"075 (B042) - The Gold Ogre (1939-05) - Lester Dent" - читать интересную книгу автора (Robeson Kenneth)"This is such an impossible thing," he said. "It's plain fantastic. I wouldn't believe such stuff, even in a book."
B. Elmer Dexter groaned. "Wish I had a camera and photoflash bulbs." "Camera?" "Think of what the newspapers would be willing to pay for pictures of that little golden man!" B. Elmer explained. "Boy, I'll bet I could sell the picture for a thousand smackers." "Come on," Don growled. "We'll follow him. Maybe he'll lead us to my father." Their quarry was not exercising much caution, so they did not have difficulty following him. The forest that bordered Crescent City on three sides—the lake made the fourth side—came close to the city limits at some points, and this was one of them. The dwarf plunged into the woods, and immediately it was hard to follow him, for it was very dark. The four stuck close together. Each of them would have been reluctant to admit it, but the night was giving them a large case of the creeps. They were modern boys of the twentieth century, and nobody could have told them that something like this could happen. But it was happening. They had stepped, literally, into a fairy story. "I wouldn't be surprised to see a goblin in here," B. Elmer whispered, feeling his way in the forest blackness. "There're no such things as goblins," Funny Tucker told him. "There're no such things as little golden cavemen, either," B. Elmer retorted. "Sh-h-h!" breathed Mental Byron. "Look!" They strained their eyes in the shadows. "Two of them!" Don exploded. The dwarf they had been following had joined another, and the two were standing in the moonlight glade, leaning on their clubs and conversing. Don and Mental crawled close enough that the guttural little voices were understandable. They watched the two little ogres—one of them was pointing with his club at something in the distance. "Yah, yah," the midget said. "Yah, yah," agreed the other. Funny Tucker crawled up behind Don and breathed. "Quite a vocabulary." The midget continued to point with his club—and Don craned his neck to see what the club indicated. He saw a man—a fully grown man clad in disheveled garments—stumbling through the woods, some distance away. The poor man was weak, hardly able to travel. His progress was a series of stumbling runs from one tree to another. "My father!" Don exploded. Don Worth was as quiet and patient as a mountain—but he was the kind of mountain that could turn into a volcano. He erupted now. In a wild rage, Don leaped up and charged at the dwarfs. DON thought only of what had happened to his father, what these little horrors had done. He wanted to seize them, punish them severely, put them where they could not harm anyone else. Funny yelled, "There goes the other! I got 'im!" Judging from the noises, Funny got more than he bargained for. They all began to get more than they bargained for. Don heaved up—only to have a terrific blow send him sprawling. He crashed into a thorn bush. In spite of himself, he yelled in pain. He clawed out of the tangle. Hands grabbed his ankles. He went down. He was struck several blows—with a fist, he thought—that were agonizing. More desperate now, Don floundered around. His big, strong hands found a limb as thick as his wrist He flailed with the huge club, striking random blows at the smothering darkness. It was intensely dark. He could not see what he was hitting. Abruptly, the club was wrenched out of his hands with incredible force! Don was very strong. But the club was yanked from him as if he was a child. He could tell from the struggle and confusion in the shadow-blackened underbrush that his three friends were faring as badly as himself. They were, in fact, getting whipped! If this kept up, the little gold dwarfs would capture them all. Moreover, they weren't fighting two midgets. There must be at least a dozen! It was Don Worth, the quietest one of the four, who made their decisions in the emergency. "Beat it!" Don barked. "We've bit off more'n we can chew!" "Wait!" B. Elmer Dexter yelled. "I wanna catch one of these dwarfs! I could get rich showin' him in a sideshow!" Then B. Elmer howled painfully. He must have gotten a whack that discouraged his collecting instincts. In fact, B. Elmer thereafter took the lead in the running. The four boys ran headlong until they decided they had outdistanced their pursuers. Then they stopped for a sheepish conference. "Fine bunch of heroes we turned out to be," Don Worth said grimly. "Don't they say that he who fights and runs will be around to fight another day?" Mental asked dryly. Funny Tucker produced a flashlight and started examining himself. "What gave you that black eye?" B. Elmer asked him. "It wasn't any gift," Funny groaned. "Boy, I fought for it." Don Worth said soberly, "I formed a suspicion during that fight, fellows. I wonder if any of you formed the same idea." "All I felt forming was knots on my head," Funny Tucker said. "What do you mean, Don?" "We had more than two foes in that fight," Don explained. "And I got the idea that some of them were perhaps grown men." "Grown men—I got the same idea," Mental said. "Somebody had me by the neck for a while, and I'll swear it wasn't any dwarf." "You guys," said Funny, "wouldn't be making excuses for our failure?" They weren't sure. It had been very dark, and the excitement furious. Whether they had fought some grown men, they couldn't tell. |
|
© 2026 Библиотека RealLib.org
(support [a t] reallib.org) |