CHAPTER VIII

  PROFESSOR SNODGRASS

  Momentary silence followed the rather disconcerting remark made by Nedafter his discovery. Then Jerry asked:

  “Are you sure about that? Look around. Maybe there’s another sign-boardsomewhere else that gives information about Fordham.”

  “This is the only one there is,” declared Ned, flashing his lightabout, “and it doesn’t intimate that such a place as Fordham evenexists.”

  “Then we must have come the wrong road!” exclaimed Bob.

  “Oh, fine! How’d you guess it? That’s a brilliant head you have!” saidNed, rather sarcastically.

  “Well, it isn’t my fault,” observed Bob. “I wasn’t guiding the car.”

  “No, I s’pose it’s up to me,” admitted Jerry. “Though I’m sure I tookthe turn that last fellow we asked told us to take.”

  “Yes, you did all right,” agreed Ned. “It was that farmer whomisdirected us. I beg your pardon, Bob, for jumping at you that way.But it makes me mad to think we’ve gotten on the wrong road, and wewon’t get to Boxwood until after supper.”

  “Getting hungry?” asked Jerry. “That’s Chunky’s role, you know.”

  “Roll or bread--I’d be glad of either,” said Ned. “Yes, I am hungry. Ididn’t eat as much lunch as you fellows did. Now go ahead, Bob, and layit into me. I deserve it.”

  Bob reached under the rear seat and held up a package.

  “I’ll lay this into you, Ned,” he laughed.

  “What is it?” asked the complaining one.

  “Grub! Sandwiches, cake and so on.”

  “Grub!” Jerry exclaimed. “Where’d you get it?”

  “Oh, I had the waiter in the restaurant put it up for me. I thought wemight get hungry before supper, but I didn’t think we would get lost.It’ll come in handy, won’t it?”

  “It’ll come in stomachicly, to coin a new word,” declared Ned. “Chunky,if ever I say anything again about your eats, just you remind me ofthis occasion.”

  “All right,” agreed the stout youth.

  “Well, we won’t starve, that’s sure,” Jerry said. “But the question iswhich road are we to take?”

  “Neither one of these, I vote,” said Bob. “They don’t go where we wantto go. I say, let’s go back until we get to another cross highway, andthat may have a sign on that we didn’t notice before which will directus to Fordham.”

  “I guess Bob’s right,” conceded Jerry. “Back we go.”

  “And we can eat on the way,” Bob went on; and neither of his chumsjoked him this time.

  Somewhat disappointed and chagrined at the outcome of their automobiletrip, or rather, at the prospective outcome, the boys put back. Theyhad counted on arriving at Boxwood Hall in some “style” with their bigcar. Not that the three chums cared so much about showing off, but theyfelt they had a right to make a certain impression, since, according topresent plans, they were to remain at the college for some time.

  But now they would arrive after dark, and they would be met by strangeprofessors and college officials (all save Professor Snodgrass), theywould be late for supper, and would have no chance to view the collegeuntil morning.

  “Hang that farmer, anyhow!” murmured Jerry.

  “I wish he had to go without his suppers for a week,” added Ned.

  “Oh, we’re not so badly off,” declared Bob, as he was munching asandwich.

  “Bob wouldn’t want any one condemned to go without food,” said Jerry.“Well, I suppose it was my own fault in a way. I should have consultedthe map after that fellow told us which turn to take. We’ll know betternext time.”

  “There’s a house,” remarked Ned. “Suppose we inquire there.”

  “No!” decided Jerry. “That’s a farmer’s house, and I won’t trust anymore farmers. I’ll go on back to the last turn we made. There’s agarage not far from there, and they’ll know the road, that’s sure.”

  It was not a long ride back to the place where Jerry felt they had madethe wrong turn, and a few minutes more took them to the garage. But itwas now quite dark.

  “Fordham--um, yes,” said the garage man, reflectively. “I should sayyou _did_ take the wrong turn!”

  “Well, please tell us how to take the right one,” begged Jerry.

  “The right one happens to be a left one,” said the man with a laugh.Then he gave them the proper directions, and said they ought to be atBoxwood Hall in about an hour.

  “Come on!” cried Ned, as they started away once more. “On with thedance!”

  “Speaking of dances, I wonder if they ever have any at the college?”asked Bob, reflectively.

  “Sure they do!” exclaimed Ned, who of late had taken up fox-trotting.“Didn’t the catalogue say that all proper facilities were given for thebest social life. And what is social life, I’d like to know, without adance now and then?”

  “I guess you’ll get your share of it,” remarked Jerry, his eyes onthe road ahead, for it was an unfamiliar one to him, and, though thegarage man had said it was a fine, straight highway, Jerry was takingno chances. The powerful electric lights made a fine illumination farahead.

  Now it might have been reasonably expected that Fate, if you chooseto call it such, having dealt our heroes one blow, would refrain fromgiving them another, at least for a while. But it was not to be.

  About a half hour after having left the garage they came to anobstruction across the road. It was in the form of a big sawhorse suchas is used in cities to block streets when repair work is being done.From the barrier hung a red lantern.

  “Hello! What does this mean?” asked Jerry, bringing the car up with ascreeching of brakes.

  “Looks like danger,” observed Bob.

  “There’s some kind of a sign,” said Ned. “I’ll get out and read it.”

  With his pocket flashlight he inspected a placard that was tacked onthe big sawhorse.

  “It says the bridge just ahead is being repaired, and can’t be used,”Ned called back to his chums. “And it says to go back half a mile, andtake the road to the left.”

  “Well, if this isn’t luck!” cried Jerry. “Will we ever get to BoxwoodHall?”

  “There’s no help for it,” remarked Ned. “We can’t go over a dangerousbridge, that’s sure. The only thing to do is to go back. It won’t delayus much, as the road the sign mentions isn’t a five minutes’ ride back.”

  “No, but it may take us on a roundabout way,” objected Jerry. “That’swhat I’m thinking of. But I guess it’s the only thing we can do. Ireckon the garage man didn’t know about the bridge.”

  So back they turned for the second time, and, following the directions,they took the road to the left, speeding along as fast as they dared.

  “Who proposed this auto trip, anyhow?” grumbled Ned.

  “I did,” confessed Jerry. “But I guess it would have been better tohave come by train, and have had a chauffeur bring our car on later.I’m sorry, fellows, that----”

  “Oh, it’s all right,” Ned hastened to say. “I was only joking. I don’tknow what’s the matter with me to-night. I seem to be on the outs allaround.”

  “It’s your liver,” said Jerry with a laugh. “I don’t hold it againstyou.”

  “Fox-trotting is good for it,” observed Bob.

  “Good for what?” demanded Ned.

  “Sluggish and torpid livers. I guess that’s what you’ve got.”

  “Get out!” laughed Ned. “I only have one liver.”

  They sped along, and presently a new moon showed above the horizon,shining now and then through the masses of scudding clouds. The roadwas good, and Jerry had turned the wheel over to Ned, as the latter hadnot driven much that day, and Jerry was rather tired from the strain.

  They came to the top of a little hill, and saw, not far away, a groupof buildings revealed in the moonlight.

  “There she is!” exclaimed Bob. “There’s Boxwood Hall!”

  Jerry and Ned peered at the structures.

/>   “It doesn’t look like the pictures,” declared Ned, dubiously.

  “Just what I was going to say,” remarked Jerry. “It doesn’t look a bitlike Boxwood Hall.”

  “What else could it be?” asked Bob.

  “I don’t know, unless some of the buildings have been destroyed sincethat catalogue came out. But if that had happened Professor Snodgrasswould have told us,” Ned declared.

  “Well, we’ll see in a few minutes,” observed Jerry.

  They motored on until they came to where a gateway at the roadside ledup to the group of buildings they had noticed, and then, in the glareof their headlights they read over the arch:

  KENWELL MILITARY ACADEMY

  For a moment no one spoke. Then Jerry burst out with:

  “Well, what in the world is happening to us?”

  “We’re jinxed!” cried Ned.

  Bob said nothing.

  “Why don’t you add to the general hilarity?” asked Jerry.

  “Well, I--I’m--stumped!” murmured the stout lad.

  “If that’s all you can think of to say you might better have keptstill,” laughed Ned. “We sure have been up against it to-day!”

  “About as bad luck as we ever had,” admitted Jerry. “Still it might beworse.”

  “The worst is yet to come,” quoted Bob, with a laugh. They all joinedin, for, after all, there was a funny side to the whole thing.

  “Did that sign where the red lantern was say the left road went toFordham?” asked Jerry.

  “No, it didn’t say that,” admitted Ned. “But it didn’t say anythingabout any other road. There wasn’t any choice.”

  “Well, I’m going to get this straight now,” said Jerry, in a determinedtone. “I’m going up to that academy and get them to draw us a plan ofthe right road to take. No more mistakes for me!”

  “Here’s some one coming now,” remarked Bob. Into the glare of theheadlights came a man. He stepped to one side, to get out of the toobrilliant illumination.

  “Excuse me, sir,” said Jerry, “but we are trying to find Boxwood Hall,near Fordham. Can you direct us to it?”

  “Boxwood Hall! Of course I can. I am an instructor there, but I havehad the misfortune to----”

  Something in the voice caused the boys to give a simultaneous shout of:

  “Professor Snodgrass! It’s Professor Snodgrass!”

 
Clarence Young's Novels
»The Motor Boys Under the Sea; or, From Airship to Submarineby Clarence Young
»Dorothy Dixon and the Mystery Planeby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys Afloat; or, The Stirring Cruise of the Dartawayby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys on a Ranch; or, Ned, Bob and Jerry Among the Cowboysby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys Over the Ocean; Or, A Marvelous Rescue in Mid-Airby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys on Road and River; Or, Racing To Save a Lifeby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys in the Army; or, Ned, Bob and Jerry as Volunteersby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys on the Border; Or, Sixty Nuggets of Goldby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys in Strange Waters; or, Lost in a Floating Forestby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys Across the Plains; or, The Hermit of Lost Lakeby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys Overland; Or, A Long Trip for Fun and Fortuneby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys After a Fortune; or, The Hut on Snake Islandby Clarence Young
»Ned, Bob and Jerry at Boxwood Hall; Or, The Motor Boys as Freshmenby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys on the Wing; Or, Seeking the Airship Treasureby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys Bound for Home; or, Ned, Bob and Jerry on the Wrecked Troopshipby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys in Mexico; Or, The Secret of the Buried Cityby Clarence Young
»The Golden Boys and Their New Electric Cellby Clarence Young
»The Kangaroo Hunters; Or, Adventures in the Bushby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys in the Clouds; or, A Trip for Fame and Fortuneby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys on the Atlantic; or, The Mystery of the Lighthouseby Clarence Young