Beware the Pirate Ghost

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by Joan Lowery Nixon


  “What happened?” Brian asked.

  “I don’t know,” Lester mumbled. “I just kicked a little bit.”

  “I told you to lie still,” Brian said.

  Lester scowled. “It’s your fault. You didn’t come down here to get me.”

  “We’re coming now,” Brian said. He crawled back to join the fisherman. “Are you sure Sean won’t be in danger?”

  “Not as long as we’re hanging on to him,” the man answered. He pulled tight the knots that fastened the second rope to the leather harness.

  “How do I put the harness on Lester?” Sean asked.

  The fisherman hurried to explain. Then he fastened one end of the rope to the wall and the pulley. With the other end he made a harness that fit over Sean’s shoulders, around his chest and back, and under his legs.

  As he pulled the knots tight, he said, “When you get to the ledge, fasten the leather harness on the boy. Make sure all the straps are pulled tight and buckled. We’ll haul him up first, then bring you after him. Okay?”

  “Okay,” Sean said, but the words came out in a squeak. He cleared his throat and tried again. “Okay,” he repeated.

  With the harness for Lester over his right arm and shoulder, Sean crawled to the edge of the hole and looked down. The lantern light barely reached the ledge.

  “Ease yourself over,” the fisherman said. “We’ve got a good grip on you. We’ll lower you slowly. When you reach the ledge, give us a holler.”

  Sean, tightly clinging to the rope, felt himself dropping inch by inch. Finally his toes touched something, and he scrambled to get a foothold.

  He had reached the ledge and was standing about a foot away from Lester’s head.

  “I’m down!” Sean yelled to the fisherman.

  But suddenly the chunk of rock on which Sean was standing gave way, and he swung out, over the dark pit.

  9

  SEAN’S YELL ECHOED IN the cave, hurting his ears. Panting, he tried to reach the ledge again, and once more felt something solid under his feet. “I’m okay!” he cried, but he didn’t feel okay. He felt dizzy and sick and wished he were home in bed.

  “What are you doing?” Lester asked him.

  “I’m helping you,” Sean said. He tested the ledge with his weight and found that this time it held.

  “Give me more rope,” he shouted, and as the rope eased, he was able to kneel next to Lester.

  “Put this on,” he said. “We’ll put your feet through first.”

  “Don’t touch my ankle,” Lester said.

  “I’ve got to,” Sean said. “It may hurt a little bit, but this is the only way we can get you out of this hole.”

  Lester whimpered, but he let Sean pull the harness around his legs and up to his hips.

  “Now, put one arm in,” Sean directed. As Lester did what Sean said, Sean eased Lester’s other arm into the harness. Finally, he buckled the leather straps around Lester’s hips and chest, making sure they were tight.

  “They’re going to pull you up now,” Sean said.

  “Will I swing in the air, like you did?”

  “Sure,” Sean told him.

  Lester’s lip curled out. “I don’t want to.”

  “You have to,” Sean said. He called out, “Lester’s ready to come up!”

  The rope attached to Lester’s harness began to tighten. It pulled him to a sitting position.

  “I said I didn’t want to!” Lester screamed.

  “Don’t be afraid,” Sean said. “You’ll be out of here in a few minutes.”

  Inch by inch, Lester was pulled upright and off his feet. Screaming all the way, he was dragged up to the cave floor. Sean saw the fisherman grab Lester by the shoulders and yank him up out of sight.

  “Now me,” Sean said to himself. He gulped as he glanced at the black pit, less than a foot away from his toes. He closed his eyes and breathed evenly, trying to stay calm, but it seemed like hours before he heard Brian call, “Sean, are you ready?”

  “Ready!” Sean yelled.

  The rope tightened as Sean was jerked upward.

  Sean clung to the rope and stared upward at the dim light. Bri was up there. So was the fisherman. They’d get him out of this awful place.

  With strong arms holding him, Sean scrambled onto the cave floor and quickly crawled away from the hole. For a few minutes he lay on his stomach, head pillowed on his arms, and tried to breathe normally.

  But Brian grabbed him. “Sean!” Brian shouted. “That was cool! That was cooler that cool! You were terrific!”

  His fingers fumbled with the knots in the rope around Sean, untying them.

  “You did a fine job,” the fisherman said.

  He scooped up Lester, who grumbled at Sean, “My ankle hurts. You bumped it.”

  Brian and Sean collected the rope and the lanterns and followed the pirate out of the cave. As they reached the entrance they could hear sirens.

  Brian looked at his watch. “It’s almost two-thirty. Lester will get back in time to take his medicine.”

  “I’m not going to take my medicine! Ever!” Lester shouted. “That’s why I ran away.”

  The fisherman looked into Lester’s face, almost nose-to-nose. “You’ll take your medicine, or the pirate ghost who haunts these caves will make you walk the plank.”

  “I didn’t see any pirate ghost,” Lester said.

  “You didn’t? He was there. He saw you.”

  Lester’s lower lip stuck out. “How’s he going to make me take my medicine if I don’t want to?”

  “If I were you, I wouldn’t try to find out.” The fisherman’s mouth twisted into a gap-toothed grin, and he chuckled a horrible laugh, low in his throat.

  “I want my mother!” Lester shrieked.

  A parade of cars, led by the sheriff’s cruiser and an ambulance, turned into the cove.

  Lester’s parents ran toward him. His mother waved the medicine bottle and a spoon. Lester glanced up at the fisherman, who growled. When his mother reached him and held out a spoonful of the medicine, Lester gulped and swallowed it without a complaint.

  As the paramedics tended to Lester’s injured ankle, the fisherman sighed. “People will come around the caves again, once you tell them I dressed up like a pirate ghost.”

  “Sean and I aren’t going to tell them,” Brian said. “We all saw the ghost. Remember his sword dripping with blood?”

  “What about Sam?” Sean said. “He knows who the ghost is, too.”

  “I’ll tell Sam to keep it quiet as soon as I see him,” Brian said. “Sam’s going to have great fun scaring his little brother and everybody else who’ll listen when he tells them he personally met the pirate ghost.”

  Mr. Quinn drove up, and Sam and Debbie Jean jumped from his car.

  “You found Lester!” Debbie Jean shouted. “And all because of me!”

  There were introductions to be made and questions to be answered. True to his promise, Brian pulled Sam aside and told him to keep quiet about the ghost’s identity. Sam quickly agreed.

  Finally, to Sean and Brian’s relief, they piled into Mr. Quinn’s car with Debbie Jean and Sam.

  Brian quickly told their dad why they’d come looking for Lester at the caves.

  “I saw your note,” he said. “That was good thinking on your part. If Mr. and Mrs. Hopper had been honest with me about what really happened, we might have found Lester much sooner.”

  He glanced at Brian and Sean and added, “Now, tell me where you found Lester and what happened.”

  “Uh … in the second cavern, Dad. Lester was hiding in the caves,” Brian said.

  “You went into those caves?”

  Sean interrupted. “Start the car, Dad. Wait till we get home. Then we’ll tell you all about it.”

  “You know the caves are dangerous,” Mr. Quinn said. “I’m not happy with the idea that you were inside them.”

  Debbie Jean stared at Sean, open-mouthed.

  “You really, truly went into the caves,
even after that awful pirate ghost warned us away?”

  “Debbie Jean keeps insisting that you saw a pirate ghost,” Mr. Quinn said.

  He smiled, and Sean was thankful that he and Brian weren’t in really big trouble.

  “Take Debbie Jean’s word for it, Dad,” Brian said. He grinned at Sam and Sean.

  As Debbie Jean began to describe the ghost again, Brian turned to wave good-bye to the fisherman, who stood at the door to his shack, watching them. Brian nudged Sean, who glanced back, too, as the fisherman raised a hand and waved.

  But from the shadows near the entrance to the caves, a ghostly pirate stepped out. He held his sword high in a salute.

  “Bri!” Sean whispered. “The fisherman didn’t say he was the ghost. He said he dressed like the ghost! That means …”

  “Everybody be quiet,” Debbie Jean ordered. “I’m the one telling about the ghost. It’s my turn.”

  For a moment Brian looked wide-eyed at Sean. Then he slid back in the seat and slowly began to smile. “Face it, Sean,” he said. “This may be the first mystery in which the Casebusters didn’t come up with all the answers.”

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this ebook onscreen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the publisher.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Text © 1996 by Joan Lowery Nixon

  cover design by Omar Olivera, Andrea C. Uva

  978-1-4532-8279-3

  This edition published in 2012 by Open Road Integrated Media

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  New York, NY 10014

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  EBOOKS BY JOAN LOWERY NIXON

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