A few seconds later they were both carried into the hut, and set in rickety chairs. Their bonds were not removed, and the door was closed and locked. Amy looked over at Betty, and the latter could see that her chum"s eyes were filled with tears.
Then, suddenly, Amy seemed to collapse. She slipped from the chair to the floor.
"Now what"s up?" roughly demanded Pete. "I wish I"d never gone into this girl business, anyhow--it"s so uncertain. What"s happened?" and he looked at the limp form of Amy on the floor.
Betty tried to rise, but sank back dizzily. The room seemed to become suddenly dark. She feared she would topple over as Amy had done.
"It"s only a faint, the poor dear," chuckled the old woman. "I"ll attend to her. You go out and get the boat ready," she told the two men.
Betty"s brain became clearer. There was no longer blackness before her eyes.
"Here, drink this," said the woman, raising Amy by her shoulders, and holding a gla.s.s of water to her lips. The gag had been removed. Amy drank and a little color came into her face.
"Where--where am I? What happened?" she faltered.
"Nothing, dearie," said the hoa.r.s.e voice of the crone. "You"ll be all right soon. You"re just going to stay with me a little while--you and your friend. You won"t suffer a bit of harm, if you tell us what we want to know. You"ll be well taken care of."
Betty began to see a light now. She wished the gag might be taken from her lips, and water given her, but the old woman was busy with Amy. The girl closed her eyes again, and seemed too weak to cry out, even though the rag was not again bound across her lips.
There sounded voices outside the cabin, and a knock on the door.
"Drat "em," muttered the old woman. "A body would need four hands to attend to all that"s to be done."
She laid Amy back on the floor, and hobbled across the room to unbar the door. Betty was frantically struggling to loosen the bonds that held her hands behind her back.
"The boat"s ready," gruffly said Jake, as he and Pete were admitted to the shack.
"That"s good," muttered the old crone. "We can take care of "em easier when we get "em out of here. We don"t care if they do yell then. Wait until I tie up this one"s mouth. She may rouse up enough to make a racket."
Poor, half-senseless Amy was again gagged. Betty had given up trying to loosen her bonds. Those men knew how to tie knots.
And then, as before, Betty was carried down to the sh.o.r.e and placed in a boat. Amy was brought down on the shoulders of the old woman, who also got in the boat with the captured girls.
"Now row out," she ordered the man. They were on the bay side, where there was no surf, so the boat was easily pushed out. The men leaped in and began pulling on the long oars. Betty could see them heading for the mysterious schooner, and, a little later she and Amy were lifted on board that vessel.
"Up anchor!" came the command from some one, and, an instant later, the vessel was in motion.
Poor Betty wished she could do as Amy had done, and faint.
CHAPTER XXII
THE SEARCH
Grace Ford slowly opened her eyes. Grace seldom did anything in a hurry, not even awakening, and on this occasion, after the little doze that hot summer day, in the grove by the seash.o.r.e, she was even more dilatory than usual in bringing all her faculties into play.
Lazily enough she glanced over at Mollie, who was still asleep. Grace felt a little sense of elation that she was awake before her friend. She did not look around for Betty or Amy, but, picking up a small pebble, tossed it in Mollie"s direction.
Straight and true it went, alighting on the sleeper"s nose, which, in spite of the a.s.surance of her friends, Mollie felt was always likely to be cla.s.sed as "slightly pug."
"Score one for me!" laughed Grace, still lazily, as Mollie sat up with a start. There was nothing slow about Mollie, waking or sleeping.
"What is it? Oh, you! Did you throw that?" she asked, rubbing her nose, on which a little red spot had been raised. Feeling a sting there Mollie opened her bag and gave a hasty glance at the little mirror hidden in one flap.
"You mean thing!" she cried. "And you know how sensitive my skin is!" By this time Mollie had glanced around her, something which Grace had not yet done.
"Why--why," Mollie exclaimed. "Where is Betty--and Amy?"
"Oh, probably off somewhere indulging in athletic stunts for fear they"ll lose their figures on account of eating so much lunch," remarked Grace, reaching out her hand toward a box that had held some chocolate almonds.
"But they"re not in sight!" declared Mollie. She rose to her feet, and glanced rapidly up and down the beach. "I can"t see them anywhere," she went on. "They--could they have gone back and left us sleeping here?"
"Well, we certainly _were_ sleeping," admitted Grace, with a smile that was lazy--like her drawling words.
"Oh, do be sensible--for once!" exclaimed Mollie, and her tones had a snap to them that made Grace sit up and fairly gasp.
"Why, whatever is the matter, Billy?" she asked in aggrieved accents.
"I haven"t done anything. And just because Betty and Amy aren"t here----"
"That"s just it--where are they?" asked Mollie, sharply.
"How should I know?" returned Grace, determined not to be conciliated so easily. "They went off for a walk while we were asleep, I suppose."
"Yes, but unless they went a long distance we ought to be able to see them," Mollie went on. "And they"re not in sight--you can see for yourself."
"If they"re not in sight I _can"t_ see, Mollie dear," spoke Grace, this time soothingly.
"Oh, do be sensible!" snapped the other. "Stop eating that silly candy, and help me gather up some of these things. I--I wonder what could have happened?"
The manner in which Mollie said this startled Grace as perhaps nothing else could have done.
"Help me up," she begged. "This skirt is so narrow. Oh, Mollie, do you think----" and she paused with frightened eyes, gazing into the more determined ones of her chum.
"I don"t know that I think anything--just now," replied Mollie, in rather gentler tones. "I"m afraid I was a bit cross, Grace, but you know, dear it is----"
"A _bit_ cross! You were positively--horrid. But I forgive you."
"I"m always cross when I wake up suddenly," explained Mollie. "You shouldn"t have hit me on the nose, Grace."
"I wouldn"t have, had I known you were such a--er--what animal is it that has such a sensitive nose, Mollie?"
"Bear, I guess you mean," Mollie admitted.
"Yes, that"s it. Oh, but I did have a nice sleep!" and Grace lazily stretched first one arm and then the other. "But where are Betty and Amy keeping themselves?" she asked.
"That"s just what I"ve been trying to get you to realize," said Mollie.