The Mystery of the Disappearing Dogs. Arthur Hammond
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Taking advantage of the fact that this attack had surprised the Spadinas completely, the five members of the Annex Gang, although outnumbered, began to do a tremendous amount of damage. Shifting from one enemy to another, they would wrestle them to the ground, pummel them for a few seconds and then move on, before the person they had downed had had time to recover or could begin to fight back. In the confusion, with figures moving from place to place all round them and blows landing from all directions, the Spadinas even began to fight with each other, rolling and wrestling all over the floor with anyone who happened to bump into them.
But the confusion was too good to last. The Spadinas had raided in force and the five leaders of the Annex Gang were hopelessly outnumbered. The noise of the fighting and the shouts from the basement brought another group of the Spadina Gang running from another part of the house, which they had been searching. They brought several more flashlights into the basement with them and found and opened the garden door. This let in yet another group of the Spadina Gang which had been keeping watch on the outside of the house, in case the Annex Gang members tried to escape from the attack that way.
In a few minutes more all five had been overpowered and made prisoner, still struggling fiercely, with members of the Spadina Gang sitting on their arms and legs and chests and threatening to sit on their heads as well if they didn’t lie still and stop trying to break loose.
The leader of the Spadina Gang, wiping a streak of blood from his nose where he had run into someone’s fist, came round and looked down at each of them in turn, shining his flashlight in their faces.
“Right,” he said finally. “Now, let’s get one or two things straight. First we owe you something for spreading that garbage all round our headquarters. For that I think we’ll take your collection of magazines and comic books and muss up your own place a bit, so that it won’t be quite as good to live in. But before we get around to that, there’s this business of the dog to be settled. I think we’d better deal with that right away.”
“You’re right, we’d better!” Blackie said, struggling again with the Spadinas who were holding him prisoner. “Raids on the other gang’s headquarters are okay, but stealing dogs is just low-down, dirty thieving! Especially with the race coming up next week!”
The leader of the Spadina Gang looked surprised and walked over to Blackie, prodding him gently in the ribs with his foot as he lay on the floor.
“You’re right it’s low-down, dirty thieving,” he said. “But if you feel that way about it, I’m surprised you do it. What’ve you done with our dog?”
“What’ve we done with your dog!” the Professor yelled, looking up angrily. “What’ve you done with our dog, you mean!”
“Now look,” the Spadina leader said threateningly. “This isn’t going to get you anywhere. You know you’ve swiped our dog and we know you’ve swiped our dog, so just tell us where it is and get it over with. You could save yourselves a lot of trouble.”
“You mean to say someone’s taken your dog, too?” Fatty said, struggling unsuccessfully to sit up. “When?”
“You know when!” the Spadina leader said angrily. “Tonight! Just around supper time!”
3
The Mystery Deepens
It was a few minutes before the two gangs could really believe that they had both lost their dogs, at what must have been almost the identical time—just around dusk. But then the talk between them grew fast and excited. The Annex prisoners were allowed to get up and the whole group stood around in the basement asking each other questions and arguing about this strange coincidence.
“What makes you so sure your dog was stolen?” Blackie said. “Was he tied up before he disappeared, the way ours was?”
“Well, no,” the Spadina leader said, “he was loose, sitting out in front of one of our houses. But that doesn’t make any difference. He never wanders away by himself, because we’ve trained him not to. He certainly wouldn’t have wandered so far away that we couldn’t find him when we looked for him, and we’ve looked everywhere. We walked a couple of blocks in every direction. He even left a big beef bone on the sidewalk, that he was chewing on, and that’s pretty strange. So then we figured you must have taken him, because we knew you were entering your dog for the race next week, and you’d already raided our place and spread that garbage all over everything.”
“Well, if he wasn’t tied up or anything, he still might have wandered off by himself,” the Professor said. “He may turn up again. Wouldn’t he have barked or anything if someone had tried to take him away?”
“Your dog didn’t, did he?” the Spadina leader said. “If he was tied up you’d think he would’ve made even more noise if someone had tried to walk off with him.”
“Say, that’s right!” Blackie said. “I hadn’t thought of that. We didn’t even hear a growl out of him inside the house all that time! Sput certainly wouldn’t have gone off quietly with anyone who just came along and unhooked him. Maybe he did get loose by himself.”
A small blond boy who had been one of the Spadina Gang’s raiding party pushed himself through to the front of the group now and spoke up.
“If they were both loose,” he said, “wandering about in the street, or even just sitting out in the street by themselves, the Humane Society could have picked them up. That happened to our dog once. It’s what they call ‘running at large.’ You can get fined fifty dollars for letting your dog do that. The man at the Humane Society told us.”
“What, just for letting it sit outside your own house?” Red said scornfully. “You’re crazy. That’s only if they’re running about loose in the streets. You can’t get fined fifty dollars for letting your dog sit outside its own house!”
“You can so!” the small boy said indignantly. “The man told us. The rule doesn’t mean that your dog actually has to be running about in the street at all! It just means if the dog is out in the street, without anyone in charge of it!”
“What happened about your dog, then?” Red’s Sister said, speaking to the boy gently, as her brother turned away from him. “Did you get fined fifty dollars?”
“No, but the man told us that that was what could happen, so that we wouldn’t let our dog go out in the street by himself again. He said the law was made because a stray dog might bite someone, or kill chickens, or something like that. That’s why they have to be so strict. The Humane Society has a dog-catcher going round the city all the time to pick up stray dogs. That’s what happened to ours.”
“Well, what happened to him after that?” the Professor said, getting interested. “How did you find out where he was and get him back?”
“My father went down to the Humane Society as soon as we found out he was missing,” the blond boy said. “Their truck had just brought him in and we got him back.”
The Professor shook his head. “Gee, I don’t know,” he said doubtfully. “I guess this could be what happened. No one saw what happened. If they were wandering about in the street, I suppose the dog-catcher could have picked them both up. We all live in pretty much the same part of town. He could have been driving around in this area tonight.” He looked at Blackie inquiringly.
Blackie shook his head too. “I still don’t