"DANGER IS MY HOMEWORK"
My name is Toby Robin O'Keefe. Out of every ten thousand kids
who get named "Toby", only one is a girl. I was named
after my Grandmother, Caitlin Tobia O'Toole. Mom's name is
Caitlin, too, so I guess that's why I got Tobia.
It wouldn't be so bad if they'd have spelled it Tobie. Every
year at the beginning of school some new girl comes up and says
that her dad or brother or uncle or whatever is named Toby, and
that "Toby-With-A-Why" is a boy's name.
So I use both my first and second name when I sign things,
because out of every ten thousand kids who get named
"Robin", only one is a boy.
That evens things out. Two years ago I solved a real crime,
and it was in the newspaper with my picture. My Dad is the
editor of the paper, and that might have had something to do
with it, but I really did figure out a mystery that the police
couldn't. That's when I knew I was going to be a detective, and
I've been practicing ever since. I've solved lots of simple
mysteries like finding things other kids at school have lost.
Sometimes I get in bigger adventures, and get into trouble and
need help.
My first really dangerous adventure began when Mr. Potter,
the owner of Greendale's Jewelry Store, was acting really
strange one day.
Part One
Mr. Potter's jewelry store is the only one left downtown ever
since they had to close down the store owned by Mr. Kassabe
about a year ago, when the police found out he had been cheating
the nsurance company after he said his store was robbed.
I guess I had something to do with that, because I was the
one who found where the jewelry was hidden. I thought that it
had been hidden by the robbers, but it turned out that Mr.
Kassabe didn't tell all the truth about it so that he could get
money from his insurance company.
There was an article in the Greendale Journal, the newspaper
that my Dad runs. It had my picture and how I found the hiding
place even after the police didn't. It said that I was a
"schoolgirl detective" and I think that the story made
Chief Macy really embarrassed. I liked Chief Macy, and I didn't
want that to happen. After the next city election we got a new
Mayor, and Chief Macy wasn't the Chief of Police anymore.
I have the newspaper story in a frame up on my wall. That's
what really got me started doing detective stuff.
So Mr. Potter is always really friendly to me, probably
because he knows that if anybody steals jewelry from him, I'll
help him solve the crime. He even lets me try on the really
expensive jewelry in front of the big store mirror.
I had been saving up my allowance for over a month to get Dad
a nice present for his birthday. Mr. Potter helped me pick out a
gold tie clasp, and said he would put Dad's initials on it. It
was supposed to be ready today, which was a good thing because
today was his birthday.
I locked my bike up in the rack by the side of the store, put
my book bag over my shoulder and walked up to the big glass
door. I looked through the glass, but I couldn't see anybody
inside the store. Not even Mr. Potter.
The jewelry store door is so heavy that I always have to lean
against it with my whole weight to open it. When it finally did
swing open, the buzzer went off in the back of the store where
he does all his work. I waited, expecting him to come through
the back office door any second.
Part Two
"Hi, Mister Potter!" I called to the back of the
store. I figured if he knew it was me he'd bring Dad's tie clasp
with him.
The glass cases always have really nice things in them, and I
usually spend a lot of time looking at everything. But today I
had to be in a hurry. We were going out to a really nice
restaurant, and I had to wrap Dad's present and do all my
homework before he got home.
I waited for a little while, then called out again.
"Hey, Mister Potter... it's Toby! Are you back there?"
I listened for him to answer like he usually does, but I
couldn't hear anything. This was kinda weird, because he always
answers unless he's not in the shop. And if he isn't in the shop
then he always locks the front door.
Then I heard him walking from the back. He stopped at the
doorway to his workshop and looked at me from across the display
cabinets. He seemed kinda strange, looking at me like he didn't
know me.
He looked behind me, through the windows into<br>the
street, then back at me.
"Hello, little girl," he said like he didn't know
who I was.
"Jeeps, Mister Potter... it's me!" I didn't say
anything about the "little girl" part because I never
talked to him about how I hate to be called that.
He squinted through his thick glasses, still acting like he
didn't know who I was. I was starting to get worried. I got my
wallet out of my book bag and took out the yellow slip of paper
he had given me for buying the tie clasp.
"I came to pick up Dad's present... it was gonna be
ready today, remember?"
Mr. Potter reached over the display case and<br>took
the yellow slip of paper. He looked at it for a moment, then
looked behind him into his workshop.
"Oh yes, of course. The gold tie clasp with the
initials. It's in the back. Just a moment". He went back
behind the doorway where I couldn't see him any more. I waited,
and I was getting worried while I waited.
Something was really really wrong with this picture. Mr.
Potter never had memory problems before. And I just saw him a
couple of days ago.
I started looking around the store for clues, just like my
Uncle Jack taught me to do, trying to figure out if I could tell
what was wrong. Something was going to show up wrong somewhere,
and give me a clue to why Mr. Potter was acting so weird.
Okay... All the cases were closed, and there weren't any gaps
in the displays like anything was missing. The cash register was
closed. There was nothing spilled on the counters or carpet. The
chairs in the store were right where they were supposed to be.
Everything looked fine. I couldn't find a single thing wrong
before Mr. Potter returned with Dad's tie clasp.
But he was still acting really nervous while he looked
through a drawer full of little white boxes to put the clasp
into. I started to wonder if maybe I should come right out and
ask him what was<br>wrong.
I figured it was better not to give away that I was
suspicious. Uncle Jack says that you always pick up more clues
if the other people don't think you're paying any attention.
That works a lot.
Part Three
Mr. Potter was moving like a robot, and hardly even looking
at me. He set the tie clasp down on a little mat for me to see.
It was a thin gold bar with a spring clip on the back and the
letters "FIW", for Francis Ian O'Keefe, engraved in
fancy letters on the front. Dad's first name is really
"Francis", even though everybody calls him
"Frank", except for me because I call him
"Dad".
It was exactly what I wanted.
"That looks great, Mister Potter!". I looked up at
him and smiled.
He smiled back, but didn't look at me. He put the clip in the
white box and took it back to the cash register.
He should have been talking. He was always talking, and about
almost anything.
"That will be fifteen dollars, little girl".
There was that "little girl" stuff again, as if he
didn't want to admit he knew me.
Okay. Don't act surprised. Keep watching. I handed him a
twenty dollar bill - all of my allowance for a month. He rung up
fifteen dollars on the cash register and pulled out five one
dollar bills. He counted them out on the glass.
"Thank you, Miss. Please come again".
He walked around the counter and put his hand on my back. He
didn't really shove, but he was pushing me so that I had to walk
really quickly to the door.
I was trying to juggle the gift box, the receipt, my change,
and my wallet while I almost had to run across the store. The
strap of my bag was starting to slip off my shoulder, and all
the things I was holding were just about falling out of my
hands.
Mr. Potter swung the shop door open and kept on pushing me
until I was out on the sidewalk. Then his big, heavy door
slammed shut. "Oh jeeps, Mister Potter!" I said, and
was grabbing at everything that was dropping out of my hands. I
shoved the one dollar bills in my wallet and dumped everything
into my book bag. Then I turned around and grabbed the handle of
the shop door and pushed. It wouldn't move. I leaned against it
and pushed until my shoes were slipping on the ground. He had
locked it right behind me.
I squinted through the glass. Now the shop looked empty, just
like it did when I had first gotten here, except that now the
lights were turned off.
Jeeps! Something was really wrong!
I just couldn't go away until I figured out what it was. I
went back to the rack at the side of the shop and set my bag
into my bicycle basket. Then I looked around the small parking
lot behind the store.
There were only two cars parked there. One was a really nice
looking polished black car. That was Mr. Potter's car. The other
was an old gray wreck with banged up bumpers, rusty dents
everywhere and a peeling fabric roof. It looked years and years
old. It didn't even look like it could run.
Part Four
I could tell right away that there was something wrong. There
was mud splattered on the sides, where the tires would have
thrown it up along a muddy road. And there were weeds caught
underneath the fenders. And the mud was fresh... I could tell
even before I stuck out my finger to touch it.
It was a pale yellowish kinda color. It was clay, like the
kind you made things out of. But it didn't come from an art
store.
I knew that there were only two places that had wet,
yellowish clay. One of them was the sand quarry. But the sand
quarry didn't have long swamp weeds like were under the car
fenders.
That left only one place. Fawnhollow Marsh, where all the
clay that runs out from the sand quarry collects. Suddenly the
shop's back door started to open. I didn't want anybody seeing
me looking for clues, so I ran back to my bicycle and pretended
to be unlocking the chain. I tried my best to look really busy,
like I was having trouble remembering the combination.
I couldn't look to see who came out of the back door without
looking like I was spying. Then one of the cars started. I knew
it had to be the old beat-up one because of how bad it sounded.
It came out from the side and right out into the street
without even looking for traffic. I tried to see into the
windows when it went by, but they were so dirty that I couldn't
see a thing.
Anybody could have been inside that car, and I wondered if
Mr. Potter was.
I left my bike and went to the front of the store again. Now
the "Closed" sign was hanging in the door, and no sign
of Mr. Potter anywhere inside.
I stood there for a long time. Something was really wrong
with this picture. The sign with the store hours said he was
open until six o'clock, and it was only a little after four
right now. And all his jewelry was still in the window displays.
He never closed up his store without taking all the things away
from the front windows.
Just then I had an idea. The receipt! What if he wrote
something down on it, like a note for help or something?
I dug into my book bag and fished out the slip of paper.
Nothing.
I opened the white gift box. Only cotton and my Dad's tie
clip. What about the money he counted out... any secret
messages? I opened up my wallet and looked at all five one
dollar bills.
Nope again.
Now I didn't know what to do. Maybe he was in trouble, and
maybe I was imagining things.
Mom and Dad were always telling me that I have a runaway
imagination. Maybe this was one of those times.
But what if it wasn't? Maybe I was the only person to see how
weird Mr. Potter was acting. Then that meant I was the only
person to know that he was in trouble if he really was in
trouble.
Sometimes a good detective has to follow their instincts,
right?
I don't know how you get instincts, but my girl's intuition
said that Mr. Potter was in trouble and he was probably in that
old car, and the old car was probably going back to the place it
came from... Fawnhollow Marsh. . . .
Part Six
Okay... If I saw the car, I'd go home and call the police.
Even if Mr. Potter wasn't in it, nobody should be driving like
this into the marsh. The police would come and see for
themselves, and if Mr. Potter was in trouble, they would find
him.
There. That's what I was going to do. I pushed my way through
the reeds, looking around really carefully for the dry places to
step. If I got my school uniform or penny loafers muddy, Mom and
Dad would throw a fit (again). Unless I found Mr. Potter and got
him out of trouble, and I was a hero. Then they might
understand. Maybe.
The tire tracks got deeper the farther I went. There were
fewer and fewer dry places to step, and the tracks were getting
fainter.
Now it was getting too muddy to go on. I stood at the edge of
a really muddy spot, wondering if I should just go back, when I
saw the old car.
It was stuck in a mud pit! Oh jeeps, a big clay mud pit!
Right out here in the middle of the marsh!
Was anybody still inside? Like Mr. Potter?
I took a few steps closer, but suddenly the ground got really
soft. I was almost in the clay myself! I jumped back really
fast, leaving a footprint about an inch deep.
Another step and I would have been in big trouble.
Should I go back now? Call the police?
What if Mr. Potter were in the car? It didn't look like it
was sinking in the clay pit, but maybe it was sinking really
slowly. And maybe Mr. Potter was in the car, and had gotten hurt
driving into the marsh? And what if the car sank all the way
under the clay before the police got here?
Down deep I knew that the best thing to do was go back and
call the police.
Then I saw the plywood lying just to my left. A long enough
piece to lay across the soft clay, between me and the passenger
side window of the car. I stepped really carefully across the
short grass to pick it up by the edges. Then I slid it across
the pit, pushing it slowly so I wouldn't splash any of the muddy
clay. The board was sturdy enough to walk on. <br>Even so,
I walked really slowly. I wasn't sure if the clay underneath it
was too soft even for the board.
It stayed on top of the clay, and I was able to make my way
to the side window. I looked in. Somebody was still in the car,
sitting behind the steering wheel but leaning forward like they
were asleep...
Oh jeeps... it was Mr. Potter!
Part Seven
My intuition had been right... Mr. Potter was in big trouble!
Now what was I going to do?
Run back, ride to the nearest telephone and call the police.
Even Uncle Jack would have told me to do that.
But I couldn't just leave Mr. Potter here...
I had to make sure he was okay. I didn't even want to think
that he might not be okay. I hoped that he had just driven into
the pit by mistake and gotten knocked out when his head hit the
steering wheel.
I really really REALLY hoped that's what had happened.
The car door on my side was unlocked, and I opened it very
slowly. It was heavy enough that I had to lean a little to get
it past me, which was kinda hard to do without almost slipping
off the plywood board.
I got it open just enough to be able to crawl on the seat on
my hands and knees.
The car was tilted forward because it was sinking into the
clay from the front. I didn't even notice if it was moving,
because I was too busy watching Mr. Potter. I had my right foot
on the floor and my left knee on the passenger seat, trying to
keep my balance.
I leaned forward.
"Mister Potter...?" I whispered.
His head was leaning up against the steering wheel and he
wasn't moving at all. I crawled the rest of the way into the car
and reached out for his shoulder. I could see my hand shaking. I
guess I was scared.
"M... Mister Potter..." I whispered again, and I
gave his shoulder a small push.
He didn't move. I got even more scared.
"Mister Potter!" I said louder, and pushed his
shoulder a couple of times.
He groaned.
Jeeps, was I ever glad to hear that!
"Hey, Mister Potter... you gotta wake up!"
He groaned a little louder, and then he opened his eyes. He
blinked a few times, looked in front of him, and then turned his
head and looked at me.
"Huh... wha...?"
"Mister Potter, we gotta get outta here!"
Then his eyes went from sleepy to surprised.
"T... Toby? Toby?"
I just nodded.
"Oh my God, what are you doing here!"
"Jeeps, Mister Potter... I'm trying to get you out of
the car! Look where we are!"
I pointed out the window. That's when he finally realized how
much trouble we were in. "Good Lord!" he said, and
then he looked left and right really fast. "We have to get
out of here!"
He twisted around toward me, toward the open door.
"Be careful, now!" he said. "Go ahead... I'm
right behind you!"
I turned myself around and got ready to crawl out. He was
still trying to turn himself around from behind the steering
wheel so he could follow me. I could feel the car rock, and
almost lost my balance.
Then it rocked some more, and I suddenly felt myself falling
to my left. I lost my balance <br>and fell to the car
floor just as the door slammed shut. The car was sinking ---
fast!
Part Eight
I looked back at him to see if he was going to help me up.
But instead of trying to get out the door, he was doing
something to the middle of the steering wheel. He kept hitting
it like maybe he was trying to honk the horn, but he was hitting
it a lot harder than that.
Then the cover in the middle of the steering wheel popped
off, and Mr. Potter pulled a small, white cloth bag. He stuffed
the bag into his jacket top pocket, then grabbed my hand to pull
me back up off the floor.
But the car tipped forward again, and he fell right on top of
me!
Now I could feel the car really tipping down into the clay.
It was the weirdest thing in the world. Mr. Potter was trying to
get off of me, but the car seats and fallen forward and it was
really hard for him to move. I could hardly breath. I started to
feel trapped, and I guess I sounded pretty scared.
"Mister Potter! We gotta get out! Come <br>on...
we gotta get out!"
I could barely see him push one of the seats back. He reached
up and used the steering wheel to pull himself off of me. As
soon as he did, I twisted myself around and grabbed the
passenger seat. But I didn't try to push it back. Instead, I
reached behind the folded back and pulled myself up off the
floor, half way toward the back seats.
The car had tipped down so much that I was almost standing
up, looking right at the back seat floor. I raised myself up on
my elbows and looked around. That's when I saw the scariest
thing I think I've ever seen in my life...
The clay was covering up the windows!
It took half a second to imagine the whole car sinking under
the clay and the two of us being buried alive inside. That's
about when I could hear myself breathing really loud.
"The glove box!" Mr. Potter shouted to me, pointing
right behind me. "Look inside! There's<br>a
wrench!"
I turned around and reached down to push the button. The door
popped out a little, and I had to pull it open.
There was mostly junk inside... paper cups and old napkins...
some pens... a flashlight.
Right behind the flashlight was a big wrench. Really big, and
heavy too. I pulled it out, and it was so heavy that it bent my
wrist. I had to use both hands to get it up to Mr. Potter.
Mr. Potter grabbed it and then stepped up on top of the
steering wheel. He straightened out until he was standing
straight up.
It was really weird inside the sinking car...
I was lying on the folded passenger seat, but it felt like I
was standing straight up. The car was pointing almost straight
down now.
"Close your eyes and cover your head!" Mr. Potter
said.
Then he started hitting the wrench against the back window,
as hard as he could. I thought it would break right away, but it
didn't.
Then I DID hear breaking glass, but it wasn't the back
window...
Mr. Potter yelled something, and then I felt something heavy
hit me on the back. Then I heard even more breaking glass making
loud popping sounds all around me, and little bits of glass that
looked like tiny rocks were flying around everywhere.
Part Nine
I tried to twist around to see what was happening and saw the
clay pouring in through the broken windows, pouring on top of
me, below me and all around me! It was pouring in from all
sides!
"Mister Potter! Help!!" I screamed, and tried to
reach up for him.
The clay was filling up the car all around me, pouring in
from the front and side windows, squeezing my feet and legs
together, pinning me down against the back of the folded
passenger seat. I tried to squirm out of it, but I couldn't
move. It was too heavy.
"Keep your eyes closed!" he yelled back at me, and
I saw him pull back his arm, ready to swing the wrench at the
back window as hard as he possibly could. I closed my eyes just
as I heard the glass above me make this loud popping noise and
felt what must have been hundreds of little glass pebbles rain
down on top of me and the clay.
I could feel the clay molding itself all around me, sealing
me up like a mummy. It was getting heavier and heavier and
heavier, and I could feel it rising up and up until I was
completely buried up to my chest. I opened my eyes again and
held my arms up toward Mr. Potter. I couldn't move... the clay
was squeezing in on me... it was getting hard to breathe...
He reached down with both hands and grabbed my wrists. I
didn't think there would be any way he could get me up out of
that clay. It was so heavy...
But I could feel myself sliding through it, rising up toward
the shattered back window. I helped as much as I could, pushing
my feet against the dashboard, then the steering wheel. Mr.
Potter wrapped his arms around my chest and pulled up again. I
could feel myself getting free of the clay. He let go long
enough to grab my waist, then pulled up again. I was almost out.
He put his arms around my legs and lifted me up and through the
back window.
I put my hands on the roof of the car and pulled myself up
even further. Mr. Potter gave me one more push, and I was
sitting on top of the tilted, sinking car. Mr. Potter reached
out of the back window, put his arms out to either side, then
drew himself up until he was sitting right next to me. We were
both breathing hard, trying to catch our breaths, and totally
covered with clay.
My legs were still inside the car, and I could feel the clay
swallowing my feet.
"Come on, Mister Potter!" I yelled. "We gotta
get to the hard ground!" We both turned around to see how
close we were from the solid edge of the clay pit.
That's when we saw the man with the gun
Part Ten
He was a tall, thin man who looked as if he hadn't shaved in
a long time. His clothes were rumpled and almost too big to fit
him.
He waved his gun around at us, but didn't point it.
"Hey, Gramps," he said, his voice low and raspy.
"Looks like you finally found what I was looking for."
I turned my head to look at Mr. Potter. He was looking back
at the man with the gun. It didn't take a second to figure out
that the gunman was talking about the white cloth bag sticking
out of Mr. Potter's jacket.
"What happens when I throw it to you?" Mr. Potter
asked.
The gunman made a big smile and stretched his arms out from
his sides.
"Then I'm a happy man, and I can go my merry way!"
he said, as if he were an old friend. "Not only that, but
I'll shove this board back over the mud so you can, too.
"I'd forgotten about the plywood, and now I could see
that he had pulled it away from the sinking car and up on the
firm bank.
"Let the little girl go first, then."
This had to be the first time I didn't mind being called
that. Anything that got me away from the man with the gun was
okey dokey with me.
I started to think about what I'd do first, and it was an
easy guess. My bike was just past the reeds, and I would ride to
the first telephone I could find and call the police.
But the gunman must have figured out the same thing.
"Your little friend has already been bad luck for me
once today," he said, and he waved his gun around at me.
"If she was lucky enough to find you way out here, she'll
be trouble for me out on her own."
I heard Mr. Potter let out a loud sigh.
"Okay, you win" he said. "I'll throw you the
diamonds."
Mr. Potter slowly worked at pulling his legs out of the clay,
then stood up on the back of the car. The car was pointed
straight down into the clay pit, so he had to lean against the
left fender.
I watched him pull the white cloth bag from his jacket pocket
and hold it up as if he was ready to throw it to the gunman.
But he didn't.
"Let the girl go first. Just push that board out here
and she can bring the diamonds to you."
The gunman looked at Mr. Potter for several seconds, then
grinned.
"You're a real sweet guy, y'know that fella? Okay, I'll
do it your way if that's going to finish up our business."
I looked up at Mr. Potter.
"Are you sure this is okay?"
Mr. Potter nodded his head, as if everything was going to be
okay and he had some kind of plan for getting out of this jam.
But I sure couldn't see what it was.
I heard the plywood being dragged across the ground and
looked back at the gunman. He slid the wide board across the
clay until it was right next to me.
"Let's get going," he said.
I wiggled my legs around in the clay until I could pull them
out, and then I rolled over onto the plywood. When I looked back
at Mr. Potter, his arm was reaching out to hand me the little
white sack. I took it from him and started crawling back across
the board.
A million thoughts were running around through my head as I
slowly crawled across the plywood toward the gunman. The best
one said I should take the bag and run into the tall grass to
make him chase me and give Mr. Potter a chance to get away.
I stood up slowly so I could walk the rest of the way and be
ready to run.
But as soon as I did, the gunman stepped onto the plywood,
reached out and grabbed me hard by the arm. I barely had time to
say "ow!" when he snatched the white bag out of my
hand.
Then, without letting go of my arm, he turned around and
pointed his gun straight at Mr. Potter! "No!" I
screamed, and I shoved my whole weight against him. I heard the
gun go off . . .
so close to my head that my ears rang. I felt dizzy, and
forgot where I was for a second.
Then I felt a sudden shove against my back, and watched the
clay pit stretch out beneath me as I sailed through the air.
Part Eleven
A voice in my head said "Don't land feet first!"
But the voice was too late. I hit the clay with both feet at
once and slipped into the mud pit with hardly a splash.
The clay made waves all around me, rolling and bouncing as I
felt myself dropping deeper and deeper. I shoved my hands down
into the clay to keep from slipping further. Everything kept
moving until I had sunk up to my shoulders.
Then it was completely quiet, completely still.
I didn't notice how hard I was breathing until I tried to
listen for other sounds. Then I heard a car start up from far
away.
The sound of the car got closer for a few seconds, then
farther and farther away. I tried to remember what kind of a
sound it was. It sounded like a small car, with a small engine.
It kinda started and stopped, so it must have had a stick shift.
That's all I could figure out, but I think Uncle Jack would have
approved.
I wanted to turn around and look for Mr. Potter. But I didn't
want to see him lying on the clay shot. I really, really hoped I
had knocked that guy hard enough to make him miss.
The clay wouldn't let me turn around. It was soft between my
shoulders and waist, kind of like pudding is. The palms of my
hands were lying on a thicker layer between my waist and knees,
kind of like peanut butter. But the layer was so thick below my
knees that I couldn't move my feet. My shoes were like anchors.
I couldn't budge my legs an inch.
But it wouldn't have been smart to try. The clay was slowly
creeping over my collar. I could feel myself sinking, very
slowly, even though I wasn't moving. I tilted back my head and
looked straight<br>up at the sky. I wanted to keep my face
away from the mud for as long as I could.
"M – Mister Potter...!" I called out.
"Are... are you there?"
I heard something, but it could have been the wind through
the cat tails at the banks of the pit. Or was it Mr. Potter? The
Bad Guy? Anybody else at all?
The clay was touching my chin and the backs of my ears.
This was so unfair... you weren't supposed to keep sinking if
you didn't move.
"Help!" I yelled as hard as I could. "Help!
I'm sinking!!"
I kept on yelling until the clay covered over my ears and I
couldn't hear myself. Then I started taking really deep breaths,
so I could hold my breath if I sank completely under.
I had a full breath of air when the mud crawled over my mouth
and nose. I closed my eyes just in time.
I prayed... very, very hard.
Part Twelve
I felt my glasses and my hair band being pulled off as my
head went completely under. Just before I started to panic, I
felt very, very sad. Nobody was ever going to find me down under
all this mud...
Everything was wiggling around me, and I wondered if the clay
did that all the time. My chest was hurting. I wanted to breathe
but pushed my lips tightly together and squeezed down on my
lungs to try and stop them from pushing my last air out.
The clay wiggled even more. Like it was trying to swallow me
deeper.
Then something hit me on my head, then shoulders, and I felt
the material of my jumper being grabbed in two big handfuls.
There was a growing pain under my arms as my jumper was being
pulled up.
I drove my hands up through the mud and grabbed on to
whatever was holding me. Hands... wrists... I grabbed onto the
wrists...
Up I went, and my head tore through the thickening layer of
clay above me -- up into the free, wide, living air!
The clay in my ears kept everything silent, but I knew I
screamed out with my first full breathe of air. I breathed in
and out hard and fast, getting all the air I could as fast as I
could, still gripping the wrists that had saved my life. I
couldn't open my eyes, but as long as I knew where the wrists
were, I knew I was going to live.
My feet were still caught in the really thick clay below, and
as the wrists tried to pull me out further I kicked my legs up
and down trying to soften the clay enough to let me go. It was
hard work, especially because I felt so weak after holding my
breath.
I tried to kick my loafers off. But a weird suction between
my feet and my shoes made it feel like they were glued to my
feet. That made it a lot harder. But I kept on kicking until the
thick clay was as soft as the peanut butter clay.
The wrists pulled away, and then I could feel two large hands
holding on to my wrists instead. My arms were stretched straight
up over my head, and then I could feel myself being dragged up
and out of the clay in a single, continuous motion, until I was
lying face up on something flat and hard.
As soon as the hands had let my wrists go, I started scooping
away the clay off my face and out of my ears. Then something
soft was wiping my face for me, and I could open my ears.
Mr. Potter was using his jacket to wipe the mud off my face.
"Mister Potter!" I gasped. "You're okay!"
He nodded and didn't say anything. He was wiping he mud out
of my right ear, looking at was he was doing with his head
tilted back the way he looks at other people's jewelry.
"... way up in there," I heard him say.
"You're okay!" I said again. "What happened?
Did he shoot you? Are you really okay? Where did that guy go? Is
he gone? What..."
"I'm okay, Toby" he said, and stopped wiping my
face. "He didn't hit me, and he's gone."
I noticed that we were sitting on the plank of plywood that I
had found. Mr. Potter had pushed it back over the clay to save
me.
You should have seen us. It was like we were both melting
grey wax statues.
I knew that if I tried to stand up, I'd probably fall down.
Both because I was shaking so much, and because I was covered
with so much clay that I must have weighed a zillion pounds.
"Jeeps, Mister Potter... you save my life."
He smiled.
"That makes us even, sweetheart. I'd be parked overtime
at the bottom of this mud pit if you hadn't come along."
I was really anxious to find out more.
"So, Mister Potter, how come you drove your car into the
clay?"
Of course I knew he didn't drive himself into the clay. It
was a way to get him to tell me everything that had happened.
Part Thirteen
Mr. Potter looked over at the back fender of his car, which
was all that was left sticking up out of the clay pit.
"I drive that old wreck when I'm bringing very expensive
things into my store. I had always figured that anybody who
wanted to rob a jeweler wouldn't think to look for a heap like
that."
The clay made deep popping noises as some bubbles burst up on
it's surface. Mr. Potter made a grunting noise.
"Looks like I figured wrong."
"So the things in that little white bag were really
expensive?" I asked.
He nodded.
"Diamonds. From a very famous mine in Africa, and as
clear as the air itself." He sounded like he was describing
something in a dream.
"I had the diamonds sent to my home instead of the store
so that I could photograph them. Then I hid them in the steering
wheel to bring them into the shop. When I got there, two thugs
hiding inside<br>jumped me.
"First they had me drive out here, where they
could<br>search the car without being seen. It didn't
matter that I told them the diamonds were in the store. They
didn't take the bait until they had looked everywhere but where
I'd actually hidden them.
"Just a few minutes after they had me drive back to the
store, you arrived."
"Ah!" I said. "I *knew* something was
wrong!"
"I got you out the door as fast as I could. If they had
thought for a moment that you might have suspected something was
wrong, you would have been<br>in that car with me as
well."
"Oh Jeeps! So that's why you were in such a hurry! To
keep me from saying anything that made them nervous."
"Yes, and I could tell you were getting very suspicious,
so out you flew. It wasn't until after I had locked up the shop
and returned to the back that they decided you might try to call
the police.
"So rather than continue to look for the diamonds, they
took me back out to the marsh to give themselves time to get
away. The last thing I remembered was one of them putting his
foot over mine to press the accelerator, and the clay pit
suddenly appearing in front of us. I think I must have hit my
head on the steering wheel when the car reached the clay. The
next thing I knew, you were shaking my shoulder."
And I knew the rest of the story.
"You saved my life again when you threw his aim off
trying to shoot me," he said. "I fell back and rolled
behind what was left of the car. Then I saw him push you out
into the pit. But I couldn't do a thing until he had gone."
"Lucky for me he was in a hurry."
"And so was I," Mr. Potter said. "As soon as I
heard him start up his car, I rolled to the firm ground and
grabbed this plywood. Another few seconds and I'm afraid I would
have been too late."
"Jeeps, Mister Potter, I'll say! I didn't have a whole
lot of breath left."
We sat there for a while longer, very muddy and very tired,
not saying a thing. The only noises were from the birds, who
were still telling us that we weren't supposed to be there.
I couldn't have agreed with them more. And I thought that I
would never set foot in Fawnhallow Marsh again.
But as long as there were two nasty crooks running around
loose in Greendale, things were really dangerous. How dangerous?
Me and my best friend Terry found out soon, when we tried to
solve "The Mystery of the Marsh Diamonds".