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    163 The Clues Challenge

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      and down to keep warm. Even in the dim light Nancy

      recognized a lot of faces from the night before. Like

      her and George, they all wore sleek warm-up gear and

      sweaters under their parkas. Only a few die-hard

      spectators, bundled up from head to toe, had braved

      the cold and the early hour to be there.

      “Nancy! George!” Ned's voice rang out.

      Nancy turned to see her boyfriend's tall silhouette

      walking up the snowy, tree-lined path with a thermos

      and insulated cups. Grant and C.J. were with him. All

      three guys wore bright yellow caps that glowed in the

      darkness.

      “Omega Chi Epsilon!” Nancy said, reading the

      Greek symbols printed on the hats in neon green.

      “They're perfect.”

      “Tea and team hats.” George grinned as C.J. pulled

      two more hats from his pocket and handed them to her

      and Nancy. “Okay. Now I'm psyched.”

      They were just digging into their muffins when

      Randy hustled up with his camera. “How about a team

      photo?” he asked. “Guys in back, girls in front.”

      C.J. had started toward Dede's team, which was

      doing stretches next to the tower, but Randy pulled

      him back. As Randy motioned for C.J. to take his place

      between Ned and Grant, Nancy noticed the team from

      Sigma Pi heading toward the tower.

      Nancy didn't miss the way Dennis's eyes flitted be-

      tween C.J. and Dede. Rolling his eyes at C.J., Dennis

      muttered loud enough for them all to hear, “We'll see

      who's the top jock around here after the competition.”

      “There's Mr. Lorenzo now,” Ned said.

      Mel Lorenzo was just walking up the tree-lined path

      to the bell tower, Nancy saw. His round face was

      almost completely obscured by his tinted glasses, knit

      cap, and thick scarf. His heavy ski jacket made his large

      frame look even bulkier than usual.

      “Let's talk to him,” Nancy said.

      They caught up to him outside the arched stone

      doorway to the tower. “Ready for the challenge?” Mr.

      Lorenzo asked them.

      “Ready, willing, and able,” Ned assured him. “But

      before we start . . .”

      He and Nancy told him about the muscle relaxant

      they had found on their dessert. As he listened, Mr.

      Lorenzo's expression grew more and more sober.

      “This is a serious accusation.” Mr. Lorenzo shook his

      head and gazed at them over the tops of his tinted

      glasses. “Man, oh, man. You say no one saw the person

      who . . . um, the person who . . . did it?”

      Suddenly the store owner seemed distracted. His

      eyes were focused on something behind Nancy. When

      she turned, she saw Randy headed their way with his

      notebook open and ready.

      “C.J. just told me about a possible sabotage inci-

      dent,” Randy said, tapping his pen against the page.

      “And what's this about threats to hand over clues? Care

      to comment, Mr. Lorenzo?”

      “No,” Mr. Lorenzo practically growled at the re-

      porter, then walked away from him.

      “Mr. Lorenzo,” Nancy said, hustling after him with

      Ned. “We think whoever put those pills on our dessert

      could be the same person who sent you that computer

      threat.”

      “I already told you, that was nothing,” Mr. Lorenzo

      insisted. His eyes kept jumping to Randy, who hovered

      nearby.

      “We saw Joy talking to you last night. You seemed

      uncomfortable, and then suddenly you left,” Ned said.

      “Did she say something that made you leave?”

      Mr. Lorenzo held up a hand and shook his head. “I

      had to meet Jimmy, an employee. He hid the clues for

      me,” he explained. “Joy was just making small talk.”

      He turned to Nancy and Ned with an understanding

      smile. “I'll keep my eyes open for trouble,” he assured

      them. “But I'm afraid I can't suspend anyone from the

      challenge without much more solid evidence.”

      Nancy saw the doubt in his eyes. Mr. Lorenzo

      clearly thought she and Ned were blowing the whole

      thing out of proportion.

      “Okay, everyone.” Mr. Lorenzo pulled a whistle

      from his pocket and blew it. “To the starting line!”

      Excited murmurs rose from all four teams. “This is

      it!” George said as she, Grant, and C.J. joined Nancy

      and Ned.

      They had already agreed that C.J. would run for the

      first clue for their team. He took his place at the

      entrance, bouncing lightly on the balls of his feet. Joy,

      Dennis, and Dede's sorority sister Krista lined up next

      to him.

      “On your marks!” Mr. Lorenzo called. “Get set . . .”

      He blew the whistle, and all four runners sprinted

      through the bell tower doorway. Shouts and cheers

      erupted from the crowd.

      “Yes!” Nancy jumped up and down as C.J. took the

      lead on the stairs. “Go, C.J.! Go!”

      The runners' pounding footsteps mixed with cries of

      encouragement from their teammates and spectators.

      The outer wall of the tower was dotted with small,

      diamond-shaped windows that rose in the same curve

      as the stone stairs inside. Nancy followed the flashes of

      movement as the runners sprinted higher and higher.

      “They're almost at the top!” George said, squinting

      upward at the tower. “But I can't see which runner is—

      —”

      “Aiieeeeee!”

      An earsplitting cry rang out from the top of the bell

      tower. The anguish—and pain—in the voice made

      Nancy shiver from head to toe.

      “Oh, no,” she said breathily. “Someone's hurt!”

      5. A Cry for Help

      “We've got to help!” Nancy cried. After shoving her tea

      into Ned's hands, she raced for the bell tower and

      pounded up the stone stairs two at a time.

      Her heart thumped as she sprinted higher and

      higher. Surely she had to be near the top. As she raced

      past a window, she caught a diamond-shaped glimpse

      of branches and snow far below. And then . . .

      “C.J.!” Nancy said as she stopped short.

      He was doubled over on the stairs with the others

      around him, clutching his left ankle. “Owww,” he

      groaned. “I think I sprained it.”

      “All of a sudden he slipped going up,” Krista ex-

      plained. “We plowed right into him.”

      “It happened so fast,” Dennis added. “We were

      lucky we didn't all fall.”

      Nancy crouched down in front of C.J. “We have to

      get you downstairs—” She was interrupted as someone

      shoved her from behind. “Hey!”

      Randy pushed past her with his camera, snapping

      photos. The blinding flashes made Nancy instinctively

      move up the stairs.

      “C.J.!” Dede appeared below them on the stairs.

      Her face was red, and her eyes were wide. “You're

      hurt!”

      She tried to get close to her boyfriend, but Randy

      blocked her way.

      “Can't you get out of the way?” Nancy said. “Dede

      needs to— Whoa!”
    As she had moved up a step,

      Nancy's foot slipped out from under her, and she

      landed on her knees.

      “Ow!” She winced, then did a double-take as she felt

      the surface of the step with her hand.

      “It's slippery!” she said, rubbing her fingers to-

      gether. “Someone rubbed this step with soap!”

      “No way.” C.J. whipped his head around—then

      scowled when Nancy showed him the soap marks on

      the step. “So someone tripped me up on purpose!”

      Randy turned his camera toward the step. “Talk

      about great material,” he said under his breath.

      “Unless he's faking for publicity,” Dennis muttered.

      “C.J. would never do that!” Dede said hotly. She

      shot a furious look at Dennis. “How do we know it

      wasn't you? You'd do anything to get C.J. out of the

      competition.”

      Good point, Nancy thought and turned toward

      Dennis. At least, she tried to, but with everyone clus-

      tered around, she could barely wiggle.

      “We need to get Randy to the infirmary!” she

      shouted above the din of everyone speaking at once.

      “He has to—”

      “I've got it!” came a voice from farther up the tower.

      Nancy turned around in time to see Joy trot down

      the stone stairs. She was clutching a slip of paper in her

      right hand.

      “The first clue!” she crowed, holding up the paper.

      Joy shoved past Nancy and everyone else who had

      pushed up the stairs. “See you at the finish!”

      Krista and Dennis looked at each other, then, care-

      fully avoiding the soapy steps, sprinted to the top.

      “The others can help me down,” C.J. told Nancy.

      “Go get our clue!”

      Nancy didn't have to be told twice. But as she ran up

      the curving tower stairs after Krista and Dennis, a

      troubling thought nagged at her.

      How had Joy avoided the soapy step? How had she

      known to?

      “I'm all taped up and ready to go,” C.J. announced

      half an hour later.

      Using a cane, he limped into the infirmary waiting

      room, his left ankle wrapped in an Ace bandage.

      Nancy looked up from the slip of paper that rested

      on the battered coffee table in the waiting room. She,

      George, Ned, and Grant had been going over their first

      clue while Randy observed from a chair.

      “How is your ankle?” Ned asked.

      C.J. shrugged. “It's a minor strain, nothing serious.

      This stuff is just a precaution, to keep from aggravating

      the injury,” he said, pointing at the cane and bandage.

      “I have to steer clear of strenuous activity today, but if

      it feels okay, I'll be back in action tomorrow.”

      “Great,” Randy said, raking his white-blond hair off

      his forehead. “That means we'll have time for some in-

      depth questions today.”

      “Speaking of questions . . .” Ned picked up the clue

      from the table and handed it to C.J. “Take a look at

      this.”

      As C.J. read the clue, Nancy glanced at it over his

      shoulder. Not that she needed to. She already knew it

      by heart:

      Shake it up at the start!

      Leave sculdiggery behind

      Lunge past frozen waters

      Run alongside the wet wanderer

      Bypass broken-down barriers

      Escape the bony clutches

      Navigate the trail to the ring of rocks

      Advance to the foundation of victory

      Overturn the rising sun

      Invite success!

      “Looks like directions,” C.J. said, sitting.

      “Frozen waters must be the lake,” Ned agreed. “But

      the rest of it. . .” He shook his head.

      Grant opened up his backpack and pulled out a

      sheet of glossy paper. “Here's a map of the campus,” he

      said, spreading it out on the table.

      The lake was a blue oval at the center. A vast

      wooded section spread out to the west of it. Nancy

      followed a squiggly blue stream that threaded through

      the woods to the lake.

      “Do you think that could be the wet wanderer'?”

      she wondered out loud.

      “Could be,” George said. “But it runs for miles. We

      need to figure out the rest of the clue first.”

      Nancy's eyes jumped to the top of the clue. “ Shake

      it up at the start,' “ she murmured.

      “The start of what?” C.J. asked.

      “I wonder . . .” Reaching into her own backpack,

      Nancy took out a pen and a small notebook. “What if

      he means the start of each line of the clue,” she said.

      “The first letter from each line . . .”

      She wrote down S L L R B E N A O I. “Okay. What

      if we scramble the letters?”

      “You think that's what Mr. Lorenzo means by Shake

      it up'?” Ned asked.

      “Maybe. It can't hurt to try,” Nancy said. She was

      already spelling different words. “Bells . . . beans . . .

      sail . . . rose . . . barn . . .”

      “Wait a sec. There is a barn. The old Sanderford

      place!” Grant jabbed a finger at the map, nearly

      sending it flying off the table.

      “That's right,” Ned said. “The whole campus used to

      be part of the farm. Woods have grown back over the

      part of the land where the house and barn used to be.

      I've never seen them, but from what I've heard, they're

      wrecks now.”

      Nancy circled the B, A, R, and N. “That leaves S, L,

      L, E, O, and I,” she said. “What did you say the

      farmer's name was?”

      “Sanderford,” Grant said. “Ollie Sanderford.”

      “That's it!” Nancy crowed. “If you take the first let-

      ter from each line and rearrange them, they spell

      Ollie's Barn!”

      C.J.'s eyes lit up. He leaned on his cane to gaze at

      the map. “Excellent! But . . . the house and barn aren't

      marked on here,” he said.

      “That's where the directions come in.” Nancy's

      whole body tingled as she took the paper from C.J.

      “We know the barn is somewhere in the woods. I say

      we ski to the wooded side of the lake and see if we can

      figure out the rest of the clue.”

      “I'll have to sit out this part of the challenge,” C.J.

      said. “Randy and I will meet you at the headquarters

      later, okay?”

      Ned jumped to his feet and grabbed his parka and

      yellow team hat. “Mr. Lorenzo said he's got all the

      equipment in the atrium of the Sports Complex,” he

      said. “Let's go.”

      The Sports Complex consisted of three modern,

      cubelike buildings that had been constructed at angles

      to the old brick gymnasium. Nestled between the

      buildings was a triangular, glassed-in atrium carpeted

      with AstroTurf.

      “Ah!” Mr. Lorenzo glanced up from a table just in-

      side the door to the atrium. He smiled as Ned sorted

      through the cross-country skis and poles stacked

      against the outer wall of the old gym, along with ropes,

      pins, harnesses, and climbing shoes. Everything was

      divided into four sections, one for each team. “I see the

      Om
    ega team has solved the first clue. Good work.

      You're the second team out.”

      “Second?” George frowned at the blank spot be-

      neath the Delta Tau sign. “Joy's team is ahead of us,

      huh?”

      “Looks like the Sigmas and the Kappas are still

      puzzling over the clue,” Nancy said, nodding to where

      the two groups sat hunched at tables on opposite sides

      of the fountain. Both teams watched as Nancy and the

      others put on their ski boots and grabbed skis and

      poles.

      “Come on!” Grant urged, pushing back outside

      through the glass doors.

      He, George, Ned, and Nancy stepped into their skis.

      As they took off, they heard a loud whoop from inside

      the atrium.

      “It's the Kappas,” said George, glancing back over

      her shoulder.

      Nancy felt a jolt of adrenaline as Dede and her

      teammates burst through the atrium doors with their

      skis. “Go!” Nancy urged.

      She plunged her pole into the snow and skied for-

      ward. Beyond the parking lot, a corner of the snow-

      covered lake was visible. It was rimmed on one side by

      a thick woods of evergreens, maples, and oaks that

      stretched all the way to the horizon.

      “This way,” Ned called. He took the lead on a path

      that angled toward the woods.

      “Hmm,” Nancy said as her eyes fell on two buildings

      that had come into sight. To their left was a

      greenhouse, dominated by steamed-up windows and

      flashes of greenery. Just beyond it, to their right, the

      boathouse was nestled into the trees at the lake's edge.

      “Hey, George!” Nancy called as she poled and

      glided forward. “Isn't sculling a way of rowing a boat?”

      she asked. “And isn't digging one of the main things

      that happens in a greenhouse?”

      George looked back and forth between the two

      buildings. “Sculdiggery. It's perfect!” She whooped as

      they skied past both buildings. “We just left sculdiggery

      behind, guys! What's next?”

      Nancy recalled the next part of the clue. “We have

      to ski past frozen waters—that must be the lake,” she

      said. “Then we should follow the shore until we come

      to the stream.”

      “The wet wanderer,” Ned called back to them. “It'll

      take a while to get there.”

      As Nancy skied, she tilted her face up to catch the

      sun's rays. The wind whipped at her cheeks, but she

      was moving with such energy that she didn't feel the

      cold. She felt completely invigorated.

     


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