[Brave Tom by Edward S. Ellis]@TWC D-Link book
Brave Tom

CHAPTER XIII
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If you do, your clock will be wound up in short order; but remember what I've told you, and you'll be released after a while, without any harm to you.

I will now bid you good-night." With this the man shut and fastened the door of the cabin, using a padlock to do so.
The lad heard his footsteps as he walked rapidly over the deck, leaping upon those adjoining, and quickly passing up the wharf.
"Well, this beats everything," remarked Jim with a great sigh, sitting down again on the camp-stool.
As he sat thus in deep thought, it seemed to him, more than once, as if it was all a hideous dream, and he pinched himself to make sure it was not.
What it all meant was more than he could figure out, or even guess.

The only possible solution he could hit upon was that this Hornblower, as he called himself, was in need of a cabin-boy, or perhaps a sailor, and he took this rather summary way of securing one, without the preliminary of obtaining the consent of the party most concerned.
Whoever Mr.Hornblower might be, it looked as if he had made elaborate preparations for the game played with such success.
"Poor Tom will be worried to death when he finds nothing of me," was the natural fear of Jim, while turning over in his mind the extraordinary situation in which he was placed.

Despite the warning uttered by his captor before leaving, the boy stole up the steps and stealthily tried the door.

It was fastened too securely for him to force it.
As he sat down again in the chair, he heard feet on the deck, and he concluded that his master had come back to see whether all was right.
But the fellow did not touch the cabin-door; and a minute later the lad noticed that two men were moving about, then the sounds showed that the sail was being hoisted.


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