Mitchell looked up, spotted Courtney, and his shoulders fell. “Don’t you go giving me a hard time,” he said anxiously. “I’m having a bad enough day as it is.”
“Why? What’s going on?” Courtney asked as she sat in an easy chair. She needed to sit down. Though she was feeling better, the three days she’d spent at school had taken a lot out of her.
Mark said, “The sprinkler in Andy’s uncle’s florist shop just exploded.”
“It didn’t explode,” Andy said. “He must have been smokin’. I know that guy. He set it off. Idiot.”
“Whatever,” Mark said. “Andy came over, we were all set to leave, and then he got the call.”
“Five minutes from a clean getaway,” Andy lamented.
Mark added,” His uncle says the place is a wreck.”
“There was a flood and it blew out the heat,” Andy said angrily. “Just his luck the weather turned frigid last night. The place is turning into a skating rink.”
“So what does that mean for you?” Courtney asked.
“Oh, not much,” Andy answered sarcastically. “Only that I can’t go to Orlando! Months of work, all for nothin’. Unbelievable!”
“Why can’t you go?” Courtney asked.
“Because I gotta help him clean up the mess!” Andy cried. “He just took delivery of all his Christmas flowers. If we don’t get them out of there and over to his house like, right now, they’ll die and his whole season will be gone, which means I’m out of a job. I gotta go there right now and get to work.”
“It’s not fair,” Mark said. “We’ve worked so hard for this.”
“Is there a later flight?” Courtney asked.
“Yeah, but there’s too much work to do,” Andy said, sounding defeated. “I’d never get it done and make it down to the airport in time.”
Mark said, “I told you I’d stay and help. With extra help you might still make the later flight.”
“Or I might not, and then you’d be stuck too,” Andy said.
Mr. Dimond entered the room holding a piece of paper. “I just called the airline,” he announced, referring to the paper. “Good news, bad news. There’s a later flight tonight, and one first thing in the morning. If worse comes to worst, you can make the flight tomorrow and still be at the convention center in time for the presentation.”
“Seriously?” Andy asked, gaining hope. “What’s the bad news?”
“It’ll cost two hundred bucks a ticket to make the change” was the answer.
“Ouch,” Mark said. “That’s a lot of cash.”
“Eight hundred bucks for all of you,” Courtney pointed out.
“I can do the math,” Mitchell snapped.
“Here’s my suggestion,” Mr. Dimond said. “Mrs. Dimond and I will go down on the flight as scheduled. We’re there to chap-erone, but it’s a vacation for us too. I’d just as soon not miss any of it. Sorry, Andy.”
“No problem,” Andy said.
“But if Mark wants to stay, he can help you clean up the shop and maybe you can both make it to the airport for the later flight. If not, I can book you on the flight tomorrow and you’ll come down then. How does that sound?”
“Fine,” Andy said. “Except for the part about the extra two hundred bucks to change my ticket. I ain’t got that kind of cash. If I did I wouldn’t be working for my idiot uncle.”
“I’ll spring for it,” Mr. Dimond said. “For both of you.”
“Are you serious?” Andy said.
“Really, Dad?” Mark asked.
“Hey, how often do I get to see a couple of geniuses change the world?” Mr. Dimond said. “What do you say?”
Andy looked at Mark. Mark shrugged and said, “Let’s go save some flowers!”
D. J. MacHale
The Quillan Games
Courtney said, “I’d help but I barely have enough energy to get out of this chair.”
Andy ran over to Mr. Dimond and shook his hand. “Thank you, man. Seriously. I don’t know what to say.”
“Say you’ll hurry up,” Mr. Dimond said, laughing.
“Dad, you are the best,” Mark said.
“Don’t tell him that,” Mrs. Dimond said as she entered the living room. “It’ll go right to his head, and I won’t be able to live with him.”
“Thank you, both,” Andy said. “C’mon, Chetwynde, we’ll drop you at home.”
Courtney pulled herself out of the chair and said, “Well, glad I came by to solve the dilemma.”
“Yeah, you’re swell,” Andy said sarcastically. “Let’s go.”
He ran out. Mark gave his mom and dad a quick hug and said, “See you in Florida. You guys are awesome.” He ran after Andy; Courtney was right behind.
They all headed for Andy’s ancient station wagon. Since Andy used it to transport flowers, the backseat was down. That meant all three had to sit in front on the bench seat. Andy jumped behind the wheel. Courtney looked to Mark and said, “You’re not going to make me sit next to him, are you?”
Mark laughed and jumped in first. Courtney didn’t live far from Mark, so the drive only took a few minutes. Andy pulled the car up to the curb in front of her house, skidding to a stop.
“Okay, out!” he shouted. “We ain’t got a whole lot of time.”
Mark said, “Wait, I gotta use Courtney’s bathroom.”
“What?” Mitchell exclaimed. “We just left your house a minute ago!”
“Wh-What can I say,” Mark said. “When you g-gotta go… “
Mark’s words caught Courtney by surprise. Why was he stuttering? Mark only stuttered when he got nervous. She opened the door, pulled her stiff body out of the car, and headed up the walkway to her house. Mark was right after her.
“Make it quick!” Andy shouted. “We got a plane to catch!”
Mark hurried up behind Courtney, took her by the arm, and hurried her toward the house.
“Geez,” Courtney said. “He’s right. Why didn’t you go back at your house?”
Mark didn’t stop. “Just hurry,” he said.
He pulled her quickly toward the door. Courtney pulled her keys out and could see that Mark was nervously hopping from one foot to the other.
“You gonna make it?” she asked, chuckling.
“Just open the door,” Mark ordered.
Courtney wasn’t used to Mark giving orders like bathroom. When she got the door open, Mark jumped past her and inside.
“Close the door!” he shouted.
She did. “What is wrong with you?” she demanded.
Mark pulled his right hand out of his coat pocket.
“This!” he shouted.
His ring had come to life. Bobby’s next journal was about to arrive.
“You’re not gonna make that plane later tonight,” Courtney said, breathless.
“No,” Mark said. “We’ll fly tomorrow.”
No sooner had Mark finished saying that than the entryway to Courtney’s house came alive with light from the expanding ring. Mark and Courtney already had their eyes shielded.
“Courtney?” came a familiar voice. It was Courtney’s mother.
“Uh-oh,” Mark said. He quickly took off his jacket and threw it over the growing ring just as Mrs. Chetwynde entered.
“Oh, hi, Mark!” she said cheerily. “Congratulations, I heard all about your, uh, your science thing.”
“Thanks, M-Mrs. Chetwynde,” Mark stammered nervously.
Both he and Courtney stepped onto Mark’s coat, pressing the edges down into the rug so no light would shine out.
“What is that strange sound?” Mrs. Chetwynde asked.
Mark and Courtney knew it was the strange music that always accompanied a delivery through the ring.
Courtney said, “That’s part of Mark’s project. They’re experimenting with sound, too.”
Mrs. Chetwynde looked at the jacket they were standing on and frowned. “It’s in the jacket?”
“Uh-huh,” Courtney said.
“The jacket you’re standing on,” Mrs. Chetwynde added. “Uh, yeah, we didn’t want to track dirt onto the rug,” Courtney said, thinking fast.
“Since when?”
Courtney could feel the ring shrinking under her foot. The music ended too.
“Hey! Dimond!” Andy Mitchell called from outside. He was pressing his face against the small window next to the front door.
Mrs. Chetwynde saw him and jumped in surprise. “Oh!” she exclaimed. “Who is that person?”
Mark took the opportunity to scoop up the jacket, along with the ring and the pages that had just arrived.