“Carol!”
Trapped in a car with two
gas pedals and no brakes. Headed towards
a dangerous curve at eighty miles an hour. The last thing Carol expected was to hear her
name called from the backseat. She twisted
around in surprise. “Edward?! How did you get here?”
“I’ll explain later!” said
Edward. “Right now, let me have the
wheel, or we’ll crash!” He pushed
himself through the space between the front seats, grabbed the wheel, and
turned it just in time to get around the curve.
“One down!” he said. “I’ll steer; you handle the rest. Can you slow down?”
“No, I can’t!” said
Carol. “The brake’s just making it go
faster! I tried both pedals! They
don’t work!”
“Don’t panic,” said Edward,
turning around another curve. “Grab the
gearshift and set the car to neutral.”
Carol grabbed it and pushed
a button on the side. The stick popped
out.
“Uh, Edward?” said Carol,
panic in her voice. “I don’t think—”
Edward glanced down, then
shook his head. “Oh, well. Don’t worry!” he said, turning the
wheel. They barely made it around this
curve. Carol heard a scrape as the car’s
paint came in contact with the guardrail.
“That was too close!” shrieked
Carol.
“I’m doing my best!” barked
Edward. “Even Grand Prix drivers slow
down for these curves! How about the
emergency brake?”
“Is that safe, at this
speed?” said Carol.
“Is anything?” asked Edward.
Carol yanked it. The lever came away in her hand without so
much as a jolt. “There’s another curve!”
This was a double curve, and
Carol was pretty sure her side of the car went through the air a little bit as
they passed. “Did you—”
“Shh!” said Edward. “Turn the ignition off!”
Carol did. Nothing happened.
“That’s not working either!”
“Then there’s only one thing
to do,” Edward calmly replied.
“What’s that?!”
“Hang on for dear life!” Edward swerved around another curve. “This road should get less curvy as we go on!”
Exactly the opposite was
true. Up till now, it had been bad
enough. Now, there was a stretch where
the curves grew even sharper. Warning
signs appeared, encouraging drivers to slow down. Carol and Edward would have loved to follow
them; unfortunately, that wasn’t an option.
“Put the highbeams on!” shouted
Edward.
“What if another car comes?”
asked Carol.
“Too bad for them!” answered
Edward. “We need as much of the road as
we can get!” The car screeched around
another bend.
“Do you want me to—”
“No!” said Edward. “You just stay as calm as possible.”
Round another curve they
went, and another curve, and another curve.
Then, they saw yet another curve sign.
The recommended speed was thirty miles an hour!
“That says thirty!” screamed
Carol.
“Can’t do that!” said
Edward, bringing the car to the right of the shoulder until he was practically
scraping the guardrail. Below, on the
left, waves broke over jagged rocks that looked black in the dim light. To the curve they came.
As gradually as possible,
Edward steered around the curve. The car
moved back into its lane and into the opposite lane. Then, it hit the guardrail on the other
side! Sparks flew into the air, there
was a crunch, and the large hunk of metal fell over the side.
“We’re going over!” screamed
Carol. She looked down and saw nothing
but water below.
Then, suddenly, a strip of
road appeared. “We’re around!” called
Edward.
“Whew!” said Carol. “Don’t go so close!”
“I didn’t have a choice,”
said Edward, turning the wheel again.
“If we come to another curve like that…”
He didn’t finish his
sentence. Nor did Carol. Brother and sister stared worriedly out at
the gloomy, twisty road.
They reached a hill and
started up. “Maybe this will slow us
down!” said Carol. “Uh-oh, another curve
sign. What does it say?”
“You don’t want to know,”
said Edward. “Close your eyes on this
one.”
“Twenty?” said Carol. “Did that say twenty?”
The car reached the top of
the hill, revealing a sharp bend to the right, followed immediately by a sharp
bend to the left. “Hang on!” said Edward. “I’m not even going to try to make that?”
“What?” said Carol.
Bam! The car plowed through the
guardrail, flew over a cove below, and plowed through a guardrail on the other
side.
“I thought this side was
lower,” said Edward. “Good thing I was right.”
“You weren’t sure?” said
Carol. “How did you learn to drive,
anyway?!”
“It’s easy,” said
Edward. He looked at his sister, then
back at the road. “For some people,
anyway. What’s that ahead on the road?”
“What?!” exclaimed Carol.
Crunch!
“I think it was a hubcap,”
said Edward. “Nothing to—whoa!”
Another curve had shown up,
and Edward swung the car around. He
misjudged, and sparks flew as the BMW skidded across the guardrail. This one survived, though, and they were around.
“Don’t they ever end?” asked
Carol.
“I don’t know. I didn’t bring my GPS,” said Edward. “Next time—”
“There’s another car
coming!” screamed Carol. “I can see it
up ahead!”
“Where? Oh, there?” said Edward. “Uh-oh!
You’d better start praying we don’t meet them on a curve. Place your hand on the horn and hold it
there.”
BEEEEEEEP!!!!!
Closer and closer the other
car came, and Edward tried to figure out where they would pass. Sometimes, it looked like they’d meet on a
curve. Sometimes, it looked like they
wouldn’t. He couldn’t quite tell for
sure.
“I think they’ll hit us on
that curve up there!” called Carol.
“Don’t worry about that,”
said Edward.
“Why?”
“There’s nothing we can do
about it if that happens,” said Edward.
“Here we go!”
They went around. It was sharp enough that they had to swerve
into the opposite lane, and there was the other car, right in front of
them. HONK!!!!!! went its horn!
Carol shut her eyes. Edward swerved back into the right lane and
hoped that the other car wouldn’t try to veer out of their way.
Neither of them was sure
what happened, but somehow, they missed the other car. “Phew!” said Edward. “That was too close for comfort!”
“This whole trip is too
close for comfort!” yelled Carol, her face white with fright. Edward glanced over at his sister.
“Pretend you’re on a roller
coaster,” he said.
“I hate roller coasters!”
said Carol.
“Never mind,” said Edward. “Just—just—just try to enjoy the California
starlight glinting off the ocean.”
“I’m too scared we’re going
to be in it!” said Carol.
“The starlight?”
“No! The ocean!
Look out for that curve!”
“I’ve got it,” said
Edward. “Just relax.”
“Hah!” said Carol. “Relax?”
The car swerved around
another curve, left tire tracks on another one, and destroyed another guardrail
on the third (though this was on the right side of the road). “What’s around the next curve?” asked
Carol. “I can’t see!”
“We’ll find out soon!” said
Edward. “Here we go!”
Scrrrch!
went
the car. Then—
“Look!” said Carol. “The road!”
“It’s straight!” called
Edward. “We’ve passed the curves!”
“Yes!” said Carol. “We made it!”
“Not yet,” said Edward. “You take over now. Don’t move the wheel until we reach another
turn, okay?”
“Oh, sure,” said Carol. “What are you going to do?”
“I’m going to try to stop
this thing,” said Edward. “Whatever you
do, don’t panic. Just keep us going
straight until the hood comes up.”
“Until WHAT?!”
“The hood. Keep us straight until the hood comes—”
“Why is the hood going to
come up?!”
“We’ve got to stop this car!”
said Edward. “I’m going to crawl out and
open the hood. Once I do, keep going
straight. I’ll stop us before we hit
another curve.”
“That’s dangerous!” said
Carol.
“As if this isn’t?” said
Edward. “Don’t worry.” With that, he rolled down the window.
When Edward stuck his head
out, he felt the wind rushing past. It
was more powerful than anything he’d felt in his life, but not powerful enough
to blow him off the car. Carefully, he pulled
himself out.
“Careful!” called Carol
after him.
“Do you think I’d forget?”
Edward asked. The ground raced by below
at over eighty miles per hour as he pulled himself onto the right side of the
windshield.
Just below him was the
hood. Unfortunately, the end that opened
was on the other side of the car. There
was no way he could open it from that end while they were in motion. If he was to get at the engine while the car
was moving, Edward would have to create his own opening.
He pulled out his wallet and
tugged what appeared to be an Eckerd card.
Suddenly, a bright flame leapt out of the wallet. It was a miniature blowtorch!
Edward went to work on the
hood. Soon, its rear-right corner was
flapping up and down in the breeze, the hinges slashed by fire. Now for the left. Edward made sure as he moved over that his
sister could still see the road. Her
tense face looked strange, viewed through a windshield. Even if it hadn’t been tense, it probably
still would’ve looked strange from that angle.
FZZZZZZ! A few seconds, and the left
side of the hood was free. Edward grabbed
the end of it and pried. The wind
sweeping over the car made it difficult, but suddenly, the hood popped into the
air and fell away to the side of the car.
Edward heard it clatter in the background.
The car wasn’t stopped yet,
but a grin that seemed to say “so there!” crossed Edward’s face. He pocketed the wallet and pulled out a
pocketknife. Carol, watching from
inside, didn’t know enough about cars to understand what he was doing, but she saw
her brother attack the motor with an unbridled fury. The moonlight glinted off his knife as he
worked at the heart of the car.
All at once, the
motor cut off! Carol saw the speedometer
drop to seventy.
Then sixty.
Then fifty.
Forty.
Thirty.
Twenty.
Ten.
Five.
Finally, the car
rolled to a stop. Edward hopped off the
hood and ran around to the driver’s door. Carol, still white-faced, was just staggering
out of the car. She sat down next to it
and took several deep breaths.
“Are you alright?”
asked Edward.
Carol nodded. “Remind me never to drive again,” she said,
leaning back against the Bavarian death trap.
“If you hadn’t steered me around those curves, I wouldn’t be alive right
now—I’m sure of it! Hey, how come you
were in the car?”
“I was just going to
ask you the same thing,” said Edward. “I’ll
go first, though. Yesterday, I was
thinking about the night someone tried to poison Mr. Hallett. Who could have poisoned Mr. Hallett’s glass?”
“Anybody, I guess,”
said Carol.
“Uh-uh,” said Edward.
“Think about it. How were the glasses filled?”
“I forget,” said
Carol.
“A servant came
around with a pitcher, remember?”
“Oh, that’s right,”
said Carol. “Sorry, I’m still thinking
about our ride.”
“Did the servant use
the same pitcher for all the glasses?”
“Did he?” asked
Carol.
“Yes,” said
Edward. “I remember thinking to myself
that it had to be pretty large to hold enough water for everyone. Now, get this. Everyone was served from the same
pitcher. If the water was poisoned, then
everyone would’ve received a poisoned glass.”
Carol gasped. “That’s right!” she said. “But wait!
Maybe everybody did! Drew broke
all the glasses with his—”
“They weren’t all
poisoned,” said Edward, flatly. “Bourdon
drank all of his, remember?”
“Right,” said
Carol. A puzzled look came over her
face. “Then how could—”
“—someone have
specifically poisoned Mr. Hallett’s glass?” asked Edward. “I figured that out yesterday. Drew and Mrs. Hallett were on either side of
him. Neither of them would have done it—”
“Of course,” said
Carol.
“—which means the
glass was poisoned before the water was ever poured,” said Edward. “See where this is going?”
“I think so,” said
Carol, “but that still doesn’t explain how the poisoner knew which glass was
Mr. Hallett’s.”
“That’s the key to
this whole thing,” said Edward. “The
poisoner was in the room well before anyone else entered. So long before, in fact, that the room wasn’t
entirely set up yet. Someone changed the
flowers before dinner started—”
“Schlegel!” exclaimed
Carol. “He thought there were different
flowers in the vase!”
“Exactly!” said
Edward. “I figured it out late yesterday
afternoon, but I didn’t have a chance to tell anyone.”
“I overheard him say
there was something hidden in the glovebox yesterday afternoon,” said Carol,
“but I didn’t have a chance to tell anyone either!”
“So that’s what
happened,” said Edward. “Well, once I
figured out it was him, I searched his room.
Unfortunately, I didn’t find anything.
Then, I decided to search his car, but I decided to wait until the
middle of the night so no one would notice.
I’d just opened the door and climbed in when I heard somebody coming, so
I hid in the backseat. You can imagine
my surprise when it was you.”
“So that’s why you
were there,” said Carol. “Oh, I’m so
glad you were!” She quickly told her
story of how she’d caught on to Schlegel.
“But there’s another
thing I don’t understand,” she said.
“How did Schlegel know I was listening?”
“Good question,” said
Edward. “He didn’t see you?”
“No,” said
Carol. “I’d just gone to the kitchen to
get a glass of lemonade. I wasn’t even
scheduled to be in that area.”
“Interesting,” said
Edward. “The way the car acted, I’d say
this was a trap. How could he trap you,
though, if—say, wait a minute.”
“What?” said Carol.
“Let’s have a look at
those plans you went after,” said Edward.
He ran around to the passenger door, yanked open the glovebox, and
yanked out the papers.
“Well?” said Carol.
“Old newspapers—all
of them,” said Edward. “These weren’t
the real plans at all. This whole
business was a trap.”
“For who, though?”
asked Carol.
“Probably just
the—were either of our ‘parents’ around when he made the call?”
“I think Mr. Hallett
was nearby—”
“That’s it,
then! Schlegel wasn’t trying to trap
us! He was trying to trap Mr. Hallett!” Edward laughed. “Won’t he be surprised tomorrow morning when
our ‘dad’ is still around?!”
“That doesn’t help us,
though,” said Carol. “We’ve got to get
back to Malibu and tell Drew and Renee what happened!”
“You’re right,” said
Edward. “Who knows how far away we are
by now. Do you have your compact?”
“Let me see,” said
Carol, sticking her hand in her pocket.
She frowned. “No. I must have left it in my room.”
“Phooey!” said
Edward. “And I left my wallet behind. No one told me we were going for a late-night
spin. We’ll have to figure out how to
get back ourselves.”
“Where are we,
anyway?” asked Carol. She and her
brother looked around. The moon shone
bright over trees, grass, the road, and—
“Over to our right!”
said Edward. “Look! A railroad siding!”
“With some freight
cars parked on it!” said Carol. “Let’s
go take a look.”
“Hopefully it’s a
train pulled over, waiting for another one to pass,” said Edward, as the two
spies walked over.
Sure enough, when
they reached the side of the tracks, they saw light coming from an engine way
down the siding. “It’s facing south,”
said Edward. “Hear that? That’s another train coming.”
“I don’t hear a
horn,” said Carol.
“They only honk at
crossings,” said Edward. “Quick, let’s
duck in this boxcar before this one heads out.”
“How long do you
think it’ll take to get back?” asked Carol.
“A while,” said
Edward. “This won’t go eighty, and I
don’t know if it’s headed to Malibu.
Hopefully, we can make it back sometime this morning. Once Schlegel finds out we’re gone, he might
become suspicious of Drew and Renee.
We’ve got to get back there as soon as possible!”
That was fun.
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