now. Isn't that Mr. Morton's car?'
'Yes, it is,' Frank replied.
Chet's father let him off in front of the Hardy home and the stout boy hurried
to the porch. 'Good morning, Mrs. Hardy. Good morning, Mr. Hardy. Hi,
chums!' he said cheerily. 'Sorry to be late. My dad had a lot of phoning to do
before he left. I was afraid if I'd tried to walk here, I wouldn't have arrived
until tomorrow.'
At this point Mr. Hardy spoke up. 'As I said before, I think you boys should
work in twos. There are only three of you to take care of half the territory.'
The detective suddenly grinned boyishly. 'How about me teaming up with one
of you?'
Frank and Joe looked at their dad in delight. 'You mean it?' Frank cried
out. 'I'll choose you as my partner right now.'
'I have a further suggestion,' the detective said. 'It's not going to take you
fellows more than three hours to cover the area you've laid out. And there's
an additional section I think you might look into.'
'What's that?' Joe inquired.
'Willow Grove. That's a park area, but there's also a lot of tangled
woodland to one side of it. Good place to hide a stolen car.'
Mr. Hardy suggested that the boys meet for a picnic lunch at Willow Grove
and later do some sleuthing in the vicinity. 'That is, provided you haven't
found Chet's jalopy by that time.'
Mrs. Hardy spoke up. 'I'll fix a nice lunch for all of you,' she offered.
'That sure would be swell,' Chet said hastily. 'You make grand picnic
lunches, Mrs. Hardy.'
Frank and Joe liked the plan, and it was decided that the boys would have the
picnic whether or not they had found the jalopy by one o'clock. Mrs. Hardy
said she would relay the news to the other boys when they phoned in.
Chet and Joe set off on the Hardy boys' motorcycles, taking the
twelve-to-three segment on the map. Then Mr. Hardy and Frank drove off for
the three-to-six area.
Hour after hour went by, with the searchers constantly on the alert. Every
garage, public and private, every little-used road, every patch of woods was
thoroughly investigated. There was no sign of Chet's missing yellow jalopy.
Finally at one o'clock Frank and his father returned to the Hardy home. A
few moments later Joe and Chet returned and a huge picnic lunch was
stowed aboard the two motorcycles.
When the three boys reached the picnic area they were required to park their
motorcycles outside the fence. They unstrapped the lunch baskets and carried
them down to the lake front The other boys were already there.
'Too bad we can't go swimming,' Tony remarked, 'but this water's pretty
cold.'
Quickly they unpacked the food and assembled around one of the park picnic
tables.
'Um! Yum! Chicken sandwiches!' Chet cried gleefully.
During the meal the boys exchanged reports on their morning's sleuthing. All
had tried hard but failed to find any trace of the missing car.
'Our work hasn't ended,' Frank reminded the others. 'But I'm so stuffed
I'm going to rest a while before I start out again.'
All the other boys but Joe Hardy felt the same way and lay down on the grass
for a nap. Joe, eager to find out whether or not the woods to their right held
the secret of the missing car, plunged off alone through the underbrush.
He searched for twenty minutes without finding a clue to any automobile. He
was on the point of returning and waiting for the other boys when he saw a
small clearing ahead of him. It appeared to be part of an abandoned
roadway.
Excitedly Joe pushed on through the dense undergrowth. It was in a low-lying
part of the grove and the ground was wet. At one point it was quite muddy,
and it was here that Joe saw something that aroused his curiosity.
'A tire! Then maybe an automobile has been in here,' he muttered to himself,
although there were no tire marks in the immediate vicinity. 'No footprints,
either. I guess someone tossed this tire here.'
Remembering his father's admonitions on the value of developing one's
powers of observation, Joe went closer and examined the tire.
'That tread,' he thought excitedly, 'looks familiar.'
He gazed at it until he was sure, then dashed back to the other boys.
'I've found a clue!' he cried out. 'Come on, everybody!'
CHAPTER VI
The Robbery
JOE HARDY quickly led the way into the swampy area as the other boys
trooped along, everyone talking at once. When they reached the spot, Chet
examined the tire and exclaimed:
'There's no mistake about it! This is one of the tires! When the thief put on
the new one, he threw this away.'
'Perhaps the Queen is still around,' suggested Frank quickly. 'The thief
may have picked this road as a good place to hide your jalopy until he could
make a getaway.'
'It would be an ideal place,' Chet agreed. 'People coming to Willow Grove
have to park at the gate, so nobody would come in here. But this old road
comes in from the main highway. Let's take a look, fellows.'
A scrutinizing search was begun along the abandoned road in the direction of
the highway. A moment later Frank and Chet, in the lead, cried out
simultaneously.
'Here's a bypath! And here are tire marks!' Frank exclaimed. To one side
was a narrow roadway, almost overgrown with weeds and low bushes. It led
from the abandoned road into the depths of the woods.
Without hesitation Frank and Chet plunged into it. Presently the roadway
widened out, then wound about a heavy clump of trees. It came to an end in a
wide clearing.
In the clearing stood Chet Morton's lost jalopy!
'My Queen!' he yelled in delight. 'Her own license plates!'
His shout was heard by the rest of the boys, who came on a run. Chet's joy
was boundless. He examined the car with minute care, while his chums
crowded around. At last he straightened up with a smile of satisfaction.
'She hasn't been damaged a bit. All ready to run. The thief just hid the old
bus in here and made a getaway. Come on, fellows, climb aboard. Free ride
to the highway!'