Boardwalk Bust

Read Boardwalk Bust Online

Authors: Franklin W. Dixon

Time to Hit the Beach …

“Um, Mom,” I said as I toyed with my scrambled eggs, “Joe and I would like to go down to the Jersey Shore for a week. Could we go?”

“By yourselves?” Aunt Trudy broke in.

She was sitting between us, looking from one of us to the other like we were out of our minds.

“I don't know, Frank,” Mom said. “You boys just got back from a trip, and now you want to go away again so soon? Fenton, what do you think? Shouldn't they be spending more time at home?”

Dad lowered his newspaper—the one he likes to hide behind whenever there's a family dispute—and looked straight into my eyes.

I tried to signal him that this was important.

He seemed to get it. Turning to Mom, he said, “Well, dear, it is the summertime, after all. I think the boys are old enough to go to the beach on their own.”

“Probably get themselves into more mischief,” Aunt Trudy grumbled.

“It's true,” Mom said, balling her napkin up into a knot. “Fenton, they only just got back—why do they have to leave again? Can't it wait till next week?”

I gave Dad another look. This couldn't wait.

THE
HARDY BOYS
UNDERCOVER BROTHERS
™

#1
Extreme Danger

#2
Running on Fumes

#3
Boardwalk Bust

Available from Simon & Schuster

#3 Boardwalk Bust

FRANKLIN W. DIXON

Aladdin Paperbacks
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If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”

This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author's imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

ALADDIN PAPERBACKS
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Children's Publishing Division
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Copyright © 2005 by Simon & Schuster, Inc.

All rights reserved, including the right of
reproduction in whole or in part in any form.

THE HARDY BOYS MYSTERY STORIES and HARDY BOYS
UNDERCOVER BROTHERS are trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
ALADDIN PAPERBACKS and colophon are trademarks of
Simon & Schuster, Inc.

Designed by Lisa Vega

The text of this book was set in Aldine 401BT.

Manufactured in the United States of America

First Aladdin Paperbacks edition June 2005

10  9  8  7  6  5

Library of Congress Control Number: 2004116378

ISBN-13: 978-1-4169-0004-7

ISBN-10: 1-4169-0004-7
eISBN-13: 978-1-439-11357-8

1.
In Too Deep

2.
Ride Like the Wind

3.
Shore Thing

4.
Lies, and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them

5.
Beach Bound

6.
Ocean Point

7.
All in a Day's Work

8.
Scene of the Crime

9.
X Marks the Spot

10.
Buried Treasure

11.
Gold Rush

12.
The Richest Man in Ocean Point

13.
Stakeout!

14.
Neck-Deep in Trouble

15.
Miracles from on High

16.
A Bump on the Head

17.
Up in the Air

18.
Defying Gravity

19.
There's No Place Like Home

Boardwalk Bust

1.
In Too Deep

Being buried alive is no fun. No fun at all.

Let me set the scene:

A waterfall of corn was raining down on me. The grains felt like millions of BBs as they bounced off my head.

A mountain of grain was rising like sand dunes all around me. It was at least ten feet deep. It had the consistency of quicksand. I was sunk into it almost up to my knees, and it was trying really hard to suck me down.

Meanwhile, the falling grain was sending up a billowing cloud of dust. I was totally choking on it.

Nice, huh?

It was mostly dark inside this grain bin, except for a distant square of light high above that threw
faint shadows here and there. Corn was pouring through the hole—coming through the conveyor belt that a certain bad guy named Bill Pressman had started.

His intention? To kill me and Frank.

Why? That's a long story. But right now we were in trouble.

I could just make out my brother Frank. He was about twenty feet away from me, but it might as well have been twenty miles. He was well out of reach, and buried even deeper than I was.

“Joe!” I heard him yell over the roar. “Where are you?”

“Over h-here!” I shouted back, choking on the dust. “We've got to do something!”

“No, duh. Ya think?”

“Okay, genius,” I said. “What's your brilliant plan?”

And, as usual, Frank had one. Over the years, I've come to count on his uncanny ability to pull impossible schemes right out of his ear.

“Joe, you've got to get out of here and shut off the conveyor!”

Uh, hel-lo. Anyone see me stuck in a pile of corn?

“I'm up to my knees in corn, bro,” I said. “How am I supposed to do that?”

“Hey, I'm up to my chest! Just figure out a way—you've got to get over to that ladder … up there on the wall.”

“Are you kidding me? I can hardly move—”

“J-Joe,” he gasped, “I feel like I'm gonna be ccrushed if it gets much higher…. It's … gonna have to be you.”

I could tell he wasn't joking now.

Desperately, I tried to wiggle free. I swung my body back and forth. When I had a little play, I shifted my weight to my right leg, which was on the low side of the corn pile, and twisted myself loose.

Then I rolled over, so I was lying with my back against the ever-shifting mountain. That way I could do things like breathe and see.

All right, so it wasn't so hard.

Meanwhile, the corn kept raining down, adding to the pile. The dust made it hard to see anything.

“Okay,” I shouted. “Now what?”

“Shine your flashlight on me.”

I pulled out my light wand—sort of a combination laser cutter and flashlight—and pointed it at him.

I could make out Frank now. He was holding up a pretty sweet gadget of his own.

“Use this grapple line,” he said. “Catch!”

He tossed it to me. Luckily, I didn't miss it. It would have been buried under the corn for sure.

By this time I'd gotten Frank's intention. I aimed his gizmo at the ladder and fired.

The strong nylon line shot out and wound itself around one of the rungs of the wooden ladder. The hook at the end of the grapple dug into the wood.

I pressed another button on the handy-dandy contraption, and it reeled itself back in, drawing me forward. I was pulled up the slippery slope, gliding with ease. Before I knew it, I was on the ladder, climbing free of the death trap that still held my brother.

I kept climbing until I got to the door in the wall. The door was locked, of course—from the outside.

These guys thought of everything.

“I'll just use my laser cutter,” I said, pocketing the grapple line and pulling out my other gadget.

“No!” Frank screamed. “Joe, grain dust is highly flammable—explosive, even! You'll blow us both to smithereens!”

“Hmmm,” I said, stuffing it back in my pocket. “All righty, then. No lasers.”

I tried brute strength instead.

Luckily, the lock was old and rusty, and it popped after five or six solid hits from my well-developed shoulder.

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