Read Hunter Moran Saves the Universe Online
Authors: Patricia Reilly Giff
Steadman opens his mouth. I pretend I'm wiping some of the dirt off his mouth.
But a miracle occurs: a crackling sound. One of the cops raises a hand for quiet. It's their radio. More important things are going on than someone trying to blow up the world. They take off running and jump into the patrol car. With lights still flashing, they hit the road.
I stare down at Steadman. He's clueless about what he's put us through. He's actually grinning up at me with those chocolate-covered teeth. I have a terrible realization that he must have stolen a Hershey bar from Vinny's Vegetables and More.
My brother, a thief. What will this do to Mom?
Linny opens her mouth. “Another thing. Do you know what I found? Do you knowâ”
Zack nudges me. We have no time to listen to her.
“On the back porch,” she says. “About a hundred concert tickets. All gunked together with hard candy.”
“They're just not dependable,” Becca says, her nose twitching like a rabbit's.
Zack looks as if he's going into shock.
“It's a wonder the rain didn't get them.” Linny shakes her head.
Steadman and I trot around the back after Zack and sink down on the step.
Zack holds his head. “I was supposed to sell them for the concert.”
Some concert, with no audience.
Zack begins to pull the tickets apart and holds one up. A lemon lollipop stick is stuck to the edge.
“Oh yeah,” Steadman says. “That's where I left that lollipop.”
“I can't stand much more of this,” Zack says. “Danger is one thing, but Steadmanâ”
“What's dangerous?” Steadman asks.
“Stealing chocolate from Vinny's Vegetables,” I say.
“I just opened the candy bar the tiniest bit,” Steadman says. “I bit off an edge and put the rest right back.”
How gross is that?
“See what I mean?” Zack says.
“Listen,” I say. “There's no time to waste. We'll find theâ” I break off, looking at Steadman. “It's probably sitting on Vinny's garbage pile. We'll bury it, then sell the tickets.” I think about it. “You can say they're that way on purpose. You're composingâ”
Zack gives me a high five. “The Sticky Symphony.”
On the way to Vinny's, we swing Steadman between us like a flying gorilla. But bad news. We can't get down Vinny's alley. The supermarket king has locked the gate.
“Serves him right,” Zack says. “Blown to kingdom come because he's too mean to let anyone near his garbage.”
“We'll figure it all out,” I say. “Don't worry.”
Zack takes a breath. “In the meantime, let's get these tickets going.”
We zigzag down the block and bang on the first door. Who answers? Our luck. Sarah Yulefski, with braces and brown teeth. Yulefski, who thinks I'm in love with her.
Zack moves in front of me. “We're selling tickets to the concert. How many would you like to buy? Five? Seven?”
“How about twelve?” Steadman puts in.
Sarah smiles her terrible smile at me. “Did you forget? I'm
in
the concert. I'm playing a violin masterpiece I composed myself.” She sighs. “You were supposed to sell those tickets months ago. I sold forty myself.”
How could that be? Who in his right mind would buy a
ticket to hear Zack and Sarah Yulefski? And right now Sarah gives me a Miss American Beauty Queen smile with cornflakes stuck to her braces.
I step back and nearly fall off her steps. And Steadman is right there with his mouth. “Some set of choppers you have,” he tells her.
She smirks at him. “Dr. Diglio's work. I just got back from his office on Murdock Avenue. He had to fit me in. He's leaving right after Tinwitty Night.”
It hits me. Diglio will skip town just before the bomb detonates.
The clock is ticking away.
“I know,” Steadman says.
Steadman's reading my mind? It's very discouraging.
“We'd better get over to Diglio's house right away,” Zack says. “See what's going on there.”
And that's what we do.
But all is eerily still at Diglio's. His dinged Acura isn't in the driveway, and today's newspaper is still on the front path.
“What does that tell you?” Zack says.
“That we're too late,” I say. “He's moved on with the original, whatever that is. Right to ⦔ We don't even know where. How could we possibly follow him?
“Nah,” Steadman says. “It tells me that he's still at his office.”
Zack looks as if he's going to explode. He makes a zipper
with his pointer finger and his thumb and runs it across his mouth. “When I do this, stop talking.”
Steadman pays no attention. He speeds up the path ahead of us. “Come on,” he calls. “Let's look in the window.”
“Let him fend for himself for two minutes,” I say, and we tiptoe into Diglio's backyard jungle. We look carefully, crawling up and down the yard, but Diglio is too smart to leave any clues in his weeds. Thenâ
My heart almost stops. Inside the house, someone is speaking. We dive down into the bushes, landing on sticks that are as sharp as swords. What sacrifices we're making for the good of the country.
I raise my head an inch as the back door opens. It actually creaks like the chiller stuff on TV. And there's Mrs. Diglio in a black outfit with a bunch of lace and dagger-sharp heels. She looks highly dangerous.
Zack gasps and grabs my wrist.
Next to Mrs. Diglio, with some kind of pie thing stuffed in his mouth, is Steadman.
Steadman!
And he's pointing right at us.
Steadman walks down the steps with Diglio's accomplice. “Hunter,” he calls. “Zack. Good news.”
There's no hiding ourselves. Mrs. Diglio peers at us through diamond-studded glasses.
Steadman goes on. “Mrs. Diglio isn't a spy.”
We stand up and wipe the mud off our jeans. “Heh, heh,” Zack says. “Of course not.”
“We were ⦔ I wave my hand, trying to think. Why would we be hiding in her jungle? And then it comes to me: “⦠wondering if you'd like to buy a concert ticket.”
“Come in,” she says.
There's danger, staring us right in the face. But Mrs. Diglio has a firm grip on Steadman's arm. We have no choice. We follow her into her kitchen, the middle of her web.
It's very disappointing, just an ordinary kitchen, except for killer-vine wallpaper. What isn't ordinary is a fish tank filled with greenish water. If there are fish in there, they're well hidden. I don't even glimpse a fin or a tail. No, wait, there's something sliding along on the bottom. A slug? A snail? Strange.
And another thing. Locks bristle from the inside of the door and iron bars crisscross the windows. It's a regular Hansel and Gretel prison.
Will we ever get out of there alive?
Mrs. Diglio puts a plate of spy cookies in front of us and pours lemonade. She sees me staring at the door. “New locks,” she says. “There are maniacs all over the place. Frightening.”
“It certainly is,” I say, wishing Pop would fix the lock on our door. He's very careless about things like that.
“They climb over the fence.” Mrs. Diglio leans forward. “They've cut up my bushes, put them in piles.”
Zack stares at me. What is he trying to say? And then it comes to me. We're the maniacs she's talking about. Imagine. Spies like the Diglios worrying about things like that.
I glance down at the pad in front of me. Mrs. Diglio has terrible handwriting, even for a spy. There's a pile of
Z
s and
X
s; she may have added a new letter to the alphabet.
I try to read without her noticing.
Nead
, it begins. Then a list.
Alarm cluck, big hands to see in dark. Earploogs to miffle sound.
Miffle? Muffle the sound of a bomb going off as they speed away? And what about that alarm cluck? Don't they use clocks as timers for bombs? Didn't I see that on some program? Maybe
Death on Planet X
, Thursday night, nine o'clock?
I snap my fingers trying to think. Then I realize everyone is staring at me. I go
mmm, mmm
with my mouth filled with cookie, as Mrs. Diglio talks about the neighborhood being overrun with noot cases.
Whatever that means.
There's more. All strange things. And at the bottom â¦
At the bottom â¦
Is
Olyushka
!
That's it. We're toast.
Mrs. Diglio moves as fast as an iguana. She scoops up the pad and puts it in a drawer. Then she clears her throat, so I look up quickly, innocently. Steadman's mouth is full and wide open. It's a cement mixer in there. I give him the zipped-lip signal, and the cement mixer snaps shut.
He takes that moment to spill his lemonade across the plate of cookies, the plastic tablecloth, the chair, the floor, and himself, of course.
Zack and I jump out of the way, saying, “Sorry.”
Then, like a St. Dorothy miracle, I hear Linny's screechy voice in the background. “Get in the house, Hunter! Zack! It's time to eat!”
Perfect.
“We have to go,” Zack says, his eyes the size of Lester's soup kettle.
To our great relief, Mrs. Diglio opens her forty locks and we head out toward freedom.
“Wait!” she yells, but we don't stop. Of course not.
“You forgot,” she goes on. “The concert tickets.”
“We'll be back,” Zack shouts.
But that's not going to happen, we both know that. It's a miracle we've escaped with our lives.
HERE WE AREâDAY THREE OF SUMMER.
It's hot, sticky, and time is running out.â¦
Chapter 13
Breakfast may never be over. Pop keeps talking about computer hackers ruining the world.
Zack and I agree.
He's also a little irritable, maybe because drops of water from the ceiling plink and plunk down on his head.
He leaves for work with his hair plastered to his scalp.
“So what's the plan?” I ask Zack.
He crunches down on a lump of granola. “I have to compose a sonata. A symphony.” He waves his hand. “A something. It's hard to think about it when Newfield may be coming to an end.”
I clatter upstairs to sit on the edge of my bed for a while. What can I do to save us all? Then I smell chocolate two inches from my face.
Steadman, of course.
“How about I show you some pictures?” he says. “You'll be so excited.”
Can I just find one secure place to think of how to dismantle a bomb?
Steadman dives onto the bed. “I took one of you and Zack on the roof.”
“Nice.” I back away from him.
“I have a picture of the bomb, too,” he says.
I look up. “You don't have a camera.”
He pokes his nose up close. The odor of chocolate is intense. “William's cell phone,” he whispers.
“William's cell phone with me on top of St. Ursula's? A picture of the bomb?”
Steadman nods. “And one of the two of you working on Dad's computer.”
I'm off the bed as if I've been shot out of a cannon. William will blackmail Zack and me forever.
Steadman jumps off the bed, too. He rocks back and forth on his sneakers. “There's more, but William says he's going to decapitate me if I touch his phone again. Who knows what that means?”
“Did William see the pictures yet?” My mind is racing. William's door is bolted, his windows locked.
Steadman shrugs. He reaches high up into his pajama sleeve. With some effort, he pulls out William's bedroom key.
Hard to believe.
I take the key without a word. Where is William? Downstairs? Outside? Is there enough time to â¦
“William's mixing paint in the basement,” Steadman says. “It's a real mess down there.”
“Sit here,” I tell him. “Don't move. Don't breathe.”
“I have to breathe,” he says. “And I have to come with you. I know where he hid the phone.”
We go down the hall to William's room. I lean over the stairs. I can hear Zack plunking on the cello and Mom singing to Mary. I wish I knew where alpha dog Linny was, but at least William is nowhere in sight. I turn the key in the lock and we're inside.
I leap back against the door.
It's a horror, an absolute horror.
In front of me, a tyrannosaurus is poised to chomp down onâ
Zack's head. It really is a painting of Zack. I can tell by the ears and the teeth.
“Great, right?” Steadman says. “William is a genius. Turn around. You're on the other wall.”
“No thanks,” I say. “Just get the cell phone.”
Steadman begins to open drawers. It isn't easy. There's a ton of stuff jammed inside. “I can't remember exactly where ⦔ He tosses socks and underwear on the floor.
Someone is clumping up the stairs.
It's William, all right. No one else makes that much noise. Steadman grabs the phone, tosses it to me, and vanishes under the bed.