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“I wonder who made that phone call,” Jessie said a few minutes later. The Aldens were gathered in the small parking lot outside Jeff’s shop.
“I don’t know,” Henry said, hoisting1 his backpack onto his shoulder. “But I don’t like it.”
While they were standing2 there, Benny noticed a curtain moving in the front window of the little yellow house across the street. Was Mrs. Thorton watching them again? He wondered.
“Remember, Mrs. Thorton said she’d do whatever it took to stop Jeff from building the yo-yo?” Benny asked.
“Yes,” the others said.
“Maybe she’s the one who made the phone call,” Benny suggested.
“I don’t think so,” Jessie said. “The voice on the phone was definitely a man’s voice.”
“Then maybe it was her son,” Benny said. “Jeff also said he thought her son Erik was visiting right now.”
“Why would he call Jeff?” Henry asked. “Just because his mother thinks the yo-yo is too dangerous?”
“I don’t know. That doesn’t make a lot of sense,” Jessie said.
“I wonder what record Erik Thorton tried to break.” Violet said.
“Maybe we should go over to the library and see if we can find out?” Jessie suggested.
Jeff’s shop was only a few blocks from the library, so Henry opened his backpack and took put his cell phone. Then he called Grandfather to see if it was okay if he, Jessie, Violet, and Benny went to the library before Grandfather picked them up. Maybe they could even have lunch at the Greenfield Diner along the way.
“That sounds like a nice idea,” Grandfather said. “Call me when you’re finished at the library.”
So the children headed downtown. The diner was on the corner of Center Street and 4th Avenue. Bells jangled on the door when the Aldens stepped inside.
“Have a seat anywhere,” a waitress called as she delivered an armload of plates to the people in the back booth.
The Aldens chose a table near the front door, then opened their menus.
The waitress poured water for each of them, then took out her pad and pen. “What’ll it be?” she asked, chomping3 on her gum.
The children all ordered cheeseburgers, fries, and vanilla4 milkshakes. Then they sat back to wait for their order.
“I want to get some books on yo-yos when we’re at the library,” Benny said.
“Maybe I can find one with pictures on how to do a sleeper5.”
“I’d like to get some books on yo-yos, too,” Violet said. “Did you know that the yo-yo is the second oldest toy in history?”
“It is?” Jessie asked.
“Yes,” Violet said. “Yo-yos have been around for twenty-five hundred years. I read that in one of those articles that Jeff gave me.”
“If the yo-yo is the second oldest toy, I wonder what the oldest toy is?” Benny said.
“The doll,” Violet said. “I read that in the same article. I’d like to see what else I can find out about the history of yo-yos.”
The waitress brought their food and the children dug in.
“Mm!” Benny said as he wrapped his mouth around the huge burger. “I’m starving!”
“You’re always starving, Benny,” Violet teased. She took a sip6 of her milkshake. As she put her glass down, she noticed a gray station wagon7 parked across the street.
“I don’t believe it!” Violet said, staring out the window.
“What?” Jessie asked. She turned around in her seat to see what Violet was looking at.
“That same gray station wagon we saw in front of Jeff’s shop last night and this morning is now parked right out in front of this diner,” Violet said.
“Is there anybody in it?” Henry asked, straining his neck to see.
“No,” Violet replied. “Do you still think it’s a coincidence we keep seeing that car?”
“I don’t know,” Henry said with concern. “The more often we see it, the more I wonder if we’re being followed.”
“But why would anyone want to follow us?” Jessie asked.
“I don’t know,” Violet said.
“We’re looking for some information on Erik Thorton,” Jessie told the reference librarian.
“What kind of information are you looking for?” the librarian asked.
Henry let his backpack drop to the floor. “Well, we know he grew up here in Greenfield, but he doesn’t live here anymore. We heard he tried to break a world’s record a few years ago. We’d like to know what that record was.”
“And whether he actually broke it or not,” Benny put in.
“It sounds like you want some magazine or newspaper articles,” the librarian said. She showed them how to search magazine and newspaper databases.
“If you find something, let me know,” the librarian said. “I’ll see if we have the actual magazine or newspaper that you’re looking for.”
The children set their jackets and Henry’s backpack on a table, and decided8 to look on the Internet first. When there were no matches for Erik Thornton, they started to search the library indexes for newspaper or magazine articles.
“Here’s one,” Violet said, sitting up a little straighter. “It’s an article from the Greenfield Gazette. ‘Local Boy Attempts World’s Record.’”
“What’s the record for?” Benny stood on his tip-toes, trying to see. “Does it say?”
“Oh, wow,” Jessie said, staring at the computer screen. “You’re not going to believe this.”
“What?” Violet asked.
“It looks like Erik Thorton tried to build the world’s largest yo-yo, too.”
“No! Really?” Henry said.
“There’s just one sentence that says what the article is about,” Jessie said. “If we want to know more, we have to get the whole article.”
“Are there other articles about him besides this one?” Violet asked.
Jessie scanned the listings on the computer screen. “It looks like there were several articles about him in the Greenfield Gazette.”
Henry copied down the information. Then he said, “Let’s go ask the librarian if they’ve got these newspapers here.”
The children trooped back over to the reference desk.
“We do have that newspaper,” the librarian told them. “But it’s on microfiche. Do you know how to use the microfiche machine?”
“No,” Jessie said. “But we’re willing to learn.”
The librarian took the children over to a cabinet and pulled out a small box with the correct date. “This roll contains the newspaper you want,” she said. Then she led the children over to the microfiche machine, turned on the lamp, and showed them how to thread the machine.
A page from an old Greenfield Gazette came up on the screen.
“Cool!” Benny said.
“Now all you have to do is turn this handle to go forward,” the librarian said, as she demonstrated. “This other handle goes backward. You just keep turning the handles until you get to the article you want.”
Jessie turned the handle and pages flew by on the screen in front of them.
“What date are we looking for?” Violet asked.
“October 26,” Jessie replied. Finally, she got to the right date. The article they were looking for was on page 4.
Jessie skimmed through the article. “This one just talks about him building the yo-yo. It doesn’t say whether he actually finished it or whether it broke any records.”
“It looks like his yo-yo was only eight feet tall,” Henry said. “Jeff’s yo-yo is going to be much bigger than that.”
“If I were Erik Thorton, I wouldn’t be very happy about someone else trying to break my record,” Benny said.
“We don’t even know for sure that he set a record,” Violet pointed9 out.
“Maybe the next article will tell us that,” Jessie said. She turned the crank again, searching for the next article.
“Here it is,” Jessie said, peering at the screen.
“Oh no!” Violet gasped10.
“What?” Benny asked. He was a good reader for his age, but there were a lot of hard words in these articles.
“It says here that they used a crane to lift the yo-yo up into the air,” Henry began.
“That’s what Jeff’s going to do, too,” Violet said.
“Yes, but it says here that when they raised Erik’s yo-yo, the rope broke and the yo-yo fell,” Henry said. “Some people got hurt, including Erik. He broke his arm.”
“Oh no,” Benny said.
“The record never made it into any record books,” Violet said. “It never counted at all.”
“No wonder Mrs. Thort?n doesn’t want Jeff to build the world’s largest yo-yo,” Jessie said. “It looks like this time she’s got a reason to be worried.”
“Do you suppose that’s why Erik is in town right now?” Henry asked. “To put a stop to Jeff’s yo-yo?”
“How would Erik have known Jeff was trying to build the world’s largest yo-yo?” Violet asked.
“Maybe his mother told him,” Benny suggested.
“He could be the person who called earlier and told me to tell Jeff to stop building the yo-yo,” Jessie suggested.
“Could be,” Henry said. “But that doesn’t explain why he’d follow us around. What would he want with us?”
“We don’t know for sure that he has a gray station wagon,” Violet pointed out.
Jessie stood up. “Well, either way, I think we’re done here, aren’t we? Why don’t we go pick up our things at the table. Then we can take the microfiche back to the librarian and call Grandfather to see if he’s ready to pick us up.”
“Sounds good,” Henry said as he led the way back to the table.
He handed Jessie her jacket. Violet grabbed her jacket and Benny’s. Henry found his own jacket on the floor. He picked it up, then glanced around.
“Hey, where’s my backpack?” Henry asked.
“Did you leave it over by the microfiche machine?” Jessie asked.
“No.” Henry shook his head. “I’m sure I left it here with the jackets.”
But the table was empty. And Henry’s backpack was nowhere to be seen.
1 hoisting | |
起重,提升 | |
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2 standing | |
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的 | |
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3 chomping | |
v.切齿,格格地咬牙,咬响牙齿( chomp的现在分词 ) | |
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4 vanilla | |
n.香子兰,香草 | |
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5 sleeper | |
n.睡眠者,卧车,卧铺 | |
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6 sip | |
v.小口地喝,抿,呷;n.一小口的量 | |
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7 wagon | |
n.四轮马车,手推车,面包车;无盖运货列车 | |
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8 decided | |
adj.决定了的,坚决的;明显的,明确的 | |
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9 pointed | |
adj.尖的,直截了当的 | |
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10 gasped | |
v.喘气( gasp的过去式和过去分词 );喘息;倒抽气;很想要 | |
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