FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   237   238   239   240   241   242   243   244   245   246   247   248   >>  
hem shoes, and that there nice warm jacket and clean shirt. Tain't had one for weeks. And I'll just trouble you for the powder and shot. Let him get up, mate. He won't try to run, because he knows I should have to wipe his head with this little nutcracker. Why don't you let him get up?--Yah! Quick! Look out!" As the man spoke he swung round the gun and took aim at a figure which came rushing up. He drew trigger, but the hammer struck out a few sparks--that was all, for he had forgotten that it was not loaded. What followed was very quickly done. Frank Mayne--for it was he--sprang at the savage ruffian who was holding Nic, and struck at him sidewise with the stout stick he held in his right hand. It did not seem much of a blow, but he delivered it in leaping through the air, just as a mounted soldier would direct a cut from his left. The effect was wonderful: the man rolled over and over, and Nic sprang up, free to gaze after Mayne as he sprang at the other man. The scoundrel struck at him savagely, and Nic heard the blow take effect. Then he had to fend for himself; for the man with the gun came on. "Here," he cried: "out with that powder and shot, or--" He raised the piece with both hands by the barrel, and swung it back as if to get force for a blow. But, boy as he was, Nic sprang at him. "Give me my gun!" he cried, and he was too close in for the blow to have any effect, as he seized the fellow by the throat and clung to him with all his might. But Nic's muscles were not yet hardened, and the man swung him round and round just as he liked, the boy gradually growing weaker; while, as he struggled, he saw with despair that Mayne was evidently getting the worse of it, for the man he had attacked partially disabled him at the first blow, and had now got his hand free and was striking brutally with the club. Mayne evidently felt that he was beaten, but he clung to his adversary tenaciously, bore him backward with his hands fast at his throat, and, bending down his head to avoid the savage blows, he leaped forward so that he and the convict fell, the latter undermost. "Joe, mate--quick!" roared the latter; and the big ruffian, who had now risen to his feet, stooped and picked up a piece of stone, raising it with both hands to bring it down on Mayne's head. "Leather!" yelled Nic; "look out--look out!" "Surrender!" roared a stern voice which sounded familiar, and the man with the stone pa
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   237   238   239   240   241   242   243   244   245   246   247   248   >>  



Top keywords:

sprang

 

struck

 

effect

 

throat

 

powder

 

roared

 

savage

 

ruffian

 

evidently

 

struggled


weaker

 

growing

 

barrel

 
seized
 

hardened

 

muscles

 
fellow
 
gradually
 

beaten

 

stooped


convict

 

undermost

 
picked
 

raising

 

sounded

 

familiar

 

Surrender

 

Leather

 

yelled

 

forward


leaped

 

striking

 

brutally

 

disabled

 

partially

 

attacked

 

bending

 

backward

 

raised

 

adversary


tenaciously

 

despair

 

nutcracker

 
trigger
 

hammer

 

rushing

 

figure

 

jacket

 
trouble
 
sparks