The Falcon's Feathers (6 page)

BOOK: The Falcon's Feathers
7.09Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Dink stared at the spot where daylight had been. He could feel Ruth Rose and Josh come closer.

“What if he doesn't let us out?” Ruth Rose asked.

“Let's try to get that window flap open again,” Dink said.

Dink and Josh hoisted Ruth Rose up to the window. She shoved against the flap. “Forget it,” she said. “He must have locked it.”

They tried pushing against the door, but it too was solidly locked.

“What're we gonna do, guys?” Josh asked. “No one even knows we're here!”

Dink walked around the dim shed, feeling the walls for openings. In one corner, he stumbled over some rakes and shovels.

“Guys, look!” Ruth Rose said suddenly.

“Look at what?” Josh asked.

“On the floor, by my foot,” she said.

Dink looked down and saw a round spot of white.

“Sunlight!” Josh said.

They looked up. There was a small hole in the roof.

Dink ran to the corner and grabbed a shovel. “Maybe we can bust through!” he said.

Josh took a rake. Together, they
tried to poke at the small hole.

“I can't reach!” Josh said.

“Some of these cages are empty,” Ruth Rose said. “Maybe you could stand on them!”

Together, Josh and Dink dragged four cages over and made a platform. Standing on it, they found that they could easily reach the ceiling.

They smashed at the hole. After a few minutes, it was the size of a softball. Hunks of wood, shingle, and tar paper fell on their heads and shoulders.

Dink stopped to wipe his eyes.

“My arms are killing me,” Josh said, sitting on the cages to rest.

“At least now we can see better,” Ruth Rose said. She walked around, looking at the caged falcons.

“The cages all have labels,” she said. “The first two initials are different, but the second two are always KS.”

“Guys, I found Flash,” Dink said.

He was looking at a cage holding three young falcons. The label on the cage door read GLKS-6-17.

“OH MY GOSH!” Ruth Rose yelled. “I just remembered what I couldn't remember!”

“What?” Dink asked.

“When we went to Curt's office, I saw a nameplate on his desk,” she said. “His name is spelled with a K, not a C!”

“I don't get it,” Josh said.

“I do,” Dink said. “The KS on Flash's leg band stands for Kurt Striker, right, Ruth Rose?”

“Right! And I bet the GL stands for Green Lawn!” she said.

“Now I get it,” Josh said. “He labeled the falcons with the place he found them and his own initials.”

“We have to tell Officer Fallon,” Ruth Rose said.

“First we have to get out of here!” Josh grabbed his rake and climbed back on the stack of cages.

With Dink and Josh both smashing at the roof, they made the hole larger. Sunlight poured in on their sweaty, dirty faces.

Finally, the hole was wide enough to crawl through.

“Pile up more cages!” Ruth Rose said.

With two more cages on the stack, the kids could climb out onto the shed roof.

They sat for a minute, breathing in the clean air and feeling the sun on their faces.

“It was him the whole time,” Josh said, sounding disappointed.

“At least we found the falcons,” said Dink.

Josh walked to the edge of the roof and looked down. “The barrel's still there,” he said. “Come on, we can climb down.”

As soon as they were on the ground, the kids ran toward Main Street and the police station.

An hour later, it was all over. Doc Henry, Grace Lockwood, and Officer Fallon sat with the kids in a booth at Ellie's Diner.

“They caught Kurt Striker in Massachusetts,” Officer Fallon said. “He's sitting in a jail in Springfield right now, waiting to be shipped back here.”

“So he took the falcons from the nest?” Josh asked.

“Not only that nest, Josh,” Grace
Lockwood said. “He took birds from nests in three other states that we know of.”

Doc Henry smiled. “I think we owe you kids an explanation,” he said. “Grace isn't a vet. She's an undercover agent with the Department of Environmental Protection. She was assigned to Green Lawn for one reason: to keep an eye on our falcon population.”

Josh stared at Grace. “I knew there was something weird about you!”

Everyone laughed. “Grace knew about the nest,” Officer Fallon told Josh. “And she knew that you were out there a lot with your binoculars.”

“I watched you watching the falcons,” Grace said. “At first I thought
you
had taken them.”

“You thought it was Josh?” Dink said. “He thought it was you!”

“I know,” Grace said, smiling at Josh. “You kept looking at me funny!”

“Did you suspect Kurt Striker?” Ruth Rose asked.

Grace shook her head. “Not a clue. We have you kids to thank for figuring that out.”

“So what was he doing with the falcons?” Dink asked.

“You kids were right about that one, too,” Doc Henry said. “Striker had a little business going. He was taking young falcons and training them to race.”

“What will happen to them?” Dink asked.

“We'd like to set them all free,” Grace said. “But they've had a lot of human contact, so they probably wouldn't make it in the wild. Don't worry, there are plenty of wonderful zoos that keep animals happy and safe.”

“Maybe Flash could live in the
Green Lawn Petting Zoo!” Josh said.

“Now, there's a great idea!” Doc Henry said. “I'll talk to them about adopting all three from Flash's nest.”

“As for Kurt Striker, he'll spend some time in jail,” Officer Fallon said. “He'll no doubt rat on a few of his cronies, and they'll join him.”

Ellie came over carrying a large tray. “Ice cream on the house!” she said. “I brought vanilla for every—”

“But I always get pistachio!” Josh said.

“You didn't let me finish, Josh,” Ellie said.

“You'll have to excuse Josh,” Ruth Rose said. “He gets cranky when he's hungry.”

“And he's
always
hungry!” Dink added.

“As I was saying,” Ellie went on, “vanilla for everyone except Joshua
Pinto, the boy who saved our falcons!”

She set a huge dish of pistachio ice cream in front of Josh. “And I want you to eat every bite,” she said, smiling.

“Don't worry about Josh,” Dink said. “That'll be gone in a flash!”

Collect clues with Dink, Josh, and Ruth Rose in their next exciting adventure
,

THE GOOSE'S GOLD

The kids climbed aboard the boat and stood on the aft deck.

Spike opened the box and brought out something shiny. He held his hand out.

“These are Spanish coins,” he told the kids. “Almost four hundred years old.”

Chip had followed the kids aboard. “Pretty neat, huh?” he said from behind Dink.

The large gold coins gleamed in the sun.

“Awesome!” Josh said.

Other books

Thy Neighbor's Wife by Gay Talese
Waking Kate by Sarah Addison Allen
Shepherd's Moon by Stacy Mantle
Drive by Diana Wieler
Stripping Her Defenses by Jessie Lane
LooseCorset by Christine Rains
Hare Moon by Carrie Ryan
Nosotros, los indignados by Pablo Gallego Klaudia Álvarez