hire me to follow this fellerâs trail, and youâre hirinâ me to lift his hair. Thatâs how the Comanche Kid operates.â
âYou mean youâll scalp him?â Billy asked.
âI donât want you to shoot or scalp him,â said Mr. Margarine. âFind him. Bring him in alive. Iâll see to the rest of it.â
ââTaint my way of doing business,â said Freddy with a sneer. âBut suit yourself. Generally on a job like this, I get paid by the scalp. No scalp, no pay.â
Mr. Margarine brought out a fat pocketbook. âIâll pay you the first week right now.â
âWeek!â Freddy exclaimed. âIt donât take a week for the Comanche Kid to do a little job like this.â He walked over to Cy and gathered up the rein and swung into the saddle. âSee you around,â he said, and cantered off towards the woods.
âYouâre kind of getting yourself into a spot, arenât you, Freddy?â said Cy.
âMaybe. But Iâm glad I donât have to scalp myself to get that money. Oh, I canât get away with being the Comanche Kid. Up there I was standing in the doorway with all that bright sky behind meâhe couldnât get a good look at me. But theyâd have caught me if I hadnât bluffed them.â
âWhat are you going to do about that rattler?â Cy asked.
Freddy said: âDarn those Margarines. All that work we had catching him, and they had to let him out. I wish Iâd turned him over to Whibley.â
âYou ought to have taken him down to that dentist in Centerboro and had his fangs pulled.â
âI understand they just grow back in again,â said Freddy. âAnyway, heâd scare everybody to death rattling even if he didnât have any fangs. Hâm, thatâs an idea. Wonder if the rabbits could handle it.â
He rode up to the Grimby House and had a long talk with the Horribles, and with Georgie and Charles, and having warned them to keep a sharp eye out for the escaped rattler, he circled around to the north and came down out of the woods on to the Margarine farm.
The sun had set; it was dark and beginning to get chilly. As he came down towards the Margarine house he saw lights in the dining room; evidently the family was still at dinner. He rode around to the front of the house and up to the front door and banged on it with the butt of his pistol.
A maid in a little white apron opened the door, saw Freddy, gave a screech and slammed it shut again.
So Freddy banged on it harder.
There were voices calling inside and a bustle of movement, and then the door opened again and Mr. Margarine stood there with a shotgun in his hands. Behind him was Billy and a man in a chauffeurâs cap.
âOh, itâs you,â he said. âWhat do you mean, making such a disturbance?â
âIf you want that pig,â Freddy drawled, âstop yapping at me and go saddle your horse.â
âYou mean youâve found him?â
âI know where he is,â Freddy said.
Five minutes later, Mr. Margarine and Billy followed Freddy down the drive. He led them at a trot up along the wall to the Big Woods, then turned in among the trees. Here Freddy said they must leave the horses and proceed on foot.
From this side there was no path to the Grimby house. Though they had flashlights, there were roots to fall over and witch hopple to tangle their feet and low boughs to whip their faces. They stumbled along for a few minutes, then Mr. Margarine stopped.
âThis is all nonsense,â he said angrily. âIâm paying you to catch this Freddy, not to break my neck looking for him. What is this place?â
âThe Big Woods,â said Freddy. âSome folks call it Snakeville, on account of the rattlers.â
âSay, Dad,â said Billy, âThat was a rattlesnake in the pig pen this afternoon, wasnât it?â
âYou mean there are
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