“He did, but yeah, that could be him. He looks different with his mustache shaved off,” Sandy said. “No wonder I didn’t recognize him!”
“I never even saw him, just heard Mrs. Morgan talk about him,” Megan explained to her grandfather. And then, because she could see that Sandy felt bad about not realizing sooner who the man was, she added, “I don’t suppose I’d have known him, either, if he shaved off a mustache.”
Grandpa grunted and put the wet handkerchief back in his pocket. “Anyway, this struck him as an easy way to make some money. He hasn’t yet thought about how it’s probably going to land him in the penitentiary. Or he thinks he’s smarter than the FBI, which I doubt. Maybe they found the keys and drove off by now,” he added hopefully.
“No. I see them, now. They were in the house,” Ben said. “I think they’re mad. One of them just kicked that can of rocks off the porch.” He hesitated, then went on. “They’re coming down to the water. Wolf is jumping around, but he’s not biting anybody.” He sounded disgusted.
“He’s young, and he’s only been around a few days. He doesn’t know yet who belongs there and who doesn’t,” Grandpa pointed out. “The thing is, if they figure out we took to the water, they may come after us.”
Ben made another report. “No. They must have fixed your car, Mr. Davis. They’re getting in it. They’re driving away.”
They waited then, until it seemed the men were not coming back. At least not immediately. Still, Megan and Ben rowed vigorously when they finally left the shelter of the tiny island and headed for the bigger one, and it was a relief to slide behind it, out of sight from the nearer shore.
Grandpa looked at the steeply sloping rock as they stepped out of the boat. “I couldn’t climb into your tree house, so I think I’ll just wait for you here,” he said. “Looks like a man could get hurt if he slipped on that rock. I’m not part-monkey like the rest of you.”
Besides that, Megan saw to her alarm, he was frighteningly pale. She was afraid the men had hurt him more than he had admitted. “Shall we bring you back something to eat?” she asked, offering the only comfort she could think of.
Grandpa inspected the small cove. “That would be nice. I’m not hungry, but it’s always a good idea to keep up your strength. We’re not safely out of this yet. After the threats they made, and roughing me up, I don’t think they’re going to want us to get away to the authorities.” He eased himself into a sitting position on the sand. “Maybe you could bring me a blanket, too. It’ll be cooling off soon.”
“Hey,” Ben said, “we’re not going to spend the night here. After we’ve rested a few minutes I’ll take the boat and go after my dad. If he’d left his keys in the car, I’d have taken it to go for help even if I had to run over those guys to do it. But he must have the keys in his pocket, and he’ll get the cops.”
Grandpa nodded. “Good. Go before those men come back and see you. They’re nasty customers, and we don’t know how long they’ll be gone. They undoubtedly want to get that car out of there, if it can be traced back to whichever of them owns it.”
It was already too late to row across the lake toward Mr. Jamison without being seen, however. By the time Megan had fixed a lunch for her grandfather, and rolled up one of the sleeping bags to take to him, Ben had the binoculars trained on the cottage.
“They’re back! Oh, oh! They’ve figured out where we are, I think!”
Megan took the glasses to scan the shore. The two men were there, all right, with Wolf running up and down the edge of the lake, his antics clearly indicating which direction their prey had taken.
Her lips were so stiff she could hardly speak. “What if they went to get a gun? Oh, gosh, they’re checking out the canoe! They’re going to follow us!”
Sure enough, the red canoe was being slid toward the water. Wolf became even more animated, clearly thinking he was to go, too. One of the men kicked at him, but the dog leaped into the canoe before they got it all the way off the beach, then sat down as they’d taught him; Megan could see his tongue lolling happily even from this distance, for the glasses brought him sharply into view.
“I think they’re arguing about getting Wolf out,” she said, unwilling to relinquish the binoculars. “He doesn’t want to get out, and I think they’ve given up. Yes, they’re getting in.” She paused, then added, “I don’t think they know much about canoes.”
“Look up-lake,” Ben said. “See if my dad is still out.”
Megan swung the glasses, seeing a loon lift from the water in flight, so close she saw water dripping behind it, until she located the yellow canoe that came with the log cabin. “He’s just sitting there. Not fishing, just drifting. Resting.”
Ben took the binoculars from her hand then, to see for himself. “Yeah. Resting. He always needs to rest when he finishes a book. Hey, I just thought of something. Have you got a mirror with you?”
“A mirror? No, why? Oh, wait a minute. I’ve got Mom’s little bag, and there might be a hand mirror in the pockets. Let me look.” Megan scrambled inside to find it.
“Great! The way the sun is, I think maybe I can pick it up in the mirror and signal to him, if he looks this way. I was in a camp once where we learned to signal SOS for help. I forgot everything else, but that one’s easy. Three long, three short, three long. Or is it the other way around? Anyway, it won’t matter once I get started. Here, hold these. Watch Dad and see if he reacts to my signals.”
Mr. Jamison wasn’t asleep, Megan thought thankfully as the glasses brought him nearer. He pushed back his hat and scratched his head, then reached for a can of something, popped the lid off, and drank.
“He’s not looking this way,” she muttered. “Come on, Mr. Jamison, please! Oh, he’s looking! Keep signaling, Ben, I think he sees it!”
Ben’s father must have seen the tiny blinking flashes. He was shading his eyes now with a hand, staring directly at the island.
“He’s coming! He’s picked up the paddle, and he’s coming!” she squealed.
“So are those guys,” Sandy interrupted anxiously. “See? And they’re closer than Mr. Jamison. They’re going to get here first.”
Chapter Twenty
Grandpa lifted his head to watch them come slipping and sliding down the rocky surface. He looked no better than when they’d left him twenty minutes earlier. He’s in shock, Megan thought worriedly.
“Get in the boat, everybody,” Ben said. “I’ll wait up on top and signal you which way they’re coming. We’ll take off in the other direction. With a little head start, we’ll get out in the open where dad can see us. He saw my signals and he’s coming this way,” he added by way of explanation to Grandpa Davis.
“What about you?” Megan called after him as Ben turned immediately and went back the way he’d come.
“I’ll jump in at the last minute,” Ben shouted over his shoulder.
Grandpa got up slowly, as if he were stiff. “Mr. Jamison is in his canoe? If he’d go for the police—but it’s a good hard paddle back to his place.”
Megan didn’t reply. At least he sounded all right. She joined Sandy in pushing the rowboat partway into the water, concentrating on doing exactly what Ben had said. “Sandy and I will row, so you’d better sit in the back this time, Grandpa. Then Ben can shove off and we’ll try to get out of sight before they get here.”
It was strange to be speaking that way to a grown-up, but Grandpa just nodded and stepped over the side of the boat, casted foot first to keep it from getting wet.
It didn’t work out quite as neatly as Ben had planned, however. The others were ready and waiting when he finally appeared at the top of the slope, but when he turned to look back one last time, his foot slipped. Ben did a somersault on the way down and landed flat on his back, stunned.
For a moment Megan thought he’d been knocked out, for he didn’t move. “Ben! Oh, no, we’ve got to get him into the boat!”
Ben stirred, lifting his head, cradling it in both hands. “Wow! I think
I’ve got a fractured skull, or at least a concussion!”
“Hurry, Ben! Are they almost here?”
“Going around that way.” He staggered to his feet and headed toward the others, still holding his head. “They’re . . . they’re fighting between themselves. I could hear them arguing, and I waited too long. . . .”
He reached the water’s edge, but instead of shoving them off, he collapsed on his knees before the bow.
“Get in, hurry!” Megan urged, shipping her oar. She wasn’t sure she could drag him in by herself, and there wasn’t much maneuvering room for anyone to help her.
Ben let go of his head and made a final effort that landed him half-in, half-out of the boat, then pushed with the foot that was left on the sand. To Megan’s great relief, the boat floated free, and she grabbed for her oar and pulled at the same time Sandy did.
They hadn’t taken half a dozen strokes, however, when the red canoe slid into sight around the end of the island. There was still no sign of Mr. Jamison, and she could only hope he hadn’t written the mirror signals off as a joke and headed for home without knowing what was going on.
Megan went numb, forgetting the oar, while Sandy pulled harder. The result was that they began to swing around, and then to drift as Sandy, too, ceased rowing.
Ben was bent forward. He lifted his head, and they all stared toward the men in the canoe.
The blond one called Mac held a mean looking club he’d picked up in the woods.
“All right! Back to shore!” he shouted. “Or else I’ll have to hurt old Grandpa there some more! Come on, move!”
Wolf, sitting at the far end of the canoe, whined eagerly and quivered with delight to see his friends.
Megan saw the canoe rock a little as Wolf stood up, and the idea came to her, the only idea she had.
“Here, Wolf!” she called out. “Come on, boy, come!”
Wolf didn’t hesitate. The canoe rocked violently as he leaped up. For a moment the club was pointed skyward as Mac struggled to keep his balance. Then the big dog went over the side into the water, and the canoe capsized. Mac went backward over the far side; the one called Guy screamed, “I can’t swim!” before he followed suit and his head went under.
Wolf was swimming strongly toward the rowboat, but by this time Megan remembered that they’d never been able to haul him into the boat from the water. What did she do now?
Both men had resurfaced, and by this time realized that the rock shelf beneath them made the water shallow. The overturned canoe had drifted beyond the reach of the non-swimmers; they had no choice but to wade to shore. Mac no longer carried the club; it, too, had floated off into deep water.
Ben, still somewhat dazed, gave Megan an admiring grin. “Hey, not bad!” he said. And to Sandy, “Give me a hand, maybe between us we can get him aboard!”
For the following moments, it was touch and go whether Wolf would get into the boat, or the rest of them would be dumped out. And then he was hauled over the side, dripping, shaking, drenching them all, crowded in between everybody’s feet. In fact, he was sitting on Megan, but she didn’t care.
“Hi, what’s going on here?” Mr. Jamison came into view around the far end of the island, taking in the upside-down canoe and the two dripping would-be kidnappers on the little beach.
In the babble of voices trying to explain, with Wolf barking enthusiastically over them all, it was a miracle Mr. Jamison understood any of it. When he did, his mouth was grim.
“I’ll get the police. The rest of you follow me to shore. I don’t think that pair are going anywhere until the authorities get here.”
Megan felt as if her bones had turned to jelly. Her arms were too limp to row any longer, and she was afraid she was going to cry. A few tears did escape, and she hoped if anyone saw them they’d be taken for the water Wolf was still scattering around.
“We’d better rescue your canoe,” Ben said. “We can pull it behind us. You want me to row? I’m okay, I think.”
Megan pulled herself together. “So am I,” she said, and found that she could handle the oar again after all.
From his seat at the back of the boat, Grandpa Davis grinned at her. “You sure are,” he said. “All three of you are just great!”
Megan sat at the kitchen table and began to write.
Dear Annie:
So much has happened I hardly know where to begin to tell you about it.
She paused and chewed thoughtfully on the eraser end of her pencil.
Maybe I’ll just wait until you get here to give you the details. You’ve probably already heard that Mrs. Morgan’s nephew and his friend are in jail for plotting to kidnap Sandy and me and assaulting Grandpa Davis. And next week our new grandfather, that we didn’t know we had until a few days ago, is coming to visit us. We feel funny about that. Sandy says he isn’t going to like him, because he wasn’t very nice to Mom a long time ago. But Grandpa Davis said not to make up our minds until we meet him, because he wouldn’t have hired a detective to find us if he didn’t care about us. So I’ll wait and see.
She nibbled on the eraser again.
I’m glad your folks said it was all right for you to visit us. I can’t wait to show you my island. We met this boy named Ben, and he helped us build a tree house on it.
Megan read through what she had written and signed it, Love, Megan.
She hesitated, then added a P.S.: We’ll meet you at the bus stop in Lakewood on Thursday.
“Hey, Megan, come on!” Ben shouted through the screen door. “We’re going to explore the islands down at the other end of the lake! You’ve got an island, and Sandy’s got one named for him. Now we’re going to see if the last one down can’t be King Ben’s Island!”
“King Ben!” Megan scoffed. “More like Bossy Ben.” She smiled as she wrote one more P.S. on the letter to Annie. Ben thinks he knows everything, but he does have some good ideas. See you Thursday.
Then she pushed back her chair and took three apples from the bowl on the table before she went out into the summer sunshine to help Ben stake a claim to his own island.
WILLO DAVIS ROBERTS wrote many mystery and suspense novels for children during her long and illustrious career, including The Girl with the Silver Eyes, The View from the Cherry Tree, Twisted Summer, Megan’s Island, Baby-Sitting Is a Dangerous Job, Hostage, Scared Stiff, and The Kidnappers. Three of her children’s books won Edgar® Awards, while others received great reviews and accolades, including the Sunshine State Young Reader Award, the California Young Reader Medal, and the Georgia Children’s Book Award.
Aladdin
Simon & Schuster, New York
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DON’T MISS THESE OTHER WILLO DAVIS ROBERTS MYSTERIES:
Surviving Summer Vacation
The View from the Cherry Tree
Baby-Sitting Is a Dangerous Job
The Kidnappers
Hostage
Scared Stiff
The Pet-Sitting Peril
What Could Go Wrong?
Secrets at Hidden Valley
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This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and events are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or places or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
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This Aladdin hardcover edition January 2016
Text copyright © 1988 by Willo Davis Roberts
Jacket illustration copyright © 2016 by Jessica Handelman
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Jacket designed by Jessica Handelman
Interior designed by Mike Rosamilia
The text of this book was set in New Century Schoolbook.
Library of Congress Control Number 2015953367
ISBN 978-1-4814-4908-3 (hc)
ISBN 978-1-4814-4907-6 (pbk)
ISBN 978-1-4814-4909-0 (eBook)
Willo Davis Roberts, Megan's Island
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