The Case of the Saddle House Robbery. John R. Erickson
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу The Case of the Saddle House Robbery - John R. Erickson страница 3

Название: The Case of the Saddle House Robbery

Автор: John R. Erickson

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Учебная литература

Серия: Hank the Cowdog

isbn: 9781591887355

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ defeat and left the cat sitting in the ruins of his own shambles.

      I don’t know why I’d even bothered to speak to him. Trying to communicate with cats was a waste of time, a teetotal waste of time, and I had much more important things to do than . . . boy, that tree had really messed up my nose. It throbbed with every step.

      Kitty-Kitty would pay for this.

      I finally managed to push Pete’s nonsense out of my mind and poured all my vast mental insurgencies into the morning’s mission: barking up the sun thirty minutes ahead of schedule.

      It was a very important mission. The world was lost in a great blinding darkness. Only the Head of Ranch Security could save it, and I just happened to be the right dog for that job.

      Little did I know that . . . hmmm, better not say.

      Chapter Two: I Bark Up Cannibals, Not the Sun

      Holding my head at a proud angle, I marched myself in an easterly direction, across the caliche drive in front of the house, past that young cottonwood tree that Sally May had raised from a mere twig, and on out into the deep darkness of the Home Pasture, until at last I came to Point Zero: Sunrise Hill.

      I reached Point Zero at precisely . . . whatever the time, it was precisely the time I arrived there and that was close enough, considering all the nonsense and follyrot I’d had to endure from Sally May’s precious kitty.

      I had never understood what she saw in that little schemer. Oh well.

      I marched myself out to the easternmost point of the hill and went right into my Preparations and Warm-Ups for the big event. A lot of your ordinary dogs wouldn’t have gone to the trouble of prepping themselves for this job, but I did. And I guess it wouldn’t hurt if I revealed the procedure I followed here.

      I started by taking thirteen deep breaths, one for each day of the week. Wait. One for each day of the week, plus six extras for Tuesday. Why the six extra for Tuesday? I’m sorry, but I’m not at liberty to reveal that information. All I can tell you is that we were following charts and graphs that showed Tuesday falling between Monday and Wednesday.

      Okay, I did the deep breathing so-forths, then went plunging right into a series of exercises, and once again, we run up against the Wall of Secrecy, which surrounds so much of our work in the Security Division. I can’t describe the exercises. Sorry. I can tell you only that they were calculated to direct a tremendous energy field into my barking procedure.

      You see, the task of barking the sun above the horizon required huge amounts of ozmottic energy and . . . I really can’t say any more about it. No kidding. If this information fell into the wrong hands . . . well, think about it. We could never be sure who was raising the sun. It might be going up in the middle of the day or the middle of the night. It could be very bad.

      Okay. I zipped through my checklist of exercises and routines and so forth, until at last I felt pre­pared for the awesome task that awaited me. I turned myself in a precise east-west orientation, stiffened my tail, took three deep breaths, and began barking—and fellers, we’re talking about deep heavy-duty ozmottic barkings, the kind that rumble into the distance and cause full-grown cotton­wood trees to rattle and shake.

      Yes sir, we had launched ourselves into some serious barking.

      I barked and I barked.

      Hmmm.

      Then I barked and I barked.

      Hmmmm.

      Then I threw everything I had into it, and I barked and I barked and I BARKED!

      You probably think that the, uh, sun came shooting up from below the horizon. I had kind of expected that myself, to be honest about it, but . . .something had . . . once in a while we get the wrong mix of . . .

      Okay, maybe the sun didn’t exactly come skip­ping into view, but I hasten to add that I did notice a few strink peaks of light on the horizon . . . pink streaks, I should say, on the horizon, a sure indication that, while the sun may have been too lazy and dumb to leap into view, it had . . . uh . . . heard my massive barkings and was at least thinking of . . .

      It didn’t go just exactly as I had planned, but even more important was the fact that my amazing burst of barking seemed to have triggered a mysterious echo effect. Yes sir. I’d never heard anything quite like it. See, after launching three huge rounds of barking, I paused to catch my breath and to . . . well, to watch the sun leap into the air, which we already know didn’t happen.

      But what did happen was that, suddenly and all at once, I began hearing my own barks returning! I was amazed by this at first, but then it began to make sense. Your high-energy ozmottic barkings will sometimes travel hundreds of miles, strike a solid object such as a mountain range or a grain elevator, and then return to the ear of the barker.

      You’ve heard of your radar and your sonar? Same deal, high-energy pulses of ozmottic so-forth bouncing off a whatever and coming back.

      But the amazing thing about this deal was that the barks kept coming. According to our records at Data Control, we had launched . . . let’s see, 2+2+3=7 . . . we had launched exactly seven barks. But do you know how many barks came back? Not seven, as you might have guessed, but eleven. Yes sir, we had launched seven and eleven had returned.

      This was very strange, very strange indeed. We put Data Control to work on it right away, crunching the numbers and searching for a pattern here. At last we got the solution. Here’s what it said, and this is an exact quote:

      “Seven-come-eleven. They must be shooting dice.”

      Shooting dice? That made no sense at all. Who or whom or what was shooting dice? In a flash I punched in the codes and commands for “Retread”—“Retry,” actually—but we came up with the same message.

      Hmmmm. There was something fishy going on here and I had to get to the bottom of the barrel. It was bad luck that Data Control had failed to answer the vital questions, and now I had to follow it up on my own.

      I issued a Test Bark, then cocked my right ear and listened. Two barks returned. I issued a second Test Bark. Three barks returned. Was there a pattern here? No. I didn’t know what we had, only that it was pretty derned mysterious.

      I issued a third Test Bark and got one back this time, but aha! This time I picked up a crucial piece of information. The returning bark seemed closer than the ones before. I fired off a fourth and fifth Test Bark, and yes, the pattern continued.

      Those returning barks were definitely getting closer.

      How could this be? What could be causing the echoing barks to . . . wait. Something moved in the darkness. Yes, right out there in front of me, near the base of Sunrise Hill. A shadowy form seemed to be . . . two shadowy forms seemed to be creeping up the hill in my . . .

      HUH?

      Glittering yellow eyes?

      I was beginning to feel a little uneasy about this. I mean, echoes don’t have glittering СКАЧАТЬ