<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"></SPAN> CHAPTER VIII<br/> BARRETT CEASES TO EXPLORE </h2>
<p>'Fetchimout!' said the voice, all in one word.</p>
<p>'Nice cheery remark to make!' thought Barrett. 'He'll have to do a good
bit of digging before he fetches <i>me</i> out. I'm a fixture for the
present.'</p>
<p>There was a sound of scratching as if the dog, in his eagerness to oblige,
were trying to uproot the tree. Barrett, realising that unless the keeper
took it into his head to climb, which was unlikely, he was as safe as if
he had been in his study at Philpott's, chuckled within himself, and
listened intently.</p>
<p>'What is it, then?' said the keeper. 'Good dog, at 'em! Fetch him out,
Jack.'</p>
<p>Jack barked excitedly, and redoubled his efforts.</p>
<p>The sound of scratching proceeded.</p>
<p>'R-r-r-ats-s-s!' said the mendacious keeper. Jack had evidently paused for
breath. Barrett began quite to sympathise with him. The thought that the
animal was getting farther away from the object of his search with every
ounce of earth he removed, tickled him hugely. He would have liked to have
been able to see the operations, though. At present it was like listening
to a conversation through a telephone. He could only guess at what was
going on.</p>
<p>Then he heard somebody whistling 'The Lincolnshire Poacher', a strangely
inappropriate air in the mouth of a keeper. The sound was too far away to
be the work of Jack's owner, unless he had gone for a stroll since his
last remark. No, it was another keeper. A new voice came up to him.</p>
<p>''Ullo, Ned, what's the dog after?'</p>
<p>'Thinks 'e's smelt a rabbit, seems to me.'</p>
<p>''Ain't a rabbit hole 'ere.'</p>
<p>'Thinks there is, anyhow. Look at the pore beast!'</p>
<p>They both laughed. Jack meanwhile, unaware that he was turning himself
into an exhibition to make a keeper's holiday, dug assiduously. 'Come
away, Jack,' said the first keeper at length. 'Ain't nothin' there. Ought
to know that, clever dog like you.'</p>
<p>There was a sound as if he had pulled Jack bodily from his hole.</p>
<p>'Wait! 'Ere, Ned, what's that on the ground there?' Barrett gasped. His
pill-boxes had been discovered. Surely they would put two and two together
now, and climb the tree after him.</p>
<p>'Eggs. Two of 'em. 'Ow did they get 'ere, then?'</p>
<p>'It's one of them young devils from the School. Master says to me this
morning, "Look out," 'e says, "Saunders, for them boys as come in 'ere
after eggs, and frighten all the birds out of the dratted place. You keep
your eyes open, Saunders," 'e says.'</p>
<p>'Well, if 'e's still in the woods, we'll 'ave 'im safe.'</p>
<p>'<i>If</i> he's still in the woods!' thought Barrett with a shiver.</p>
<p>After this there was silence. Barrett waited for what he thought was a
quarter of an hour—it was really five minutes or less—then he
peeped cautiously over the edge of his hiding-place. Yes, they had
certainly gone, unless—horrible thought—they were waiting so
close to the trunk of the tree as to be invisible from where he stood. He
decided that the possibility must be risked. He was down on the ground in
record time. Nothing happened. No hand shot out from its ambush to clutch
him. He breathed more freely, and began to debate within himself which way
to go. Up the hill it must be, of course, but should he go straight up, or
to the left or to the right? He would have given much to know which way
the keepers had gone, particularly he of the dog. They had separated, he
knew. He began to reason the thing out. In the first place if they had
separated, they must have gone different ways. It did not take him long to
arrive at that conclusion. The odds, therefore, were that one had gone to
the right up-stream, the other down-stream to the left. His knowledge of
human nature told him that nobody would willingly walk up-hill if it was
possible for him to walk on the flat. Therefore, assuming the two keepers
to be human, they had gone along the valley. Therefore, his best plan
would be to make straight for the top of the hill, as straight as he could
steer, and risk it. Just as he was about to start, his eye caught the two
pill-boxes, lying on the turf a few yards from where he had placed them.</p>
<p>'May as well take what I can get,' he thought. He placed them carefully in
his pocket. As he did so a faint bark came to him on the breeze from
down-stream. That must be friend Jack. He waited no longer, but dived into
the bushes in the direction of the summit. He was congratulating himself
on being out of danger—already he was more than half way up the hill—when
suddenly he received a terrible shock. From the bushes to his left, not
ten yards from where he stood, came the clear, sharp sound of a whistle.
The sound was repeated, and this time an answer came from far out to his
right. Before he could move another whistle joined in, again from the
left, but farther off and higher up the hill than the first he had heard.
He recalled what Grey had said about 'millions' of keepers. The
expression, he thought, had understated the true facts, if anything. He
remembered the case of Babington. It was a moment for action. No guile
could save him now. It must be a stern chase for the rest of the distance.
He drew a breath, and was off like an arrow. The noise he made was
appalling. No one in the wood could help hearing it.</p>
<p>'Stop, there!' shouted someone. The voice came from behind, a fact which
he noted almost automatically and rejoiced at. He had a start at any rate.</p>
<p>'Stop!' shouted the voice once again. The whistle blew like a steam siren,
and once more the other two answered it. They were all behind him now.
Surely a man of the public schools in flannels and gymnasium shoes, and
trained to the last ounce for just such a sprint as this, could beat a
handful of keepers in their leggings and heavy boots. Barrett raced on.
Close behind him a crashing in the undergrowth and the sound of heavy
breathing told him that keeper number one was doing his best. To left and
right similar sounds were to be heard. But Barrett had placed these
competitors out of the running at once. The race was between him and the
man behind.</p>
<p>Fifty yards of difficult country, bushes which caught his clothes as if
they were trying to stop him in the interests of law and order, branches
which lashed him across the face, and rabbit-holes half hidden in the
bracken, and still he kept his lead. He was increasing it. He must win
now. The man behind was panting in deep gasps, for the pace had been warm
and he was not in training. Barrett cast a glance over his shoulder, and
as he looked the keeper's foot caught in a hole and he fell heavily.
Barrett uttered a shout of triumph. Victory was his.</p>
<p>In front of him was a small hollow fringed with bushes. Collecting his
strength he cleared these with a bound. Then another of the events of this
eventful afternoon happened. Instead of the hard turf, his foot struck
something soft, something which sat up suddenly with a yell. Barrett
rolled down the slope and halfway up the other side like a shot rabbit.
Dimly he recognised that he had jumped on to a human being. The figure did
not wear the official velveteens. Therefore he had no business in the
Dingle. And close behind thundered the keeper, now on his feet once more,
dust on his clothes and wrath in his heart in equal proportions. 'Look
out, man!' shouted Barrett, as the injured person rose to his feet. 'Run!
Cut, quick! Keeper!' There was no time to say more. He ran. Another second
and he was at the top, over the railing, and in the good, honest, public
high-road again, safe. A hoarse shout of 'Got yer!' from below told a
harrowing tale of capture. The stranger had fallen into the hands of the
enemy. Very cautiously Barrett left the road and crept to the railing
again. It was a rash thing to do, but curiosity overcame him. He had to
see, or, if that was impossible, to hear what had happened.</p>
<p>For a moment the only sound to be heard was the gasping of the keeper.
After a few seconds a rapidly nearing series of crashes announced the
arrival of the man from the right flank of the pursuing forces, while
almost simultaneously his colleague on the left came up.</p>
<p>Barrett could see nothing, but it was easy to understand what was going
on. Keeper number one was exhibiting his prisoner. His narrative,
punctuated with gasps, was told mostly in hoarse whispers, and Barrett
missed most of it.</p>
<p>'Foot (gasp) rabbit-'ole.' More gasps. 'Up agen ... minute ... (indistinct
mutterings) ... and (triumphantly) COTCHED 'IM!'</p>
<p>Exclamations of approval from the other two. 'I assure you,' said another
voice. The prisoner was having his say. 'I assure you that I was doing no
harm whatever in this wood. I....'</p>
<p>'Better tell that tale to Sir Alfred,' cut in one of his captors.</p>
<p>''E'll learn yer,' said the keeper previously referred to as number one,
vindictively. He was feeling shaken up with his run and his heavy fall,
and his temper was proportionately short.</p>
<p>'I swear I've heard that voice before somewhere,' thought Barrett. 'Wonder
if it's a Coll. chap.'</p>
<p>Keeper number one added something here, which was inaudible to Barrett.</p>
<p>'I tell you I'm not a poacher,' said the prisoner, indignantly. 'And I
object to your language. I tell you I was lying here doing nothing and
some fool or other came and jumped on me. I....'</p>
<p>The rest was inaudible. But Barrett had heard enough.</p>
<p>'I knew I'd heard that voice before. Plunkett, by Jove! Golly, what is the
world coming to, when heads of Houses and School-prefects go on the poach!
Fancy! Plunkett of all people, too! This is a knock-out, I'm hanged if it
isn't.'</p>
<p>From below came the sound of movement. The keepers were going down the
hill again. To Barrett's guilty conscience it seemed that they were coming
up. He turned and fled.</p>
<p>The hedge separating Sir Alfred Venner's land from the road was not a high
one, though the drop the other side was considerable. Barrett had not
reckoned on this. He leapt the hedge, and staggered across the road. At
the same moment a grey-clad cyclist, who was pedalling in a leisurely
manner in the direction of the School, arrived at the spot. A collision
seemed imminent, but the stranger in a perfectly composed manner, as if he
had suddenly made up his mind to take a sharp turning, rode his machine up
the bank, whence he fell with easy grace to the road, just in time to act
as a cushion for Barrett. The two lay there in a tangled heap. Barrett was
the first to rise.</p>
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