The fourth book of The Blackgaard Chronicles series—stories based on classic episodes of the Adventures in Odyssey audio program.
The scheming Dr. Regis Blackgaard continues his fevered pursuit of the Applesauce program and access to Whit’s End. This time, assisted once again by Richard Maxwell, he recruits one of John Avery Whittaker’s young friends, who pays a high price for her gullibility.
Die Inhaltsangabe kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.
A-choo!
Dr. Regis Blackgaard pulled a handkerchief from his pocket and wiped his nose. "Dusty down here," he muttered. "But then, it is a tunnel." He replaced his handkerchief in his pocket, retrieved a folded parchment from a different pocket, unfolded it, and shone his flashlight on it.
It was a very old map detailing an intricate network of tunnels under the town of Odyssey. He held the flashlight between his teeth, the beam still illuminating the map, and from yet a third pocket, he pulled out a compass. He checked the direction of the needle and mentally calculated how far he had come and how much farther he had to go. Not far. Three more turns and he would arrive at his destination. He replaced the compass in his pocket, removed the flashlight from his mouth, and trudged forward.
Splash!
"Ugh! It's wet down here too." He shook the water and mud from his polished Italian-made calfskin loafers and continued on. "Should've worn heavier shoes."
He made one last turn, shone his flashlight down the dark tunnel in front of him, and followed the beam another twenty-five feet or so until it intersected at a T with another tunnel. He checked the map. If his calculations were correct, a left turn would take him out of the tunnels and into McAlister Park, while a right turn would lead him straight under the former Fillmore Recreation Center, now known as Whit's End. This was it; it had to be.
He folded and replaced the map in his coat pocket and then moved several feet into the left tunnel. He stopped, pulled a test tube from his coat, fished a switchblade knife from his pants pocket, clicked it open, and scraped a goodly amount of soil from the tunnel wall into the tube. He corked the tube, labeled it, and returned it to his coat. He then retraced his footsteps back to the T intersection, retrieved another test tube from his coat, scraped more soil from the tunnel wall into it, corked and labeled it, and put it back in his coat. He then went down the Whit's End portion of the tunnel and repeated the process.
Once he had pocketed the last tube, he looked at his knife for a long moment. He was suddenly very tempted to continue down the hallway and right into Whit's End, snoop around down in the basement for a while, perhaps go upstairs for a sundae at the soda fountain, and then use the knife to retrieve the other test sample he needed. But no — there would be time for that later.
He was almost certain Whittaker was aware of these tunnels; in fact, they were probably the reason he had outmaneuvered Councilman Glossman in purchasing the Fillmore Recreation Center five years ago. The old man was much smarter than he liked to let on. He and Whittaker would confront each other soon enough; there was no need to push things. Meanwhile, there were tests to run on the samples he had just collected.
He folded his knife, slipped it back in his pants pocket, pulled out the map, shone his flashlight on it, and headed back to Blackgaard's Castle.
* * *
"Well?" Blackgaard tapped his foot impatiently. He glared at the oily black hair that covered the back of the head of a brown-skinned man. The man wore a white lab coat and leaned over a microscope. No answer.
"Hakim, I'm waiting," he growled.
"Patience, my friend," came the reply, in a cultured Middle Eastern accent. "One cannot rush science."
Blackgaard sighed, crossed his arms, and looked around the laboratory he had outfitted in the secret room under Blackgaard's Castle. It was still pristine, except for the places where he had tracked in mud from the tunnel. The laboratory was also somewhat cluttered with boxes, some of which hadn't yet been opened. He noticed the company label was still on many of them: Edgebiter Chemical. Blackgaard made a note to have Hakim remove the labels. He would need the company for future operations; there was no sense in needlessly exposing them at present.
Above the laboratory where he and Hakim were currently, the finishing touches were being put on the arcade and game room in time for the grand opening of Blackgaard's Castle next week. And though the possibility of one of the workers — or even Glossman or Maxwell — stumbling in on them was remote, he wasn't taking any chances.
Blackgaard's Castle. He smiled at the name. Perhaps he should instead employ his family's original surname: Blagueur. But maybe not — it was too French for the people in Middle America Odyssey. Besides, he had worked hard to make "Blackgaard" a name to be respected and feared. It was no small task, considering what it really meant. A blagueur is a jester, a joker, a prankster, even a liar. He chuckled. That fits dear brother Eddie perfectly, he thought. But a "blackgaard" or "blaggard" is the lowest of the low, a menial, a scoundrel, a cad — which fits me perfectly. He chuckled wryly again.
There was nothing amusing about the reason behind their family name change, though. His mother instituted it when they all left the Netherlands and went to live with her parents in England after World War II. All, that is, except for his father, Jannus.
The family hadn't seen him since he joined the Waffen-SS Volunteer Grenadier Brigade Landstorm Nederland. And that suited Blackgaard perfectly, though he sometimes wondered where his father ended up after the war.
When the Canadian armies liberated the Netherlands, his mother had moved with her twin boys to England to live with her family. Afraid that the stigma of her husband's German association would follow them, she gave the immigration officials her maiden name, Barnett. Eddie didn't seem to care, but Regis remembered pitching a perfect fit about it. For some reason he didn't understand. He didn't want to be a Barnett. He raised such a ruckus that he recalled the security guards looking in their direction and some even taking a few steps toward them.
Panicked, his mother capitulated and gave the immigration agent their actual name. But when the agent mispronounced "Blagueur" as "Blagaard," Regis decided he liked the sound of it even better and told his mother "Blagaard" would be just fine. Eddie still didn't seem to care. So their mother kept the new name, albeit with a slightly different spelling. She filled out the immigration form as "Yvette Blackgaard," and under "Children," she listed her twin sons, "Edwin" and "Regis." Under "Spouse," she wrote "deceased."
In school, their name was the object of much teasing and ridicule — at first. Regis soon saw to it that the name became a rumored force to be reckoned with. Schoolmates who snickered at it would find their homework shredded or their lunch infested with bugs or their gym shoes filled with mud. And a teacher who mocked the name wound up in the hospital when the front tire on his car suddenly flew off as he was rounding a curve on a country lane. "Somehow" the bolts holding the tire in place had loosened and fallen away. Though no one could ever conclusively trace any of these events back to Regis, everyone knew who was responsible. As a result, they feared him and his name. And he liked that.
When the time came to go to university, Edwin studied acting and the arts at a British academy, while Regis pursued behavioral sciences at the University of Vienna. He excelled at his studies and eventually transferred to America to do his doctoral work at UC Berkeley. There he met...
„Über diesen Titel“ kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.
Anbieter: World of Books (was SecondSale), Montgomery, IL, USA
Zustand: Good. Item in good condition. Textbooks may not include supplemental items i.e. CDs, access codes etc. Artikel-Nr. 00105200129
Anzahl: 7 verfügbar
Anbieter: World of Books (was SecondSale), Montgomery, IL, USA
Zustand: Very Good. Item in very good condition! Textbooks may not include supplemental items i.e. CDs, access codes etc. Artikel-Nr. 00105200839
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
Anbieter: Revaluation Books, Exeter, Vereinigtes Königreich
Hardcover. Zustand: Brand New. 153 pages. 7.25x5.25x0.50 inches. In Stock. Artikel-Nr. xr1589973445
Anzahl: 2 verfügbar
Anzahl: 15 verfügbar
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Zustand: New. KlappentextrnrnThis edition is based on Adventures in Odyssey s audio drama episodes The Nemesis, Part 1 and The Nemesis, Part 2, original scripts by Phil Lollar. Artikel-Nr. 281121243
Anzahl: Mehr als 20 verfügbar