D do. He was excited, determined, he accepted readily enough the
responsibility which had fallen upon him, but he was hardly happy. He
could see no hope of rescuing Dorothy and Elsie by himself, even if he
caught the carriage; and since he reckoned that it would take his father
two or three hours to turn the Riviera upside down, and extricate
himself and Mr. Rainer from the extremely neat and effective trap into
which they had fallen, he could look for no help from them till far into
the night. For a while he suffered from the sense that he had bitten
off, or rather had had thrust into his mouth, more than he could chew.
Then of a sudden he saw that the really important thing, the dogging the
kidnappers, was in his power, and he regained his cheerfulness. He drove
on the car at full speed for ten miles, and inquired of a peasant
walking beside a cart loaded with bags of grain, if he had seen the
carriage. The peasant had seen it; he was vague as to how long ago, and
how far away, but Tinker was sure that he had seen it. Accordingly, he
drove on the car at full speed again. In this way, going at full speed,
and now and again slowing down to inquire, he got over a good many
miles. He was frightened when he went through a town lest the police
should try to stop him, but it seemed that they had received no such
instructions from Ventimiglia. All the while he was drawing nearer the
carriage, for all that, somewhere or other, it had plainly changed
horses. At last he made up his mind that he would overtake it in the
next seven miles; and h

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