<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</h2></div>
<p class="h2sub">DICK AND JOE BLOCK MUDGETT AND TIM BUNKER’S SHADY
ENTERPRISE.</p>
<p>Mudgett had seized the old miser by the arm and was
dragging him out of the buggy when Dick Armstrong
sprang upon him like a young tiger and bore him to the
ground. At the same instant Joe Fletcher ran around the
vehicle and hit Tim Bunker such a whack over the head
with his cudgel that the Walkhill youth saw unnumbered
stars and hastened to make his escape over the back of the
buggy.</p>
<p>But Joe cut him off, and the two boys were soon mixing
it up pretty lively, with all the advantage in Joe’s favor.</p>
<p>In the meantime Dick found Mudgett a tough proposition
to get away with, while the bearded man discovered
in the strong and active boy a hard nut to crack.</p>
<p>Old Adam Fairclough, thus relieved of his assailants,
stood helplessly aloof, and watched the struggle that was
going on about him.</p>
<p>He seemed to be utterly bewildered by the condition of
affairs that had faced him on his return home.</p>
<p>And while this lively scrimmage was going on in the
front of the house, Luke Maslin in the rear took advantage
of the opportunity to scramble out of the window
through which he had been forced to effect an entrance,
and, reaching the ground, he took to his heels and made
off into the line of woods beyond the fence as fast as his
heels would carry him.</p>
<p>“Let me up, you young imp!” exclaimed Mudgett, panting
for breath after several ineffectual efforts on his part
to dislodge Dick from an advantageous position on his
chest.</p>
<p>“Do you give in?” asked the almost equally breathless
boy, refusing to budge an inch from his perch.</p>
<p>“No, hang you for a meddlesome little monkey! But if
you don’t let me up, I’ll break your head!”</p>
<p>“I don’t think you will, Mr. Mudgett,” answered Dick,
stoutly.</p>
<p>“You know my name, eh? Who the dickens are you,
anyway?” said the rascal in a tone that showed his surprise.</p>
<p>“Never mind who I am,” returned the lad. “I’ve got
you dead to rights now, so you might just as well throw
up your hands at once.”</p>
<p>“Not on your life!” gritted Mudgett, renewing the struggle.</p>
<p>But he might just as well have saved his strength, for
Joe having mastered Tim Bunker and bound his arms
behind his back with the whip-lash belonging to the buggy,
now came to his chum’s assistance, and Mudgett, with a
villainous scowl, gave up the fight and suffered himself to
be secured with one of the traces which Joe took off the
horse.</p>
<p>“I’m afraid these men meant to kill me, thinking I had
money,” said old Adam Fairclough to Dick, in trembling
tones, when the lad stepped up to assure him that he no
longer was in danger of molestation. “But I’m a poor
old man. Poor—very poor.”</p>
<p>“They were in the act of breaking into your house to rob
you when we turned up, intending to prevent them carrying
out their plan, which I fortunately overheard.”</p>
<p>“Why should they want to rob me when I’m only a poor
old man?” cried the miser, in a pathetic voice.</p>
<p>“They think you have lots of money hidden in your
house,” replied Dick.</p>
<p>“Not a cent—not a single cent!” wailed the old man,
beating the air with his arms in a sort of abject denial.</p>
<p>Dick of course believed Adam Fairclough was not telling
the truth.</p>
<p>He had always heard people say the man was worth thousands
of dollars.</p>
<p>That he owned half a dozen good farms which he rented
out to thrifty tenants.</p>
<p>That he held mortgages on a dozen more.</p>
<p>That he had a strong-box filled with family plate that
had not been used for fifty years, and a second one stuffed
with gold and banknotes he had taken out of circulation
in order to hoard up for the mere pleasure of accumulation.</p>
<p>Probably the old man’s wealth was greatly exaggerated,
but there seemed little doubt that he was tolerably rich.</p>
<p>Dick led him around to the back of the house and showed
him the broken window.</p>
<p>“They sent you a letter saying your brother William
in Walkhill was dead; isn’t that so?” asked the boy.</p>
<p>“Yes, yes; but it was false—my brother is not dead at
all.”</p>
<p>“That was a trick to get you away from here so they
might search the house during your absence.”</p>
<p>Then Dick told him the whole story of what he had
learned at the old deserted farmhouse.</p>
<p>“You are a good boy—a brave boy,” said the poor old
miser, shaking the lad by the hand in a pitiful way, for
he appeared to have but little strength after the shock he
had sustained. “If I wasn’t so very, very poor, I’d reward
you.”</p>
<p>“Don’t worry about that,” replied Dick, with a cheerfulness
that put the old man more at his ease. “If you’ll let
us stay here for the rest of the night, it’s all we want.”</p>
<p>“You shall stay—yes, yes, you shall stay; but there isn’t
anything I could give you to eat. I’m so poor I can’t buy
much.”</p>
<p>From the appearance of both his horse as well as himself
it was evident the miser didn’t squander much of his
money on food of any kind.</p>
<p>They were both shrivelled and dried up like a pair of
animated mummies.</p>
<p>Indeed, when Dick led the animal off to its stable he
almost fancied he could hear its bones rattle with each
step it took.</p>
<p>“Poor old beast!” he murmured sympathetically. “How
I’d like to give you one good, square meal! But I fear
the shock of it would lay you out.”</p>
<p>And the mare, as if it understood him, looked at him
with her saucer-like eyes in hopeless resignation.</p>
<p>Such a thing as a square meal to her was a dream, never
to be realized.</p>
<p>The old man wouldn’t have the prisoners taken into the
mansion.</p>
<p>He was afraid of them, and so Joe tied them securely
to posts in the stable.</p>
<p>Inside the house there were bolts and bars without number.</p>
<p>Every room appeared to be completely furnished, but the
old-fashioned mahogany pieces, that must have been valuable
in their day long ago, were now given over to the
ravages of dust and neglect.</p>
<p>Adam Fairclough ate and slept in one little room at
the top of the building, of which the boys caught only
a momentary glimpse as the old man led them past to another
room in which were a bed, some chairs, and other
articles in a fair state of preservation.</p>
<p>There the miser left them after assuring Dick once more
that he was miserably poor and sorry he couldn’t do better
by them.</p>
<p>“Gee!” grinned Joe when they were alone, “what a liar
the old fellow is!”</p>
<p>“Never mind, old man,” replied his chum. “It’s none
of our business. We’ve done our duty, and I can sleep like
a top on the strength of it. There’s one thing I’m glad
about—Luke Maslin has skipped.”</p>
<p>Next morning old Fairclough produced some weak boiled
coffee and a plate of hard bread and cheese, which he offered
to them for breakfast with every evidence of earnest hospitality,
repeating his refrain of abject poverty.</p>
<p>He wrote down the boys’ names in a big, leather-bound
book, making a large cross opposite Dick’s name.</p>
<p>When they went out to the stable to look after Mudgett
and Tim Bunker they were surprised to find that the rascals
had managed to liberate themselves somehow and had taken
French leave.</p>
<p>The boys didn’t know whether to be glad or sorry, but,
on the whole, they were pleased to find they would not
have to appear against the housebreakers.</p>
<p>Then they bade the old man good-bye, advising him to
be very careful against any future attempts of a like
nature.</p>
<p>They reached the deserted farm about nine o’clock, looked
after the horses, made their stomachs happy with a substantial
meal, and then hied themselves to the nutting-ground,
where they spent most of the day gathering up
the remainder of the crop.</p>
<p>Not knowing but they might possibly be surprised by the
fugitives, Mudgett and Tim Bunker, if they passed the
night in the house, they left the place before dark and put
up at Farmer Haywood’s for supper and a bed.</p>
<p>Next day they arrived back in Albany and disposed of
their final load of nuts, the whole speculation netting them
the sum of $375.</p>
<p>That same afternoon Dick sold the team for nearly $400.</p>
<p>“I think we can afford to take the train for New York,”
he said after figuring up his cash capital, which he found
amounted to $850.</p>
<p>And Joe readily agreed with him, for he had $155 tucked
snugly away in an inside pocket.</p>
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