<h2> <SPAN name="chp_17" id="chp_17"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVII </h2>
<h3> ACTION <br/> <br/> </h3>
<p>"Well then I say let's send up a signal," said Nick hurriedly,
"the fellows at camp will see it and everybody else for miles
around will see it. Every telegraph operator along the railroad
can read it. Forget about scouts stealing cars and do what I tell
you. Hustle up to the police station and tell them about it so
they can't say we didn't report it, then meet me at the town
hall."</p>
<p>"What are you going to do?"</p>
<p>"I'm going to use the old search-light if it will work. It hasn't
been used since the night of the armistice when they lighted up
the flag with it. Climb in through the broken window on the side
and come up into the cupola. Don't tell Chief Bungelheimer or
he'll say it was his idea. My father's on the town committee,
it's all right, hustle now, get the police department off your
hands and maybe we can do something--no telling. Remember, the
side window, the one that's broken. And look out for the ladder,
it's rotten. Hurry up, beat it!"</p>
<p>Fido Norton hurried to the police station in back of Ezra
Corbett's store and aroused Officer Dopeson who was at the desk
waiting for out-of-town speeders to be brought in. In a kind of
waking dream the officer heard an excited voice shout, "Mr. Ned
Garrison's car is stolen from the shed down by the lake."</p>
<p>When Officer Dopeson was fully aware of this noisy intrusion, the
intruder had disappeared. He lost no time, however, in setting
the usual machinery in motion. By a continuous series of
movements of the receiver rack on the telephone he aroused Miss
Dolly Bobbitt, the night operator, from the depths of the novel
she was reading, and notified the Police Department in East
Ketchem across the lake to be on watch for the car. The police
department over there said that he would be glad to do that. The
police departments of Conner's Junction and Rocky Hollow were
also notified.</p>
<p>A long distance call to the New York police warned them to be on
the lookout. Blinksboro, on the main road, did not answer.
Knapp's Crossroads had gone to a harvest festival and forgotten
to come back. No answer. Lonehaven couldn't get the name of the
car but said it would watch out for a Plunkabunk. Wakeville said
no car could possibly get through there as there wasn't any road.
Miss Dolly Bobbitt returned to her novel.</p>
<p>And meanwhile the scout raised a mighty hand up into the vast,
starry heaven, like some giant traffic cop....</p>
<p>"Pull that canvas cover off it," said Nick to his comrade who had
just come up the ladder. "The blamed thing's all rotten anyway, I
guess. Strike a match and find where the switch is. Look out you
don't slip in the hole. Look at all the confetti and stuff," he
added hurriedly, as the tiny flame of the match illuminated a
small area of the little cupola. "War's over, huh?"</p>
<p>There upon the floor were strewn the gay many-colored little
paper particles, plastered against the wood by many a rain,
mementos of the night when even West Ketchem arose and poured
this festive, fluttering stuff down necks and into windows.
Someone who had thought to throw the search-light on the flag
across the street, had spilled some of insinuating stuff in the
little cupola. How old and stale, and a part of the forgotten
past, the war seemed! And these once gay memorials of its ending
were all washed out and as colorless as the big spiders that
claimed the little cupola as their own. It smelled musty up
there. And whenever a match was lighted the spiders started in
their webs. A lonely bat, settled for the winter, hung like an
old stiff dishrag from a beam.</p>
<p>"Did you find the switch?" Nick asked, as he fumbled hastily with
the big brass light. "All right, wait till I point the lens down,
now turn it."</p>
<p>There was no light.</p>
<p>"Did you turn it?"</p>
<p>"Sure."</p>
<p>"Pull it out, maybe it works that way."</p>
<p>There was no light. Norton paused in suspense while Nick shook
the brass case and jarred the wiring to overcome a slight short
circuit if there was any there.</p>
<p>"All right, turn it again."</p>
<p>There was no light, and the two scouts stood baffled and heavy
hearted in the lonely darkness.
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