The Rover Boys on a Hunt; or, The Mysterious House in the Woods. Stratemeyer Edward

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Название The Rover Boys on a Hunt; or, The Mysterious House in the Woods
Автор произведения Stratemeyer Edward
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isbn 4064066240899



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Garrison. With Glutts were Codfish, Carncross, and three other of the bully's cronies.

      "Gee! I wish I was in that race," came from Will Hendry, who, on account of his unusual stoutness, was always called Fatty.

      "Nothing doing, Fatty," remarked Dan Soppinger, another cadet. "You'd make the Rovers lose sure."

      "All ready?" questioned Walt Baxter, who had been settled on as the starter of the race.

      "All ready," answered Jack Rover, after a glance around to see that nothing was out of order.

      "Been ready half an hour," grumbled Bill Glutts.

      "All right, then!" cried Walt. "One—two—three—go!"

      As he finished Fred Rover, who was at the rear of the Blue Moon, gave that bobsled a quick push and leaped aboard. At the same time Carncross sent the Yellow Streak forward and also sprang to his seat. Then, side by side, the two bobsleds moved down the long hill, slowly at first, but gradually gathering speed.

      It was five o'clock of an afternoon in early December, and consequently quite dark, even on the snow-clad hills. Many of the smaller children, and also the girls, had gone home, leaving the place to the cadets and a few others.

      "I hope we win this," remarked Randy, as the two sleds continued to speed forward side by side.

      "Of course we'll win it," came promptly from Gif Garrison.

      "We've got to win it!" added Fred Rover.

      "If you don't win Bill Glutts will never stop crowing over you," put in Spouter Powell.

      "Hi, there, Glutts! Keep to your side of the run," warned Jack suddenly. The Yellow Streak had swerved over well into the middle of the road.

      "I know what I'm doing," growled Glutts. "You tend to your own business."

      "Well, you know the rules," warned Jack. "You keep over on your own side. If you don't there'll be trouble."

      "Humph! you don't have to tell me what to do," growled the other cadet; and then, striking a bit of extra smooth roadway, the Yellow Streak bounded ahead, much to the delight of its riders.

      "Hurrah! here is where we leave them behind," sang out Codfish.

      "Nothing to it but the shouting," added another of Bill Glutts' cronies.

      "We'll be a mile ahead by the time we reach the lake," exulted Nick Carncross.

      For half a minute it looked as if his prophecy might be true. The Yellow Streak was gliding over the icy surface of the long hill, and consequently going ahead, while the Blue Moon struck several soft spots where going was anything but good.

      "Oh, Jack! can't you pull out of this?" queried Gif Garrison anxiously. "Pull over to the left where the going is harder. It's too soft here entirely."

      "I'm sticking to my side of the road, just as I was expected to do," said Jack grimly.

      The Yellow Streak disappeared over the first rise, and for a few seconds was lost to view. But then the Blue Moon came along, and beyond this rise found going somewhat easier. Slowly but surely they crawled up behind the other bobsled.

      "Keep to your side of the road, Glutts!" yelled Jack, in a second warning. "If you don't, there'll be trouble."

      "And you'll get the worst of it," added Randy.

      "I know what I'm doing," retorted Glutts. He had found the snow somewhat soft on his side of the road, and was now running near the center, and occasionally crowding to Jack's side.

      "We'll run into 'em sure!" came from Spouter Powell in alarm. "Look out, Jack!"

      "Look out!" echoed Fred.

      "Over on your own side, or we'll smash you, Glutts!" yelled Jack, for the Blue Moon had suddenly found going much easier and was forging forward rapidly. "Get out of the way!"

      The call was so peremptory that Glutts felt bound to obey. He swerved to his side of the road, and with not a second to spare, for almost instantly the Blue Moon shot past and continued down the slope toward the lake.

      "We win! we win!" yelled Andy gayly.

      "But the Yellow Streak is just behind us!" cried Spouter, looking back. "Here they come!"

      "Yes, and on our side of the road, too!" cried Fred, in alarm. He turned his head still further around. "Glutts, get to your own side!"

      "Aw, dry up!" cried the other cadet, in disgust. "You don't have to act as if you owned the whole road."

      "You know the rules of the race," flung back Fred.

      Crossing the highway which skirted the lake was not so easy, and beyond this the snow was rather deep, and consequently the speed of the Blue Moon was slackened. The Yellow Streak came dangerously close, and then Bill Glutts seemed to lose his head completely. He slued around to his own side of the road, but made such a short turn that in a twinkling the long bobsled was upset and the occupants hurled in all directions.

      "There they go! They are upset!" yelled Fred. And then he lost sight of those left behind as the Blue Moon shot out on the surface of the lake and beyond the mark set for the end of the race.

      "We win! we win!" cried Andy, leaping from the bobsled, and in the exuberance of his spirits he turned a handspring in the snow.

      "What happened to the other sled?" asked Jack, who had been so busy steering the Blue Moon he had paid little attention to what had been going on behind.

      "They had a spill," answered Fred. "But before they took it they came pretty close to running into us."

      "It was up to them to keep to their side of the road," said Gif Garrison. "Why, we might have had a terrible accident if they had run into us!"

      There were about a dozen boys on the lake who had witnessed the finish of the race, and these, along with those who had come down on the Blue Moon, now turned back to see what had happened to the Glutts party. They found the cadets who had been spilled picking themselves up and brushing the snow from their garments. One was nursing a bruised ankle, and another a bruised elbow, while Bill Glutts was wiping some blood from a scratch on his chin.

      "Well, we won the race," said Jack briefly. He had no desire to crow over his opponents.

      "Huh! you didn't win it fairly," growled Glutts, glaring at him.

      "Didn't win it fairly!" exclaimed Jack. "What do you mean by that?"

      "I mean you got in our way so we couldn't get past you—that's what I mean!" growled the other.

      "That is false, Glutts, and you know it," retorted the oldest Rover boy.

      "See here, Jack Rover! you can't talk to me in that fashion," roared Bill Glutts. He had been in a more or less bad humor all the afternoon, and the defeat had not improved his temper. "I say you got in my way, and that is why I lost the race."

      "And I say your statement isn't true," returned Jack sturdily.

      "It is true! And I won't let you or anybody else say any different," said Bill Glutts. And then, in sudden passion, he stepped forward and gave Jack a shove which sent the oldest Rover boy flat on his back in a snowbank.

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      The attack upon Jack Rover was so unexpected that he had no chance to save himself from going down into the snowbank.