CHAPTER V
NODDY NIXON THREATENS
Professor Snodgrass continued to gaze steadfastly at the astonishedminer, still keeping hold of his coat. Then over the face of the littlebald-headed scientist there came a change. Into his eyes there shot agleam of joy.
“Stand still!” he commanded, though Mr. Brill was too much startled todo anything in the line of motion. “Don’t stir!” went on the professor.“I’ll have him in a minute. It’s on your neck! Oh, if only it doesn’thop off! Easy now! There! I have it!” and with a quick motion heremoved some insect from the coat collar of the miner. The latter movedquickly back and seemed about to bolt from the room.
“Wha--what am I up against?” he asked. “Is he crazy--or am I? What ishe after, anyhow? Have I got bugs on me?”
“You did have, my dear man,” said the professor, calmly, as he took outa small box, with a glass top, under which he imprisoned his prize.“You were carrying about with you a very rare specimen of a jumpingfly--something I have been hoping to capture for years. Now I have thelittle beauty. Oh, you can’t get away!” he added, as the insect leapedagainst the glass. “I have you safe.”
“Is--er--am I--what’s it all about, anyhow?” cried the miner, lookingfrom one to the other.
“It’s all right, Harvey--it’s all right,” said Jim Nestor soothingly,for he knew the professor of old. “Mr. Snodgrass collects bugs andthings for scientific purposes. He just found one on you, that’s all.”
“A jumping fly--_excilio muscarium_--it might be Latinized,” explainedthe scientist. “A very rare specimen. I am exceedingly obliged to you.”
“Oh--Oh, you--you’re welcome,” stammered Mr. Brill. “I hope I haven’tany more things on me,” and he looked himself over as well as he could.
“No more,” said the professor, aiding in the search. “I wish you had.But what is this I heard about the luminous snakes?” he asked. “Snakesthat shine at night--_illustris serpensus_ as they could be called.Many years have I longed to get such a specimen, and now, unexpectedly,I get on the track.
“I might explain,” he went on, turning to the boys, “that I have beensent out by a Boston museum to look for a new kind of blue lizard, butI can combine my search for that with the luminous snakes--the latterbeing much more valuable. I came to Cresville, thinking perhaps youboys might be going off on some expedition, as you frequently are, andI proposed to join you to look for the blue lizard. I came directly toyour house, Jerry, since your mother has been so kind as to give me astanding invitation, and, just as I enter I hear--‘luminous snakes!’Oh, how I rejoiced! This has indeed been a fortunate day for me!” andhe looked at the jumping fly in his little box.
Mr. Brill was less excited now, since Jim Nestor had, in a whisper,explained more about the talented and kind professor, whose only hobbywas bugs and reptiles.
“Tell me more about the snakes,” urged the scientist.
“They were only casually mentioned,” said Jerry, and briefly he relatedwhat is already known to my readers about the visit East of the twoWesterners, and the curious train of events that had followed.
“And are you going after the sixty nuggets of gold?” asked theprofessor, eagerly.
“We hope to,” spoke Bob, while the chums nodded.
“Then may I go along to look for the luminous serpents?”
“Of course!” exclaimed Jerry. “But we’ll have to put this up to thefolks,” he added to his chums. “I hope my mother will let us go,and----”
“Oh, I’m sure my folks won’t object,” said Bob, while Ned nodded toshow that he, too, thought he could easily gain the necessary consent.
“Then the thing to do is to tell them about it,” went on Jerry.“Professor, you know where your room is--the same one you always have.Jim, I’m going to put you and Mr. Brill up here, and maybe----”
“We were calculating on going to a hotel,” said the mine foreman.“We’re not exactly used to plush carpets on the floor, and all thatsort of thing.”
“Oh shucks!” exclaimed Jerry. “You’ll stay here. Besides, I think thehotel is over-crowded, anyhow. We’ve got lots of room. I’ll bringmother in and introduce you to her, and then we’ll leave you for awhile. Dinner will soon be ready.”
“Dinner!” exclaimed Mr. Brill. “Why it’s long past noon. Besides we hada snack on the train--me and Jim.”
“We call supper dinner here,” explained Jerry, with a laugh. “There’sno sense in it, as far as I can see, but we always have dinner atnight.”
“And breakfast at noon?” asked Mr. Brill.
“No, that goes by its regular name, but the noon meal is lunch, here inthe East.”
“I don’t care what they call ’em, as long as there’s something to eat,”said Bob, with a sigh, at which they all laughed.
Mrs. Hopkins came in, and soon made the two miners feel at home. Theywere shown to their rooms, and the professor to his.
“Well, Jerry, what is it this time?” asked his mother, with a smile.
“Sixty nuggets of gold, and some luminous snakes!” he exclaimed.
“Oh, what boys!” cried Mrs. Hopkins. “There, I’m not going to listen toa thing about it now. I’ve got to see about dinner.”
“Then we’ll talk it over at the table,” proposed Jerry, as his motherhurried away to look to the comfort of her unexpected guests. “Forwe’re bound to go.”
“That’s right,” exclaimed Bob.
“Now, fellows, I’ll tell you what we’ll do,” suggested Jerry. “We’ll goto the station and get the baggage of the two miners, and then it willbe nearly dinner time. My! how this day has passed! Come on, we’ll rundown in the car.”
As they were about to enter it there was a rush of feet down thestreet, and a shrill voice burst out with:
“You’d better look out--he’s awful mad--says he’s going to fixyou--blow up the place--have you arrested--sent to jail--he’sraving--completely fooled--you’ll soon see him--Oh my! wow!”
“What’s the matter now, Andy?” asked Jerry, turning to see the littlechap panting from a run, and from his flow of words. “Is it a mad dog,or a runaway horse?”
“It’s Noddy Nixon!” gasped Andy. “He--he----” but words failed him, andhe could only make motions with his lips.
“Oh, Noddy!” exclaimed Jerry. “Here, Andy, hop in and we’ll see if wecan’t catch your breath for you,” and he cranked the car while theothers took their seats.
They had not progressed far down the street before, near the jewelrystore toward which he had gone, they saw Noddy Nixon. Beside him wasBill Berry, wheeling a barrow load of dirt, and the looks on the facesof the two showed anger and disappointment.
“Slow up, Jerry,” said Ned, in a low voice, and the tall lad did so.
Noddy Nixon, catching sight of them, said something to Bill, whostopped. Then the bully, shaking his fist at the three chums,exclaimed:
“I’ll fix you for this, all right!”
“Fix us for what?” asked Jerry, innocently.
“For playing that trick on me. You knew there wasn’t any gold there,but you pretended there was, and I dug up a whole lot of worthlessdirt. Bah! I’ll fix you for it!”
“Wasn’t there any gold in your dirt, Noddy?” asked Ned, smiling.
“No, and you know there wasn’t!” snapped the bully. “You made me andBill do a lot of work for nothing. But I’ll get square with you, andthose two men. I know Jim Nestor--I’ll fix you!”
“Look here!” cried Jerry, not willing to take any more abuse. “We hadno more to do with your digging up the railroad track than the man inthe moon. You fooled yourself. There was gold on the track, but it camefrom a watch that was run over. We didn’t know it until a little whileago. If you’re so foolish as to cart off cinders, and think they’regold, that’s not our fault.”
“That’s all right! I’ll fix you!” growled Noddy. “Go on, Bill. I don’twant to talk to ’em, but I’ll get square, somehow!”
“Be careful it isn
’t in the same way when you took the _Comet_--ourairship--and had to walk home,” warned Ned, referring to something thathad happened when the motor boys went after a fortune of radium in theGrand Canyon. Noddy and his cronies had overreached themselves thattime; but even then, Jerry and his chums had saved the bully from thehut on Snake Island.
“That’s all right--I’ll fix you!” threatened Noddy. “Come on, Bill.”
“What’ll you take for that load of dirt?” taunted Bob, but Noddy didnot answer.
“Better let him alone,” advised Jerry, as he started the auto again.
“Think he’ll make trouble?” asked Ned.
“Oh, he might try.”
“Ha! Ha!” laughed Andy Rush. “He was fooled all right. I was at thejewelry store when he took the dirt in. He said it was full of gold,and he asked the clerk how much he’d give for it. ‘Get out of here withthat trash!’ the clerk yelled, and when Noddy spilled a lot of it onthe floor, and on a lady’s dress, Mr. Smith, the proprietor, was so madthat he shoved Noddy and Bill out. Then Noddy fairly raved and I ran totell you. I thought he might do you some harm.”
“Much obliged,” said Jerry, to the little chap. “I guess we can handleNoddy,” and yet Jerry felt a vague uneasiness as he thought of thesixty nuggets of gold, and recalled that Sim Fletcher might haveoverheard something about them.