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The Crowning Terror
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Hardy Boys Casefiles - 06
The Crowning Terror
By
Franklin W. Dixon
Chapter 1
"MR. HARDY!" THE headwaiter called. "Your table is ready for luncheon."
Frank Hardy blinked lazily, shaking his head to toss his brown hair away from his eyes. He had almost fallen asleep, sitting in the Club Kiev's waiting room.
"Finally," Frank's brother, Joe, who was seated beside him, said. Energized by the thought of food, Joe sprang to his feet. He stood six feet tall, and though Frank was an inch taller still, Joe's springy blond hair made him seem the same height. Joe was burlier than his brother and looked as if he could hit hard. A natural on the football field, he looked out of place in the Club Kiev.
Frank stood up, too, very aware of the glances from the other men waiting for tables. Those older gentlemen fit the restaurant's image perfectly. They blended in with the dim lighting and aging furniture. Frank and Joe were the youngest people in the room—by about forty years.
It was weird, Frank had to admit. Here he was in New York City, where an eighteen-year-old could find the most hip restaurants on earth. Instead, he was in the stodgy Club Kiev. He sighed. It hadn't been his choice. They moved toward the white-haired headwaiter, who stood next to the dining room. Nothing ever seemed to change at the club, not since it had opened in the 1920s. Its style and menu hadn't changed in all the intervening years, nor, seemingly, had its personnel. As Frank approached the headwaiter, he thought he caught a hint of disapproval in the old man's eye.
Teenagers were common in most restaurants in the city, but at the Club Kiev they clung to a long-dead past and found any change hard to tolerate. Teens had their place, but it was obvious the headwaiter believed that place was elsewhere.
"Good evening," Frank said in Russian, and the older man's face brightened.
"You speak my language?" the headwaiter asked.
"Not much and not well, I'm afraid," Frank replied. "But it's a beautiful language. I'm Mr. Hardy."
For a moment the headwaiter squinted with confusion. "Ah!" he said and smiled. "You are Fenton Hardy's boy. You have his eyes. For you, we will make a perfect meal." He pulled two menus from his podium. "Lunch for two?"
"Three, actually," Frank said. "We're waiting for a family friend. I'm Frank, by the way, and this is my brother, Joe."
"Good, very good," the headwaiter said as he pushed into the dining room. The boys followed, crossing the brightly lit room until they reached a small booth on the side wall. The elderly Russian swept a hand over it, waving them in, and Frank and Joe slid along seats on opposite sides of the table. With a slight bow, the man handed them menus and before leaving, he asked, "You will be following in your father's footsteps?" Joe glanced up, puzzled. "Excuse me?" "As detectives," the headwaiter said. His eyes were wide with excitement. "Your father is a great detective. He saved this restaurant many years ago. It would be a shame if such greatness were not handed down."
Frank checked a grin. "We haven't decided," — the Russian's smile faded — "but we're considering it."
Pleased, the white-haired man nodded and turned away. As he looked across the room, he stiffened.
A man was strolling toward the booth, white curls spilling on his forehead and highlighting his dancing green eyes. Though well on in years, the man was lean beneath his business suit, and Frank's age.
"M - Mr. Hunt," the headwaiter stammered. "I'm sorry I wasn't at the door to greet you." It was evident from the smile on the other man's face that the Russian took the situation far more seriously than he did. "Let me find you a table."
"It's all right," Joe said. "He's with us. How are you doing, Uncle Hugh?"
"Just fine, Joe," Hugh Hunt replied, sliding into the booth next to Frank. He wasn't really their uncle, but only a good and older friend of Fenton Hardy's. When they were younger, the boys had begun calling him "uncle," and the name stuck.
They had never been sure of the exact connection between him and their father. They knew the two men had known each other in the army, but then they had moved in different directions. Fenton Hardy became a detective, and Hugh continued in the insurance business, eventually starting his own company, Transmutual Indemnity, and retiring just a couple of years before.; The two men had less and less in common as they grew older, but Hugh was always there for the Hardys. Fenton Hardy never missed a chance to see him, sometimes even taking time off from a vital case to meet with him. It was something Frank and Joe accepted but never really understood.
"I'm sorry your father couldn't be here," Hugh said.
"Dad's in England with Mom and Aunt Gertrude," Frank said. "He told us to extend his apologies, but Mom's been bugging him to take a vacation for a long time, and his schedule finally opened up, and ... well — "
"I understand perfectly," Hugh said with a wink. He flipped open the menu and ran his finger down the listings. "They have a great borscht here, if you like beets. For a main course, the chicken Kiev is—" He squeezed the fingertips of his right hand together, pressed them to his lips, and kissed them with a loud smacking sound. "There's nothing better than great Russian food, and nowhere is it better than here."
A waiter appeared at the end of the table. In a thick Russian accent, he asked, "Would you like anything to drink before your meal?"
"A round of your best Russian tea," Hugh replied, looking at the boys for their approval.
"None for me, thanks," said Joe. As much as he liked his uncle Hugh, the man's tendency to make decisions for everyone always annoyed him a little. Joe's small acts of rebellion helped keep the peace between them, gently reminding Hugh that not everyone shared his tastes. Curiously, Frank never contradicted his uncle.
When the waiter had left, Joe said, "You're looking good, Uncle Hugh." Blushing, the older man flexed his arm so the bicep bulged beneath his jacket. "You mean this? Keeps my insurance rates down. You look in great shape, too. What have you two been doing with yourselves?"
Joe inhaled deeply, weighing his answer. What could they tell him? That Joe's girlfriend, Iola Morton, had been killed by a mad terrorist group called the Assassins, and as a result the boys had decided to devote themselves to bringing dangerous criminals to justice? "Oh, you know. We go to school, and still help out our dad on his cases—" "Actually," Frank cut in, "we don't spend that much time in Bayport anymore. Most of the time we're fighting supercriminals and terrorist organizations. So we spend a lot of time traveling. We get help sometimes from a government agency called the Network, but they don't really like independents like us getting in their way. All in all it's interesting work."
Joe's jaw dropped. Their parents didn't even know what Frank had just revealed to their uncle Hugh. He couldn't believe, after all they had done to keep their work secret, that Frank had just blown it.
Hugh stared at Frank for a long moment, studying the boy's face. Finally, a smile crept along his lips, widening into a grin until Hugh burst into laughter.
"Sounds like you need a good insurance policy," Hugh sputtered between laughs. "That's a good one, Frank. You're developing quite a sense of humor in your old age."
Frank began laughing with his uncle, and Joe giggled nervously. Hugh didn't believe Frank. Joe realized then what Frank had known all along, and Joe felt a rush of new respect for his brother. It was a gambit worthy of Joe himself.
The waiter reappeared with two heavy white cups and a china teapot on a tray. He poured a cup and set it in front of Hugh, and then poured one for Frank. The spicy steam rose off the cup and wafted into Joe's nostrils, and he wished he had ordered tea after all. "So what have you been doing lately, Uncle Hugh?" Joe asked.
"Oh, this and that," Hugh said, lifting the cup to his l
ips. "I do a little freelance insurance advising now and then." He closed his eyes and drained the cup, and with a look of satisfaction, he set it back into its saucer. Glancing down, he began, "You should become a tea drinker, Joe. You don't know what you're mi — "
He stopped suddenly, and his face went a sickly white. His eyes locked on the cup. "Where's that waiter?"
"He went back to the kitchen," Frank said. "Why?" He received no answer. Without another word, Hugh scrambled from the booth and dashed toward the kitchen. "Joe, go after him," Frank ordered.
Nodding, Joe followed his uncle, who had already disappeared through the swinging steel doors to the kitchen. Frank picked up the teacup and looked into it. At the bottom of the cup were black indelible marks. Cyrillic, Frank realized with a start. Letters in the Russian alphabet.
Anxiously, the Russian headwaiter appeared. "You are not pleased with the service?" he asked.
"You read Russian," Frank said and thrust the teacup at him. "What does this say?"
Puzzled, the older man took the cup and squinted at the letters. His mouth fell open in horror, and his eyes bulged. "No! No!" he shouted, hurling the cup to the ground. "What is it?" Frank demanded. Trembling, the headwaiter replied, "It says, 'You have just been poisoned.'"
Chapter 2
JOE CRASHED THROUGH the swinging doors. It looked like an ordinary restaurant kitchen, all sleek, bright chrome to contrast with the dark wood of the restaurant itself. The dozen chefs, waiters, and busboys spun to look at him and all motion froze for a second. Not surprising—he had just invaded their territory. But it didn't explain the fear in their eyes.
And suddenly they were moving again, ducking to the floor and scrambling for cover among the stoves and cabinets. Then Joe saw what they were running from. At the far end of the kitchen, next to a closed fire door, two men dressed in black suits had Joe's uncle Hugh by the arms and were forcing him toward the door.
The taller of the men had a dark beard, and a blackpatch covered his left eye. In his hand he held a Mauser with a silencer screwed on to the end of its barrel.
The gun made a sound like two cupped hands clapping gently together, and Joe hurled himself to the floor as the shot spattered against the swinging steel door behind him. It was the silencer that had saved him, he knew. At a distance of a few feet a gun with a silencer meant instant death, but over several yards a silencer would throw off the bullet's trajectory. For Joe, that fraction of an inch had been the difference between life and death.
"Joe!" he heard his uncle Hugh shout. "Get out of here!" Joe popped his head up over a counter to see the shorter man clamp a black-gloved hand over his uncle's mouth. A bullet sponged across the chrome counter near Joe's ear, and he ducked back down.
He rolled across the floor, trying to figure the odds against him. It was at least forty feet to the back door, and he realized there was no way he could get there, moving on hands and knees, before the men in black forced his uncle out the door and got away.
Let Frank worry about odds, Joe decided. Keeping low, he dashed past a line of counters and rounded a refrigerator. On each side of him, the restaurant employees were cringing, not believing that he would keep heading for the murderous pair. Joe turned the corner of an oven, where the smell of searing meat choked him. How far? he wondered. Were they still there?
At first he saw only a foot in his way. Cautiously he looked up, and above him stood the bearded man, his lips parted by a cruel smile. He said something that Joe didn't understand, but the motion of the gun made the meaning clear. Up it jerked, ordering him to his feet. Joe considered rushing the guy. But he knew the bearded man would have a clear shot at him. And this time, Joe knew, the silencer wouldn't alter the bullet's path. Joe stood up, hands raised to shoulder height.
No one else in the kitchen moved. The bearded man's smile widened as he pressed the tip of the gun barrel to Joe's forehead. Joe's breath caught in his throat as the bearded man chuckled softly and slowly began to squeeze the trigger.
With a muffled cry, Hugh bit into the gloved hand covering his mouth. The shorter man shrieked in pain and loosened his grip on Hugh. The bearded man turned slightly to see what was wrong.
That was when Joe swung his fist up, knocking the bearded man's arm aside. The gun went off, and the bullet lodged harmlessly in the ceiling. The man recovered instantly and jabbed out, clipping Joe on the chin with the gun butt.
Joe fell back in a haze of pain. Across the room his uncle Hugh struggled with the shorter man, who called to his companion for help. Ignoring Joe, the bearded man sprinted over and planted a fist in Hugh's stomach. As Hugh doubled over, the shorter man slammed him against the door. It opened, and the three of them vanished through it.
"Joe?" asked Frank Hardy as he pushed through the kitchen doors. "Where's Uncle Hugh?"
"In big trouble, I think!" Joe shouted. He dashed for the back door. "Two men just dragged him out this way."
"There's a narrow passageway behind the club," Frank said. "It spills directly out onto Fifty-third Street. Try to catch up to them. I'll head out front and we should have them surrounded." Without another word, Frank darted back through the swinging doors.
Joe reached the passageway in time to hear the roar of a car engine on Fifty-third Street. He saw his uncle and the bearded man seated close together in the backseat of a gray sedan. The shorter man sat in the driver's seat.
Sliding down the window, the bearded man snapped off another shot at Joe. Brick chips stung Joe's face as he ducked back into the doorway.
The car pulled out into the traffic. Joe looked up and saw his brother on the sidewalk just ahead. "Was that the car?" Frank shouted.
"Yes," Joe mumbled, barely loud enough for Frank to hear. Joe was angry at himself because the car was gone, and their uncle was beyond help. Joe dusted himself off and ran out to join Frank.
"Hurry up!" Frank said urgently. "They'll get away." Already Frank was running after the car, leaving a bewildered Joe standing on the street corner.
Then Joe turned and saw the tail of the car, just turning the corner. Of course! he realized. This is Manhattan! If it were night, the car might possibly be able to speed off, but it was midday, and New York's streets were clogged with traffic. The Hardys had a better chance of moving quickly than the car did. Their uncle's kidnappers hadn't escaped after all!
The rush of excitement brought to Joe a surge of speed. He dashed along the street, quickly catching up with his brother. The sedan was half a block in front of them, but they were gaining on it with every step.
"You're the track star," Frank said to Joe. "Why don't you sprint up there and try to slow them down? I'll be right behind you."
Joe nodded and took off. He wanted another crack at that tall guy. In the restaurant he may have used a gun, but on the crowded streets a shot, no matter how quiet, would be noticed. The police would be called, and in that traffic, the kidnappers would have little chance to escape. They would have to fight without guns, and once Joe got his hands on him, the bearded man would have no chance at all.
A honking erupted from the gray sedan as Joe neared it. The streetlight was green, and the sedan pushed vainly forward, struggling to get through the intersection before the light changed again to red. But traffic blocked the way. Only a few feet separated Joe from the car now. He stretched out an arm to open the back door.
As the traffic light switched to yellow, a gap appeared in the intersection. Joe's fingertips brushed the handle, but it was too late. The car lurched forward, then sped across the intersection as the light turned red, leaving Joe stranded in the middle of traffic.
Cars blocking him, Joe watched the sedan move farther and farther off. From the corner of his eye, he saw Frank trapped on the street corner behind him.
I'll just have to make a path and try to follow them, Joe decided. He took a deep breath, crossed his fingers, and lunged into the oncoming traffic. A taxi slammed on its brakes and skidded. Joe twisted as he jumped. He slammed onto the
cab's hood and rolled across the windshield, then slid down off the far side of the car, landing feet first on the pavement. Ignoring the cabbie's angry threats, he continued his pursuit of the sedan.
He could still see it, half a block ahead, stalled once again in traffic. Time seemed to stand still as Joe drew nearer and nearer to the motionless car. He was dimly aware of the tall man turning his head in the sedan's rear window, his face filled with rage.
Joe grabbed the door handle, tearing the door open. The tall man's foot jabbed out, striking Joe in the stomach. The air whooshed out of him, and Joe fell back, smashing into another man. · As Joe tried to balance himself, he looked up into the newcomer's face. There was nothing recognizable about it, apart from sunglasses that covered his eyes. Like the others, the man wore a nondescript black suit, and his face was as expressionless as a mannequin's.
The kidnappers stepped out the far side of the car, dragging Hugh with them. Joe was on his feet, struggling to run in pursuit. But the man in black behind him clamped a strong hand on Joe's shoulder and stopped him.
"You've interfered enough," the stranger said coldly. "We'll handle this." At the snap of his fingers, some other men jumped from cars and took off after Hugh and his kidnappers.
"Get your hands off him!" ordered Frank, running up to them. Swiftly, the man in black reached inside his coat.
"Look out!" shouted Joe. "He has a gun!" He twisted from the man's grasp, ramming an elbo into his chest. With a sharp cry, Frank spun, aiming a high kick into the man's midsection. The man in black doubled over, his sunglasses flying from his face. He staggered back, whipping his hand from under his coat. It held, not a gun, but a small leather wallet.
He flipped it open, and Joe Hardy gasped. The wallet held a card that read: United States Espionage Resources. The man was a government agent!
"You're both under arrest," the man in black said.
Chapter 3
"So, YOU'RE THE Hardy brothers," a hoarse voice said.

The Great Pumpkin Smash
Who Let the Frogs Out?
Return to Black Bear Mountain
A Treacherous Tide
Bug-Napped
The Disappearance
Sea Life Secrets
The Mystery of the Chinese Junk
A Skateboard Cat-astrophe
Too Many Traitors
Galaxy X
The Secret Panel
The Secret of Wildcat Swamp
The Secret of the Caves
The Caribbean Cruise Caper
Without a Trace
The Mystery of the Spiral Bridge
Movie Menace
Dungeons & Detectives
Water-Ski Wipeout
The Case of the Psychic's Vision
X-plosion
Deathgame
The Apeman's Secret
A Will to Survive
Mystery at Devil's Paw
Blood Money
The Mark on the Door
Scene of the Crime
The Gray Hunter's Revenge
Stolen Identity
The Mummy's Curse
Mystery of Smugglers Cove
Diplomatic Deceit
The Haunted Fort
The Crisscross Shadow
Secret of the Red Arrow
Trial and Terror
The Short-Wave Mystery
The Spy That Never Lies
Operation: Survival
Deception on the Set
The Sign of the Crooked Arrow
Hunting for Hidden Gold
Disaster for Hire
The Clue in the Embers
Danger Zone
The Hidden Harbor Mystery
Eye on Crime
A Game Called Chaos
The Bicycle Thief
The Missing Playbook
Survival Run
The Bombay Boomerang
Mystery of the Samurai Sword
Burned
Death and Diamonds
Murder at the Mall
The Prime-Time Crime
Hide-and-Sneak
Training for Trouble
Trouble in Paradise
While the Clock Ticked
The Alaskan Adventure
The Lost Brother
Tunnel of Secrets
A Killing in the Market
The Curse of the Ancient Emerald
The Arctic Patrol Mystery
Past and Present Danger
The Castle Conundrum (Hardy Boys)
Farming Fear
Nowhere to Run
The Secret of the Soldier's Gold
Danger on Vampire Trail
The Lure of the Italian Treasure
The Mystery of Cabin Island
Darkness Falls
Night of the Werewolf
Danger in the Extreme
The Lazarus Plot
The Hooded Hawk Mystery
Double Trouble
Forever Lost
Pushed
The Great Airport Mystery
The Hunt for Four Brothers
The Disappearing Floor
Motocross Madness
Foul Play
High-Speed Showdown
The Mummy Case
The Firebird Rocket
Trouble in Warp Space
Ship of Secrets
Line of Fire
The Clue of the Broken Blade
Medieval Upheaval
Witness to Murder
The Giant Rat of Sumatra
Attack of the Bayport Beast
The Borgia Dagger
Scavenger Hunt Heist
No Way Out
Murder House
The X-Factor
The Desert Thieves
Mystery of the Phantom Heist
The Battle of Bayport
Final Cut
Brother Against Brother
Private Killer
The Mystery of the Black Rhino
Feeding Frenzy
Castle Fear
A Figure in Hiding
Hopping Mad
Dead on Target
Skin and Bones
The Secret Warning
Flesh and Blood
The Shattered Helmet
Boardwalk Bust
Terror at High Tide
In Plane Sight
The London Deception
Evil, Inc.
Deprivation House
The Mystery of the Aztec Warrior
First Day, Worst Day
Bonfire Masquerade
Killer Connections
Strategic Moves
Warehouse Rumble
The Chase for the Mystery Twister
The Tower Treasure thb-1
The Children of the Lost
The Last Laugh
Trick-or-Trouble
Perfect Getaway
Nightmare in Angel City
Edge of Destruction
Fright Wave
The Jungle Pyramid
Footprints Under the Window
The Gross Ghost Mystery
A Monster of a Mystery
House Arrest
Mystery of the Desert Giant
Talent Show Tricks
The Sting of the Scorpion
The Secret of Skull Mountain
The Missing Chums
Kickoff to Danger
Cult of Crime
Running on Fumes
Martial Law
The Pentagon Spy
Hazed
The Secret Agent on Flight 101
Running on Empty
Top Ten Ways to Die
The Missing Mitt
The Melted Coins
The Rocky Road to Revenge
The Masked Monkey
Lost in Gator Swamp
Extreme Danger
Street Spies
The Wailing Siren Mystery
The Dangerous Transmission
Hurricane Joe
The Crisscross Crime
Mystery of the Whale Tattoo
The House on the Cliff
Camping Chaos
Ghost of a Chance
Tagged for Terror
Thrill Ride
Fossil Frenzy
The Time Warp Wonder
Ghost Stories
Speed Times Five
What Happened at Midnight
Three-Ring Terror
Trouble at the Arcade
The Clue of the Hissing Serpent
Trouble in the Pipeline
The Tower Treasure
Hostages of Hate
The Crowning Terror
Daredevils
The Vanishing Thieves
Killer Mission
The Mark of the Blue Tattoo
The Witchmaster's Key
The Deadliest Dare
Peril at Granite Peak
The Secret Of The Old Mill thb-3
Rocky Road
The Demolition Mission
Blown Away
Passport to Danger
The Shore Road Mystery
Trouble Times Two
The Yellow Feather Mystery
One False Step
Crime in the Cards
Thick as Thieves
The Clue of the Screeching Owl
The Pacific Conspiracy
The Genius Thieves
The Flickering Torch Mystery
Into Thin Air
Highway Robbery
Deadfall
Mystery of the Flying Express
The Viking Symbol Mystery
The End of the Trail
The Number File
Gold Medal Murder
Bound for Danger
Collision Course
The Madman of Black Bear Mountain
The Secret of the Lost Tunnel
The Stone Idol
The Secret of Pirates' Hill
A Con Artist in Paris
The Mysterious Caravan
The Secret of Sigma Seven
The Twisted Claw
The Phantom Freighter
The Dead Season
The Video Game Bandit
The Vanishing Game
Typhoon Island