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The automobile was backed out of the woods, and turned in the direction of Rallston. Jack Mason was in his element, and in less than twenty minutes they came in sight of the town and turned into a side street leading to the freight yards.
"There she is!" cried Sam, a minute later.
He pointed to one of the tracks in the yards and there, on a flat car, the boys beheld the wreck of the biplane. A small crowd of curious men and boys surrounded the remains of the Dartaway.
"What yer going to do with her, Jimmy?" asked a man in the crowd, of a burly individual on the flat car.
"I guess the railroad is going to sell her," replied the section boss.
CHAPTER VII
THE SALE OF THE BIPLANE
"Did you hear what that man said?" demanded Sam in a whisper, of his brothers.
"I did," returned d.i.c.k. "But he isn't going to sell our property,"
added Tom, warmly.
"Hardly," responded d.i.c.k. He pushed his way through the crowd and walked straight up to the flat car.
"Who is in charge here?" he demanded.
"What's that?" came in some surprise from the section boss.
"I asked who was in charge of this flat car with this flying machine?"
"What business is that of yours, young fellow?"
"This is our biplane--it belongs to me and my brothers here," and d.i.c.k waved his hand at Tom and Sam.
"Oh! Are you the Rover brothers?"
"Yes. And I want to know what business you had to bring that flying machine here?" went on d.i.c.k sharply, for he saw the kind of a man with whom he had to deal.
"Say, look here, if you've got any kick coming you go to the office with it," cried Jimmy Budley.
"Very well, I will. But I want to know who ordered you to bring that biplane here."
"Never mind; you go to the office and find out."
"You brought it here, didn't you?" asked Tom, who had now come up to d.i.c.k's side, along with the others.
"I ain't answering questions when I don't have to," returned the section boss, with a sneer.
"Sure he brought it here--on this flat car!" cried a man in the crowd. "Why don't you answer the young fellow straight, Jimmy?"
"This biplane belongs to my brothers and me," went on d.i.c.k, as sharply as before. "You had absolutely no right to touch it. If I wished to do so, I could have you arrested for this," he continued.
"Say, I don't allow n.o.body to talk to me like that!" growled the section boss. "You git out of here and see the men at the office."
"We'll not get out!" put in Tom. "This flying machine is ours and we want it."
"You'll take it right back to where you found it," added Sam. "And be careful that you don't break it worse than it is, or you'll foot the bill."
"I won't listen to you!" stormed the section boss, who was of an ugly disposition naturally and not liked in the neighborhood.
"Very well then," answered d.i.c.k. He turned to Stanley. "Will you go out and see if you can find a policeman?" he asked, loudly.
"Sure," returned the college youth, readily.
"Wow! he's goin' to have Budley locked up!" exclaimed a small boy.
"See here, don't you get fresh!" stormed the section boss, eying d.i.c.k angrily.
"We'll have a policeman settle this," answered the oldest Rover boy.
"This is our property, and we can easily prove it. You had no right to touch it."
"I had orders," said Jimmy Budley, doggedly.
"Why don't you telephone to the office, Jimmy?" suggested a friend.
"Maybe there was some mistake."
"Wasn't no mistake," growled the section boss; nevertheless he hopped down from the flat car and hurried in the direction of a shanty wherein was located a telephone. d.i.c.k followed him.
"You can tell them what I said," said the youth; "And they may find it to their interest to call up Mr. Belright Fogg before they give you orders."
"Have you seen Fogg?" demanded the section boss.
"Yes."
"Did he say you could take the machine?"
"He said nothing about our taking it. He settled for what damage the railroad did to the biplane. We went to get our property and found it gone. n.o.body had a right to touch it, excepting to take it from the tracks."
"Huh!" grumbled the section boss, and shot into the shanty, banging the door behind him. d.i.c.k heard him shout something into the telephone, and quite a lengthy conversation ensued.
In the meanwhile Stanley had gone off for a policeman and presently came back with a bluecoat who did duty in the streets beyond the railroad yards.
"Well, what have you got to say about it?" demanded d.i.c.k, when the section ba.s.s came from the shanty and while Stanley and the policeman were approaching. "Do we get our property or not?"
"It's yours," returned the railroad man, and his voice was much milder than before. "They had no right to give me the orders they did."
"What about taking it back?" went on d.i.c.k.