The Rover Boys on the River - The Search for the Missing Houseboat by Edward Stratemeyer
page 14 of 249 (05%)
page 14 of 249 (05%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
escape his tormentors. In the end he found another shoe, but it was not
the one he wanted, for that had been rolled up in the blankets by Tom and was not returned until Putnam Hall was reached. Drums and fifes enlivened the way as the cadets started for the military academy. The march was to take the balance of that afternoon and all of the next day. During the night they were to camp out like regular soldiers on the march, in a big field Captain Putnam had hired for that purpose. The march did not take the cadets through Oakville, so the Rover boys did not see the friends they had made in that vicinity. They headed directly for the village of Bramley, and then for another small settlement named White Corners,--why, nobody could tell, since there was not so much as a white post anywhere to be seen in that vicinity. "It's queer how a name sticks," declared Tom, after speaking of this to his brother Dick. "They might rather call this Brown Corners, since most of the houses are brown." At the Corners they obtained supper, which was supplied to the cadets by the hotel keeper, who had been notified in advance of their coming. While they were eating a boy who worked around the stables of the hotel watched them curiously. Afterwards this boy came up to Sam and Tom. "We had a cadet here yesterday who was awfully mad," said the boy. "Had hydrophobia, eh?" returned Tom. "Too bad!" |
|