Outside, the car braked to a stop. Rick wondered if Mac and Pancho had come to keep a rendezvous? He couldn"t get rid of the feeling that those two were involved somehow.
"A few minutes more," Scotty gritted. "The knots are loose." Then, "I got it."
Moving swiftly, Scotty untied his ankles and knelt at Rick"s side. Long minutes later Rick felt the ropes fall from his wrists. It didn"t take long to get his ankles free, and he stood up, rubbing circulation back into his hands.
Scotty went to the doorway of the old jail and Rick joined him. "See anything?"
"No," Scotty whispered. "We"ll have to go outside."
"We can"t go out the front," Rick murmured. "They"d see us. That car stopped right in front. Let"s see if there"s a back entrance of some kind."
He led the way to the rear of the jail building, walking carefully in the darkness. There were windows but they were barred. He carefully felt his way past the jail"s only cell, and along the back wall.
Outside, a motor spun into life.
Rick whirled. "They"re going!"
Another motor started.
The boys turned and hurried to the front of the building. They were in time to see a sedan shift and speed away from the hotel, following the road toward civilization.
They hurried into the street and Scotty pointed in the opposite direction. The road back to the base was a dim, pale ribbon in the faint moonlight. Along it a dark shape was speeding.
"That does it," Rick said aloud.
Scotty turned to watch the departing sedan. "It didn"t take them long to complete their business, whatever it was. I didn"t hear any talk, did you?"
"Not a word. Do you suppose that was Mac and Pancho that came from the base?"
"No way of knowing, but it could have been. Come on. Let"s find our jeep."
The jeep was where they had left it, but the hood was up. Scotty hurried to look, while Rick went to the glove compartment. The flashlight hadn"t been touched. He got it and joined Scotty, throwing the beam under the hood.
For a moment everything looked normal, then Rick saw that the distributor cap and rotor were missing. The question was, had the men simply hidden them? Or had they taken the parts along?
Scotty put his thoughts into words. "If the parts are here, we"ll find them in the morning. If they aren"t ..."
Rick finished, "We"ll be here until someone finds us!"
CHAPTER XI
Deadrock Ogg, Mayor
At dawn"s first light Rick and Scotty began the search for the distributor cap and rotor. The boys searched methodically, taking in the area far beyond throwing distance, on the a.s.sumption that whoever had taken the two essential parts might have walked a distance away from the jeep before throwing them as far as he could.
"It"s not here," Rick said positively.
Now all that remained was the town itself. They walked back to the town, Rick carrying the water bag and Scotty the canteen. At least their water hadn"t been dumped.
Scotty paid careful attention to the vehicle tracks in the dust of the road.
"It"s pretty clear," he pointed out at last. "Here"s where the sedan was parked. And here"s where the other vehicle parked. See how this area is scuffed up? They made quite a few trips, carrying something from the side of the vehicle to the rear of the sedan, probably stowing the stuff in the luggage compartment. And, from the tire tracks, I"d say the vehicle from the base was a light truck."
"Like Mac"s truck?" Rick asked.
"Maybe. Anyway, whoever it was had to go through the guard gate, and the run might even be chalked up on the board. Not to here, of course, but maybe to Careless Mesa or Dry Spring."
"We can check when we get back," Rick said. "Come on. We"d better take the town apart and see if the rotor and distributor cap are here."
It was midmorning before they gave up the search, and both of them were exhausted.
"Now what?" Rick asked wearily. He had never in his life felt so badly in need of sleep. Except for a few brief catnaps in the jeep, he had been awake continuously for forty-eight tense hours.
Scotty scratched his head. "There are a few buildings we haven"t searched yet."
"No, but they wouldn"t be in those. If the men were going to leave them here, they"d drop them nearby and not hide them in one of the distant buildings. But I suppose we"d better look, anyway."
"We"d better. I"m fresher than you are. Go stretch out in the hotel lobby and I"ll look."
Rick was too tired to argue. He walked into the comparative coolness of the rickety old hotel and found a section of undamaged floor. He removed his shoes, stretched out, and was asleep almost at once. In a short time Scotty joined him after an unsuccessful search.
When Rick woke again it was dark and Scotty was stretched out beside him, sound asleep. He turned over and went to sleep again.
Both boys woke up, stiff and bleary-eyed, as dawn light flooded the hotel. They grinned at each other.
"I must have slept for two days," Rick said.
"Not quite. Just about sixteen hours. But you needed it, and there wasn"t anything to do."
"We"re okay so long as the water lasts, but then what?" Rick knew without even putting it into words that they could never walk to civilization. Their water would run out and heat exhaustion would get them before they were halfway to anywhere. The base was closest, and it was over thirty miles away, across desert and waterless mountains.
Scotty walked over to what had once been the hotel desk and held up a can. "Want some breakfast?"
Rick was at his side in an instant, examining a can of tomatoes. "Where did you get it?" It was shiny, the label unfaded.
"Down the street. In one of the houses. Someone comes here now and then, I guess. There are blankets, a sleeping bag, and a small supply of food."
Rick"s brows knitted. "Shouldn"t we have been standing guard?"
"I thought about it," Scotty admitted, "but I figured there wasn"t much sense to it. We"d welcome friend or foe at this point. Anyway, I don"t think whoever hangs out here is part of the gang."
"Why not?"
"Wouldn"t the gang have been at his hide-out instead of here in the hotel? Besides, this looks like a cache for just one man."