"All right," returned the Indian. "What white boy mean to do?"
"Have a little racket on my own hook," was the reply. "If I lose my bearings and can't find the hut, I will fire five shots into the air from my revolver. Have one of my friends answer in a similar manner."
"It shall be done."
"Give me that coat. All right. Now skip with the girl."
Frank took the coat; stepped into the boat, watched till Gage was approaching, and then muffled his head, sitting in the place where Elsie had been left.
In the meantime, the Seminole was bearing the girl swiftly and silently away.
Thus it came about that Gage made love to Frank Merriwell, instead of the fair captive he believed was muffled by the coat.
When Gage plunged into the water, the small boat rocked and came near upsetting, but did not go over.
But the fellow's cry and the splash had brought the sailors to a halt, and they soon called back:
"What's the matter? What has happened?"
"I rather fancy it will be a good plan to make myself scarce in this particular locality," muttered Frank.
Gage swam under water for some distance, and then, coming to the surface, he shouted to the men in the leading boat:
"Bowsprit, Black Tom, help! Turn back quickly! There is an enemy here, but he is alone! We can capture him, boys! Be lively about it!"
"Ha! ha! ha!" laughed Frank, merrily. "You will have a fine time catching me. You have given me great amusement, Gage. I assure you that I have been highly entertained by your company, and hereafter I shall consider you an adept in the gentle art of making love."
"Laugh!" fiercely shouted Gage from the water. "You are having your turn now, but mine will soon come!"
"I have heard you talk like that before, Gage. It does not seem that you have yet learned 'the way of the transgressor is hard.'"
"You'll learn better than to meddle with me! I have longed to meet you again, Frank Merriwell, and I tell you now that one of us will not leave this swamp alive!"
"This is not the first time you have made a promise that you were not able to keep. Before I leave you, I have this to say: If Captain Bellwood is harmed in the least, if he is not set at liberty with very little delay, I'll never rest till you have received the punishment which your crimes merit."
Frank could hear the sailors rowing back, and he felt for the oars, having no doubt that he would be able to escape them with ease, aided by the darkness.
Then came a surprise for him.
When Gage stopped rowing to make love to the supposed Elsie he had left the oars in the rowlocks, drawing them in and laying them across the boat. In the violent rocking of the boat when the fellow leaped overboard one of the oars had been lost.
Frank was left with a single oar, and his enemies were bearing down upon him with great swiftness.
"I wonder if there's a chance to scull this boat?" he coolly speculated, as he hastened to the stern and made a swift examination.
To his satisfaction and relief, he found there was, and the remaining oar was quickly put to use.
Even then Frank felt confident that he would be able to avoid his enemies in the darkness that lay deep and dense upon the great swamp. He could hear them rowing, and he managed to skull the light boat along without making much noise.
He did not mind that Gage had escaped; in fact, he was relieved to get rid of the fellow, although it had been his intention to hold him as hostage for Captain Bellwood.
It was the desire for adventure that had led Frank into the affair, and, now that it was over so far as surprising Gage was concerned, he was satisfied to get away quietly.
He could hear the sailors calling Gage, who answered from the water, and he knew they would stop to pick the fellow up, which would give our hero a still better show of getting away.
All this took place, and Frank was so well hidden by the darkness that there was not one chance in a thousand of being troubled by the ruffianly crew when another astonishing thing happened.
From a point amid the tall rushes a powerful white light gleamed out and fell full and fair upon the small boat and its single occupant, revealing Frank as plainly as if by the glare of midday sunlight.
"Great Scott!" gasped the astonished boy. "What is the meaning of this, I would like to know?"
He was so astonished that he nearly dropped the oar.
The sailors were astonished, but the light showed them distinctly, and Gage snarled.
"Give me your pistol, Bowsprit! Be lively!"
He snatched the weapon from the old tar's hand, took hasty aim, and fired.
Frank Merriwell was seen to fling up his arms and fall heavily into the bottom of the boat!
CHAPTER XXXIV.
A FEARFUL FATE
"Got him!" grated the triumphant young rascal, flourishing the revolver. "That's the time I fixed him!"
The mysterious light vanished in the twinkling of an eye, but it had shone long enough for Gage to do his dastardly work.
The sailors were alarmed by the light, and wished to row away; but Gage raved at them, ordering them to pull down toward the spot where the other boat lay.
After a time, the men recovered enough to do as directed, and the smaller boat was soon found, rocking lightly on the surface.
Running alongside, Gage reached over into the small boat, and his hand found the boy who was stretched in the bottom.
"Here he is!" cried the young rascal, gleefully. "I'll bet anything I put the bullet straight through his heart!"
And then, as if his own words had brought a sense of it all to him, he suddenly shuddered with horror, faintly muttering:
"That was murder!"
The horror grew upon him rapidly, and he began to wonder that he had felt delight when he saw Frank Merriwell fall. The shooting had been the impulse of the moment, and, now that it was done and he realized what it meant, he would have given much to recall that bullet.
"Never mind," he thought. "I swore that one of us should not leave this swamp alive, and my oath will not be broken. I hated Frank Merriwell the first time I saw him, and I have hated him ever since. Now he is out of my way, and he will never cross my path again."
There was a slight stir in the small boat, followed by something like a gasping moan.
"He don't seem to be dead yet, cap'n," said Ben Bowsprit. "I guess your aim wasn't as good as you thought."
That nettled Gage.
"Oh, I don't think he'll recover very fast," said the youthful rascal, harshly.
He rose and stepped over into the smaller boat.
"Give me some matches," he ordered. "I want to take a look at the chap. He must make a beautiful corpse."
"You'll find I'm not dead yet!" returned a weak voice, and Frank Merriwell sat up and grappled with Gage.
A snarl of fury came from the lips of the boy desperado.
"So I didn't finish you! Well, you'll not get away!"
"You'll have to fight before you finish me!" panted Frank.
But