Escape from the Drooling Octopod! (9 page)

Read Escape from the Drooling Octopod! Online

Authors: Robert West

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They were all gasping up air like they were on Mars without a space suit. “Well, that's that.” Ghoulie coughed. “We take one more step in that house, and she'll have us on a table in the morgue.”

“She wasn't just angry,” said Scilla thoughtfully. “Did you notice?”

“Yeah,” said Beamer, “she was scared — terrified even.”

“Like a lioness protecting her cub,” Scilla finished for him. “Knowin' Alana's condition, I guess I can understand. Do you suppose she's her real mother?”

“Uh . . . Scilla,” said Ghoulie with a wry look, “we saw her mother's picture. Remember? And Pinocchio looks more like this woman than Alana does.”

There could have been all sorts of reasons — they weren't used to climbing the tree from the ground up or they were dizzy from their quick escape or the wind had a little pixie dust in it — but they couldn't find the passage, at least for a very long time. And when they did, it didn't look right. They weren't even in the same tree. Ghoulie checked his combination compass, GPS tracker, and odor analyzer and gave them a direction. Pretty soon, though, it was clear that they were going the wrong way. They could tell they were in the same neighborhood, though; the houses were just as strange. The one they were now passing was off-the-chart strange. It had a broad, flat roof that was almost completely covered with trees!

Beamer was totally befuddled.
How could anyone plant a
forest on top of a house? Where would the roots go?
The trees weren't all that big, but the canopy of leaves was pretty dense. Even with shafts of light from the setting sun prying into every nook and cranny, the forest interior looked very murky.

This was no time to explore. Night was looming in the east, and they were already late for supper. Ghoulie tried to call home, but his cell phone was dead. As it turned out, so were Beamer's and Scilla's. Good grief! They couldn't be more than a half mile from home. Before they had time to think about it, things became even more complicated.

A stream of moths suddenly poured out from the forest and crossed directly in front of them. On second glance, Beamer wasn't sure they were moths. It was really too early in the year for moths, and these were kind of big, the size of a small bird. They were almost white, but not quite. Actually, they were a lot of different colors — blue, green, pink, and yellow — all just slightly off from white. They were so bright that they seemed to glow. Come to think of it, they were doing just that — glowing.

12

The Enchanted Forest

“Hey . . . y'all,” said Scilla in a hushed voice. “Do you see what I see?”

“Uhhhh . . . probably not, because I'm sure I'm dreaming,” said Ghoulie.

“I'm not sayin',” said Beamer, “because I don't want anyone to think I'm crazy.”

“Then I'll say it,” said Scilla. “Those moths don't have insect bodies.”

“But they're not really . . . human, are they?” asked Beamer with a squeak in his voice.

“Maybe they're fairies,” said Scilla with hushed excitement. “I'm gonna find out.” She immediately tumbled off the branch, caught another, and swung over to drop onto the forest path.

Somebody oughtta check her DNA , thought Beamer. There's gotta be some chimpanzee in there somewhere.
“Scilla!” whisper-shouted Beamer. “Where are you going? We don't even know if they're friendly.”

It didn't look like they were going to find out, for as soon as Scilla plunked down on the roof in front of them, the moths shot back into the forest.

“Stop!” cried Scilla. “I won't hurt you! I promise!”

But it wasn't her they were afraid of. They heard flapping wings — loud and leathery. Then they heard a shriek!

Scilla whirled around and looked up. She lurched back, fell to the ground with a scream, and then lay there without moving. Beamer and Ghoulie recoiled back into a thicket of tree leaves. The thing flapping its wings and hovering far too near Scilla was right out of a nightmare. It had the wings of a bat and the face of a monster.

“It's a gargoyle!” Ghoulie exclaimed in hushed alarm. “We've got to get Scilla away from him!”

But the gargoyle paid no attention to Scilla. It flew quickly off in pursuit of the moths. Beamer and Ghoulie lost no time in getting to Scilla. Ghoulie checked her pulse, and Beamer listened to her heart.

“What are y'all doing?” she suddenly yelped as she pushed them off her. “This is no time to play paramedic. That thing is after the fairies. We've gotta rescue them!”

“Are you sure they're fairies?” Beamer asked her. “Did they say anything? What did they look like?”

“First of all, the moths weren't human,” she said after taking a deep breath. “They were sort of human, but their eyes were too big and shaped like . . . uh, maybe rounded diamonds. And their legs were too long and spindly, like insect legs.”

“Whoa! They'd be great for a science fair exhibit!” said Ghoulie. “Could we get rights for a national tour?”

“Would y'all pipe down!” Scilla yelled in frustration as she waved a “Back off ” to them. “Come on, we gotta save them!” Scilla said, suddenly bolting on down the path into the roof forest.

“Scilla!” Beamer yelled again. “We don't have anything to fight gargoyles with! Scillllaaaaa!”

But Scilla had already charged into a dark corner of the forest. “Oh, brother!” Beamer said with a sigh. “Looks like we're gonna have to drag her back. Let's go, Ghoulie,” he said, charging after her.

The forest was every bit as murky as it had looked from afar. The tree trunks were especially weird. They weren't tucked neatly into the ground like most trees on Murphy Street — or on any other street Beamer had ever been on. They stood above the ground on their partly exposed roots, looking like they might start walking at any moment. The normal assortment of forest animals was skittering around — squirrels, chipmunks, rabbits, and the like — even a deer or two. There were also a lot of fireflies beginning to whisk about as it got darker.

Something didn't seem right about all this wildlife to Beamer, though. First of all, he'd never seen so many forest creatures at the same time. Second, all the animals seemed like they'd just jumped out of
Bambi
or
Snow White
. They were just too perfect — like out of a cartoon forest. Even the weeds were pretty with flowers.

Also, unlike most forests, this forest floor was covered with grass. Real grass needed plenty of sunlight, which you couldn't get in a dense forest. What's more, the grass was neatly trimmed, not a blade out of place. Beamer was seeing all this on the run, of course. Luckily his legs were longer than Scilla's. “Scillaaaa, stop!” he yelled as he drew closer to her. “Scillaaaa!” he called again as he dived for her.

He missed her and rolled across the grass. “Hey, what is this stuff ?” he asked as he ran his hands across the turf. The grass was soft and warm . . . like fur! “This is too crazy!” exclaimed Beamer. Beamer picked up a fallen leaf and handed it to Scilla as she came back to see if he was all right. “When's the last time you held a soft and furry leaf ?” he asked as Ghoulie caught up with them and reached to touch the leaf in her hand.

Before Scilla could say anything, they heard a moan, or was it a muffled roar? They froze in their tracks and scanned the gloomy depths of the forest.

“That didn't sound soft and fury,” Ghoulie said in a hushed voice.

Very carefully, they stood up and started walking toward the sound. For some reason they seemed to be huddled close together, sort of like Dorothy and her friends in the dark forest of Oz. Ghoulie looked a strong match for the Tin Man, but Beamer wasn't keen on being either the Cowardly Lion or the Scarecrow. The forest path took a sharp turn to the left. It was when they rounded that turn that their stomachs fell.

Directly ahead, stretched out between two trees, was a huge spiderweb almost as big as the one in Beamer's attic! The gargoyle was flapping about in front of the web, stalking the fairies who were fearfully scattering in a circle away from it. Beamer saw that one of the fairies was caught in the web. He thought maybe the other fairies were trying to keep the gargoyle away from their friend. Then the danger level jumped to critical. The spindly legs of an enormous spider suddenly appeared through the trees heading into the web. The gargoyle jumped back with a loud shriek!

“No way can we handle both a gargoyle and a giant spider,” said Beamer. They didn't wait to see whether the spider or the gargoyle would win the day. They shifted into full reverse, then spun about and ran full tilt back the way they had come.

Before they got ten steps, though, somebody turned off the forest!

Suddenly they were on an empty flat roof. The weird trees, cute animals, flowers, and birds were all gone! So were the fairies, they noticed when they turned around. But two trees still stood in a small garden plot on one side of the roof. And the web was still there too, with the spider making its way down the web toward the roof floor.

Whoa! Eight legs against six isn't fair!
“Move it, guys!” Beamer yelled. “Molgotha's gonna be on our tail any second!” There wasn't time to figure out what was going on. All they had time to think about was moving their legs.

They ran till their tongues were hanging out and their legs were turning to rubber. They didn't even stop to climb, but launched into a web of tree foliage. Then they scrambled through the branches like tree nymphs, stumbling from tree to tree, going they knew not where. Twenty minutes later, they finally felt safe enough to stop and catch their breaths. They sat quietly, listening for anything that sounded like what might be a giant spider pushing through the leaves.

By now it was pretty dark but, thanks to an ancient streetlight, they recognized the street corner below them. It was the corner of Murphy Street and Parkview, the street that ran directly into the park. With no tree passage in sight, they found a cluster of both large and small trees and climbed down to the street. Unfortunately, they all got home just in time to be grounded for getting home late.

Beamer didn't sleep very well that night. Molgotha was alive! At least he thought it was Molgotha.
After all, how
many giant spiders could there be in one neighborhood?
The MacIntyre Web had the uncanny ability to absorb and radiate energy — not exactly a practical function for a spiderweb. The web in the enchanted forest seemed to function more like a normal web — too bad for that trapped fairy.

Everything had happened so fast! And what was that disappearing act all about? Oh well, what was one more mystery to the Star-Fighters? The trouble with the forest was that they'd been lost when they found it and still lost when they escaped it. Beamer didn't have a clue how to find it again.

13

Monster Bash

Any way you find them, spiders and spiderwebs tend to make people squirm. Dashiell nearly fell backward down the stairs when he saw the MacIntyre Web. He wasn't supposed to be on the attic steps, of course. Nobody was, except for the scientists.

Once Scilla was through being grounded again — just for a day this time — Dashiell had insisted on following her around. Scilla clearly wasn't excited about the idea. She'd told Ghoulie how Dashiell had gotten a lot of mileage making fun of Scilla's “imagined” adventures after their disappointing tour.

Ghoulie was pretty sure that Dashiell wasn't all he was cracked up to be. Scilla had told him about Dashiell's science project. Ghoulie had won first prize when he'd done that project two years ago. He'd even put it up online. He showed the site to Beamer. They hadn't said anything to Scilla, though. After all, he was her brother, and, for some reason, she idolized him.

Anyway, the kids had all been gathered in Beamer's room when Dashiell just slipped away. Beamer was showing them the new section he had added to his wall-length Lego monorail system.

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