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One of the tires had burst.
CHAPTER XV
AN AUTOMOBILING ADVENTURE
"What did you run over?" asked Sam.
"Look for yourself," returned his big brother. "This is an outrage! I wish I could catch the party responsible for it," he added bitterly.
d.i.c.k had stopped the touring car in the midst of a quant.i.ty of broken gla.s.s bottles. The gla.s.s covered the road from side to side, and had evidently been put there on purpose.
"Say, do you think that chauffeur had anything to do with this?"
demanded Tom.
"Hardly," answered d.i.c.k. "If his story about the fire was not true he'd know he'd be found out."
"Maybe it was done by some country fellow who is running an auto repair shop," suggested Sam. "I've heard of such things being done--when business was dull."
"Well, we'll have to fix the tire, that is all there is to it," said the oldest Rover. "Might as well get out while we are doing it," he added to the girls.
"Lucky you stopped when you did," said Tom as he walked around the machine. "If you hadn't we might have had all four tires busted."
"What a contemptible trick to play," said Dora as she alighted,
"Can you mend the tire?" asked Nellie as she, too, got out, followed by her sister.
"Oh, yes, we can mend it--or rather put on another," said d.i.c.k. "But we'll examine all the tires first," he added, taking off a lamp for that purpose.
It was found that each tire had some gla.s.s in it, and the bits were picked out with care. While this was going on d.i.c.k suddenly swung the lamp around so that its rays struck through the trees and bushes lining the roadway.
"Look! look!" he cried. "There is somebody watching us!"
"The fellow who is guilty," added Sam.
"Catch him!" came from Tom, and he made a quick rush forward.
"Say, we've got to get out of here," came in a low voice from among the trees. "Run for all you are worth!"
"I told you to get back," said another voice "Come on this way."
A cras.h.i.+ng through the brushwood back of the trees followed. d.i.c.k held up the lamp and threw the rays in the direction of the sounds. He and his brothers caught a glimpse of two boys or men hurrying away.
"Stop, or I'll shoot!" cried Tom, although he had no weapon at his command. But this cry only made the fleeing ones move the faster.
"Sam, you stay with the girls," said d.i.c.k quickly. "Tom and I can go after those rascals."
"All right, but take care; they may be dangerous," answered the youngest Rover.
Tom had picked up a good sized stone. Now he hurled it ahead into the bushes. A cry of alarm followed, but whether he hit anybody or not he could not till.
Holding the lamp so that it would light up the scene ahead, d.i.c.k and Tom ran through the grove of trees and then into the thicket of brushwood beyond. They could hear two persons working their way along, and knew they must be the fellows they were after. Once they caught sight of the rascals, but the evildoers lost no time in seeking cover by running for another patch of undergrowth.
"Say, this is fierce!" cried Tom as he stepped into a hole and tumbled headlong.
"Well, it's just as bad for those fellows," answered d.i.c.k grimly.
"Yes, but I reckon they are not dressed up as we are," Tom had on his tuxedo and a white tie, and d.i.c.k was similarly attired. But over the dress suit each wore a linen coat, b.u.t.toned close up to the neck.
The two youths kept on until, much to their surprise, they came out on a back road that was almost as good as the highway they had left. Here was a rail fence, and as they halted at this Tom pointed down the road a distance.
"Somebody on wheels," he cried. "Turn the light on 'em!"
d.i.c.k did as requested, and to their astonishment they beheld two young fellows on bicycles. They had their heads bent low over the handlebars, and were streaking along at top speed. Soon a bend of the road hid them from view.
"Those are the chaps who put that gla.s.s in the roadway," said Tom.
"I believe you," answered his brother. "They came up here on their wheels and walked through the woods to do it. The question is, who are they?"
"They are enemies of ours," was the prompt answer.
"Yes; but how did they know we were coming this way, and in the auto?"
"They might have overheard us talking to Songbird or Stanley."
"Can they be Flockley and Koswell?"
"More likely Koswell and Larkspur. Flockley hasn't the backbone to do a thing like this, He's too much of a dude."
d.i.c.k and Tom took a look around the vicinity. By the light of the lamp they saw where the others had leaped the fence and mounted their bicycles.
"They are the guilty ones, I am sure of that," said d.i.c.k. "I wish we had seen their faces."
The youths went back to the auto and told of their adventure. Sam and the girls listened with interest to what they had to say.
"Those boys must be very wicked," said Nellie. "If we had been running fast we might have had a serious accident."
"Shall you accuse them of it?" asked Dora.
"I don't know. I'll think it over," answered d.i.c.k.
"The cut-up tire has got to be paid for," said Tom. "Whoever is guilty ought to be made to foot the bill."
While d.i.c.k and Sam jacked up the axle of the automobile and put on a new tire--inner tube and shoe combined--Sam set to work and cleaned up the roadway, throwing all the gla.s.s into the bushes. Then the new tire was pumped up and tested.