surprised. At that moment the door was slightly shifted ajar and an eye peeped in.
âCatch him!â said Hewitt aloud, as we sprang to the door. âHe mustnât get away!â
I had been nearer the doorway, and was first through it. The stranger ran down the yard at his best, but my legs were the longer, and half-way to the street I caught him by the shoulder and swung him round. Like lightning he whipped out a knife, and I flung in my left instantly on the chance of flooring him. It barely checked him, however, and the knife swung short of my chest by no more than two inches; but Hewitt had him by the wrist and tripped him forward on his face. He struggled like a wild beast, and Hewitt had to stand on his forearm and force up his wrist till the bones were near breaking before he dropped his knife. But throughout the struggle the man never shouted, called for help, nor, indeed, made the slightest sound, and we on our part were equally silent. It was quickly over, of course, for he was on his face, and we were two. We dragged our prisoner into the stable and closed the door behind us. So far as we had seen, nobody had witnessed the capture from the street, though, of course, we had been too busy to be certain.
âThereâs a set of harness hanging over at the back,â said Hewitt; âI think weâll tie him up with the traces and reinsânothing like leather. We donât need a gag; I know he wonât shout.â
While I got the straps Hewitt held the prisoner by a peculiar neck-and-wrist grip that forbade him to move except at the peril of a snapped arm. He had probably never been a person of pleasant aspect, being short, strongly and squatly built, large and ugly of feature, and wild and dirty of hair and beard. And now, his face flushed with struggling and smeared with mud from the stable-yard, his nose bleeding and his forehead exhibiting a growing bump, he looked particularly repellent. We strapped his elbows together behind, and as he sullenly ignored a demand for the contents of his pockets Hewitt unceremoniously turned them out. Helpless as he was, the man struggled to prevent this, though, of course, ineffectually. There were papers, tobacco, a bunch of keys, and various odds and ends. Hewitt was glancing hastily at the papers when, suddenly dropping them, he caught the prisoner by the shoulder and pulled him away from a partly-consumed hay-truss which stood in a corner, and toward which he had quietly sidled.
âKeep him still,â said Hewitt; âwe havenât examined this place yet.â And he commenced to pull away the hay from the corner.
Presently a large piece of sackcloth was revealed, and this being lifted left visible below it another batch of loaves of the same sort as we had seen in the cart. There were a dozen of them in one square batch, and the only thing about them that differed them from those in the cart was their position, for the batch lay bottom side up.
âThatâs enough, I think,â Hewitt said. âDonât touch them, for Heavenâs sake!â He picked up the papers he had dropped. âThat has saved us a little search,â he continued. âSee here, Brett; I was in the act of telling you my suspicions when this little affair interrupted me. If you care to look at one or two of these letters youâll see what I should have told you. Itâs Anarchism and bombs, of course. Iâm about as certain as I can be that thereâs a reversible dynamite bomb inside each of those innocent loaves, though I assure you I donât mean meddling with them now. But see here. Will you go and bring in a four-wheeler? Bring it right down the yard. Thereâs more to do, and we mustnât attract attention.â
I hurried away and found the cab. The meaning of the loaves, the cart, and the spring-mattress was now plain. There was an Anarchist plot to carry out a number of explosions probably simultaneously, in
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