Скачать книгу

      

      The Case of the Monster Fire

      John R. Erickson

      Illustrations by Gerald L. Holmes

      Maverick Books, Inc.

      Publication Information

      MAVERICK BOOKS

      Published by Maverick Books, Inc.

      P.O. Box 549, Perryton, TX 79070

      Phone: 806.435.7611

      www.hankthecowdog.com

      Published in the United States of America by Maverick Books, Inc., 2018

      Copyright © John R. Erickson, 2018

      All rights reserved

      Maverick Books, Inc. Paperback ISBN: 978-1-59188-171-1

      Hank the Cowdog® is a registered trademark of John R. Erickson.

      Printed in the United States of America

      Except in the United States of America, this book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

      Dedication

      Dedicated to the hundreds of kind people who helped us after the wildfire of 2017, with special thanks to Scot and Tina Erickson, Mark Erickson, and George and Karen Chapman.

      Contents

      Chapter One - The Mouse Didn’t Run Down the Clock

      Chapter Two - A Robot on the Porch!

      Chapter Three - Not a Robot

      Chapter Four - Slim Wears a Suit

      Chapter Five - A Bad Wind

      Chapter Six - Smoke!

      Chapter Seven - Evacuation

      Chapter Eight - We Race the Fire

      Chapter Nine - We Search For Drover

      Chapter Ten - Help Arrives

      Chapter Eleven - The Mysterious Marsh Berries

      Chapter Twelve - Together In This

      Chapter One: The Mouse Didn’t Run Down the Clock

      It’s me again, Hank the Cowdog. The main part of this story takes place in March, oh what a terrible day, but to get there, we have to go back to October. Around here, October always happens before March. I don’t know why, it just does.

      So it was October before the next March. Drover and I had spent the night at Slim’s place, as we often do because, well, he lets us stay inside the house. I had been up for hours, going over a stalk of poperwick…a stack of pickerwarp on my disk, when I hicked a honk in the frizzling fubble.

      Huh?

      Sorry, I’m having a little trouble with my words. Every once in a while, we have this pablum, so bee sting beside the honey hive and the mouse ran down the clock. When that hurples, we murple the purple.

      Huh?

      Sorry, my attention drifted there for a second, but I’m back up to speed now. We were discussing the mouse problem. These mice keep running down our clocks, don’t you see, and when the clocks run down, we don’t know whether it’s raining or Tuesday. Tuesdays are very important in the overall scheme of things, because without Tuesday, we would never be able to measure our rainfall.

      Yawn.

      You know, some of this isn’t making sense. How did we get onto the subject of mice and clocks and Tuesday? I mean, what is Tuesday to a mouse?

      Does anyone remember what we were talking about?

      Wait, here we go. Early morning, and I mean EARLY. Dawn. First light. At that hour, most of your ordinary mutts are still sprawled out on the floor, pumping out a line of Z’s. In other words, sleeping their lives away.

      Not me, fellers. I take pride in being the first one up. In the Security Business, we have little time for sleeping. At first light, I’m on the jib of the jab…I’m on the job.

      May I whisper a little secret? See, one of my greatest fears in life is being infected with the Slacker Virus. Drover’s had it all his life, and we’re talking about BAD, and I’m scared I might catch it.

      That’s why, every morning before daylight, I leap out of bed and start doing pushups and pull-ups…pretzels and pork rinds, ketchup on poperwick, and plan out my whole day’s snizzle, whilst all the slackers of the world are still snickerdoodling.

      Wait. I seem to have lost my choo-choo…my train of thought, that is, so let’s take a deep breath and start all over.

      Okay, Drover and I must have spent the night at Slim’s place, now we’re cookin’, and I had been up for hours, grinding out reports and studying mops and chops…maps and charts, that is, while chained to my desk. I heard an odd sound…several odd sounds and cranked open one eye.

      Wait, that can’t be right. I’d been working for hours, so both eyes must have been open, yes, wide open, so if you don’t mind, get a red pencil and mark out that business about “cranked open one eye.” I was misquibbled…misquoted, shall we say.

      Go ahead and mark it out. Thanks.

      I heard a sound, looked up from my work, and saw…hang on, this is scary…I saw what appeared to be an Egyptian mummy creeping down the dark hallway, sliding its hand along the wall. Somehow radar hadn’t picked him up. Well, you know me. When a mummy shows up in the house, we sound General Quackers.

      General Quarters, it should be.

      A strip of hair shot up along my backbone and a growl came rumbling up from the engine room. Fellers, I BARKED!

      “Hush!”

      Huh?

      Did you hear that? The mummy said…wait a second. Do you suppose…ha ha. Okay, we can call off the alert. Everybody relax. Ha ha. No big deal, just a simple…hey, when radar doesn’t pick ‘em up, how are we supposed to know?

      It was Slim Chance, but believe me, he looked like some kind of mummy monster, I mean pale face and puffy red eyes and a rat’s nest of hair. And he was wearing boxer shorts too. That’s on our Check List For Mummies. They almost always show up wearing boxer shorts.

      Okay, things were starting to fall into place. The Elite Troops of the ranch’s Security Division had camped at Slim’s place, and it was morning. It was also October and every dog on the force was exhausted.

      Let me emphasize the exhausted part. See, if portions of the preceding so-forth sounded, well, disjointed, that’s why. Our team had been pushed to the limits of Doggie Endurance, I mean, eighteen-hour days, no breaks, no weekends or holidays, no time off, just the grinding routine of running the ranch.

      So, yes, Drover and I had spent the night down at Slim’s place, and I’m going to stand before you right now and admit that I might have dozed off at my desk—not a deep sleep, nothing like Drover, I mean, the runt was in a coma, but maybe I’d been drifting in and out of focus.

      Hey, it happens, even to the Head of Ranch Security, but now I was wide awake and back on the job.

      Slim

Скачать книгу