short. âH-e-e-e-re, Meathead,â he said. âN-i-i-i-i-ce kitty. Give us the brushy-wushy.â
Meathead backed up a step.
I elbowed Zeke aside. âLet me do it. He probably remembers the time you painted stripes on him.â
âWhat do you mean?â said Zeke. âMeathead liked playing skunk.â
I sat on the steps and held out a friendly hand. âHere, kitty kitty.â
Meathead blinked. But he didnât drop the brush.
Slowly and carefully, I got to my feet.
âEasy now,â said Dr. Prufrock from behind us.
We crept forward.
The cat backed up another step.
âGood thing olâ Meatbrain doesnât know how valuable that thing is,â Zeke said.
Meatheadâs ears pricked up. Brush in mouth, he turned and trotted for the side yard.
âBrilliant move, basket case!â I cried, giving chase.
âWhatâd I do?â said Zeke, joining me.
I spared him a glance. âFitz can understand English; why do you think Meathead canât?â
Meathead plunged into the overgrown bushes beside the house, the tip of his tail wriggling through the jungleâprobably all poison ivy and prickly plants. (Dr. Prufrockâs gardening was about equal to his housekeeping.) We waded through the bushes anyway.
âGive us the brush, fleaball!â cried Zeke.
âThatâs it, genius,â I said. âSweet-talk him.â
Meathead reappeared on the far side of the thicket and bolted across the front lawn. Ten seconds later we followed, running full out.
And we might have caught him tooâif not for the two hairy, black-suited men blocking our path.
âGreetings, children,â said the chubbier man.
âCanât talk now,â said Zeke, dodging past. The taller man snagged his arm.
âHold on,â said the man. A monster-sized mole on his cheek made it hard to look him in the eyes. (Or into the sunglasses that covered his eyes.)
It was our old friends, the nameless spies from H.U.S.H., an agency so secret, even they didnât know what H.U.S.H. stood for. They had forced us to spy in Underwhere. We called them Agent Belly and Agent Mole.
And they were anything but friends.
âLetâs talk,â said Agent Belly.
From the sidewalk just beyond them, Meathead turned to watch.
âSorry, but we have to catch our cat,â I said.
âNo,â growled Agent Mole, âyou donât.â
Hector flinched. I glanced back at the house for help, only to see Dr. Prufrock duck behind a curtain. Whereâs a grown-up when you need one?
âUm, maybe we can spare a minute,â I said.
Meathead ambled away with the brush, tail held jauntily, mocking us.
âAww, sheesh ,â said Zeke.
Agent Belly adjusted his fake black beard. Mole straightened a fake mustache. I suppose they thought their disguises were good. And maybe they wereâfor a kindergartner.
âChildren,â said Belly, âwe appreciated the, er, magic rock you brought back from your last trip below.â
Magic rock. A nice description for the dhow-naught, an enchanted stone that would happily bite your hand off.
âIt had our team quite fascinated,â he continued. âBut nowâ¦â
âNeed more,â grunted Agent Mole.
Belly smiled. âYes, the rock isnât enough. We want something better.â
âLike what?â asked Zeke. He looked where Meathead had gone. Mole tightened his grip.
âAn object of power,â said Agent Belly. âYou know, a wand, a crystal, a gizmo that people down there use for making magic?â
Zeke, Hector, and I traded glances. We knew that Meathead was carrying a power object. But we didnât want to just hand it over to the men from H.U.S.H. when our friends in Underwhere needed it so badly.
I chewed my lip. Soon Meathead would be long gone.
âThat brush,â I said.
âNo!â said Zeke.
âSpeak,â said Agent Mole.
âThat brush