<h2 id='chapIII' class='c001'>CHAPTER III</h2>
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<div>BREAKING AWAY</div>
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<p class='c012'>Dave Dashaway was almost speechless. His
tyrant master had struck him in a tender spot, indeed.
Not that Dave had ever been foolish
enough to build extravagant hopes on his model.
It had been all guess work and an experiment.
However, his soul had been wrapped up in his
labor, he had been proud and pleased with his
progress as an inventor, and that mean, vengeful
act of the old man roused him up terribly.</p>
<p>“What busted that wagon?” demanded Mr.
Warner, grasping Dave’s arm till the pain was unbearable.</p>
<p>Dave jerked loose, and panting and angry-faced
confronted his guardian with a look that
made the old man hesitate. His lip trembled, but
he held his speech as steady as he could, as he replied:</p>
<p>“Dobbin got scared and ran into the ditch.”</p>
<p>“With your star-gazing after those airships
I’ll warrant.”</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='20' id='Page_20'></span>This was so near the truth that Dave did not
reply.</p>
<p>“What do you suppose will pay for all that
damage to that wagon?” demanded Warner.</p>
<p>“I suppose my hard work will,” bluntly replied
Dave.</p>
<p>“Your hard work—bah! It looks as if you
was worked hard, fritting half of the afternoon
away, spending hours and hours on that worthless
piece of trumpery up in the barn loft. I’ve settled
for good and all. Now you put up that
horse, get your supper, and go to your room.
You dare to leave it till I say so, and I’ll just call
the sheriff up here again, and see what he says
about affairs.”</p>
<p>This was an old-time threat of his guardian.
It was worn so threadbare that Dave did not pay
much attention to it. He proceeded silently
about his task, unhitched Dobbin, led him to his
stall, and made him comfortable for the night
with feed and bedding.</p>
<p>As Dave came out into the yard again he made
a speedy run for the wagon. His guardian had
been poking about the vehicle, and had discovered
the sweater roll. This he now held, turning it
over and over in his hand and viewing it curiously.</p>
<p>“Here!” shouted Dave, “that’s mine.”</p>
<p>“Oh, is it?” snapped the old man, holding the
bundle out of Dave’s reach. “What is it? I’m
going to see.”</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='21' id='Page_21'></span>“I don’t mean that it belongs to me,” Dave corrected
himself, “but I found it.”</p>
<p>“What is it?”</p>
<p>“It fell out of an airship. It lighted on Dobbin’s
back. That’s what made him run away.”</p>
<p>“Fell from an airship?” repeated old Warner
with a sniff of disbelief. “Romancing, hey?”</p>
<p>“No, I am not, I am telling you the truth,” persisted
Dave.</p>
<p>“Hello! hello! Here, what’s this?”</p>
<p>Mr. Warner had opened the sweater. His
miserly old eyes fairly gloated over the pocket
book and its contents. His thin cruel lips moved
as if he was smacking them over a meal.</p>
<p>“You found this, you say?” he inquired.</p>
<p>“Yes, I did,” responded Dave brusquely, none
too well pleased with the way things had turned
out.</p>
<p>“Well, finders keepers!” chuckled the old man
with a cunning laugh.</p>
<p>“Nobody is going to have that pocket book
but the owner,” said Dave staunchly.</p>
<p>“I’ll arrange about that, you young insolent!”
retorted Mr. Warner.</p>
<p>“You’ll have to, in the right way, too,” asserted
Dave, who was quite nettled.</p>
<p>“Eh—what’s that?” shouted the old man.</p>
<p>“Just what I said. If you will look at that
medal in that pocket book, you will find that the
owner’s name is on it. It is ‘Robert King’. All
<span class='pageno' title='22' id='Page_22'></span>you’ve got to do is to send his property back to
him. I happen to know that he is at Fairfield
now, and a letter directed there would reach
him.”</p>
<p>“Say,” blurted out old Warner, “I know what
to do, I guess, about my own business.”</p>
<p>“This is my business, too,” insisted Dave. “I
found that property, and I’m honest enough to
want to get it right back to the man who lost it.”</p>
<p>“You get into that house quick as you can, and
mind your own business and keep your mouth
shut, or I’ll make it pretty interesting for you,”
bawled the old man.</p>
<p>Dave closed his lips tightly. He had gone
through a pretty trying ordeal. It had made him
almost desperate. It had come so thick and fast,
one indignity after another, that Dave had not
found time to break down. His just wrath over
the destruction of the model was lessened by the
appropriation of the sweater bundle.</p>
<p>“There’s something I won’t stand,” declared
Dave, as he made his way into the house. “I
know who that property belongs to, and if Mr.
Warner tries any tricks, I’ll expose him.”</p>
<p>Dave felt sure that his tyrant master would not
do the square thing. He might not dare to keep
the pocket book and its contents and say nothing
about it. Dave felt sure, however, that in any
event Mr. Warner would not give it up without
<span class='pageno' title='23' id='Page_23'></span>a big reward. This humiliated Dave, somehow,
on account of his father and his own liking for
aeronautics. Dave felt more than kindly to one
of that profession, and would have been glad to
return the lost pocket book for nothing.</p>
<p>Dave glanced into the kitchen as he passed its
open door. The scraps of food on the uncovered
deal table did not at all appeal to his appetite.
Besides that, he was too stirred up to care to eat.
He went up to his little room in the attic and sat
down at the open window to think.</p>
<p>Dave felt that a crisis in his affairs had been
reached. His mind ran back rapidly over his
past life. He could find nothing cheering in it
since the time he was removed from a pleasant
boarding school upon the death of his father.
The latter had been traveling in foreign parts at
the time giving lectures on aeronautics, of which
science he was an ardent student.</p>
<p>Since then old Silas Warner had led his young
ward a very wretched life. Several letters had
come addressed to Mr. Dashaway. These Mr.
Warner had not shown to Dave, but had told him
that they amounted to nothing of importance.
Dave had noticed that these, with some other
papers, his guardian kept in a strong manilla envelope
in his desk.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='24' id='Page_24'></span>Dave had known nothing but neglect and hardship
with Silas Warner in the past. He saw no
prospects now of any betterment of his condition.
After what had happened during the day the man
would be more unbearable than ever.</p>
<p>“I’ve got to do it,” murmured Dave, after a
long period of painful thought. “My life will
be spoiled if I stay here. I’ll never learn anything,
I’ll never amount to anything. There is
only one way out.”</p>
<p>Dave got up and paced the floor of the darkened
room in greatly disturbed spirit.</p>
<p>“I’ll do it,” he added a moment later, with
firmness and decision. “I’ll be true to my name—it’s
a ‘dash away’ for freedom. Yes, I’ve
made up my mind. I’m going to run away from
home—if this can be called home.”</p>
<p>Old Warner had told Dave to go to his room
and remain there until further orders. In his
present state of mind, however, Dave cared little
for that. He was so excited that the air of the
close low-ceilinged roof room seemed stifling to
him. The lad got out through the window and
clambered down the remains of an old vine trellis
without trouble. Too many times at night when
he could not sleep had he stolen out thus secretly to
work on his pet model in the barn loft, to miss
his footing now. Dave reached the ground, went
over to the pasture lot and threw himself down
upon the grass. His hands under his head, staring
up at the stars, he rested and reflected.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='25' id='Page_25'></span>The more he thought the more was he resolved
to leave Brookville. He would leave it that night,
too, he decided. He knew that when his guardian
discovered his absence he would raise a great
hue and cry and try to find him, just as he had
done before.</p>
<p>“I’ll move as soon as he goes to bed,” planned
Dave. “That will give me a safe start away
from Brookville.”</p>
<p>Dave decided to regain his room by the route
he had left it. As he again neared the house,
however, he noticed a light in the sitting room
which his guardian usually occupied evenings.
As Dave made out Silas Warner and observed
what he was about, he glided to a thick bush near
the open window and peered curiously through
its branches.</p>
<p>Dave saw Mr. Warner seated at the big cumbrous
desk. He had thrown the sweater on the
floor at his side. The pocket book lay open on
the desk, and its contents were spread out before
their engrossed possessor.</p>
<p>The old man was viewing the collection with
gloating eyes. He took up the badge and
weighted it in his hands as if thinking of it only
as to its value as gold. For nearly ten minutes
Dave watched his miserly guardian finger over the
various articles. He knew that it was in his mind
to keep them if he could.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='26' id='Page_26'></span>Finally old Warner restored all the articles to
the pocket book. He took a small box from a
drawer in the desk. Dave had seen it before.
As Warner opened it, Dave again caught sight
of the manilla envelope which he knew held
papers referring to his dead father.</p>
<p>The old man locked up the desk and carried the
box to a corner of the room. Here he leaned
over, and Dave saw him lift up a small section of
the floor. When it was set back in place the box
had disappeared.</p>
<p>A new train of thought came into Dave’s mind
as he noticed all this. He now knew the secret
hiding place of his miserly old guardian. He
watched the latter take up the lighted candle and
go over to the wing room of the house where he
slept. Mr. Warner reached out of its window
and pulled in a rope, resting its end on the floor
directly beside his bed.</p>
<p>This rope ran out to an old swing frame which
held a bell of pretty good size. It had once belonged
to a school house, but had got cracked,
and Warner had got it for nothing. He had
never had occasion to ring it. He had told his
neighbors that he had put it up for protection.
He was a lonely old man, he had said. Some one
might try to rob him. If so, he could alarm his
neighbors and call them to the rescue. This had
given rise to the rumor that the old man must
<span class='pageno' title='27' id='Page_27'></span>have some hidden wealth about the place. To a
stranger, however, the dilapidated old place
would not indicate this.</p>
<p>Dave waited till his guardian had retired, then
he got back to his room, moving about cautiously.
Dave owned only the rather shabby suit he wore,
but he had some handkerchiefs and the like, and
these he gathered together and made up into a
small parcel. Then he sat down to wait. It was
in order for Dave to depart by the window route
if he so chose, and no one the wiser. Dave,
however, had something further to do before he
left the inhospitable roof of his guardian.</p>
<p>It was not until two hours later that Dave ventured
to leave his room. He stowed the parcel
containing his few small personal effects under his
coat and took a piece of unlighted candle in his
hand. Then he groped his way cautiously down
the rickety stairs.</p>
<p>In a few minutes Dave was in the sitting room.
He had listened at the entrance to the wing room
in which his guardian slept. He had heard Silas
Warner breathing regularly, and was sure that he
was asleep. Dave carefully closed the door of
the sitting room opening out into the hallway. He
went to the corner of the room where he had seen
his guardian stow away the little box.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='28' id='Page_28'></span>A chair stood over the spot, and this Dave
moved out of place. He lit the candle, and by
poking with his hand soon located a loose section
of the flooring about two feet square.</p>
<p>“I’ve found it,” breathed Dave softly, and he
lifted the square from its place.</p>
<p>Below showed the usual space found between
beams. Lying across the lower boards was the
box he was after. Dave lifted it out. He found
that it was secured with a small padlock.</p>
<p>“I don’t like to do it,” mused Dave, “but there
is no other way.”</p>
<p>He found little difficulty in wrenching the padlock,
hasp and all, out of place, for the fastening
was of tin, and flimsy. Then Dave opened
the cover of the box.</p>
<p>He took out the pocket book belonging to the
aeronaut. Then he lifted out the manilla envelope.</p>
<p>“I don’t suppose there’s anything but old
worthless papers in this envelope,” he decided,
“but it belongs to me, if anybody. The mischief!”</p>
<p>Dave sprang to his feet in dismay. He had
tilted the square of flooring against the chair
near by. Some way accidentally his hand had
struck it, and it tipped over flat with quite a clang.
Trying to stop it, Dave fell against the chair.
This went over with an echoing crash.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='29' id='Page_29'></span>Dave knew that the windows were double
locked. If he had disturbed old Warner, his only
route of escape was through the single doorway
of the room and down the hallway. So quickly
did he run for the door that he had not time to
blow out the candle.</p>
<p>Dave opened the door with a violent push.
Once out in the hall he glanced anxiously across
it.</p>
<p>“Too bad—too late,” he murmured, as his eye
fell upon his guardian just coming out of his room.
Against the candle light, Silas Warner must have
recognized Dave. The latter was just stowing
the manilla envelope in his pocket, and the old
man must have seen that, too.</p>
<p>“Hi, there! Stop! What are you up to?”
bellowed old Warner.</p>
<p>Dave ran down the hall at the top bent of his
speed. He knew the kitchen door was bolted,
and risked no chance of being stopped by halting
to open it. Indeed, he dodged down a step into a
store room, the window of which was always open.
He was through its sash space with a bolt and a
squirm in a jiffy.</p>
<p>Making sure that he had lost nothing in his
flight, Dave put across the yard. The last he saw
of his alarmed and excited guardian was his
frowsled grey head stuck through the buttery window,
bawling frantically:</p>
<p>“Stop him! stop thief! stop thief!”</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='30' id='Page_30'></span>Dave crossed the yard and the meadow in swift
bounds. He was sorry that his intended flight
had been discovered, and was satisfied that old
Warner would proceed to make a great noise
about it very promptly. However, now started
on his runaway career, Dave resolved that he
would not turn back.</p>
<p>“A good swift run, and I’ll get safe and sound
out of the neighborhood,” he told himself. “Of
course Mr. Warner will start a chase after me,
but I’ll get a lead they can’t beat. Hello!”</p>
<p>Dave Dashaway prepared for a new spurt of
speed as a wild alarm rang out on the still night
air.</p>
<p>Clang! Clang! Clang!</p>
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