“Hullo, Phil! I’m gone!” And that was all Phil then heard from Billy.
Just then there came a scuffling noise from the interior, where a door, partially open, led from the old office to the rear room. Knowing that someone must be inside, for the noise was not from where Billy had gone down, Phil grasped his cane harder and dashed through the open door into the back room where he had before seen the forge and the tools, which he had not been able to understand at the time.
Right in front of him was another open door, beyond the hastily constructed forge; and down what seemed to be a cellar stairway he could see the head and shoulders of a man. The stranger was struggling upward, impeded by some burden he was carrying with difficulty.
It was difficult in the half light that filtered through the overhanging shade trees without to distinguish anything distinctly. All Phil could see was that the man wore a slouch hat, combed with cobwebs from the cellar region below. All at once came the conviction to the lad:
“This must be Dippy, whom the other was calling for so often.”
With this came Phil’s resolve to boldly move up and prevent this mysterious fellow’s escape. He dashed forward, calling out:
“Halt, you! Give an account of yourself! I—”
Here the stranger, dropping the bundle he was carrying, attempted to spring up the last two steps, at the same time reaching behind and pulling forth something small that glittered in the semi-twilight. What could it be—a pistol? At the mere thought, Phil leaped nearer, struck at the glittering toy, while the descending blow knocked the fellow’s hat off and, partially stunning him, sent him back down the gloomy stairway. The lower end of this was shrouded in deeper gloom, though some light from a cellar window shed a little pale glow from the outside daylight.
Following closely, Phil began to stumble down the stairway, when he heard another’s unmistakable advance below. For Billy, still armed with the rubber tube, had heard the mix-up going on above, together with Phil’s loud tones and the succeeding fracas; and he saw dimly the tumbling of some bulky weight, followed by the heavier fall of a man’s body.
“Great goodness!” thought Worth. “Can that be Phil?”