“Don’t panic,” said
Drew. “There’s another way out of
this!” With that, he put the car in
drive and gunned the motor. The car
lurched ahead of the one pushing it and sped the rest of the way down the dock.
“What are you doing?” gasped
Carol. The car reached the edge, flew
into the air, and plummeted straight towards the water below.
As it fell, Drew turned on
the radio, set the station to FM 107.9, and hit the hazard lights button.
Splash! The car landed in the water
and plunged under the surface. Then, it
stopped sinking. New headlights that cut
through the water came on. Drew adjusted
the gearshift and began speeding through the water.
“Didn’t the CIA tell you
about this car?” said Drew. “Oh, never
mind. I guess they didn’t want you
driving it.”
“It’s a submarine?”
“Among other things,” said
Drew. “Remember? Like the one we used on the last assignment?”
“Oh, that one,” said
Carol. “I remember that. That one was a Chevy though, right?”
“A Maserati would have
looked out of place in Billings,” said Drew.
“Anyway, they’re still repairing that one. We got this car for this trip.”
“I see,” said Carol. “Well, it came in handy.”
“Yes,” said Drew. “I wonder who rammed us.”
“Don’t we have a camera?”
asked Renee.
Drew shook his head. “It was in the left-rear backup light, and
that broke when they hit us. No
footage.”
“I couldn’t really get a
look,” said Edward. “All I noticed were
the headlights. Then, I was too stunned
to see anything else.”
“Same,” said Renee.
Drew shrugged. Then, he grinned. “Someone’s going to be surprised when we get
home. Let’s go.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If anyone was surprised at
the Blaine residence, they did a good job of hiding it. The butler merely sniffed at the Lawrences
when he opened the door. (Renee asked if
he had a cold.) Philip yawned at the
four before heading upstairs to his room.
Hannah and Peter were out in the gardens, gazing up at the moonlight. Hodgson had gone to bed, and Schlegel and
Bourdon were playing billiards.
“Shall we go look in on them
and let them know we’re still alive?” Carol whispered.
Drew shook his head. “Let’s make ourselves scarce. Remember, we’ve got something going on
tonight.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
At one in the morning, Drew
tapped on his sisters’ door. It opened
immediately. Carol and Renee had been
watching the clock. Edward was up,
too. Without a word, the four started
down the stairs.
Reaching the first floor,
they made their way down the main hall to the library. Drew stopped the group at the door. Silently, he motioned for Edward to watch
it. Then, he took Renee through the
library to the other door and stopped her there. He looked at her, and she nodded. With that, Drew and Carol got to work.
Drew walked to the table in
the center of the end of the room with the secret door. He set a large flashlight on the table and
turned it on, illuminating the bookshelves.
Then, he walked around to the bookshelf in the center and yanked a book
on the third shelf from the ceiling, towards the right.
It came out. Nothing happened.
Carol stared at Drew, a
quizzical expression on her face.
“Forgot,” Drew mouthed. He put
that book back and grabbed another one.
It slipped out too, nicely. So
did the next, and the next, and the next.
Drew looked visibly perplexed as he reached for another one.
It didn’t come out. Instead, the bookshelf swung slowly
open. Drew stepped out of the way of the
shelf and peered inside.
Suddenly, Edward opened his
door. “Psst!” he said. “There’s someone upstairs!”
Drew turned out the
light. “Make sure no one goes in here,”
he whispered. “I’ll go find out who it
is. Be right back.” He slipped out of the library and darted down
the hall towards the front steps. Before
reaching them, he flattened himself against the wall and slid along until he
was almost in the entryway.
Then, he stepped out
nonchalantly.
“Ah, Mr. Bourdon! Fancy running into you this time of night!”
Bourdon stopped in the
middle of the stairs, a surprised expression on his face. “Drew!
I thought you’d gone to bed.”
“I had, but I couldn’t
sleep,” said Drew. “What about you?”
“Same.”
There was an awkward
silence.
“You should take a look
outside,” said Drew. “I hear Orion’s
really clear tonight.”
“Yes,” said Bourdon. “Plenty of time for that later.” He paused.
“What were you really doing?”
“Walking around,” said
Drew. “Why, what about you?”
“Oh—just wandering,” said
Bourdon. “Uh—find out anything?”
“I found out I’m not the
only one who can’t sleep,” said Drew.
“I mean about—you know.”
“I know what?” said
Drew. “Who can’t sleep, you mean?”
“No—not that at all,”
Bourdon laughed, a very hollow-sounding laugh.
He looked nervous. “Would you—”
“Would I what?” said
Drew. He gave Bourdon a funny look. “What’s up?
Is there something you want?”
“No—I mean—well, it’s
nothing pressing, but—” Drew kept
silent, forcing Bourdon to finish.
“What do you know?” Bourdon
finally said.
“About what?”
“The project.”
“Project?”
“Mr. Blaine’s project. We both know he’s working on something. Have you found out anything yet?”
“Not much.”
“What do you mean, not
much?”
“Nothing outside common
knowledge.”
“What’s that?”
Drew smiled. “Like I said, not much. Nobody knows anything about it, except
Blaine’s working on something.”
“Something related to
aerospace.”
Drew thought a moment. “That’s plausible,” he said. “After all, he does work for—”
“It involves a missile,
doesn’t it? A big, self-guided missile,
powerful enough to wipe out a whole county?”
“Go on,” said Drew. “You intrigue me!”
Worry crossed Bourdon’s
face. “You mean you didn’t know?”
“I didn’t say that,” said
Drew, “but I’d appreciate hearing more.”
“Er, no,” said Bourdon. “No, no—not now. Not—just pretend I didn’t say anything. Goodnight.”
With that, the flustered spy
ran back upstairs, slamming his door behind him.
Drew stared after him,
grinning. Then, he turned to go back
downstairs.
“Aaaah!”
The
scream came from the Halletts’ room!
Drew rushed back up the
stairs and flung open the door to his “parents’” room. Mrs. Ames stood against the wall, a look of
fright on her face. Mr. Ames rose up
from the other side of the bed, something small in his hand. He looked over at Drew.
“Snake,” he said. “There was a snake in the room.”
The scream had drawn
attention. Bourdon and the Schlegels
darted out of their rooms, and the Blaines followed close behind. “What is it?
What’s the matter?” asked Mr. Blaine.
Drew pointed past the
bed. “Dad killed a snake over there,” he
said.
The throng milled their way
through the room until they reached the other side of the bed. Sliced neatly in two with Mr. Ames’s
pocketknife was an ugly, tan snake with little diamond patterns on its back.
Mr. Blaine drew in his
breath. “A diamondbacked rattler,” he
said. “Now, how did that get here? I’ve never seen one on this property before?”
“There’s something unusual
about this snake,” said Mr. Hallett. “No
rattler.”
“That’s right,” said
Drew. “Someone removed it.”
“Why would someone do that?”
asked Mrs. Hallett.
“So it wouldn’t make noise,”
said Mr. Blaine. “That’s the only
explanation. Without a rattler, there’d
be no warning of its presence.”
“If this is some kind of a
joke,” said Mr. Hallett, “I want you all to know it’s not very funny.” He stared accusingly around the room.
Schlegel leaned over the bed
and stared at the snake’s body. “I’m
going to make sure there aren’t more of these crawling around,” he said. “Come on, Karla!”
Mrs. Schlegel didn’t look too
enthusiastic. “I think I’ll wait here
while you search our room,” she said.
“Ooh, how ghastly!”
“I’ll send Godfrey to clean
this up,” said Mr. Blaine. “That is,
unless you want a rattlesnake carcass on your floor all night.”
Mr. Hallett shook his head. “Take it away,” he said, leaning against the
bed. “I’d rather not have to look at
something like that. I didn’t think this
trip would be so dangerous.”
Drew knew it would be
dangerous. He just didn’t realize how
dangerous it would be for the Halletts.
“Hopefully we can get this cleared up before something else happens,” he
thought.
This is the Pacific, all right...
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