by John Blaine
CHAPTER VII
The Frostola Man
Rick Brant was filled with cold anger. It showed in the determined set of his lips as he swung Dr. Miller’s car around the turn leading to the bridge across the creek. He was no longer content to wait for developments. After last night’s episode, he and Scotty intended to take the war to the enemy-for war it had become, the moment the Blue Ghost had led them on the wild-goose chase ending with Rick in a deep quarry.
It was pure luck that Rick had not been hurt by the drop into the quarry. True, the ghost had led them to the side that dropped sheer into the water, but impact with the water after a fifty-foot drop was enough to cause damage if one landed in the wrong position.
Rick had hit feet first, simply by chance.
Scotty looked at him as the car turned toward the picnic grounds. “Aren’t we going to town?”
“Sure. But I want another look at the landscape.”
“What do you expect to see?”
“I don’t know,” Rick admitted. “I’m just hoping for an idea.”
He drove through the trees, across the picnic ground, and came to a stop before the mine shaft. There was no one in sight, and the grounds were just as they had left them.
Rick studied the scene, searching for anything offbeat,any anomaly. There was nothing, except for the iron pipe from which spring water flowed. That bothered him. Dr. Miller’s explanation might be the right one, but he didn’t really think so. If tailings from the mine had been dumped there, the hill would not be so steep or so regular. The years would have weathered the rock debris, but not to such a natural-looking formation.
“If they didn’t dump the tailings there,” he thought aloud, “where did they dump them?”
“Tailings?”Scotty prompted.
“Rock from the mine.Stuff with no ore in it, or such low-grade stuff that it was worthless.”
“I see. Well, they didn’t dump it in sight. But they couldn’t have dumped it far from here. It wouldn’t be sensible to cart worthless rock away any distance.”
They hadn’t used the tailings for roads around the mine. The roads were natural dirt, with good drainage and no sign of rock ballast. Rick tried to imagine another use, but couldn’t, until Scotty spoke.
“Suppose they used up all the rocks throwing them at the Yankee soldiers?”Scotty asked whimsically.
The question started a train of thought that gave Rick the answer in a few seconds.
“You’ve hit it. They didn’t throw the rocks, but they used them against the Yankees. I’ll bet on it. Come on.”
He got out of the car and led the way through the trees to where the creek flowed on its quiet way. There were low embankments a few yards back from the water’s edge.
“There are the rocks.”
“Where?”Scotty couldn’t see them. “I don’t see nary a rock.”
“In the embankments, covered with dirt.See? There’s a place where the dirt cover has
been washed away by the rain. I’ve seen defenses like this before. They used rocks as a base, filled in the cracks with clay,then put dirt on top and planted grass to hold it. That gave them a permanent earthwork.”
“Why plant grass?” Scotty wanted to know.
“To fool enemy reconnaissance, I guess. I can’t think of any other reason, except to prevent erosion. In those days scouting was done by cavalry, and from the other side of the river these look like natural grassy banks.”
Inspection of the embankment disclosed that Rick had guessed right. Scotty inspected the place where the rain had washed the topsoil away, probably because some careless picnicker had ruined the grass in that spotThe rocks were clearly of the kind in the mine.
Suddenly Scotty bent lower and began to pry at something. “Rick, there’s something buried here.”
Rick hurried to help out, and in a moment they had lifted away enough rocks to disclose a considerable amount of moldy cloth.
Scotty took a piece and shook it, then chuckled. The answer is in the writing on the bag.
Wilbur’s Premium Portland Cement.” He grew serious. “Only where was it used? I’ve seen no construction around here.”
“Maybe someone brought picnic supplies in the bags and buried them with the
garbage,” Rick said.
“I doubt it. You can’t get all the cement out of a bag, because the powder sticks in the fabric. If you try to wash it out, it only sets the cement.”
Rick thought his pal probably was right. No one would use a cement bag for supplies, now that he thought about it. He looked up suddenly as a sound came through the trees.
It was a motor, but a small two-cycle kind, like a scooter or a small motorcycle.
“Someone coming,” he said. “Let’s go see who it is.”
Scotty held onto the bag. They walked back through the trees and into the camping ground in time to see a lanky, white-clad individual on a three-wheeled motor scooter-the kind where the driver sits on a cargo box-come to a stop. On the box were blue letters, dripping with whitefrost, that spelledfrostola . Underneath the letters was a list of products: cream pies, frozen cones, cream sandwiches, icicles, and quarts and pints.
Although Rick had never heard of Frostola, it was immediately clear that this was an ice-cream vendor, of the kind that appears in swarms in warm weather with ringing bells and tooting horns, in trucks, on scooters, and even on bicycles.
The Frostola man gave them a cheery wave and tilted his white cap to the back of his head. “Hi! Where’s the crowd?”
“We’re it,” Scotty answered. “Were you expecting more?”
“Wasn’t expecting anything,” the man retorted. “It’s a nice day for a swim, so I thought I’d come sell refreshments to the swimmers.”
“They’re afraid of ghost fish,” Rick said. “The place is haunted.”
The man grinned. “I heard about the ghost. If he shows up I’ll sell him a cream pie.”
“Sell me one,” Rick invited, and Scotty echoed the thought.
“Pleasure.”The man got off the seat and Rick saw that he was over six feet tall, and built like a sapling. The boy also saw that he wasn’t as young as he at first appeared.
That was odd, because the peddlers on scooters were usually either very young or old.
The Frostola man opened the seat box and the boys looked in, at neat stacks of ice cream packaged in various ways. The stuff was kept frozen by slabs of dry ice wrapped in brown paper.
The cream pies were on a stick, and coated with chocolate, butterscotch, and vanilla with coconut. Rick paid for his selection and Scotty’s, then commented, “It’s a long way out here from town.”
“Sure. Rut I enjoy the ride. It’s a chance to get away from howling mobs of kids.”
A strange comment from one who made most of his sales to kids, Rick thought. He noticed that the peddler was eying the bag Scotty had picked up, and was trying to be surreptitious about it. Anyone would be curious about someone carrying a moldy bag, but why try to conceal that curiosity? On impulse, Rick said, “There’s a trash can, Scotty. Throw the bag away and let’s go.” To the peddler, he added, “We’re doing our bit to keep the place clean.”
“Good thing to do,” the man admitted.
The boys got in the car. Rick turned it around and headed for town. The rear-view
mirror told him that the Frostola man watched them until the trees hid them from view.
Rick said thoughtfully, “If you were anxious to make your fortune selling Frostola, where would you go to do it?”
Scotty grinned. “My thought exactly. I’d go where there are people. I’d either go up streets ringing my bell, or I’d park at an intersection where cars could stop. I wouldn’t go to a deserted picnic ground-if I knew it was deserted.”
“If he didn’t know, he’s a stranger here. Could he be a new man?”
Scotty shook his head. “A new man wouldn’t know the way out here, and if he asked, he’d be told that people are staying away bec
ause of the ghost.”
“True. Your thoughts are as lucid as Costin’s Creek,ol ’ buddy. Also, he is not the typical ice-cream salesman, and he’s not from around here. He’s a little old for riding a scooter cart, and the look on his face and the way he carries himself are wrong. He doesn’t fit the part. Besides, his speech isn’t local. He’s no more a Virginian than you are.”
“He sounds more like a Yankee,” Scotty agreed.
Rick sighed. “Well, we’ve got something, although I don’t know what. Cement bags where there is no construction and an ice-cream man who doesn’t fit the part. What do you make out of that?”
Scotty chuckled. “Simple. The Frostola man is building a secret ice-cream stand.A modern one, out of poured concrete walls. He’s not building it where anyone can see it, because he doesn’t want to be bothered by customers.”
Rick grinned. “Okay,Hawkshaw . That’s enough deduction for one morning. Take a
look at that sky. Have you heard a weather report lately?”
Scotty glanced upward to where mare’s-tails were making streaks across the sky.
“Looks like a storm brewing. Why not turn on the radio?”
Rick did so, but there was only music from a nearby station, interspersed with local commercials. Before there was a chance to get a weather report they were rolling into town.
Lansdalewas too small even to be called a “whistle stop,” because no trains came near it. An interstate bus route passed through on the main highway, and that was the sole link with the towns to north and south, except for private cars.
Rick drove right up the main street. He saw a drugstore, an independent food market, a hardware-and-farm-supply store, a variety store, and two gas stations. On the outskirts of town was a huge farmers’ market open only on Fridays and Saturdays.
The market was obviously the main center of trade for the farm people of the
area.Lansdale would be very busy on Fridays and Saturdays, and just about abandoned, except for the few hundred people who lived in town, for most of the week.
He turned the car at the edge of town and drove back down the main street. Opposite the drugstore he found the sign he wanted.Jethro Collins, Real Estate and Notary Public.
He parked in front of the house.
Collins had his office in what had once been the parlor of his own home. Rick could see him through the window, an enormously fat man in a white shirt and red suspenders. As Rick rang the bell, he yelled, “Well, come on in!”
Once inside, the bull voice was reduced in volume to fit the room, a small one, cluttered with photographs of houses.
“What can I do for you, kids?”
The question was not courteous. The tone said Collins was impatient at the interruption, that he was sure these kids would only waste his time, and that he hated kids and everyone else.
Rick thought he looked like a Chester White hog, only meaner, but he answered
politely. “We’ve come from Dr. Miller’s place, sir.”
“So? Does he want to sell?”
“No, sir.Not without more information. If you could tell us the name of the
purchaser . . .”
“I can. I won’t.None of your business. If Miller wants to talk business he can come see me. Now get out.”
The boys lingered. “You must admit that it was an unusual offer, sir. The price was rather high for worthless land.”
Piggish eyes surveyed them. The bull voice grated, “Get out!”
They went. There was nothing else to do.
Scotty started to get into the car, but Rick stopped him. “Let’s go to the drugstore. I want to get a spray can of insect repellent.”
“Okay.” Scotty chuckled. “You can see why Dr. Miller is not fond of Mr. Collins.”
“I’m going to join the anti-Collins club as soon as we get back. Look, druggists know everything about their town. Let’s see if we can find out if the Frostola man is new.”
Rick opened the screen door and they went into a drugstore that had not changed substantially for half a century, except for the addition of modern sales items. The druggist, a wisp of a man, was friendly. They sat down at the marble-topped soda fountain and Rick asked, “Got any Frostola cream pies?”
“Don’t carry them,” the druggist replied. “They’re sold only by the route man.”
“I see you have a new man in this territory,” Rick said casually.
Bright eyes inspected him through rimless glasses.“Fairly new.Seems all right.”
“He’s pleasant enough,” Rick assented. “Has he been on the job long?”
“Six weeks, more or less.”
The boys settled for cokes, then drove back to the Millers. Rick was pleased. They hadn’t made much progress, but at least they had uncovered an interesting character in the new Frostola man. His arrival, according to the druggist, coincided with the appearances of the Blue Ghost. He traveled to the mine area when no customers could be found there. He was curious about a cement bag. He didn’t fit the character of an icecream route man.
Rick headed straight for the picnic ground. There was no sign of the Frostola scooter, which meant the man had left right behind them, otherwise they would have met him on the road on the return trip.
On a hunch, Rick got out of the car and walked to the trash can where Scotty had put the cement bag. The bag was gone.
CHAPTER VIII
Plan of Attack
Rick awoke to the sound of wind, a sign that the storm traveling northward from the middle south was approaching. He groaned. If the storm arrived before nightfall, the annual Sons of the Dominion affair would be postponed.
After yesterday’s events he had decided to drop the idea of spreading the word that he and Scotty were ghost watching, in the hope the ghost would appear for just the two of them. His new plan wasn’t completely worked out, but it would be before long.
Scotty grinned at him from the other bed. “No night alarms last night. Guess the ghost couldn’t find anyone to play with.”
“Maybe tonight,” Rick replied. “Come on, sack hound. Rise and shine. We have things to do.”
Scotty glanced through the window at the sky. “We’d better do ‘em quick, then. Barring a shift in the weather system, we’re due for some fine squalls.”
After an excellent breakfast of pancakes and genuine pepper-cured Virginia ham, Rick borrowed an empty jar from Mrs. Miller, checked all the flashlights available, and explained to the Millers the purpose of the trip.
“I’m going to get a sample of the water from the pool and try to see if there’s anything strange about it, then I thought we’d take a closer look at the mine to see if we can trace that water pipe. It still worries me.”
To his surprise, Barby and Jan hurriedly finished their breakfasts and announced they were going, too.
“You’re going into that mine,” Barby explained. “We’re going to be waiting outside, and if you’re not out within ten minutes, we’re going to come home for help.”
Rick was touched. Both girls believed in the ghost, Barby more than Jan, while he and Scotty were convinced that it was man-made in some way they didn’t yet understand. It took courage for the girls to accompany them, even if they only planned to wait at the mine entrance.
“Okay,” he agreed. “Let’s go.”
Dr. Miller offered, “Take the car. I don’t like the looks of the weather and there’s no
point in your getting caught in the rain.”
Rick accepted and in a moment the four young people were on their way. He saw that the sky was filled with haze, with only a glimpse now and then through the haze of flying scud. Something was on the way, all right.
“It’s a tropical storm,” Jan explained. “The morning weather report fromWashington said it would strike northernVirginia this morning.”
“And not long from now,” Scotty commented.
By the time Rick had collected his first sample, a jarful of water from the pool mixed with a scrapi
ng of algae from the bottom, there was an ominous line of black clouds on the horizon.
He hurried to the embankment where Scotty had found the cement bags, his pal close behind him. The girls had waited in the car.
To his surprise there were no bags. Raw earth showed where they had been dug up.
“What do you make of that?” he asked.
Scotty shook his head. “I don’t know. The Frostola man must have taken them, but I can’t imagine why. Come on. Let’s get out of here. This is no time to stand around wondering. That storm is close!”
“No mine for us this morning,” Rick said. “Wonder if the rain will last long enough to cancel out the Sons of the Old Dominion, or whether we’ll just have some
thundershowers?”
“Time will tell. Let’s go.”
They beat the storm to the house by minutes. It arrived with a rattle of windows and the flash of lightning, followed by thunder that reverberated among the mountains endlessly.
The rain came in blinding sheets, covering the windows with a steady flow of water that blocked all vision.
Rick set up his microscope on the kitchen table and plugged in the substage
illumination. Then, while the others watched, he selected a well slide, took his pipette, and captured a drop from the jar of pool water. The drop went into the well slide. He put on a cover glass,then applied his eye to the ocular.
After a moment of focusing and shifting the well slide, the drop of water suddenly turned to a strange aquarium populated by fantastic animals. He watched, counting the species aloud.“Lots of paramecia.AVolvox .TwoStephanoceros .One hydra. Not bad for a single drop. Want to look, anyone?”
Everyone did. Rick waited while the girls exclaimed over the microscopic creatures, and Mrs. Miller remarked to her scientist husband, “And we drink that water?”
Dr. Miller smiled.“No, dear. We drink the water from the pipe. This sample came from the pool.”
“But if the animals are in the pool, they must have come from the spring!”
The scientist shook his head. “The spring water is pure. It probably has a lower bacteria count than our well. But the pool water is exposed to the air, and provides an excellent breeding place. Most of these animals propagate from spores, which are in the air.”