Read The Bombay Boomerang Online

Authors: Franklin W. Dixon

The Bombay Boomerang (3 page)

Joe spun on his toes and headed for the door. He was quick, but not quick enough. Beret stepped in front of him. Tall and beefy, he flexed his powerful shoulders, raising his long arms in a wrestler's stance.
“Come on,” he barked. “I'm itching to take care of you. Next time you bob up, it'll be in the bay, and you'll be as dead as an iced mackerel!”
CHAPTER III
The Hotel Caper
 
 
 
 
SUDDENLY the door splintered inward with a terrific crash, dislodging the lock. Biff and Tony hurtled into the room.
“Sorry we haven't been introduced,” Tony said to the beefy character, “but I imagine we'll get to know one another real fast!”
“It's all a question of timing,” Biff quipped. “To wit, ten minutes!”
Joe covered his relief with a whimsical remark. “We were about to have a ball, just the four of us.”
“A brawl!” Frank corrected him.
“A real go-round,” Biff added, “only our invitations never arrived. Anyway, the party's over.”
The two men were caught off balance. Snap Brim, who had lowered his fist, recovered first. “Okay,” he snarled at the Hardys. “So you've got a bodyguard. But next time may be different! And there's sure gonna be a next time! We're not through with you by a long shot, or with your old man, either! You can tell him that!”
Frank, Joe, Biff, and Tony stepped past the door which was crazily swinging on its hinges. The desk clerk, who had heard the noise and came upstairs, looked at them uncomprehendingly as they walked past him and out of the hotel.
“That caper had a happy ending,” Tony remarked.
“I wouldn't be too sure it's ended,” Frank warned. “The curtain hasn't gone up on act two yet.”
A series of rapid-fire explosions dented their eardrums. Down the street chugged an antiquated jalopy—fire—engine red, bucking like a bronco and backfiring explosively with nearly every revolution of the cylinders.
Roly-poly Chet Morton guided his favorite vehicle to a stop at the curb and jumped out. “I've just been to your house,” he said. “Your mother says your dad phoned from Baltimore. She looked so worried, I think there's something brewing. You're to contact your father before you do anything else.”
The Hardys glanced up at the second floor of the hotel and spotted a scowling face at the window of the room they had just left. Beret stared down on them, a slightly baffled expression on his face.
Had he heard Chet's booming voice clearly enough to understand the message from Fenton Hardy? If so, it could mean trouble, and plenty of it!
Biff came up with an idea. “Suppose I stay here to keep an eye on these birds? If they come out, I'll tail them. That'll give you a chance to go home and put in that call to Baltimore. We'll meet here later and compare notes.”
“I'll keep you company,” Tony suggested. “Just in case you need some reinforcement.”
“Good thought,” Frank said. “Let's go.”
“I'll take you in my car,” Chet offered.
“And arrive with an aching back!” Joe groaned.
Everybody ragged Chet Morton about his bone-rattling car. But he wheeled it around the busy streets of Bayport, and boasted a good safety record, partly because pedestrians and motorists who heard him coming got out of the way.
Right now the Hardys were glad to have Chet give them a lift to their house. While Chet went into the kitchen looking for one of Aunt Gertrude's specialties which were usually available, Frank dialed the number of his father's hotel. The detective answered almost immediately.
“Let me call you right back,” he said. “Stand by!”
A few minutes later the phone rang. Frank picked it up, while Joe ran upstairs to the study to listen in on the extension.
“I didn't want this call to go through the switchboard here,” Mr. Hardy explained. “Someone might eavesdrop on us.”
“Dad, what's going on?” Frank wanted to know.
“Well, not too much on my end,” his father replied. “However, I'm not discouraged. I picked up a few leads that are worth checking out. Right now I'm posing as a hood. It's the best disguise for undercover operations along the waterfront where hoods hang out.”
Frank interjected, “Do you realize that the mercury gang is on to you? They came to our house hoping to find you here. And when we went to their hotel to check up on them, they got violent over your part in the case. Said to get off their backs—or else!”
The news surprised Mr. Hardy, who listened grimly to Frank's detailed account of the events that afternoon.
“Obviously word has gotten around that I'm working on the case. You and Joe better watch your step as long as those two mugs are loose in Bayport. It was a good idea to have Biff tail them. Perhaps they'll lead him to something.”
“I hope so. What's your next step, Dad?”
“Well, I'm not exactly in the safest spot here. The thieves might even know that Hardy and Marks are the same man.”
“If that guy in the hotel heard Chet mention that you're in Baltimore, they might put two and two together!” Frank said.
“They might and they might not. I have no choice but to continue as L. Marks and play it by ear.”
Frank and his father batted the details around to be sure of covering all angles. Finally Mr. Hardy said, “The Bayport pair look like our best bet right now. They probably rank on a lower echelon of the organization and receive strong-arm assignments from the top. They might lead you to the ringleader. Try not to let them shake you and tail them wherever they go.”
“Right. I'm sure Biff and Tony will help, too.”
“Okay. But at the same time you'd better get the police to back you up. Tell the whole story to Chief Collig. He'll know what to do.”
“What about the boomerang bit?” Frank asked, changing the subject.
“That's why I called in the first place. I talked with Admiral Rodgers at the Pentagon. He's very concerned about what you boys heard when Joe made that wrong call to Washington. But he wouldn't give me much information over the phone. Says the matter is top-level security stuff, too hush-hush to discuss outside his office.”
“Are you going to see him personally, then?”
“I can't leave Baltimore with the mercury gang on my hands. However, I've made an appointment for you and Joe to meet him. Be at his office tomorrow morning.”
“Will do.”
“If your friends can't take over the surveillance of the Bayport hoods during that time, Chief Collig will.”
“No problem,” Frank said.
“So long then. Good luck, and be careful!”
The phone clicked on the other end. Joe came down again and observed that the mystery was thicker than ever. “Which,” he continued, “is all the more reason for us to pitch in and give Dad all the help we can.”
“Exactly. Let's go to headquarters right away.” They went to the kitchen to tell Chet, who was enjoying a piece of Aunt Gertrude's fresh-baked apple pie.
“Be a sport and drive us over to see Chief Collig,” Frank said.
“Whatever you say.” Chet stuffed the last bite into his mouth and followed the Hardys outside. A few minutes later they reached their destination.
“Have to double-park,” Chet declared. “You two go ahead. I'll wait for you here.”
Seconds later Frank and Joe confronted Chief Collig in his office. He was an old-timer who had worked his way up on the force. He understood criminals because he had collared his share, and often assisted the Hardys in their cases.
“Sit down, boys,” he said with a smile, “and tell me what brings you here. A new case, I suppose. That's what comes of having a detective for a father. Maybe you should listen to your Aunt Gertrude more often. She'd find another occupation for you, double-quick!”
The chief stopped kidding, however, when Frank and Joe gave him the facts.
“I'll put two of my men on the case. They can stake out the hotel and check up on those characters.”
He made a brief phone call and talked to one of his officers. Then he turned to the boys again.
“Let me have the address and descriptions of the men.”
Frank complied.
Collig wrote it down and added, “Tell Biff Hooper to stay there until a green Ford arrives. If he has already left, call me.”
“Thanks, Chief.”
Chet drove the Hardys back to the hotel. Biff and Tony were still parked in the side street, keeping an eagle eye on the entrance.
“Anything stirring?” Frank queried.
“Not even a mouse,” Biff reported. “I've been staring at that door until I'm cross-eyed.”
“Our friends are still inside, no doubt,” Tony added.
“Let's make sure,” Frank suggested.
He and Joe went into the building. Strolling casually up to the desk, they questioned the clerk about the two suspects.
To their amazement they had checked out. “Paid their bill and left by the back way about an hour ago. They didn't leave a forwarding address,” the clerk added with obvious relish at the Hardys' disappointment.
They returned to the car to tell their friends what had happened. Biff and Tony were crestfallen, blaming themselves for flubbing a critical assignment.
“Think we should investigate the desk clerk?” Biff inquired. “He's a slippery fish, a definite suspect as far as I'm concerned.”
“Trouble is,” Frank replied, “there's no evidence against him. He's about as amiable as a porcupine, but that's no crime. We can always move in on him later.”
“Now what?” Joe asked.
“We better call Chief Collig and cancel the backup squad,” Frank said. “Or, on second thought, let's wait till they get here and ask them to check out the room. Maybe we'll find a clue.”
“Good idea,” Joe agreed.
Soon an unmarked police car arrived and two officers jumped out. Frank quickly explained the situation, and asked if he and Joe could join in the search.
“Sure. Come on,” one of the men said and went to the desk. He showed his badge and they were admitted to the room. Their search, however, was unsuccessful. The pair had left nothing!
Dismayed, all four boys returned home. Frank and Joe spent the rest of the afternoon reconstructing the apparently unrelated events that had occurred with such swiftness. There were so many puzzles that didn't make sense—the Bombay Boomerang, the Super S data, the Bayport suspects.
“I don't know where to begin fitting the pieces together!” Joe groaned.
Before his brother could answer, they were startled by a solid object that crashed through a window pane and landed on the carpet amid a shower of glass.
“Chet again?” Frank complained. “Isn't he getting a little out of hand with his boomerangs?”
“Hold it!” Joe interrupted. “That's no boomerang!” He picked up the object, which turned out to be a heavy bolt with a piece of paper wrapped around it, held in place by a rubber band.
Joe spread the paper out on the table. Frank peered over his shoulder. With mounting excitement they read a message written in crude letters approximately an inch high. It was a warning that gave them cold chills.
WE KNOW ALL ABOUT YOU! SPLIT OUT OR
YOU'LL WIND UP IN A CEMENT BARREL!
CHAPTER IV
The Battered Car
 
 
 
 
“WHAT'S that?” asked a nervous voice behind the boys. Aunt Gertrude had rushed in to see who had broken the window.
“Just another message,” Frank replied, trying to soothe her. “It's hardly worth mentioning.”
But her inquisitive eyes had already scanned the words on the paper. “I believe they mean it!” she retorted in frightened tones. “You'd better drop the case right now. I'm not interested in going to a funeral—least of all mine!”
Joe slipped the bolt into his pocket, then phoned Baltimore and asked to speak to L. Marks.
“He checked out,” said the hotel clerk. “Packed his bags, paid his bill, and left without giving us any forwarding address. Seemed to be in a hurry.”
“Dad must be on to a hot lead,” Frank declared. “That would explain why he departed so suddenly. Besides, if he had run into any trouble, he'd have left a code message for us.”
Joe nodded thoughtfully. “Let's hope he contacts us before we fly to Washington tomorrow morning.”
“Meanwhile, we might as well enjoy ourselves tonight,” Frank suggested. “It's almost time to start for Phil's.”
The boys went upstairs to tell their mother that they were leaving. Laura Hardy said she was relieved that for once nothing dangerous was involved. Aunt Gertrude sniffed, saying that her nephews were able to find danger wherever they went.
“You look for it hard enough!” she accused them sternly.
Frank and Joe chuckled as they headed for their convertible. Just then a shiny new car pulled into the driveway. It belonged to a friend of Mrs. Hardy.
“Good evening, Mrs. Jackson,” Joe greeted the woman at the wheel. “Here, let me help you out.”
“Nice little runabout you have there,” Frank added admiringly.
“That's a compliment,” Mrs. Jackson said with a smile. “I selected it myself. One drive around the block, and I was hooked. It's a gift from my husband for our wedding anniversary, so you can bet I'll take good care of it!”
She went into the house, and Frank and Joe drove to Phil's. Callie and Iola were already there, along with Biff, Tony and Chet, and most of their friends.

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