring had won out, even
though there wasn't much hope of his getting to Phoenix in time to save
the claim. But why had Matt taken the horse? Chub had been expecting
the explosions of a gasoline motor rather than the patter of hoofs.




CHAPTER XI.

A HARD JOURNEY.


There were few better athletes than Matt King, and he was in the pink
of condition. It was a matter of pride with him to keep himself at all
times fit and ready for whatever fate threw his way.

But scaling that steep wall, under the double necessity of doing it
effectively and making little noise, was one of the hardest things he
ever attempted. He had kept vividly in his mind the path he had mapped
out, and the upward climb was merely the working out of a problem that
he had already solved in theory; but he had to work out the problem in
the dark, and to grope with his feet for the projecting stones and with
his hands for the bushes.

At last, with every muscle tingling and his breath coming hard through
his tense lips, he drew himself over the crest of the wall. Here he
paused for a moment's rest, and to put on his shoes. There was cactus
on the hill-<DW72>, and he didn't want to hamper himself by picking up a
bunch of fish-hooks in his unprotected feet.

When near the top of the wall he had heard Bisbee's demand to know what
was going on, and he had chuckled at Chub's response. Chub's ready wit,
it might be, had made the escape successful.

Once in his shoes, Matt stole down the <DW72> and made his way to the
center monument on the claim. The _Comet_ was lying just where Perry
had let it drop. How Matt was to fix the machine in the dark he did not
know, but he had had an idea that the motor-cycle had "bucked" because
Perry did not understand just how to operate it.

His first disappointment came as he knelt down by the machine and
detected a heavy odor of gasoline. After a minute or two of groping
about, he made the startling discovery that the gasoline-tank was
empty. The cap that closed the opening into the reservoir had become
loosened in the fall, and all the gasoline had trickled out.

Here was a difficulty, and no mistake. Matt remembered having seen a
gasoline-stove at the Bluebell, but he was under the impression that
Delray didn't use the stove very much. If there was no gasoline to
be had at the mine, then Matt would have to keep on to the Arizona
canal, and try to get some at the first ranch he came to. There was no
use now in looking for the trouble that had cut short Perry's flight
on the _Comet_--that could be attended to later. What Matt had to do
was to figure on getting a hundred-and-fifty pounds of mechanism to
the Bluebell mine. To pedal the machine that distance, over the rough
pack-trail with its sharp rocks and cactus, and at night, was a task he
did not care to think about.

It was then that the idea of taking the horse appealed to him. The
horse could carry both him and the machine, providing he used judgment
in stowing the _Comet_ on the animal's back.

Having made up his mind to get over the difficulty in this way,
Matt raised the machine and trundled it toward the spring. To his
satisfaction, he gathered that everything was serene in the vicinity of
the notch. Not a sound reached him from there. If he had been nearer,
perhaps he might have heard the resonant snores of the sleeping Jacks.

When he had come close to the horse, Matt laid the motor-cycle down
and went up to the animal, whispering and stroking his neck to prevent
a startled snort or jump. With his knife he cut the picket-rope off
close to the pin, and after twisting the rope about the horse's lower
jaw, in lieu of a bridle, he cut the rope again. This gave him not
only enough for a bridle, but also some twenty feet of lashing for the
_Comet_.

To hang the machine from the horse's back so that it would ride without
injury to its mechanism was the next problem Matt had to solve. This
was accomplished by first passing a loop of rope through the forks, and
then drawing the machine up by the front with the rope over the horse's
back.

Naturally, the horse objected to this unusual procedure, and a good
part of the half-hour required by Matt in effecting his escape was
consumed in getting the horse accustomed to his strange burden.

After the front of the _Comet_ had been swung into place and fastened,
Matt repeated the operation with the back of the machine and drew the
rear wheel off the ground. The right pedal and toe-clip dug into the
horse's ribs and caused a good deal of shying and side-stepping. But
the interfering pedal had an advantage as well as a disadvantage,
inasmuch as it braced the machine away from the horse's side and gave
Matt room on the animal's back. His position, once he was astride the
horse, was far from comfortable, but he thought he could make shift, at
least, to ride until he had left the camp well behind.

Heading the horse toward the trail, he shouted his good-by to Jacks
at the top of his lungs, and then urged the horse into a gallop with
his heels and the end of the rope hackamore. The _Comet_ slipped, and
plunged, and rattled, but Matt supported it with one hand and let the
frightened horse take his own gait.

He heard Jacks and Bisbee chasing after him, but was soon so far away
that these sounds of pursuit were lost in the distance. A little later
he turned into the pack-trail, and the most difficult part of his night
journey lay ahead of him.

Matt could have hidden his machine away among the rocks and left it
there while he galloped on to Phoenix. There would have been nothing
to gain by this move, however, except an easier ride to the Bluebell.
The office of the recorder would not be open for business before eight
o'clock the next morning, and Matt had plenty of time to reach his
destination. If he could get a supply of gasoline at the mine, and
found that the _Comet_ could be easily repaired, he would leave the
horse with Delray and get back to town on the motor-cycle.

Before Matt had gone far along the pack-trail the difficulties of his
position on the horse's back became so great that he was forced to
dismount and walk. Even though he could have ridden comfortably, he
would soon have been obliged to fall back on his own feet anyway. The
trail was rough and hard to follow when it could be plainly seen, and
now, when it twisted and turned through black arroyos and clung to the
edge of half-hidden chasms, progress could only be safely made by going
slowly and carefully.

Leading the horse by the rope, Matt picked out the course with the
utmost care. Once he lost the trail and was all of two hours finding it
again; then the lashings of the _Comet_ gave way suddenly, and the rear
wheel dropped, causing the horse to give a frightened jump that nearly
took him over the edge of a steep descent. At the most difficult part
of the trail, where it ran along a shelf gouged out of the cliffs, Matt
had to unship the wheel and swing it from the other side, in order to
keep it from colliding with the rocks and being broken.

Before the _barranca_ and the Black Canyon were reached, a quivering
line of gray had run along the tops of the eastern hills. Morning was
at hand, and Matt, who had been working like a Turk through the dark
hours, was not yet at the Bluebell!

"The _Comet_ has made me a heap of trouble," he muttered, "but I'll
take the kinks out of the old girl when we get to the Bluebell, and
then there'll be clear sailing all the way to town. It's about time I
struck a streak of luck, seems to me. If Delray has any gasoline----"

Matt broke off the remark suddenly, wincing as he thought of an added
jaunt of five miles to the canal, leading the horse or pedaling a heavy
motor-cycle. If luck ever did anything for him, he hoped it would show
itself at the Bluebell.

The sky was bright with coming day when Matt turned into the
_barranca_, and the sun was up when he came in sight of the house and
derrick at the Bluebell. There was some one on foot in the road, far
away toward the canal. When Matt drew up by the house he saw that the
approaching man was Delray.

"I wonder if Del is still gadding about looking for the fellow who
smashed the wireless instrument?" thought Matt, setting to work
unloading the _Comet_.

But it was something else that had taken Delray abroad that morning. He
came, puffing, just as Matt got the _Comet_ on the ground.

"Well, by thunder!" exclaimed the watchman. "What's the matter with the
machine? Where's Chub? Say, but I've had the duse of a time!"

Delray mopped his face with a handkerchief and looked excited, and
curious, and a little bit chagrined.

"First off, Del," said Matt, "have you got any gasoline? Don't tell
me you haven't! It's the one thing I need just now more than anything
else."

"That's right," cried Delray, surprising Matt with a fresh show of
excitement, "if you ever needed gasoline, you need it now. But I don't
think I've got a drop. Haven't used the gasoline-stove for a month, and
it seems to me the can was empty when I last tried it. But wait; we'll
make sure."

Delray darted into the house. In a moment he came rushing back with a
can.

"There's some here, but I don't know how much," said he.

"Bully!" exclaimed Matt. "A quart will take me to Phoenix on the high
speed."

He began working while he kept up a flow of talk.

"Chub's in the hills, looking for his father, who's mysteriously
missing from the claim. Jacks and a rascal named Bisbee held us up
yesterday afternoon while Perry got away on Chub's wheel. Jacks and
Bisbee tried to keep us bottled up in a hole in the rocks all night;
but we managed to get away. Chub's going to look around for his
father, and I'm going to take his father's location notice to Phoenix.
Seen anything of Perry?"

"_Seen_ anything of him?" muttered Delray; "well, I should say I had!
He came puffing along here yesterday afternoon, on Chub's motor-cycle,
and I jumped for the road and headed him off. He tried to run me down,
but I grabbed him. Why, he was all night in the house with me. He
begged me to let him go, and tried to bribe me, but I was thinking of
Chub and held onto him. About half an hour ago Tom Clipperton rode
up on horseback. He was looking for you and Chub. I stepped out to
talk with him, and while I was explaining the situation, we heard the
popping of that motor-cycle, and saw Perry darting along the road. I
had a rope on Perry's hands, and how he ever got rid of it is more'n I
know. Clipperton took after him just a-smoking, but he might as well
have tried to chase a lightning express-train on a hand-car. I ran down
the road a ways, and was just coming back when I saw you."

All this set Matt's nerves to tingling. Here was an unexpected stroke
of luck. Perry had been held up all night at the Bluebell! Even though
he had got away, there was a chance to overtake him. Matt flung down
the can, adjusted the needle-valve of the gasoline shut-off which he
had found out of order, and tried the motor. She took the spark finely,
and was apparently in as good shape as before she had "bucked" with
Perry.

"Bully for you, Del!" cried Matt. "Perry leads me by half an hour?"

"Yes; but that's a whole lot, and----"

Matt did not hear the rest. He was off down the road, with the
cylinders sweetly purring and the rubber tires kicking up a cloud of
dust.

The fatigue of his night work dropped from him, and he felt as fresh
and fit as though he had had his usual amount of rest and sleep.

Once more his face was set toward Phoenix, and he felt equal to
anything.




CHAPTER XII.

A STOUT HEART AND PLENTY OF HOPE.


Dace Perry was only half an hour in the lead!

Had he been mounted on Motor Matt's two-cylinder, seven-horse-power
marvel, this would have meant that, with fearless and skilful riding,
he was already in Phoenix; but Perry was on a one-cylinder machine,
that would have to be nursed by a proficient rider in order to do even
thirty miles an hour.

Matt figured that Perry would do twenty, or twenty-five. In other
words, Perry's lead, as Matt reckoned it, was ten or twelve miles.
Could the _Comet_ reel off a score of miles while Perry was doing the
eight or ten that lay between him and the recorder's office?

Reason assured Matt that he had a fighting chance. There was a mile a
minute in the _Comet_ if Matt cared to let her go the limit and risk
his neck.

Notch by notch he opened her out. Why not do a mile a minute? There was
less sand just ahead and better ground. Besides, he was working for
Chub and Susie, and what good was a fellow who wouldn't risk his neck
for his friends?

This was a race for a fortune. It made little difference to Motor
Matt that it was a fortune for the McReadys and not for himself that
trembled in the balance.

The hills melted away behind the speeding motor-cycle. The rise and
fall of the road had little effect on the speed, and the tremendous
momentum of one hundred and fifty pounds of steel, backed by a hundred
and thirty more of brawn and daring, fairly lifted the _Comet_ over the
high places.

Ahead of Matt were a horse and rider. The horse was galloping in
Matt's direction, but took the roadside at a frightened leap as the
motor-cycle sped by.

The horseman shouted and waved an arm. It was Tom Clipperton, the
descendant of a noble line of genuine owners of the soil--the Indians.
What he said Matt could not hear, and Matt dared not take a hand from
the grip-control to wave an answering hail. However, he yelled a
greeting, and the cry trailed out behind him and died suddenly in the
speed of his flight.

That was not the first time Motor Matt had raced along the Black Canyon
road. He had done it once before, but his speed then was not what it
was now. That other time the _Comet_ was new to him, but since that he
had come to know the machine in every part as he knew his two hands.

Before he fairly realized it, he was at the canal. The _Comet_ seemed
to take the bridge at a flying leap, and was off and away through shady
lanes of cottonwood-trees.

He passed several wagons and carriages coming toward him. They got
out of the way and gave his charging steel wonder a wide berth.
Occasionally he had to slow down to pass a vehicle moving toward
Phoenix, but not often. The road was wide, and clean, and hard from
edge to edge.

Speed and more speed! That was all Matt was thinking of then. The itch
to eat up the miles as they had never been devoured before was racing
hot through his veins. He would make a record from the hills to Phoenix
this time which would stand unequaled for a long time.

He whirred across the second canal. His next bridge would be the
one that spanned the town-ditch, and then he would be only a short
half-mile from the court-house plaza, and the place where location
notices were put on file.

As he struck the last lap of country road and looked away toward
the beginning of the angling thoroughfare known as Grand Avenue, he
glimpsed a flurry of dust. That was Perry, fanning along on the
one-cylinder machine.

Matt was gaining on Perry hand over fist. As the dust blew aside, Matt
could see Perry looking back, then turning again and coaxing Penny's
wheel to fresh endeavor.

"I've got him," thought Matt exultantly, "and he knows it! He'll begin
to understand, one of these days, that crooked work can make lots of
trouble, but was never known to pay in the long run."

Perry, no doubt, was greatly astounded at sight of Motor Matt. He
had left Matt in the hands of Jacks and Bisbee, and he had left the
_Comet_ temporarily useless. Small wonder if his brain _was_ dazed and
bewildered by the sight of that hurricane closing in on him from the
rear.

If Chub and Clip had any fault to find with Matt, it was because they
thought him too "easy." This was because he had a habit of looking for
the good qualities in a fellow, rather than for the bad ones. Perry,
according to Matt, would have been all right if he hadn't got a wrong
start; and Matt had even hinted to Chub that there might be something
good even in that scheming follower of fortune's wheel, Dirk Hawley.

Chub and Clip couldn't understand this kind of talk. They realized that
it didn't show weakness, for they had sampled Matt's fiber too many
times not to know his underlying strength of character. So they laid
it up to eccentricity, and called it a hobby. Matt, however, called it
a "principle"--and he had been known to fight like a wildcat for his
"principles."

Matt's mind was resting easy. He felt that the race was as good as won,
that he would soon pass Perry, reach the court-house, and have the
McReady location on file a good two minutes before Perry could reach
the plaza.

And just at that moment, when the whole matter of the McReady "strike"
was looking its brightest, the unexpected happened again and changed
the complexion of affairs.

Matt was close to Perry--not more than a couple of hundred feet behind
him, and still gaining rapidly--when he saw a white horse, ridden by
a well-dressed young woman, riding toward them from the direction of
Grand Avenue.

The horse was mettlesome and high-spirited, and the sight of Perry's
motor-cycle sent the animal leaping toward the roadside. The girl was a
good rider--Matt could see that at a glance--but the horse was giving
her all she could manage.

Perry's proper move, in such a case, would have been to slow down--even
to stop, if the actions of the horse and the safety of the rider seemed
to demand it.

But Perry was thinking only of the recorder's office and never
slackened pace.

The white horse plunged against the fence and reared high in the air.
The girl, however, clung pluckily to the saddle.

Matt, completely absorbed in the girl's peril, lessened his speed and
watched the progress of events. Then, with his heart in his throat, he
shut off the gasoline and clamped on the brake.

One of the reins had snapped apart during the girl's frantic tugging at
the bit. Entirely out of control, the frenzied animal flung off down
the road, the piece of rein dangling from the bit-ring and the girl
clinging desperately to the saddle. Her hat was lost and her yellow
hair was streaming out behind her.

Matt's first impulse had been to leave his machine and rush to
the girl's assistance, but before he could pull his feet from the
toe-clips, the horse was past him and careering along on its wild
course.

There are times when, in the space of a lightning-flash, a person's
mind will deal with every conceivable phase of a situation. It was like
that with Matt as the white horse and helpless rider went tearing past
him.

Unless something was done to stop the runaway animal, the girl would
probably be thrown and perhaps killed. Against what he might do for the
girl, Matt, for the fraction of an instant, balanced his duty to the
McReadys. Then he used the pedals, turned on the gasoline, and switched
on the spark. But instead of going on to Phoenix and the recorder's
office, he turned the _Comet_ and raced after the girl.




CHAPTER XIII.

MATT WINS--AND LOSES.


Motor Matt had seven horses in the twin-cylinders to pit against that
one frantic animal that was slashing along the road toward the canal.
There was but one thought in his mind, and that was to spur the seven
horses into a speed that could overtake the one before it reached the
bridge and the water.

He had been racing for a fortune before, but it was for a human life
now. With keen, steady eyes he gaged the chances. The white horse was
thundering along in the middle of the road, with the scrap of rein
dangling on the left side of the bit. He aimed the _Comet_ to bring up
on the left side of the frightened beast.

He was half a minute, perhaps, in coming alongside the horse, and
during that brief interval he had a brief glimpse of the thrashing,
steel-shod heels. A heart's beat later he was abreast of the girl and
saw her white, fear-drawn face looking down at him. In another breath
he was close to the horse's head.

The time had come when Matt was to put forth his best effort, and
win or lose at a single throw of the die. If the horse got away from
him---- But he was not thinking of that; he was thinking how he could
best hold the animal and bring him to a stop.

The girl, far gone with fright, was swaying dangerously in the saddle.

"Steady!" cried Motor Matt, reaching for the head of the runaway horse.

His outstretched hand caught the piece of flying rein. It was his right
hand he had to use, and he doubled the rein about the palm twice. Then
a twist of the left handle-bar caused the _Comet_ to slow down, and he
pulled back on the bit.

The frenzied horse, however, was not to be stopped so easily. Lurching
ahead with a fresh leap, he dragged Matt from the machine, and carried
him, a dead weight, for a dozen yards.

Matt hung like grim death to the piece of rein, and his hundred and
thirty pounds finally brought the horse to a standstill. As Matt
floundered to his feet, the girl toppled into his arms--and the horse
jerked loose and went on.

But Matt was not concerned about the horse. The girl was saved, and
that was enough for him.

Dizzy and weak, he staggered with her to the roadside and laid her down
beside an irrigation-ditch. Hearing some one behind him, he turned and
saw a buckboard containing a man and woman. The man had halted the rig,
and was handing the reins to the woman. The woman was leaning from the
seat and peering anxiously at Matt and the girl over the side of the
vehicle. The man sprang down and hurried toward Matt.

"Finest thing I ever saw!" declared the man. "That girl might have
been killed if it hadn't been for you. Say, you're a plucky piece,
and----" The man stopped and stared. "Why, hello!" he went on. "You're
Motor Matt, the lad that won the bicycle-race at the park a few days
ago. Say, Malindy," he called to the woman, "this is Motor Matt.
You've heard about him. He's the boy that won the race from O'Day, of
Prescott."

"The young woman, Silas!" returned the woman. "Was she hurt?"

"She's only fainted, I think," said Matt.

"It's a wonder the fellow on that other machine wouldn't stop," growled
the man. "If he'd acted like he'd ought to, the horse wouldn't have run
off with the girl. What was the matter with him?"

"We were racing for the recorder's office," explained Matt. "We've both
got notices to file, and the one that gets there first----"

"Oh, ho! That's it, hey? And you thought more of saving the girl than
you did of beating him! Here, shake! It's sort of refreshing to meet a
boy like you. If your machine isn't busted, you hike right along, and
maybe you'll beat the other chap yet. We'll take care of the girl,
and see that she gets where she belongs in town. Hitch the horses,
Malindy," he added to the woman, "and come here and help."

Matt started off, limping as he went.

"Are you hurt?" shouted the man.

"Jolted up a little, that's all," answered Matt, stopping to pick up
his cap.

He was worrying about the _Comet_. Had he smashed it when the horse
jerked him out of the saddle?

By what seemed like a miracle, the motor-cycle had escaped injury. The
jar of its fall had closed the gasoline shut-off, and he picked the
machine out of the dust and once more got into the seat.

Was there any use in going on to the court-house, he was asking
himself. He felt more like going to his boarding-house and hunting for
a bottle of arnica.

Remembering that he had told Chub he wouldn't consider himself beaten
until the recorder had told him Perry had already filed Jacks' location
notice, he set the motor going and wheeled rapidly on toward Grand
Avenue.

He was about five minutes getting to the court-house. While he was
bracing the motor-cycle up against the steps at the entrance, Perry
came out of the building, followed by Dirk Hawley.

"Here's King," laughed Perry, "just a little bit late."

"Just a little," chuckled Hawley. "It won't do you any good to butt in
here, King."

"How do you know what I'm doing here?" demanded Matt.

"Oh, I'm a pretty fair guesser. Run along home, an' tell the McReadys
their little scheme wouldn't work."

Matt, however, climbed doggedly up the steps, entered the corridor, and
made for the place where location notices were filed.

"Was a location notice filed here just now for Jacks and Hawley?" he
asked of the clerk.

"Right you are; just about two minutes ago."

"Much obliged," said Matt. "That's all."

He went out and got on his machine, but instead of steering for Mrs.
Spooner's, he made for Chub McReady's. Susie was there, and he would
tell her the whole story. If he hadn't stopped to chase that runaway
horse, he would have been able to beat Perry to the court-house and so
save a fortune for his friends. They had to be told how he had failed
and why.

Welcome Perkins was smoking a pipe on the porch as Matt rode up. He
jumped excitedly to his feet when he saw who was coming.

"Howdy, pard!" he called. "Did you an' Chub do the trick? Did ye beat
out them villains, Jacks an' Hawley? Snakes alive, Matt, don't say ye
didn't! From the looks o' yer face, I'm argyin' ye've had bad luck. Oh,
ye ort to hev took me! Ye ort to hev let me take keer o' this."

Hearing Welcome's loud talk, Susie came out on the porch.

"Why, Matt!" she exclaimed. "Where's Mark? Didn't he come with you?"

Matt shook his head as he climbed up the steps.

"What's the matter with ye?" demanded Welcome. "I don't reckon I ever
seen ye quite so cut up afore, Matt. Somethin' must hev gone a hull lot
crossways to make _you_ pull sich a face."

"Nothing has happened to Mark, has there, Matt?" queried Susie
anxiously.

"A good many things have happened to both of us, Susie, since we left
here," said Matt; "but Chub's all right."

"You're kind of pale, Matt," went on Susie solicitously. "Here, take
this chair."

"What makes ye limp?" queried Welcome. "Hawley been roughin' things
up with ye? Shade o' Gallopin' Dick! I never felt so all-fired worked
up about anythin' as I do about that there 'strike' o' Jim's. Tell me
right out, Matt, hev ye saved the claim?"

"No," answered Matt heavily, as he sank into the chair, "we've lost
out--and it's my fault."

There followed a short silence, Welcome muttering and twisting at his
mustache, Susie peering keenly at Matt's pale face, and Matt staring at
the cottonwood-trees down by the town canal.

Susie was the first to speak. Stepping quietly to Matt's side, she laid
a small hand on his shoulder.

"You've lost out, Matt," said she, "and if it's your fault, as you say,
then there's a good reason _why_ you lost out. Money isn't everything
in this world."

"Mebby not," spoke up Welcome dryly, "but it sartinly buys a lot o
grub, an' clothes, an' critter comforts. The McReadys could stand a
few o' them same comforts, I reckon. Sometimes, gal, when I see how
ye're pinchin' along, an' Chub is hampered fer money to git things to
do his inventin' with, I vow I can't hardly keep from hikin' fer the
hills an holdin' up a few stages. It ain't right, I know, but the ole
lawless feelin' bubbles up mighty strong, oncet in a while. If you an'
Chub had waited an' asked fer my advice afore racin' off like ye done,
Matt, mebby ye'd be hevin' a diff'rent story ter tell. Howsumever, tell
the details. Ye lost, an' the biggest part o' the shock is over. The
McReadys'll continner ter struggle along on bacon an' spuds, instid,
as I had fondly hoped, bein' promoted to canned stuff. What ye hangin'
fire fer, Matt? Go on an'----"

"You don't stop talking long enough to give him a chance, Welcome,"
said Susie.

"That's right," snorted Welcome; "blame _me_! Blame the ole ex-pirate
o' the plains fer every bloomin' thing that happens. I'm expectin'
ye'll be sayin' next that it's my fault kase Matt an Chub couldn't beat
out Jacks an' Hawley. Don't fergit, young lady, I'm grub-staked fer
the hills, an'----"

"Dry up!" cried Matt, and he said it so suddenly, and in such a tone
that the old man keeled over against one of the porch-posts. Matt
smiled a little. "You're doing all the talking, Welcome," he added,
"and not saying anything, and here I sit with something to say and not
able to get a word in edgeways."

"Git in yer word," snapped Welcome, stamping his wooden pin on the
porch, "git in a dozen words, or a millyun of 'em. 'Pears like ye kin
_talk_ a heap even if ye can't _do_ anythin'."

Welcome glared, began filling his pipe, and sat down on the top step of
the porch. Before Matt could begin, Tom Clipperton hurried in at the
gate and ran along the walk and up the steps. He was covered with dust,
and was plainly just in from a hard, trying ride, but there was a glow
in his black eyes as he reached over and grabbed Matt's hand.

"Great! Everybody's talking about it. I'm proud of you."

"Somethin' more we can't understand," growled Welcome. "What's great?
What's everybody talkin' about? Where'd you come from, anyway?"

"Matt was racing for town with Perry," went on Clipperton. "Perry had
Penny's motor-cycle. Matt had the _Comet_. Matt was overhauling Perry
at every jump. He'd have beat him in and filed the McReady location
before Perry filed Jacks' and Hawley's. But Matt stopped to catch a
horse that was running away with a girl. Perry's machine scared the
horse. Catch _him_ stopping! That's why Motor Matt lost out. Claim or
no claim, everybody's proud of Matt."

"Did you do _that_, Matt?" asked Susie, a soft light in her wide, brown
eyes as she looked at him.

"Why, yes," said Matt. "I couldn't get out of it."

"I'm proud of you, too," said Susie quietly. "What you did was worth a
dozen claims."

"Money's money," growled old Welcome. "I ain't got no use fer
dad-binged sentiment when it's so hard fer the McReadys to scrub along."

"There's more to it," said Clipperton. "I've got something else to
tell."

"What's that, Clip?" queried Matt.

"The girl you saved was Edith Hawley. Dirk Hawley's daughter."

Matt sank back in his chair, dumfounded.




CHAPTER XIV.

A QUEER TANGLE.


"Waal, I'm stumped!" snorted Welcome. "Matt stops his race ter save
Dirk Hawley's gal, an' Dirk Hawley wins a bonanzer mine bekase o' it.
Looks to me like a put-up job. Mebby the gal was bein' run away with
a-purpose."

"Welcome!" reproved Susie sharply.

"That's right," whimpered the old man. "Jump onter me. Anyways, you
know Dirk Hawley wouldn't be above doin' of a thing like that."

"They say Edith Hawley is a fine girl," said Susie, "and just as
different from her father as can be. I've heard that Hawley fairly
worships her, and it's nonsense to think he'd let her risk her life to
keep Matt from beating Perry to the recorder's office. But it's a queer
tangle, isn't it, Matt?" she added, turning to her brother's chum.

"Mighty queer," answered Matt. "I'd have stopped and helped the girl,
just the same, even if I had known who she was."

"Of course you would!" declared Susie.

"You must have made a fast ride into town, Clip," said Matt.

"Hit a high place, now and then," answered Clip. "You didn't hit any."

"Why did you leave town?"

"Saw Perry's chum, Ratty Spangler. He told me where Perry had gone.
Then I got a horse and started out early this morning. Didn't know what
I could do, but I wanted to do something. After you passed me on the
road I tore in behind you. A good ways behind," Clip added. "Left my
horse at the corral and hustled straight for here. It was the corral
boss who told me what you'd done."

"Susie an' me hev been waitin' fer quite a spell to hear what Matt
done," complained Welcome. "We got a right to know, seems like."

"Wait till I get dinner," said Susie, "then we can talk while we eat."

"Prime idea," agreed Matt. "I was too busy to eat breakfast, and Chub
and I had a mighty slim supper last night."

"I'll hurry as fast as I can," said Susie, starting into the house.
"You're to stay, Clip."

The loss of a fortune hadn't seemed to make much of an impression on
Susie. On the contrary, she seemed pleased to think that Matt had
turned aside from the race with Perry to stop the runaway horse and
save Edith Hawley.

Clip went into the house after a bandage and a bottle of arnica, and
proceeded to take care of one of Matt's shins, which had been badly
skinned when he was jerked from the motor-cycle.

Clip was a master-hand at anything of this sort, and, besides,
inherited from his Indian forefathers the keen eye and subtle sense
that go to make a born tracker, whether in the woods, or on mountain
and plain.

"Hawley an' Perry hev been purty thick," mused Welcome, while the
bandaging was going on, "an' I'm kinder sorter wonderin' what Hawley'll
say when he l'arns it was Perry as skeered his darter's hoss."

"Perry did a big thing for Hawley by winning that race," said Clip.
"Hawley's all for money, no matter how it's made. He'll forget about
Perry's scaring the horse."

"An' only to think it was Hawley's gal got between the McReadys an' a
fortun'," groaned Welcome. "I shore won't sleep nights thinkin' about
it. It's goin' to ha'nt me. Mebey it'll drive me into the hills fer
good an' all."

"If Delray hadn't come out of the house to talk with me," said Clip,
"Perry wouldn't have got away from the Bluebell. He went like a streak
when he came. Couldn't either of us stop him."

"Funny how things turn out sometimes," mused Matt.

"Why don't you come back to school, Matt?" asked Clip, with his usual
abruptness in jumping from one subject to another. "Finish out the
term, I mean, before you go to Denver. You've got ten friends there to
Perry's one."

A tinge of sadness crossed Matt's face.

"I haven't any folks that I know of, Clip," said he, "and I'm up
against a financial stringency. I'm going to Denver and get something
to do."

"Short on folks myself," grunted Clip. "And about as short on money.
What you going to do there?"

"I think I'll get into the automobile business--driving a car, or
something like that. I've got to be among the motors, Clip, in order to
be happy."

"I'll buy Perry's motor-cycle and go with you. Never had a friend like
Motor Matt. Don't want to let you get away."

Clipperton was as sudden in his resolutions as he was in his talk. Matt
lifted his eyes quickly, and there was that in Clipperton's look which
led him to reach over and grip his hand.

"We'd hook up like a house afire, Clip," said Matt heartily, "but you'd
better think it over."

"I've got my way to make, same as you. Let me hitch my string to your
kite. Maybe I can help. Don't have to think it over. You know they
haven't ever made it very happy for me here," said Clipperton, his eyes
flashing and chest heaving with the indignation that filled his soul.

At that moment, Susie came to the door and announced dinner. While
they were eating, Matt struck into the experiences that had fallen
to him and Chub. Beginning with the trouble caused by the freighter
at the Bluebell Mine, he followed on down to the point where he had
stopped the runaway horse. That incident he glided over, and finished
by telling of his encounter with Hawley and Perry on the court-house
steps. As he very well knew would be the case, Susie began at once to
worry about her father. Welcome pushed away from the table, leaving his
dinner half-eaten.

"It's up to me," said he excitedly. "I knowed it u'd come. I'll git out
ole Lucretia Borgia an' hike fer the mountings immediate. Jim McReady's
my pard, an' if a hair o' his head has been teched, I'll mow down
Jacks, an' Bisbee, an' Hawley an' everybody else that's had a hand in
his undoin'. Everybody listen to me! It's Eagle-eye Perkins, the Terror
o' the Plains, what's talkin'. Don't grieve, gal," he added, turning to
Susie, "I'll go out there an' I'll bring Jim back, or I'll leave my ole
carkiss among the rocks."

Welcome thumped his chest--and immediately began to cough.

"Where's Lucretia Borgia, gal?" he demanded. "I been missin' 'er fer a
day or two."

"Lucretia Borgia" was the high-sounding and significant name Welcome
had bestowed upon an ancient revolver. The weapon had not been
discharged in a dozen years, and owing to its rusty condition firing it
had apparently ceased to become a possibility.

"I--I threw it down the cistern, Welcome," said Susie. "The old trinket
was harmless enough, but I was afraid it would get you into trouble."

Welcome stared.

"Trinket!" he mumbled. "Throwed it down the cistern! Lucretia Borgia,
with all them tur'ble recordin' notches on the handle! This here's the
last straw! I'm goin', right now, an' with nothin' on me no more'n a
jack-knife with a busted blade! But I'll git Jim. He's my pard, he is,
an' he's allers treated me _white_."

Welcome grabbed his hat and started for the door. Just as he reached
it, a tall man with grayish hair and beard stepped through and collided
with him.

"Father!" screamed Susie.

"Jim!" whooped Welcome. "Waal, snakes alive! We was jest thinkin' ye'd
never git back till ole Welcome went out an' brought ye in!"

"Don't overlook me," piped the voice of Chub, as he pushed through the
door behind his father. "Howdy, Matt! I knew you were here when I saw
the _Comet_ out in front. Clip, too! Well, well, here's a gatherin' of
the faithful, an' no mistake."




CHAPTER XV.

THE LAST SURPRISE.


Mr. McReady and Chub could not have arrived at a more fitting moment.
At no time had Matt done very much worrying on account of McReady,
senior, for he had all along believed that the prospector was in no
particular danger from Jacks and Bisbee. Those two worthies would go
as far as they dared, but they would stop short of any desperate work.
Hawley would have seen to that, even if Jacks and Bisbee had allowed
their ardor to run away with their judgment.

After the prospector had kissed Susie and shaken hands with Matt and
Clip, two more plates were put on the table, and for half an hour those
present listened to what had happened to the head of the McReady family.

"I've had a tough time of it, and no mistake," said the prospector.
"For the biggest part of my trip it was just the same old scramble
through the hills, gopherin' around and horn-spooning nothing that
had a speck of color. I was near discouraged, thinking how old a man
I was getting to be, and how my family was drifting along and kicking
the wolf off the door-step every morning. I started for home, allowing
I'd get some kind of a job in town, and chance brought me along that
old pack-trail. Knowing about the spring under the peak with the white
cross, I went there to camp for the night--and then through sheer
accident I struck that blow-out of white quartz with the rock just
glittering with yellow specks. It took me half of the next day to
locate the lode, and while I was pilin' the monuments I looked up and
saw that villain, Jacks.

"I had been running across Jacks frequently, during the trip, and it
began to dawn upon me that seeing him so much wasn't altogether a
coincidence. Everybody knows that Dirk Hawley grub-stakes him, although
why Jacks wanted to trail after such an unsuccessful prospector as I
am was a mystery. However, there he was, just at the time I had made
my 'strike,' pushing toward me threateningly. He said that it was his
claim, and that I had no business piling my monuments on it. I asked
him why he hadn't piled his own monuments on the claim, if it was his.
He hadn't anything to say to that, but tried to run me off the ground.

"Well, instead of his running me off he got run off himself, and I
could see him hanging around at a safe distance, keeping an eye on me.
When I got ready to put up my location notice, I was thunderstruck to
find that I had lost my bundle of blanks. Jacks, no doubt, had blanks,
for they're a prime part of every prospector's equipment, but of course
I couldn't expect him to let me have a couple; and if I left the claim
and tried to get any, Jacks could tack up a location notice of his own
and make a run to Phoenix with a duplicate.

"Chub was the boy I thought of to get me out of that fix, but I didn't
even think of him as a possibility until Pedro Morales came along the
pack-trail with a couple of burros loaded with mesquit and palo-verde.
I stopped the Mexican and made him wait while I took the wrapper off of
some candles and wrote that letter; then, scratching out the original
address on an old envelope, I wrote Chub's name over it, told Morales
where to go to find the boy, and gave him some money and sent him on.

"Then I waited, and watched, and hoped, all the time keeping as wary
an eye on Jacks as he was holding on me. I never left the claim once,
and I had a good-sized club of ironwood which I was ready to use on the
slightest provocation.

"Well, the days passed and Chub didn't come. I was hoping Jacks might
go away for a spell and give me a chance to slip over to the Bluebell
and flash a wireless message to Phoenix, but the rascal seemed glued
to the spot. Finally, one day, Jacks walked over with a white flag.
He said he wanted to see if we couldn't compromise, as he called it.
I kept my club handy and watched him like a cat as we talked. But the
trouble was I didn't do any looking behind me. First thing I knew I
was grabbed around the arms from the rear, then Jacks jumped forward,
and I found myself in the hands of two men, one of them being Bisbee.
Hawley had sent Bisbee out to help Jacks get the better of me. Too late
I realized how I had been trapped, but there was nothing I could do.

"The scoundrels tied me hand and foot, loaded me onto Jacks' burro, and
took me two miles away to the old Santa Maria shaft. The Santa Maria
was abandoned years ago, and Jacks and Bisbee lowered me down to the
bottom of the shaft, left a little food and water, and went away. The
old ladders had long since decayed and fallen away, so I couldn't have
been more of a prisoner if I had found myself behind bars and stone
walls. Chub can tell you the rest."

"You bet I can," put in Chub. "If it hadn't been for Matt's plucky
getaway from that hole in the rocks, it's a cinch dad would probably
have been down in the old shaft yet. When you gave that husky yell,
Matt, Jacks and Bisbee thought we had both got away. They rushed off
after you, and all I had to do was to hike out. I had time to take Old
Baldy, and I set out on a night search for the Santa Maria, as you told
me to do. I had a notion where the old mine was, although I didn't know
exactly, an' of course night was a bad time to find anything I was so
hazy about. But sure I had luck in my jeans. I stumbled on a camp of
Mexican wood-cutters, and one of 'em took me to the Santa Maria. I can
tell you I was mightily relieved when dad answered me from down in the
shaft and said he was all right. The wood-cutter got a rope and we
snaked dad out in a brace of shakes. Then we began to scratch gravel
for the Bluebell, gettin' there about half an hour after you had left,
Matt.

"'Course dad an' me felt good when Del told us how he had held Perry a
prisoner all night, an' how he had only got away half an hour ahead of
you. Still, I wasn't indulgin' in any extra high hopes, and neither was
dad. We just figured on coming into Phoenix, taking turn about riding
the horse you had left at the Bluebell, when, just as though we had
planned it, along came Major Woolford in his automobile. He had been
out to the Montezuma Mine, and was on his way to town. He brought us
in, and when we got here we heard how you came so near skinning Perry
out of that race, and how you lost by side-stepping to grab a runaway
horse and save Edith Hawley from bein' killed, or hurt."

Chub paused. Mr. McReady, with glowing eyes, leaned toward Matt.

"That was nobly done, my boy!" he cried.

Susie's eyes kindled.

"I knew you'd say that, dad," she said happily.

"You couldn't expect anythin' else of Motor Matt," chimed in Chub.
"That's his style, every time an' all the time. He's all to the good!"

Matt was deeply touched. All the McReadys, notwithstanding the fact
that his act in saving the girl had caused them to lose a chance at
fortune which might never again come their way, approved heartily the
course he had taken. The McReadys were generous and whole-souled;
and, although they were in bitter need of a "strike," yet they were
great-spirited enough to place humanity above the sordid question of
mere money.

"Dad-binged if I kin feel like you do," croaked Welcome Perkins
dismally. "It ain't likely, Jim, ye'll ever git another chanst at a
'strike,' an' I hate to think ye got juggled out o' this in any sich a
way."

The prospector laughed.

"Why, old friend," said he, "it may be a good thing. I'd have to do
development work, you know, then hunt around for capital to put up
a mill, and I would be loading up with lots of care and worry. Now,
however, I've made up my mind to get something to do right here in
Phoenix, so I can be with you, and Susie, and Chub right along. I'm
getting to be pretty old for knocking around the hills."

There was an undernote of wistfulness back of McReady's words that sent
a pang to Motor Matt's heart. A moderate fortune would have enabled the
prospector to pass his last days in comfort and give Chub and Susie a
college education. Matt's conscience didn't reprove him for what he had
done, but he couldn't help looking at the other side of the picture.

McReady pushed away from the table, put his arms around Susie and Chub,
and started for the front room.

"Let's all go out on the porch," said he. "The sun is bright, the sky
is fair, and it's easy to be happy if you only make up your mind to be
thankful for all you've got. I'd rather be in my shoes, this minute,
than in Jacks', or Hawley's."

"Or Perry's," added Chub. "I wonder what that fellow thinks of himself?"

"If that there Pedro Morales had had a leetle more sense," grumbled
old Welcome, "he'd a-handed that letter over to Chub instid o' to
Perry. Consarn them Mexicans, anyways. If ye told him where to go to
find Chub, Jim, why didn't he go?"

"Probably he didn't understand the directions," answered McReady.
"Forget it all, Welcome. Come out on the porch and we'll have a smoke.
This way, Matt, you and Clip."

The day couldn't have been finer. In the vicinity of Phoenix they say
they have three hundred and sixty cloudless days out of every year, and
perpetual spring is in the air.

A slight breeze ruffled the branches of the cotton-woods, down by
the canal, birds were twittering and singing, and the world seemed a
pretty good place to live in, despite the fact that mining-claims were
temporarily at a discount.

Hardly had the little party seated themselves on the porch when the
chugging of an automobile came to their ears. A car was coming from the
direction of town, and was at that moment crossing the bridge.

"Snakes alive!" chattered Welcome, staring. "I ain't got my glasses on,
but 'pears to me like that's Dirk Hawley's ottermobill."

"That's what it is," answered Chub, breathing hard. "He's sailin' by in
all kinds o' style, he and his daughter. There's a little more money
added to the pile he's got in the bank, an' I hope he's satisfied."

"Tainted money, at that," growled Clip. "That last deal was the
crookedest he ever worked. Where's Perry? He ought to be along."

Chub was mistaken. Dirk Hawley and his daughter were not going to
"sail by." To the astonishment of all on the porch, the resplendent
touring-car came to a halt in front of the McReady gate.

"They needn't call here," muttered Chub. "Come to rub it in, I suppose."

"Or to talk it over," said McReady.

"I'll go fish Lucretia Borgia out o' the cistern, that's what I'll do,"
flared Welcome. "Mebby I'll need 'er yet."

"Stay right where you are, old friend," cautioned McReady. "I'm ready
to talk with Hawley, if that's what he's here for."

Dirk Hawley got out of the car and helped his daughter down; then the
two of them came through the gate and walked toward the group on the
porch.




CHAPTER XVI.

MOTOR MATT'S TRIUMPH.


Edith Hawley was a stunningly pretty girl. There was little of her
father's looks about her, however, and it was quite clear that she got
most of her character from her mother's side of the house. She was a
little pale, but otherwise showed no bad effects of the ordeal through
which she had passed earlier in the day.

All those on the porch got up as the two callers drew near the
steps--that is, all except Welcome Perkins. The old ex-buccaneer of the
plains just sat where he was and glared.

"Excuse me for buttin' in here," said Hawley, "but my daughter's got a
little business with King." He turned to the girl. "Fire away, Edie,"
he added.

"Which is Mr. King?" queried the girl, in a low voice.

Matt stepped away from the others and came down the steps.

"I saw you when you stopped the horse," Edith Hawley went on, fixing
her hazel eyes on Matt's face, "but I couldn't remember much, then. I
want to thank you. Father brought me here so that I could. I want you
to understand how grateful I am."

She put out her hand timidly and Matt took it cordially.

"That's all right, Miss Hawley," said he, flushing. "What I did for you
I would have done for anybody caught in the same way."

"I believe that," she returned significantly. "Even if you had known
who I was it wouldn't have made any difference."

"Not a particle," answered Matt.

"Isn't there something my father can do for you?" she asked.

Matt shook his head.

"Well," she went on, "there's something I'm going to do for you." She
turned. "Father----"

"Wait a minute, Edie," interrupted Hawley. "Let me tell all of you,"
and he faced those on the porch, "just how I stand in the matter of
that minin'-claim. It won't take more'n a minute, and it may save a lot
of hard feelin's. I've been grub-stakin' Jacks for two or three years,
and he ain't never yet found anythin' but country rock. I was gettin'
tired o' puttin' up good money, an' the last time he started out I
told him he'd got to find somethin' or we'd split up our partnership.
I reckon that made him rather too keen for a strike, so that he didn't
care much how he made it just so he delivered the goods.

"Well, when Dace Perry came to me t'other day an' says he's found
a letter concernin' me an' Jacks, of course I read it; an', havin'
grub-staked Jacks, quite naturally I took his side. I sent Bisbee out
to help Jacks keep what was rightfully his an' mine, an' later I sent
Perry out on a horse to find out what they were doin' an' report.

"Well, Perry comes in with a location notice, an' says he had to ride
like Sam Hill to get ahead o' Matt King, who was hustling for town
with a notice o' McReady's. That's all Perry told me. Never a word,
mind ye, about scarin' Edie's horse an' makin' it run away, nary a word
about what Matt King done to stop the horse--all he said was what I'm
tellin' ye.

"By and by, Edie was brought home by a man I know, who had seen the
runaway from start to finish. He told me the whole of it."

Dirk Hawley's coarse, heavy face was flushed. His voice shook a little
as he went on.

"Edie's goin' to school in 'Frisco, an' she come out here to make her
father a short visit. There ain't anythin' I wouldn't do for her, an'
about the first thing I did after she struck town was to buy Ajax, that
white riding-horse. She knows how to ride, Edie does--none better--but
the way Perry scared the horse didn't leave Edie much of a chance. If
King hadn't taken after Ajax, I--I----"

Hawley snapped his heavy lower jaw and remained silent for a moment.

"Well," he finished, "I gave Perry three hours to get out of town an'
to go back to Denver where he belongs. He needs lookin' after, an' his
father's the one to do it. I know King won't let me do anythin' for
him, but I reckon he won't balk on takin' a little somethin' from Edie."

"I don't want any of your money, Mr. Hawley," began Matt, "if that's
what----"

"Sure you don't," broke in the gambler grimly, "you don't want any o'
my money an' you're not goin' to get any." He pulled a folded paper
from his pocket. "I'd have done this sooner," he went on, "only I had
to send my automobile out after Jacks. It was necessary for him to sign
the paper along with me."

He gave the document to Edith, and she turned and placed the paper in
Matt's hand.

"It's a quitclaim deed to that mine," she said, "and it's made out to
James McReady. It's yours, Mr. King, because you won it. If you hadn't
stopped to save me, you'd have got to the recorder's office first. It
isn't much to do for the service you rendered me, but I'm sure you
wouldn't let us do any more. Good-by!"

She held out her hand again. After Matt had clasped the small palm for
the second time, she turned, took her father's arm, and they went back
to the automobile.

In astonishment the group on the porch watched the car turn in the road
and disappear in the direction of town.

"Waal, waal!" gulped Welcome Perkins. "Somebody please ter pinch me,
so's I kin wake up. It must be a dream--can't be nothin' else. Dirk
Hawley! Actin' like that!"

Welcome picked up his wooden pin and looked hard at the brass tip on
the end of it.

Chub was also staggered.

"Get next that he didn't say anything about that underhand work," he
commented, "how he had the wireless instruments smashed, and all that."

"He's keeping such things from his daughter," said Susie. "Can you
blame him for that?"

"Let him be straight, then," put in Clip. "If he wants the girl to
think he's honest and respectable, let him act the part. It's the
easiest way."

"It was the gal as done it," grinned Welcome. "Dirk Hawley never'd hev
sashayed over here an' give up that quitclaim o' his own free will an'
accord. Not him!"

"You don't know about that, Welcome," said Matt. "It isn't always wise
to be so quick with your snap judgments."

"And Perry's gone," went on Clip, scowling. "Hawley ordered him out of
town. He had to go. And I had no chance to settle our account. Some day
we'll meet again. Those of my race do not forget easily. It will keep."

"Perry owes Hawley a heap of plunks, I've heard," put in Chub.
"Probably Perry had to hike or face a whole lot of trouble."

Matt stepped over to the prospector and gave him the quitclaim deed.

"That 'strike' of yours has made you a good deal of trouble, Mr.
McReady," said he, "but I don't think we have any of us got any kick
coming on the way the business has turned out. I hope the claim will
make a bonanza mine, and that the McReadys will have more money than
they can spend."

"Hip, hip, hurroo!" wheezed Welcome. "Canned stuff--that's what the
McReadys lives on fer all the rest o' their days."

"Canned stuff"--plenty of it--was Welcome's idea of luxury.

McReady, as he took the quitclaim deed, gripped Motor Matt's hand.

"Matt," said he, with feeling, "but for you, this would never have come
about. It was a big day for the McReadys when Chub chummed up with you,
my boy. You ought to share in this good luck; by every law of right and
justice, you're entitled to an interest in the 'strike.'"

Matt shook his head.

"It's a family affair," said he, "and you couldn't make me take even a
piece of quartz from the 'blow-out.'"

"That's Matt King for you," observed Tom Clipperton gruffly, edging
around until he stood at Matt's side. "True to his friends. That's why
he has made a hit with me."

Clipperton, on his own account, knew what it was to have Motor Matt for
a friend.

"We're going to Denver," Clipperton went on. "If Chub don't buy Penny's
motor-cycle, I'll buy it myself."

"I've got to hunt up that wheel," murmured Chub, who appeared to be a
bit dazed. "Mebby I'll have to pay for the old terror without getting
it. And there's Old Baldy, an' Perry's horse out at the Bluebell. Wish
I could call up Delray by wireless and tell him all about this. Matt,
you're the best pal in the world. Don't I wish I could go to Denver
with you. But it's me to the woods--or school."

Chub jumped for Matt and grabbed his hand.

"An' I'm wonderin'," said old Welcome plaintively, stumping forward
along the porch, "if ye'll let a pore ole reformed road-agent grip
yer honest pa'm, Matt? I've shore made some mistakes, an' among 'em I
thought ridin' that benzine go-devil o' Penny's was about the wust;
but I've changed my mind. If it hadn't been fer me makin' Hawley drap
on the bridge like I done, that there letter wouldn't never hev been
picked up by Matt, an' Hawley an' Perry would hev had things their own
way. Shucks! I'm in on this rejoicin' some myself. Ain't I now, honest
Injun?"

"You are, Welcome," declared Matt heartily; "if you hadn't been so
bull-headed, and had found out how to stop the motor-cycle as well as
to start it, that letter wouldn't have been picked up."

"Bull-headed!" demurred Welcome. "H'm! You hand out a word now an'
ag'in, that kinder jars. Anyhow, I'm proposin' three cheers fer Motor
Matt. Next ter the ole ex-pirate, he done more'n anybody else to save
the claim. Let 'er go, now. Jine in hearty, all you McReadys! Hip,
hip----"

They made a good deal of noise for a small crowd, and it's safe to say
that Motor Matt was the happiest one in the lot.


THE END.




THE NEXT NUMBER (3) WILL CONTAIN

Motor Matt's "Century" Run

OR,

THE GOVERNOR'S COURIER.


  Welcome Takes a Sudden Drop--A Queer Situation--"Rags"--A Dangerous
  Mission--The Red Roadster--Surmounting the Difficulty--Smoke
  Signals--On the Divide--A Ruse that Won--At Potter's Gap--Joe
  Bascomb--Bolivar Turns Up--The Red Roadster Again--On to Phoenix--The
  End of the Mystery--Matt Reports to the Governor.




MOTOR STORIES

THRILLING ADVENTURE MOTOR FICTION

NEW YORK, March 6, 1909.


TERMS TO MOTOR STORIES MAIL SUBSCRIBERS.

(_Postage Free._)

Single Copies or Back Numbers, 5c. Each.

  3 months                    65c.
  4 months                    85c.
  6 months                 $1.25
  One year                  2.50
  2 copies one year         4.00
  1 copy two years          4.00

=How to Send Money=--By post-office or express money-order, registered
letter, bank check or draft, at our risk. At your own risk if sent by
currency, coin, or postage-stamps in ordinary letter.

=Receipts=--Receipt of your remittance is acknowledged by proper change
of number on your label. If not correct you have not been properly
credited, and should let us know at once.

  ORMOND G. SMITH, }
  GEORGE C. SMITH, } _Proprietors_.

  STREET & SMITH, Publishers,
  79-89 Seventh Avenue, New York City.




AMONG THE ALLIGATORS.

A low, heavy mutter of thunder came booming through the hot, still air,
and Fred Kinnersly looked up sharply from the potatoes he was peeling
for his solitary supper. "Another storm!" he growled. "Two already
to-day, and now a third. This is beyond a joke."

He dropped his knife, and walked outside, onto the veranda of the
little two-roomed shack.

A huge blue-black cloud with hard, shell-like edges was rising over the
pines in the northwest, and once again the air quivered and a spark of
electric fire lit the heart of the great mountain of whirling vapor.

"Worst rains I've ever known," muttered Fred, "and this is my fifth
summer down south. We'll have the mine flooded if this goes on, and all
those <DW65>s out of work." He paused; then: "Poor old Sam," he smiled.
"What an awful ducking he'll get coming home! Well, thank goodness
to-morrow's Saturday. This steamy heat is the very deuce to work in,
and I'll be glad of the lay-off on Sunday.

He was turning to go back into the house, when the thud of hoofs far up
the track made him pause, and presently a pony shot into sight among
the red pine trunks in the distance. Its rider, bending low in the
saddle, was sending the plucky little beast along at a furious gallop.

"Why, it's Jack Godfrey!" exclaimed Fred, in surprise. "Why on earth is
he in such a deuce of a hurry?"

The pony came tearing down the sandy track, sending spurts of wet sand
and water flashing behind it. Next moment Jack Godfrey pulled up at the
door and flung himself off the panting, sweating beast.

"What's up?" cried Fred Kinnersly. "You seem in a hurry."

"Is Sam French back yet?" gasped the other.

"No, of course not. He only left the mine after dinner. He generally
gets back about ten. Why, what's the matter?" as he saw Godfrey's face
go white under the tan.

"Ducane broke jail last night," said Godfrey hoarsely.

Kinnersly staggered. "Good heavens!" he muttered. "How?"

"Set fire to the place. He and his whole gang are out--five of them.
They're armed, too. Word came to Orange Port two hours ago that they'd
raided Lopez's place early this morning, and left in the direction of
the Big Cypress."

"Where's the sheriff?"

"On the wrong track. He thought they'd make for the sea, and he and
his posse went toward Wehila. Anderson, the deputy, has got three men,
and is on his way round the north end of the Big Cypress. He told me
to warn you, and to say that as the water's so high it'll probably be
midnight before he reaches Black Bayou."

Kinnersly was whiter than the other. The whole position was clear to
him.

In a few words it stood thus: He, Kinnersly, was sub-manager of the Big
Lone Pine Phosphate Mine, which lay about a mile from the edge of the
swamp known as the Big Cypress. This swamp was twenty-five miles long,
but not more than two to three wide.

On the other side of the swamp was Lakeville, the county town. It was
distant from the mine seven miles, as the crow flies, and more than
twenty by road.

Every Friday afternoon Sam French, the manager of the mine, went
to Lakeville in his buggy, accompanied by one <DW64>, to fetch the
pay-money for the seventy hands employed in quarrying the phosphate.
Sam was well known and popular.

But now--well, there was no one in South Florida who had not heard of
the atrocities of Jean Ducane. The man was a mulatto, half French,
half <DW64>, who had come to Florida from New Orleans. He had once been
employed in the Lone Pine Mine. Trouble began with his getting drunk
and insulting Sam, who had promptly knocked him down, and next morning
fired him.

Then Ducane had disappeared. A week later Sam French was shot at from
the scrub. The mine-hands, who were fond of their manager, made the
place too hot to hold the would-be murderer, and the next heard of
Ducane was down at Key West.

Escaping from Key West, the mulatto worked his way up the coast to
Tampa, where he burgled a bank. But even then he was not caught, and
the climax came when he returned to the neighborhood of Lakeville and
deliberately fired two houses in the suburbs, causing the death of a
woman and two children. The whole neighborhood rose in arms. Ducane was
caught, and four <DW64>s with him, and jailed with difficulty by the
sheriff in the face of a mob yelling to lynch him.

And now this human wild beast was at large again, and both the young
fellows knew that the first thing he would do would be to hold up the
manager of the Lone Pine Mine and rob and murder him.

"You see, it's not only revenge," said Kinnersly. "The money would mean
everything to him and his gang. All in silver, too!"

"And Sam knows nothing!" cried Godfrey. He pulled out his watch. "What
time'll he be passing Black Bayou?"

"About eight, I should think."

"And it's nearly seven now," muttered Godfrey despairingly. "No horse
could do it in the time."

"You're sure it will be at Black Bayou?"

"Not a doubt of it. The place is made for a hold-up. Track narrow,
thick bay scrub both sides, and there'll be water over the road there,
so Sam'll have to walk his horse. It's a death-trap, Fred."

Fred Kinnersly set his teeth. "I'm going to warn him," he said quietly.

Godfrey started. "My dear chap, it's fourteen miles by road. Have you
a horse here that can do fourteen miles in an hour over Florida sand
and in this storm? Besides, you'd have to come through Black Bayou
yourself, and get shot for your pains, to a dead certainty."

"There's another way," said Fred.

"Another way!"

"Across the swamp!"

Godfrey laughed harshly. "You're crazy, Fred."

"Did you ever hear of the Spanish Causeway?" asked Kinnersly quietly.

"That! In this weather! Man, it's under water! All of it. And rotten
and broken. You couldn't do it in the dry season and in broad daylight.
Listen!"

Again the cloud spat blue fire, and the thunder bellowed angrily over
the fast darkening forest.

Kinnersly's jaw hardened. "I'm going to try it. Anything's better than
that Sam should be shot down and murdered."

"I tell you it's sheer lunacy. It'll be black dark in half an hour. I
wouldn't try it for ten thousand."

"You'll try it for Sam's life," said Kinnersly quietly.

Godfrey stared hard at the other. "You mean to go?"

"I do."

"All right. I'm your man."

In less than five minutes the two, heavily armed, were tramping rapidly
along a narrow path which led down a long, gradual <DW72> toward the
swamp. By this time clouds had covered the sky and cut off the light of
the setting sun. Faster and faster the lightning-flashes shot through
the gloom, while the thunder crashed louder and louder till the very
ground trembled beneath the reverberations.

Then came the rain in sheets, as if a cataract was falling on the
forest. In a few moments the path was swimming. The men were ankle-deep
in water, which foamed under the lash of the falling torrents.

They stumbled over twisted roots; long, pliant branches switched their
faces; thorny creepers caught and tore their clothes and skin, while
now and then the ominous folds of a water-moccasin could be seen in the
tangled growth on either side the path.

But the two young men never faltered. Kinnersly leading, they pressed
on in single file. The path grew narrower. Here and there Kinnersly was
forced to slash the tough creeper with his knife before he could force
a passage.

They were on the level now, and the water was nearly knee-deep. To
Godfrey, who had never before traveled this path, it was a marvel how
Kinnersly found his way.

Gigantic cypresses rose on either side, shutting off the last remnants
of light with their monstrous heads of matted foliage; long trails of
melancholy Spanish moss brushed their faces, and the air was thick with
the pungent scent of palmetto bloom.

Slowly the storm died, passing away into the south, and as the rain
ceased the mosquitoes rose in stinging, humming swarms, and the noises
of the night swamp burst forth. Bullfrogs bellowed, tree-frogs bleated
like lost lambs, crickets shrilled, and owls hooted.

Suddenly Kinnersly sank almost to his waist, but struggled up again
immediately. "Look out, Jack. A hole in the causeway," he said quietly.

Godfrey felt the sucking mud beneath the water, and repressed a shiver.
At every step the water seemed to deepen. "Shall we do it, Fred?" he
muttered.

"It's more open farther on," replied the other. "If the water's
not too deep we'll be all right. If it is, we must do a bit of
swimming--that's all."

Again they plunged on through the hot darkness. Water and air alike
were stagnant. The close steam of the swamp was suffocating, and the
darkness was so intense that Godfrey had to follow rather by sound than
by sight.

All of a sudden the bushes broke away. They were in the open once more.
At that very moment the cloud broke, and the moon shone out clear. The
white light fell upon a sheet of water, a wide lagoon, which lay smooth
as oil, bounded on every side by a black wall of swamp vegetation.

"This seems to be where we swim, Fred," said Godfrey quietly.

"No," replied Fred. "The causeway crosses, but it's out of sight below
the water. Come on."

"Anything's better than those horrible bushes and creepers," said
Godfrey. He looked at his watch. "Fred, it's twenty to eight."

"We shall do it," was the confident reply. "It's easier going the far
side." As he spoke, Kinnersly stepped out from the shore, and, feeling
his way cautiously, walked steadily out across the lake.

Here and there were ugly gaps, but, in the main, the ancient masonry
built for some unknown purpose by long-forgotten Spaniards was sound.
Their spirits rose as they pressed on rapidly under the welcome light
of the full moon.

They were a couple of hundred yards from shore when, all of a sudden, a
black object, for all the world like a floating log, rose noiselessly
from the depths close on Kinnersly's right.

He stopped sharply, and Godfrey saw him draw his revolver from the
holster at his waist.

Godfrey needed no telling. He knew the nature of the new peril which
confronted them. An alligator!

Slowly, very slowly, the alligator rose till not only its great gnarled
head, but the whole of its long ridged back, was above the water.

"What a brute!" muttered Godfrey, instinctively drawing his big
hunting-knife. "Get on, Fred. The alligator's coming closer."

"There's an ugly place just here," replied the other, and Godfrey
saw his friend sink nearly to his shoulders, recover himself with an
effort, and scramble up the far side. "Wait; I'll help you, Jack," he
said, turning.

He pulled his friend across the gap, and then as they both stood up on
the far side, in water hardly more than ankle-deep, a simultaneous gasp
of horror burst from them both.

Three more alligators had appeared, and, even as they watched, more and
more of the hideous monsters rose in ominous silence above the quiet
water and came gliding slowly onward toward the causeway.

Their cruel, unwinking eyes shone like green fire in the moon-rays, and
the breathless air was full of a sickening odor of musk. There were
dozens of them; from huge, rugged veterans of ten or twelve feet and
weighing perhaps half a ton, down to fierce, active, hungry six-footers.

For a moment the two young fellows stood hesitating, staring
breathlessly at the nightmare spectacle before them. Then Kinnersly
desperately cried: "Come on, Jack!"

"Shoot. Why don't you shoot?" exclaimed Godfrey.

"Not till I have to," replied Kinnersly. "Ducane may hear and suspect.
If he does, he'll move farther up, and attack Sam before we can reach
him."

"But the brutes are closing in."

"Never mind. Come on. Keep close to me, and splash as much as you can."

Kinnersly walked forward. Even in the moonlight he could not see the
causeway so much as a step ahead. The thick brown swamp water hid it
completely. And both he and Godfrey knew that one false step meant a
death almost too horrible for words. An alligator fears a man upright
on dry land, but in its native element it fears nothing, and will pull
down a dog, a horse, a man, or a bull.

Closer and closer the dreadful brutes closed in till their yard-long
jaws actually rested upon the crumbling edges of the sunken causeway.

Now and then one would open his vast jaws and blow the air through his
nostrils with a noise like a giant snoring. Then the great yellow tusks
would clash together with a sharp, ringing sound horribly suggestive of
a steel trap closing.

Kinnersly, who was leading, found the water growing deeper.

"Is there a hole there?" cried Godfrey anxiously.

"Afraid there is, old man," replied Kinnersly, feeling cautiously with
one foot. "We ought to have brought sticks."

"The 'gators are closing up behind," said Godfrey desperately. "We must
shove ahead at any price."

"Right; I have found bottom. Come on." Kinnersly dropped onto his
knees. Immediately the whole horde of alligators began moving up.
Godfrey, following close behind his friend and splashing vigorously,
could not repress a shiver of horror. "Quick!" he hissed; "quick, or
they'll have us."

At that very moment the surface of the water broke in front of
Kinnersly, and out of the depths heaved itself up a nightmare
apparition. An alligator, bigger than any they had seen yet--a gnarled
and rugged monster of huge length and enormous girth.

Getting its short, thick forelegs onto the stonework, it hoisted itself
up, completely barring the way. Its cavernous mouth gaped open, showing
rows of huge, twisted tusks, which could have bitten a bull in two.

Its fetid breath blew full in Kinnersly's face, nearly sickening him
with the horrible, putrefying stench.

"Shoot him!" shouted Godfrey. "The others are coming."

There was no help for it. Kinnersly thrust the muzzle of his pistol
almost between the yawning rows of teeth and pulled the trigger.

With the report the monstrous brute flung itself high into the air,
and fell over sideways with a crash that sent a wave almost over their
heads. Next instant the placid water of the bayou was beaten into
showers of spray, which gleamed silver in the brilliant moonlight.

Waves dashed over the causeway. The two men stood still, appalled at
the fearful death-struggles of the monster.

"Thank goodness, you got him that time!" exclaimed Godfrey, struggling
up out of the water onto firmer ground.

Another moment and all was clear. The great alligator had vanished, and
with him the others, frightened at the commotion, had gone, too.

"Now's our chance!" cried Kinnersly, and pushed on with reckless speed.

Fortunately, the rest of the causeway was unbroken, and they reached
the far side of the lagoon in safety.

"They're coming up again," muttered Godfrey, glancing back.

"Never mind. They can't hurt us now," cried the other.

They were in the brush again, plunging in the mud under the thick
shadows of the cypress. Neither spoke. It was very near eight, and each
moment they expected to hear shots. Both dreaded they might be too late.

On they rushed, now waist-deep in a morass of mud and rotting
vegetation, now struggling through a tangle of wild grape and bamboo
vine.

At last, after what seemed an endless time, the footing grew firmer and
the ground began to rise. The cypress and palmetto gave place to pine
and wire grass.

"We're close to the road," muttered Kinnersly breathlessly. "And I only
hope Sam hasn't passed."

"Listen!" hissed the other, pulling up short. "Yes, I hear horses'
feet."

Once more they both rushed forward. The hoof-sounds grew plainer, and
the red glow of a cigar shone through the pine trunks.

Kinnersly flung himself recklessly into the open. "Sam, is that you?"
he hissed desperately.

There was a sharp exclamation. "Who's that?"

"I--Kinnersly. Stop!"

The buggy came to a standstill, and Kinnersly panted out his
explanation.

"You came through the swamp!" exclaimed French, as if he could not
believe his ears.

"Yes, but don't you understand? Ducane's loose."

"Oh, that's all right," said the other coolly. "He'll be down in Black
Bayou, half a mile away. What fazes me is how you chaps came along the
causeway. It was mighty white of you, and I'm real grateful. Jump in,
an' let's git along an' interview this here Ducane."

For the life of him Kinnersly could not help laughing. "Sam, don't be a
fool! There are probably five of them, and you bet they'll be lying up
in the timber. The first you know will be they've shot you."

"I reckon not," returned French, as coolly as before. "It's going to
cost me a horse, but that's a sight cheaper'n a thousand dollars in
United States currency. Get right in, boys. I've got it all planned
inside here," touching the top of his head.

With a shrug of his broad shoulders, Kinnersly obeyed, and Godfrey
followed.

"Get your shooting-irons ready," said Sam, in a low voice, at the same
time throwing away his cigar. "Now, don't say a word, any of you, or
make any noise."

He drove on till the ground dipped again and the narrow road descended
toward the gloomy shadow of a thicket of bays. Then he pulled up, got
out, and motioned to the others to do the same.

He took out the bags of coin, propped a cushion on the seat with a coat
over it, tied the reins to the splash-board, and clucked to the horse
to go on.

Kinnersly chuckled silently. "I see now," he whispered.

"Glad o' that," remarked Sam. "Now we'll keep along in the bushes a bit
behind the wagon. You come along with me, Kinnersly, an', Godfrey, you
take the <DW65>. I don't need to tell you to shoot straight when the
chance comes."

The horse went splashing slowly through the water, here about a foot
deep. The four men stole noiselessly along through the bushes on either
side.

They had gone perhaps a hundred yards, and reached the bottom of the
hollow, where the water was axle-deep, when suddenly a rifle crashed,
and a spit of fire flashed from the bushes to the right.

"Got him," came a shout, and men came plunging out of the scrub and
surrounded the wagon.

"Now, lads!" came a crisp command from French, and at the word four
weapons spoke simultaneously.

Three of the robbers dropped in their tracks. The other two stood
dumfounded, unable to imagine whence the sudden attack had come.

Then one of them--Ducane himself--gave a yell of defiance, and came
charging furiously toward French's party, firing as he ran.

A bullet whipped Kinnersly's hat from his head. Then a second volley
rang out, and Ducane flung up his hands, and, without a sound, fell
over on his back. The fifth man ran for his life.

French walked up to the spot where Ducane's body floated.

A patch of white moonlight fell full on the twisted yellow face, and
showed a red hole in the very center of the forehead.

"Saved the hangman a job," he said quietly. "Now I reckon we'll walk
back to Lakeville, if these other wounded rascals can do the trick.
We'll go to the hotel, and the supper's on me to-night, boys."




_ESPECIALLY IMPORTANT!!_

MOTOR STORIES

_A New Idea in the Way of Five-Cent Weeklies._


Boys everywhere will be delighted to hear that Street & Smith are now
issuing this new five-cent weekly which will be known by the name of
MOTOR STORIES.

This weekly is entirely different from anything now being published.
It details the astonishing adventures of a young mechanic who owned a
motor cycle. Is there a boy who has not longed to possess one of these
swift little machines that scud about the roads everywhere throughout
the United States? Is there a boy, therefore, who will not be intensely
interested in the adventures of "Motor Matt," as he is familiarly
called by his comrades?

Boys, you have never read anything half so exciting, half so humorous
and entertaining as the first story listed for publication in this
line, called "=Motor Matt; or, The King of the Wheel=." Its fame is
bound to spread like wildfire, causing the biggest demand for the other
numbers in this line, that was ever heard of in the history of this
class of literature.

Here are the titles to be issued during the next few weeks. Do not fail
to place an order for them with your newsdealer.

  No. 1. Motor Matt; or, The King of the Wheel.
  No. 2. Motor Matt's Daring; or, True to His Friends.
  No. 3. Motor Matt's "Century" Run; or, The Governor's Courier.
  No. 4. Motor Matt's Race; or, The Last Flight of the _Comet_.

  32 LARGE SIZE PAGES      SPLENDID  COVERS

PRICE, FIVE CENTS PER COPY


AT ALL NEWSDEALERS, OR SENT POSTPAID BY THE PUBLISHERS UPON RECEIPT OF
THE PRICE.

_STREET & SMITH, Publishers, NEW YORK_




NUMBERS 1 TO 396

TIP TOP WEEKLY

ARE CONTAINED IN THE MEDAL LIBRARY


We know that there are thousands of boys who are very much interested
in the early adventures of Frank and Dick Merriwell and who want to
read everything that was written about them.

We desire to inform these boys that numbers 1 to 396 are pretty well
out of print in the TIP TOP WEEKLY, but all of them can be secured in
the numbers of the NEW MEDAL LIBRARY given below.




  _The_ NEW
  MEDAL
  LIBRARY

  AT

  FIFTEEN CENTS

[Illustration]

  150--Frank Merriwell's School-days.
  167--Frank Merriwell's Chums.
  178--Frank Merriwell's Foes.
  184--Frank Merriwell's Trip West.
  189--Frank Merriwell Down South.
  193--Frank Merriwell's Bravery.
  197--Frank Merriwell's Hunting Tour.
  201--Frank Merriwell in Europe.
  205--Frank Merriwell at Yale.
  209--Frank Merriwell's Sports Afield.
  213--Frank Merriwell's Races.
  217--Frank Merriwell's Bicycle Tour.
  225--Frank Merriwell's Courage.
  229--Frank Merriwell's Daring.
  233--Frank Merriwell's Athletes.
  237--Frank Merriwell's Skill.
  240--Frank Merriwell's Champions.
  244--Frank Merriwell's Return to Yale.
  247--Frank Merriwell's Secret.
  251--Frank Merriwell's Danger.
  254--Frank Merriwell's Loyalty.
  258--Frank Merriwell in Camp.
  262--Frank Merriwell's Vacation.
  267--Frank Merriwell's Cruise.
  271--Frank Merriwell's Chase.
  276--Frank Merriwell in Maine.
  280--Frank Merriwell's Struggle.
  284--Frank Merriwell's First Job.
  288--Frank Merriwell's Opportunity.
  292--Frank Merriwell's Hard Luck.
  296--Frank Merriwell's Protege.
  300--Frank Merriwell on the Road.
  304--Frank Merriwell's Own Company.
  308--Frank Merriwell's Fame.
  312--Frank Merriwell's College Chums.
  316--Frank Merriwell's Problem.
  320--Frank Merriwell's Fortune.
  324--Frank Merriwell's New Comedian.
  328--Frank Merriwell's Prosperity.
  332--Frank Merriwell's Stage Hit.
  336--Frank Merriwell's Great Scheme.
  340--Frank Merriwell in England.
  344--Frank Merriwell on the Boulevards.
  348--Frank Merriwell's Duel.
  352--Frank Merriwell's Double Shot.
  356--Frank Merriwell's Baseball Victories.
  359--Frank Merriwell's Confidence.
  362--Frank Merriwell's Auto.
  365--Frank Merriwell's Fun.
  368--Frank Merriwell's Generosity.
  371--Frank Merriwell's Tricks.
  374--Frank Merriwell's Temptation.
  377--Frank Merriwell on Top.
  380--Frank Merriwell's Luck.
  383--Frank Merriwell's Mascot.
  386--Frank Merriwell's Reward.
  389--Frank Merriwell's Phantom.
  392--Frank Merriwell's Faith.
  395--Frank Merriwell's Victories.
  398--Frank Merriwell's Iron Nerve.
  401--Frank Merriwell in Kentucky.
  404--Frank Merriwell's Power.
  407--Frank Merriwell's Shrewdness.
  410--Frank Merriwell's Set-back.
  413--Frank Merriwell's Search.
  416--Frank Merriwell's Club.
  419--Frank Merriwell's Trust.
  422--Frank Merriwell's False Friend.
  425--Frank Merriwell's Strong Arm.
  428--Frank Merriwell as Coach.
  431--Frank Merriwell's Brother.
  434--Frank Merriwell's Marvel.
  437--Frank Merriwell's Support.
  440--Dick Merriwell at Fardale.
  443--Dick Merriwell's Glory.
  446--Dick Merriwell's Promise.
  449--Dick Merriwell's Rescue.
  452--Dick Merriwell's Narrow Escape.
  455--Dick Merriwell's Racket.
  458--Dick Merriwell's Revenge.
  461--Dick Merriwell's Ruse.
  464--Dick Merriwell's Delivery.
  467--Dick Merriwell's Wonders.
  470--Frank Merriwell's Honor.
  473--Dick Merriwell's Diamond.
  476--Frank Merriwell's Winners.
  479--Dick Merriwell's Dash.
  482--Dick Merriwell's Ability.
  485--Dick Merriwell's Trap.
  488--Dick Merriwell's Defense.
  491--Dick Merriwell's Model.
  494--Dick Merriwell's Mystery.

=Published About January 5th=

  497--Frank Merriwell's Backers.

=Published About January 26th=

  500--Dick Merriwell's Backstop.

=Published About February 16th=

  503--Dick Merriwell's Western Mission.

=Published About March 9th=

  506--Frank Merriwell's Rescue.

=Published About March 30th=

  509--Frank Merriwell's Encounter.

=Published About April 20th=

  512--Dick Merriwell's Marked Money.

=Published About May 11th=

  515--Frank Merriwell's Nomads.

=Published About June 1st=

  518--Dick Merriwell on the Gridiron.

=Published About June 22nd=

  521--Dick Merriwell's Disguise.

STREET & SMITH, _Publishers_, NEW YORK CITY




      *      *      *      *      *      *




Transcriber's note:

A table of contents was added.

The oe-ligature was used inconsistently in the word "Phoenix." In
this text file, all oe-ligatures have been expanded to the letters
"oe."

Page 4, changed "MacReady" to "McReady."

Page 5, changed double to single quotes around "blow-out."

Page 6, changed ? to ! in "Howdy, Clip!"

Page 11, changed "topppled" to "toppled."

Page 19, changed "Mat flung" to "Matt flung."

Page 24, changed ? to ! in "Howdy, Matt!"

Page 27, changed "Edth" to "Edith."

Page 28, added missing em-dash to "NEXT NUMBER" summary.

Page 29, removed unnecessary quote before "Kinnersly staggered."

Page 30, changed incorrect character name from Godfrey to Kinnersly in
"'Not till I have to,' replied Kinnersly."



***