CHAPTER XVIII
FRED SLIDES INTO THE FREEZE
Monday"s "Blade" contained additional light on the nitroglycerine affair---or what pa.s.sed as "light."
Len Spencer and the local police had discovered that at least three of the wealthiest men in town had received, during the last few weeks, threatening letters from cranks.
These cranks had all demanded money, under pain of severe harm if they failed to turn over the money.
It now developed that the police chief and Officer Hemingway had, some time before, arrested a nearly harmless lunatic, who, it was believed had written the letters. The man with the unbalanced mind did not appear dangerous, yet, in view of his threats, he had been quietly "railroaded" off to all asylum for the insane.
Now, the arrival of four pounds of nitroglycerine at the local express office was believed to show that the lunatic had had comrades, or else that the crazy man had been used merely as a tool.
Hemingway hurried off to the asylum, to interview the unfortunate one. All the plain clothes man succeeded in getting, however, was a rambling talk that didn"t make sense.
Monday"s "Blade" announced that the chief of police had been authorized to offer a reward of five hundred dollars for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the party or parties behind the criminal shipment of the giant explosive to Gridley.
Everyone believed that the frightened rich men had combined to offer the reward. Many wondered that the offered reward was not larger.
All of the student body at the High School were busy talking about the affair in the big a.s.sembly room before the session opened.
"I see where my parents have made a great mistake," sighed Frank Thompson.
"How?" demanded Ben Badger.
"Instead of wasting my time at the High School they should have apprenticed me to a good journeyman detective," grumbled Thomp.
"Oh, but couldn"t I use that five hundred, if only my training had fitted me for such deeds as running down a nitroglycerine peddler!"
"It isn"t anything to joke about," shuddered one of the girls.
"It"s awful! Would four pounds of the dreadful stuff destroy the town of Gridley?"
"No," Badger informed her; "but it would be enough to blow up several wood-piles and destroy a lot of clean Monday wash."
"There you go joking again," protested the girl, and turned away.
"Oh, well," declared Fred Ripley, "we must possess ourselves with patience. We shall soon know the whole truth."
"Do you really think so?" asked Purcell.
"It"s one of the surest things conceivable," railed Ripley. "That bright constellation of freshmen known under the musical t.i.tle of d.i.c.k & Co. will solve the whole affair wit, in forty-eight hours. Indeed, I"m not sure but d.i.c.k & Co., even at this moment, carry the secret looked in their b.r.e.a.s.t.s."
Fred glanced quickly around him to see how much of a laugh this had started. To his chagrin he found his bantering had fallen flat.
"Oh, well," gaped Dowdell, gazing out of the window near which he stood, "I know one important fact about the mystery."
"What"s that?" asked half a dozen quickly.
"None of the five hundred is destined to come my way.
"That jest saddens a lot of us with the same conviction," muttered Ted Butler, shaking his head.
"But this I _do_ know," continued Dowdell, "if the weather continues cold there"ll be some elegant skating before the week is out."
Gridley did not slumber over the nitroglycerine mystery. Len Spencer, though he could gain no actual information, managed to have something interesting on the subject in each morning"s "Blade."
The people of Gridley talked of the mystery everywhere.
There was one other mild sensation this week that lasted for a part of a day. Tip Scammon came up for his trial. He pleaded guilty to the thefts from the High School locker room, and also guilty to the charge of entering the Prescott rooms in order to hide his loot in d.i.c.k"s trunk. By way of leniency toward a first offender the court let Tip off with a sentence of fourteen months in the penitentiary. This sentence, by good behavior on the part of Tip, would shrink to ten months of actual imprisonment.
In every way the police and the prosecuting attorney tried to make Tip reveal the name of his confederate. But Tip, for reasons of his own, maintained absolute, dogged silence on this head, and went to the penitentiary without having named the person who met him in the alleyway that evening when Tip himself was caught.
The promise of skating was made good. Wednesday afternoon it was discovered that the ice in Gaylor"s Cove was in splendid condition, and strong enough to bear.
Thursday a series of High School racing contests were planned for Sat.u.r.day afternoon. There was so much money left over in the Athletics Committee"s treasury that it was voted to offer a series of individual trophies for boy and girl skaters in different events.
Moreover, in these skating events members of the freshman cla.s.s were to be allowed to compete.
"Now, see here, fellows," urged d.i.c.k, when he had gotten his partners aside, "some of the freshman cla.s.s ought to be winners of some of the events. We want to give our cla.s.s a good name. And, out of the six of us, there ought to be one winner for something.
I wish you"d all do your best to get in shape. You"ll all go over to the cove with me this afternoon, of course."
They did. More than a hundred of the student body, most of them boys, were on the ice that afternoon.
Some went scurrying by for all they were worth. These were training for the races.
Others gathered in the less traveled parts of the cove, which was a large one, and practiced the "fancy" feats. Tom Reade and Dan Dalzell put themselves in this cla.s.s. d.i.c.k and his other partners went in for speed.
Friday afternoon there was an even larger attendance.
Gaylor"s Cove was about half a mile long, with an average width of a quarter of a mile. At the middle the cove was open for a long way upon the river.
At some points on the river proper the ice was strong enough to bear. Near Gaylor"s Cove, however, the river current was so swift that the river ice at this point looked thin and treacherous.
No one ventured out on the ice just beyond the cove.
Friday night many a High School boy and girl studied the sky.
There was no sign of storm, nor did the conditions seem to threaten a thaw. Sat.u.r.day morning was cold and clear. The temperature, at noon, was just above freezing point, though not enough so to bring about a "thaw" in the ice.
By one o"clock Sat.u.r.day afternoon Gaylor"s Cove was a scene of great activity. Two thirds of the High School students were there, most of them on skates. There were three or four hundred other youngsters, and more than a hundred grown-ups.
"All we need is the band," laughed d.i.c.k Prescott, as he skated slowly along with Laura Bentley.
"The click-clack of the skates is enough for me," Laura replied.
"You are not down in any of the girls" contests, are you?" he asked.