By this time Mr. Brown and Mrs. Jason were at the house.
"I"ll take a look at him," said Mr. Brown.
He saw, lying on a couch, a tall lad, whose face and hands were covered with bandages. The youth was tossing to and fro and murmuring, but what he said could not well be understood, except that now and then he spoke of a lion.
"I didn"t dare take his coat off to get at the scratches on his shoulders," said Mrs. Jason. "I thought I"d let the doctor do that."
"Yes, I guess it will be best. But if you have any sweet spirits of nitre in the house I"ll give him that to quiet him and keep down the fever."
"Oh, we always keep nitre on hand," and Mrs. Jason helped Mr. Brown give some to the lad. In a little while he grew quieter, and then Dr. Fandon came in with Mr. Jason.
The two men helped the physician get the youth undressed and into a spare bed, and then the doctor, with Mrs. Jason"s help, dressed the wounds on the boy"s face and shoulders, while the men waited outside.
Then, having done what he could for the boy, and promising to call in the morning, when he could tell more about the boy"s condition, the doctor went home, while Mr. Brown and Mr. Jason planned to get word of the lion to the two circus men who were still at the hotel in the village.
"I"ll drive over with you," said the farmer. This they did, though it was late to drive to town, being after nine o"clock, stopping at the "Ark" on the way to tell what had taken place at the farmhouse.
"Poor fellow!" exclaimed Mrs. Brown. "We must try to help him."
"I"ll let him play with my Teddy bear when he gets well," said Sue, and all the others laughed.
"The circus men will get after the lion in the morning," said the farmer when he and Mr. Brown were back at the "Ark" on their return from town.
Though they were excited, and not a little afraid, Bunny and Sue were at last in bed, but only after Uncle Tad had promised to sit up all night, as he used to do when a sentry in the war, and, with his gun, watch for any sign of the lion.
"And if you have to shoot him, which I hope you don"t," said Bunny, "call me first so I can look at him. But I don"t want to see him shot.
Just make him go back to the circus."
"I will," promised Uncle Tad.
Bunny and Sue were up early the next morning, and even before breakfast they wanted their father to go up to the farmhouse to find out about the scratched boy, and also whether or not the lion had been caught.
"We"ll see about the boy first," said Mr. Brown. "I guess it won"t do any harm for me to take the children up," he said to his wife.
"You will be careful, won"t you?" she begged.
"Indeed I will," he promised.
So Bunny, with his sister and his father, walked up to Mr. Jason"s home.
Dix and Splash went along, of course, and stood expectant at the door as Mr. Brown rang.
"Oh, good morning!" cried Mrs. Jason as she answered the bell. "Our scratched boy is much better this morning. He is not as badly hurt as we feared. Come in."
Mr. Brown and the children entered, and of course the dogs followed.
"Go back, Dix and Splash," ordered Mr. Brown. Splash turned and went out on the stoop, but Dix kept on. The dog was acting in a strange manner.
The door to a downstairs bedroom, where the wounded boy was lying, was open. Dix ran in and the next moment he began to bark wildly, getting on the bed with his forefeet.
"Down, Dix! Down!" cried Mr. Brown. "What do you mean, sir?"
But Dix kept on barking and whining. He tried to lick the hands of the scratched boy.
"Oh, drive him away!" cried Mrs. Jason. "He"ll hurt the boy."
But the boy, who seemed much better indeed, rose up in bed and cried:
"Don"t send him away! That"s Dix, my dog! Oh, Dix, you found me, didn"t you?"
CHAPTER XXV
FOUND AT LAST
What with the barking of Dix, in which Splash, out on the porch, joined, the manner in which the scratched boy hugged the half-wild animal on his bed, the astonishment of Bunny Brown, his sister, his father and Mrs.
Jason--well, there was enough excitement for a few minutes to satisfy even the children.
Sue did not know what to make of the strange actions of Dix on the bed where the injured boy had been sleeping, and she whispered to Bunny:
"Maybe Dix wants to bite him!"
But Bunny shook his head. He understood what had happened.
"Don"t you see, Sue!" he said. "He"s been found."
"O-o-oh!" gasped the little girl.
"Yes, sir, Fred Ward, the boy who ran away from next door to us, has been found. That"s his dog, Dix. And Dix knows him, just as we thought he would, even though his face is pretty well bandaged up. That"s Fred Ward!"
"Is that your name?" asked Mr. Brown, who also understood what had happened.
"Well, I guess it is," was the slow answer. "But it isn"t the name I"ve been going by lately. I called myself Professor Rombodno Prosondo, but now----"
"Then, it _was_ you all blacked up like a minstrel!" cried Bunny.
"Yes, I was playing on the banjo for Dr. Perry"s medicine show, but when I saw you in the crowd I managed to get away. Then I joined the circus and now----"
"Don"t talk and excite yourself," said Mrs. Jason. "The doctor will be here in a little while and perhaps he can take the bandages off your face, so your friends will know you."
"Dix knows him all right," said Mr. Brown, and indeed the dog was half wild with joy at having found his master.
Dr. Fandon came in a few minutes later and said Fred was much better.
When the face bandages were taken off, so new ones could be put on, Bunny and Sue at once recognized Fred, though his face was badly scratched.
Dix tried to lick his master"s face, but had to be stopped for fear he might do Fred harm. So the dog had to show his joy by thumping his tail and whining softly.