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Boy Scout Explorers at Emerald Valley

9781465649621
118 pages
Library of Alexandria
Overview
“Only ten more minutes, Jack, and we’ll be off duty. That gives us just time enough to get to the Scout meeting by seven o’clock. I’ll be glad to call it a night too!” Warwick Washburn yawned as he lowered a powerful field glass through which he had scanned the sky for a glimpse of aircraft. He and Jack Hartwell, a companion Boy Scout and Explorer, were nearing the end of a two hour trick at the Civilian Defense observation tower. Few planes had passed overhead and there had been no activity to break the monotonous vigil. “Oh, it hasn’t been so tough,” returned Jack cheerfully. He was a lean, friendly youth, deeply tanned because he had spent practically all of his spare hours out-of-doors. “Our work is needed here as a protection against unexpected enemy attack. I’m glad to help, even if it is tedious to perch on this tower platform.” “I’m not kicking,” said War. “Don’t get me wrong. These observation posts are necessary to cover gaps in our radar system. Only I wish more planes would pass over.” “You’d like an enemy attack, or at least a little mystery and intrigue,” chuckled Jack. “That trip we made to Peru gave you a taste for adventure!” “It did at that,” the other agreed. “After weeks of exciting life in the wilds, Belton City seems a bit tame.” “Particularly this observation post?” “Well, we’ve been reporting the movement of planes for several months now, Jack. I sure wish a little excitement would come our way again!” “Maybe we’re looking in the wrong direction.” Warwick stared at his friend, surprised by the remark. “The wrong direction?” he echoed. “What d’you mean?” Jack relieved him of the field glass, focussing it on the entrance road of a nearby cemetery. The tower platform also offered an unobstructed view of the Pablo Automobile plant adjoining the burial ground. “What do you see?” War asked as his chum remained silent. “Any ghosts moving around?” “It’s that old automobile again,” Jack reported. “This makes four times in the last month that I’ve seen it turn into that cemetery road.” “You’ve got that car on the brain, boy!” War scoffed, losing interest. “Forget it and stick to airplanes.” “Okay,” Jack agreed, again training the glass on an expanse of sky. “All the same, it strikes me as queer that the car keeps coming back time after time.” For weeks, Jack had amused fellow members of Explorers Post 21 by his constant reference to a mysterious automobile. Not only had he called attention to it repeatedly, but he had noted down the license number, LC 1478. The car was a seven-year old model, driven by a man who wore workman’s clothes. Jack had pointed out that the car always appeared at the cemetery entrance just at dusk or a trifle later. Furthermore, the driver nearly always parked close to the main highway, proceeding through the trees afoot. Where he went the Scouts never had learned, for foliage blocked their view. But after ten to twenty minutes, he always reappeared and drove away.