old buddy?â
Stacy giggled. âSince when do frogs understand English?â
âCroaker does,â Jason said. He knelt beside Dunkum in the mud. âWhereâs the bone? Is it a T-Rex T-bone?â
Dunkum shook his head. âI donât know yet. But whatever it is, itâs big. Very big.â
Stacy stared into the sloppy mudhole. âIcksville,â she said.
Suddenly, Dunkum saw a flash of gold. His eyes bugged out. âHey, did you see that?â
Jason spotted it, too. âItâs definitely gold!â
Stacy stepped closer. Her eyes were round as quarters.
âHere, hold my frog,â Jason said to Stacy.
Stacy held her hands up. âNo . . . uh, not today.â
âHeâs not slimy, and he doesnât bite,â Jason joked.
âI know that,â Stacy said.
âHere, just take him. Youâll be fine,â Jason said. And he handed Croaker to Stacy.
Stacy took the bullfrog. She held him far away from her body. Croakerâs skin felt smooth and thin, like a balloon filled with air. She felt his lungs moving. In and out. Out and in.
Stacy shivered. She thought she was going to drop Croaker. His body felt so weird.
Then she glanced at the muddy mess. The mudhole.
Dunkum was covered with muck. Jason dived into the mudhole. Hands first.
Stacy looked at the bullfrog. Croakerâs round eyes blinked back at her.
She smiled. âFrog-sitting is much better than mess-making!â
Squooshy squish , the mudhole blubbered.
Out of the spurting muddy custard came something shiny. It really was gold.
âHey, weâre rich!â Jason shouted.
âWe arenât rich,â Dunkum said. âOur treasure is stuck in the mud.â
Stacy looked at the shiny gold. âLooks like a lock.â
Dunkum nodded. âItâs connected to something much bigger. But I donât know what.â
Stacy inched closer for a better look.
Croaker blinked his froggy eyes. Hislungs breathed in and out.
Dunkum and Jason kept working. They pulled and tugged. They grunted and groaned.
âItâs in there for keeps,â Dunkum said. âI canât lug it out.â
Jason began scooping handfuls of mud out of the hole.
When more mud was removed, the boys tried again. They jerked and yanked. They fussed and yelped.
But the mudhole wouldnât let go.
Jason was tired. He stood up all muddy.
âWell, Iâm not quitting,â Dunkum announced.
Stacy headed for the gate. âIâll get the rest of the Cul-de-sac Kids. Maybe all of us can pull the mystery out.â
âHurry!â Dunkum said, looking at the mudhole. âI think our gold is sinking!â
THREE
Something huge was in the mudhole!
Dunkum wondered, Can it be a mummy?
He went back to digging.
After several minutes, Jason said, âItâs no use. We canât get it out.â And he let go.
âPlease, donât quit,â Dunkum pleaded. âMy fingers are slipping. I need your help.â
Jason leaped back toward the hole. He grabbed on to the giant lump. He held it with all his might.
âYouâre pushing it down!â shouted Dunkum.
Jason crawled away. His face was caked with mud. Even his nose. He tried to brush it off. It smeared.
âJust pretend itâs beef gravy,â Dunkum laughed.
Jason pulled a handkerchief out of his pocket. He blew his nose. Now the handkerchief was yucky brown.
âGross,â Dunkum said.
Jason was wound up. He licked his muddy fingers. âYummy chocolate pudding.â Then he spit out the dirt.
Dunkum glared at him. âExcuse me,â he said. He was still hanging on to the muddy lump. âDo you have a shovel?â
âIâll go home and check,â Jason said. He stood up. Thick mud stuck to his arms and legs. It was in his hair. Splashes of mud spotted his glasses.
Dunkum scolded. âWait till your mom sees you!â
âIâll be right back,â Jason
Dean Wesley Smith, Kristine Kathryn Rusch
Martin A. Lee, Bruce Shlain