by Lauren Child
Elliot obviously thought this was the funniest thing he had ever heard. ‘Butler!’ he repeated, ‘butler!’ He was laughing so hard that he no longer seemed to be able to hold himself up – his spine seemed to concertina. Tears were rolling down his face.
Mouse Huxtable came round the corner. ‘Hey, what’s so funny?’
‘Nothing,’ scowled Ruby.
Mouse looked at Elliot. ‘Do you think his head will fall off?’
‘It’s hard to say,’ replied Ruby. ‘It never has before.’
This scene wasn’t unusual. Elliot was prone to terrible giggling fits. At the most inappropriate moment he would break out into uncontrolled, often silent laughter, shoulders shaking, tears streaming down his cheeks. The worst thing about it was that Elliot had a very infectious laugh and it was hard not to get caught up in it once he got going.
But this time, Ruby did not want to see the funny side.
‘Give me a break bozo – funnier things have happened.’ But Elliot did not seem to think so.
Ruby felt the corners of her mouth twitch – she didn’t want to give him the satisfaction so instead she said, ‘Come on Mouse, let’s go and get a fruit shake.’
The two girls and the dog left Elliot on the sidewalk and made their way across the road to the fruit bar, Cherry Cup. Ruby liked the fruit shakes here because they had an unlimited choice of both the interesting and the more pedestrian fruit. The owner, Cherry, was a man in his late fifties – five years ago he had thrown in his job selling insurance and opened this place. Now he was just happy to be liquidising fruit, any combination, however unlikely. If anyone ever asked him how he was, he would reply, ‘not too shabby,’ meaning, pretty darn good.
‘So where’ve you been Rube?’ asked Mouse.
‘My grandmother has been sick,’ said Ruby.
‘Really? How bad is she?’
‘Tragically bad,’ replied Ruby in a hushed voice.
‘I’m sorry to hear that,’ said Mouse. ‘What hospital’s she in?’
Ruby looked down at the floor. ‘Uh, one in New York – I’ve sorta been flying back and forth.’
Another lie, she thought.
Mouse took Ruby’s unease as a signal that she no longer wanted to talk about it, and fell silent. The door opened and in walked Clancy Crew. He barely even glanced at Ruby. ‘Hey Clance,’ said Mouse.
‘Hey Mouse,’ said Clancy. Ruby said nothing.
Clancy went over to one of the booths, and sat down. He pulled out a comic, appropriately titled Buzz Off, and began to read it intently. Mouse looked first at Ruby then at Clancy and then back to Ruby. ‘Something you want to tell me?’
‘Like what?’ Ruby was staring hard at the Cherry Cup menu.
‘Like did you guys have a fight or something?’
‘Nah,’ said Ruby.
‘Are you sure? I haven’t seen old Clance like this since that time you stepped on his turtle.’
‘Look Mouse, could you just drop it. I don’t feel like talking about Clancy Crew right now, OK?’
‘Whatever you say Rube,’ sighed Mouse.
‘Listen Mouse, I got bigger things on my mind than some boy with a bad case of the grouches.’
‘Course you do Rube,’ said Mouse, biting her lip.
Ruby felt guilty – she didn’t like to lie to Mouse and now she was making it worse by snapping at her. ‘Look, I didn’t mean to bite your head off, it’s just my brain is overloaded and all – what with my grandmother being so sick and my mom all racked with worry so she can’t sleep any more.’
Another lie.‘That’s OK Rube – no offence taken. Let me order you a fruit shake.’
‘Thanks Mouse my old pal – make mine a pineapple quince, two straws. Here.’ She held out a dollar bill. ‘They’re on me.’
Mouse ordered the drinks and they waited at the bar. She was fiddling with toothpicks, sticking them into the plastic cherries which decorated the bar top. She looked up at Ruby. ‘Hey, I bet it has to do with his teeth.’
‘Huh?’ said Ruby.
‘Clancy being all grouchy – it must be to do with his teeth. I overheard his mom talking about how one of his molars is infected – how it’s gotta come out. You know what Clancy’s like about the dentist, I’ll bet that’s what’s making him act weird.’
Ruby smiled. ‘You know what Mouse, you’re probably right, you usually are.’
Mouse was pleased with that. ‘So you heard about the TV people coming to film the “safest safe in the US of A”?’
Ruby looked blank.
‘Twinford City Bank, you know – the gold?’
‘Oh yeah, I read about that in the paper – the “unstealable gold”,’ said Ruby.
When they got up to leave Mouse called out, ‘See you Clancy.’
‘Yeah, see you Mouse,’ he replied.
It was as if Ruby didn’t even exist.
It was late afternoon by the time Ruby got home and as she climbed the stairs she could hear the sing-song voice of Barbara Bartholomew. She stuck her head round the living room door; Ruby’s mother was reclining on a new and elegant sofa, Barbara sitting cross-legged on a pile of silk cushions – both were sipping on elaborate cocktails. They were deep in conversation.
‘I can’t tell you, Barb, how super great Hitch was this morning – I had quite the lucky escape.’
‘Really, no kidding?’
‘Well, he drove me into town – I needed to stop off at Glenthorn’s jewellers, they are altering that necklace of mine.’
‘The white jade one?’ asked Barbara
‘The white jade one,’ confirmed Sabina. ‘I want to wear it at the launch and it needs a better setting – more modern.’
‘Oh that will be nice,’ cooed Barbara.
‘So Hitch stays in the car because there were no free parking meters, as per usual.’
‘Oh Sabina darling, there never are – it’s terrible.’
‘Isn’t it? Why the mayor doesn’t do something I don’t know. Anyway, where was I?’
‘Hitch stayed in the car,’ said Barbara.
‘That’s right – anyway, I am in there a little while, thirty minutes maybe forty, and Hitch is driving round the block and I come out and I stand there waiting on the street for him to reappear and then you won’t believe what happens.’
‘What?’ whispered Barbara dramatically.
‘I only get my purse snatched by some criminal is all!’
‘You don’t!’
‘I’m telling you, and no one does anything, I mean the guy’s fast but still… you’d think.’
‘You would,’ agreed Barbara.
‘Anyhow, suddenly Hitch drives around the corner, sees me screaming at the thief; I tell you Barb, he was out of that car before you could blink and running, I’ve never seen a man move so fast.’
‘Hitch, your butler? You are kidding!’
‘I am not kidding Barbara, he is after that guy, catches up with him, karate kicks him in the back of the legs and the guy drops my purse.’
‘No way!’
‘I get my purse back, no harm done.’
‘What about the guy?’
‘Hitch chases him up a fire escape and over the top of the Wilmot building but the guy leaps down about forty feet into a passing garbage truck and he’s gone.’
‘Wow Sabina, that’s some butler you have there – hold on tight to that one.’
‘You can be sure of it Barb!’ And the two women dissolved into unexplained giggles.
Ruby walked into the kitchen where Hitch was preparing snacks.
‘So I hear you were quite the action hero today.’
‘Yeah well, stopping purse snatchers isn’t usually what I do but it makes a change from arranging cheese straws.’
‘But you do it so nicely,’ said Ruby, adopting her mother’s voice.
‘It’s not as hard as it looks, want to try?’
‘Nah, I’d cramp your style. So I guess your shoulder’s getting better if you can chase a th
ief up a fire escape?’ said Ruby.
‘Yeah, it must be, finally – which can only mean one thing. I’ll be moving on soon – I’ll have to get someone else to babysit you.’
‘Just like old Mary Poppins, you’ll be gone,’ said Ruby, pouring herself a glass of banana milk.
‘Yeah well kid, I’m not saying it hasn’t been super-califragilistic to know you, but I’m kind of glad to be getting back to the day job, know what I mean?’
‘I know what you mean.’
Ruby walked upstairs to her room and met Consuela coming the other way with a tray piled high with dirty cups and cereal bowls.
‘I was just about to bring those down,’ said Ruby correctly predicting trouble.
‘I shouldn’t have to be going up and down cleaning up after you – I’m a dietician not a housemaid,’ said Consuela, ‘but we are running out of crockery – it’s all in your room!’
‘Look, I’m sorry, I really am.’ Ruby gave Consuela her best “I’m sorry” face and Consuela’s scowl instantly softened.
‘Oh, your friend Clancy called,’ she said. ‘He wanted me to ask you how your grandmother is doing? He seems to think she is sick or something.’
‘Yeah, poor Clance, he can get very confused about things – gets facts very mixed up. He’s got some sorta disorder.’
‘Oh, that’s a shame,’ said Consuela, unusually concerned.
‘Yeah, it’s too bad,’ said Ruby and as she closed the door to her room, she remembered how every little untruth always led to a hundred others. This was RULE 32: TELL ONE LIE AND GET READY TO TELL A WHOLE LOT MORE.
The next day, cycling across Twinford, she had the same “watched” feeling she’d had before, but there was no sign of anything that might suggest she was being tailed.
After sitting at the desk in the dusty brown office for six hours, it dawned on Ruby that she was bored – it wasn’t the work exactly, although today it was painstaking, reading files over and over, trying to find a loose thread or something that would lead her to the next thing. No, it was the environment that was the problem, cut off from the world with only a supreme potato head for company. She wondered if this was how Lopez had felt.
Only it was doubly bad for Ruby because it looked like she was going to fail and the fear of failure was indeed a strange new feeling.
She started absent-mindedly rolling her pencil up and down the desk – she wasn’t even aware that she was doing it. She was lost in thought when she heard Froghorn shout, ‘Hey! little girl, could you stop doing that!’
Ruby jumped and the pencil rolled across the desk and disappeared off the edge.
Darn it. She slipped off her chair and took a look underneath the table – she could see the pencil there on the floor but she couldn’t reach it. As quietly as she could Ruby began pulling at the heavy piece of furniture until it moved a couple of inches. She slid her hand along and felt around until it found what she was looking for. But the pencil she retrieved was not her pencil, it was green with white writing. The writing said:
“The Fountain.”
Ruby sat still for so long that Froghorn came in to see if something had happened.
When he saw her sitting there, just staring at a pencil, he made some pathetic attempt at a smart remark. Ruby noticed that he had a mayonnaise stain on his tie but she really couldn’t be bothered to point it out – she was far too busy thinking about Lopez.
Mrs Digby was busy
trying to get a tea stain
out of Mrs Redfort’s
evening gown. . .
…when she heard a voice, or rather voices.
‘We better go and talk to the old lady, get her to co-operate if you know what I mean.’
Oh I know what you mean, said Mrs Digby to herself. She sat back in her chair and waited for the inevitable. The door was opened and in walked two men, the one with the nice face who she had met before and another much bigger man, almost a giant, who she hadn’t had the pleasure of meeting yet. There was no sign of the woman with the high-pitched scream.
The nice looking man seemed to be in charge – at least he did most of the talking.
Mrs Digby stood there with her hands on her hips. ‘What is this? Kidnap-an-old-person-week?’ She wasn’t taking captivity lying down. The Digbys had always fought tooth and nail, no matter what the odds.
‘All we want you to do,’ said the man, ‘is call your employers and tell them that you are safe and sound in Miami.’
She folded her arms.
‘And why would I tell them that, when it is perfectly obvious to me that I am not?’
‘Well,’ suggested the man softly, ‘why don’t you just say that you are?’
‘Because that would make me a liar and I ain’t no liar.’ Mrs Digby pursed her lips.
‘Well,’ said the man, ‘cross your fingers behind your back and pretend that you are.’
Mrs Digby sighed heavily. ‘And just what am I doing in Miami?’
‘Perhaps you are playing a game of blackjack, perhaps you have friends there.’
‘And what if I’m not in Miami, what if I’m being held at gunpoint in a warehouse, what are you going to do then?’
‘Then,’ said the other man, the one with the big hands and the silver rings which looked a little bit like knuckle dusters, ‘then perhaps you are gonna wish you was in Miami playing blackjack.’
‘OK, OK, I get the picture, tough guy.’ Mrs Digby picked up the phone, praying Ruby might have skipped school – if Ruby heard her voice she would know in a moment that something was up. Ruby was one smart cookie. Mrs Digby dialled the number – but no one answered.
‘So leave a message,’ hissed the tough guy.
Mrs Digby glanced at his silver rings and decided she would do as she was told.
‘They won’t ever believe you, you know,’ she said. ‘You can force me to say a whole lotta mumbo jumbo on an answerphone but the Redforts know me inside out – they’ll know I was made to do it. It just won’t ring true, they know I have no cousin Ernie – believe you me, you all are gonna be stitched up like a pack of kippers.’ Mrs Digby was defiant as ever but her captors merely laughed.
‘Don’t wait too long to be rescued, old lady – you might pass your sell-by date.’
Chapter 20.
Unlikely but not impossible
WHEN RUBY CYCLED INTO CEDARWOOD DRIVE she noticed a Sushi-land van parked across the street. She was greeted at the front door by Bug, and as she walked upstairs the sound of her parents’ chatter drifted down from the kitchen.
‘That was so nice to get a message from Mrs Digby wasn’t it, honey?’
‘Yes,’ agreed Brant. ‘I had no idea that she had a cousin Ernie.’
‘No, nor me – just shows, you can know someone your whole entire life and never know a thing like that. Still, I am glad she is having a high old time – it’s probably done her the world of good to have a break.’ Sabina picked up her magazine. ‘It’ll be nice to get her back though.’
‘Yep, I can’t wait to tell Ruby, she’s going to be pleased as a pie,’ said Brant.
‘Can’t wait to tell Ruby what?’ said Ruby, dumping her backpack on the floor and walking over to the fridge.
‘That Mrs Digby called!’ said her father
Ruby nearly dropped the carton of banana milk. ‘She did? You spoke to her? Where is she?’
‘She left a message – she’s in Miami, just as your father said she would be,’ said Sabina proudly.
‘Oh, I’ll go listen,’ said Ruby, turning to leave.
Her mother bit her lip. ‘Sorry honey, your father erased it.’
‘Sorry Rube,’ said her father, grinning awkwardly. ‘You know what a dunce I am with those answerphone gadget things, never can work out which is the right button.’
Ruby tried not to say anything unkind. ‘Can you at least tell me what she said?’
‘She’s living it up in Miami with a long lost cousin!’ said Sabina brightly.
‘
Which long lost cousin?’ said Ruby but before anyone could answer, the doorbell rang and her father went off to see who it was.
‘Oh heavens!’ said Sabina jumping up. ‘That’ll be the Sushi people!’
‘The what?’ said Ruby.
‘We have the museum committee coming over tonight – the museum curator, Enrico Gonzales, the Humberts, and of course most excitingly whats-his-name-Gustav should be flying in.’
‘No honey,’ said Brant, walking back into the kitchen. ‘He called to say he couldn’t make it.’
‘Oh drat!’ said Sabina.
‘Nor can Freddie Humbert, he’s tied up at the bank.’
‘Double drat!’ said Sabina. ‘Anyway it will be such fun.’
Ruby rolled her eyes. ‘Do you mind if I watch TV?’
‘Well, the thing is honey, I thought we might go sort of Japanese and eat low – at little tables on the floor in the living room, on account of us having no dining room set. Seemed like the perfect solution – it will be completely darling!’
‘What, you can’t go Japanese in the dining room?’
‘It’s being redecorated.’
‘You are welcome to join us Ruby sweetie – do you want to invite Clancy over?’
Clancy – Ruby felt that pang of guilt again. ‘You know what, I think I might just go Japanese on my own – in my room, do ya mind? I gotta lot of homework to do.’
‘Oh but honey won’t you just say hi to everyone? They so want to meet you.’
After Ruby had spent two hours saying ‘hi’ to everyone, she finally managed to slink off to her room where she made a list of all the things she knew about Lopez.
LOPEZ WAS LIKED BY BLACKER
and it seemed most of the Spectrum team so it was safe to assume she liked them back.
DID FROGHORN BUG THE LIFE OUT OF HER?
it seemed more than likely.
SHE SOUGHT ADVENTURE,
so she was no shrinking violet.
SHE WAS ALWAYS WELL GROOMED AT WORK,
except for that one day when she had come in with just the one hand manicured.
SHE SEEMED LIKE A PERSON WHO HAD SECRETS