Read Bus Station Mystery Page 6


  To everyone’s surprise, Frank went to a table and opened a drawer. He took out a newspaper bundle.

  “You don’t have to touch this,” Frank said to the people. “But I assure you it is a fresh dead fish.”

  “Fresh dead fish,” everyone murmured, half laughing.

  “It’s fresh,” Frank went on, “because it hasn’t been dead long. Just this afternoon this fish was swimming in our river. Then I saw him stop swimming and float to the top. I picked him up. You can find a fish like this almost any time, poisoned by waste from the paint factory.”

  “That’s a fine new piece of evidence,” called a teen-ager from the front row.

  “Just exactly what I said!” Benny whispered.

  But Frank had not quite finished what he wanted to say. “I have called the factory a bad neighbor,” he said. “And now Mr. Pickett wants to buy my house and land and make it into a parking lot.”

  “And you’re going to sell him your land?” someone asked, sounding shocked.

  “No!” Frank shouted. “I’m not selling. But I am hoping Mr. Pickett can become a good neighbor. If he makes some changes in his factory, I believe he can make paint and not spoil the river. Just spend some money, that’s how!”

  Mr. Pickett stood up. He looked at the men and women in the hall before speaking. Then he said, “I do want to be a good neighbor to Frank and to everyone. But who can show me how to run my factory and keep the river clean?”

  “This gentleman over here can, I think,” Frank answered and asked Grandfather to rise. “Mr. James Alden.”

  Everyone turned around to stare. Mr. Alden stood up and smiled. Then he walked over to Mr. Pickett and shook his hand.

  “I have had some of the same troubles in my plastics factories that you have had,” he explained. “Bad odors. Polluted water. In my plants we have found a way to burn the bad-smelling gases before they go up the chimney. We need a great deal of water. But we use the same water over and over. Not a bit of dirty water empties into any river or sewer.”

  “None?” asked Mr. Pickett.

  “None. The dirty water goes into big tanks. The dirt and pollution settle to the bottom of the tanks. Clean water rises to the top. It can be used again, and the tanks are cleaned out to hold more water.”

  Mr. Pickett was listening carefully.

  Mr. Alden continued, “You probably have a dust problem in your factory, too. That’s not bad for the river, but it is bad for your workers. We use a huge suction machine to pull the dust out of the air so that the air is safe to breathe.”

  The moderator asked, “Do I understand you, Mr. Alden? You say that Mr. Pickett’s factory can make paint and be a better place to work, too?”

  “Exactly,” said Mr. Alden. “If Mr. Pickett agrees, I’ll be glad to take him to my factories and show him what we do. My men will explain how the air and water are kept clean. I will be happy to talk with him about the business details.”

  Now everyone looked at Mr. Pickett. He spoke slowly. “Of course I know Mr. Alden’s name. With his help I think I can make some changes.” He smiled. “Then we’ll have Pickett’s Perfect Paint forever and a clean river, too!”

  Everyone clapped. Benny turned around to see what Jud and Troy were doing. They were on their feet, clapping and edging toward the aisle. Were they going to slip out before the meeting was over?

  The moderator called for order. He thanked everyone, then smiled and said, “If we work together, we can solve our problems. Meeting adjourned!”

  Now Benny saw that Jud and Troy weren’t going out. They were hurrying over to the other side of the hall. Suddenly they were running toward Mr. Pickett. People cleared the way for them, and some of the crowd smiled.

  “Dad!” Jud said. “You were wonderful! You were great!”

  Mr. Pickett had started to frown when he saw the boys. Now his frown turned to a wide smile. He saw all the Aldens and Frank coming over, too.

  “Meet my sons, Jud and Troy,” Mr. Pickett said to Mr. Alden. “And Frank, let me shake your hand. You and my boys and everyone else are going to have a clean river.”

  CHAPTER 11

  Back to the Station

  It was a beautiful summer night. When the meeting was over many people stopped to talk before starting their cars. There was a light wind, fresh and clean.

  One man said, “This is the way it should always be. There should be clean air everywhere. I’m glad we had the meeting tonight.”

  An older man said, “It was time something was done. I don’t know how the people living near the river have been able to stay there.”

  “My kids don’t want to play outside,” replied another man. “But we never dared to say anything to that Mr. Pickett. He’s too powerful.”

  “Well that Mr. Alden isn’t afraid,” a woman said. “He got things straightened out in a hurry. But it was really Mr. Alden’s grandchildren that gave Frank Timmons courage to face Mr. Pickett. I have a feeling that with Mr. Alden to help, it won’t take much time to get the air fit to breathe.”

  The four grandchildren heard this with a smile as they watched the people drive away.

  “I guess the public is with us,” said Jessie. “What a surprise it was to learn that Jud and Troy were Mr. Pickett’s sons!”

  Frank said, “I guess I thought you knew.”

  Henry asked, “Did you call them troublemakers yesterday because they were Mr. Pickett’s boys?”

  Frank smiled. “Yes,” he said. “Well, at first I thought that Mr. Pickett’s own sons would of course be on his side. When I got to know Jud and Troy a little better, I liked them because they were interested in plants and animals. I knew they wanted their father to do something about his factory. But I didn’t agree with what they were doing.”

  “Picketing their own father wasn’t such a smart idea,” Henry admitted.

  “There was something else, too,” Frank said. “I was having a lot of trouble with Mr. Pickett. He thought I was the troublemaker. He wanted to make me move away. It didn’t help to have the boys around the station. It was bad, no matter how I looked at it.”

  “But now everything will be different, won’t it?” asked Violet.

  Benny looked around. The Aldens and Frank were the only people left standing in the moonlight in front of the town hall.

  “Well,” Mr. Alden said, “I think we must be leaving. Perhaps you can come along when my men come to talk with Mr. Pickett. A good chemist can be a real help.”

  “I’ll be glad to,” Frank said. “I’ve enjoyed meeting all of you.”

  “I guess this is good-bye then,” Jessie said soberly.

  “We’re always saying good-bye to bus stations and islands and boxcars and things like that,” Benny said with a laugh.

  But the Aldens hadn’t counted on what Frank would say next.

  “Good-bye?” he said in a surprised voice. “I won’t hear of it.”

  The Aldens looked at Frank. What was he thinking of now? They did not have to wait long to find out.

  “Good-bye for tonight, maybe,” Frank continued. “But I’d like you all to be my guests for a bus station dinner next Wednesday night. What do you say?”

  “A bus station dinner!” Benny exclaimed. “Count me in! I never miss a dinner.”

  Everyone laughed so loud at what Benny said that Grandfather stepped over to see what all the noise was about.

  “Guess what, Grandfather,” Jessie said. “Frank has just invited us for a home-cooked dinner, served right at the bus station. Doesn’t that sound like fun?”

  “It certainly does,” Mr. Alden replied with a twinkle in his eye. “I almost forgot you were a cook, Frank. I always think of you as a clean-water man.”

  Frank laughed. “I have to be a cook to run a lunch counter at a bus station.”

  “Right,” Mr. Alden said.

  “You’ll come for dinner, too, of course,” Frank said to Grandfather. “After all, I owe you a great deal. Without your offering to show Mr. Pickett how y
ou made your own factory safe, I might have lost my home. And the river might not have been saved.”

  “Fighting pollution is just good sense and good business,” Mr. Alden said.

  “Then Wednesday night it is, at six o’clock,” Frank said. “There are no buses passing through at that hour, so I can put my mind on my cooking. I would invite you to my little house, but the smell of the river is so bad there close to the factory, you wouldn’t enjoy it. But we can have a good time at the bus station.”

  Benny felt as if he could hardly wait for Wednesday to come. He wondered what Frank would serve for dinner. Hamburgers? That wouldn’t be a treat.

  At six o’clock Henry parked the car beside the bus station door.

  The wind was coming from the north, so there was no bad smell in the air.

  Benny was the first one out of the car. He hardly had a chance to rap on the door when Frank opened it. He greeted all the Aldens.

  “Hello, hello,” he said. “Right on time.”

  “We’ve been looking forward to this all week,” Benny said. “And does it smell good in here!”

  “It’s the fish,” Frank replied with a smile. “I bought it at the best market in town. I stuffed it with soft breadcrumbs mixed with butter and salt and spice—”

  “And everything nice,” Violet finished.

  “Yes, and now it is baking. In a few minutes it will be done to a turn.”

  The Aldens saw that Frank had set his biggest table for six. There were real plates and a tablecloth. No paper plates or cups tonight.

  Grandfather looked around and smiled.

  “Sit right down,” said Frank, going into his kitchen.

  Everyone took a seat, and soon Frank began to bring platters of food to his guests.

  “Everything came from my own garden,” Frank said, putting a plate of baked potatoes on the table. Next came a large dish filled with all kinds of vegetables.

  Benny began to count them up. “Carrots, little onions, beets, parsley. And look! Cowslips!”

  “I canned the cowslips last year,” Frank said proudly. “They came from the riverbank on the other side of the factory. But you can’t see dessert yet. It’s in the refrigerator. It’s a mystery dessert.”

  “A mystery dessert sounds like fun,” said Violet.

  “I bet it’s ice cream,” said Benny.

  “I bet it isn’t,” said Frank.

  This was a new Frank. He was happy and joking. Now he knew Mr. Pickett was going to stop pouring dirty water into the river. He knew that many people wanted to save the river and understood how important it was. He could sit back and enjoy the first company dinner he ever served.

  “Vinegar,” Benny said. “For my cowslips. And lemon juice, too.”

  “Lemon is for the fish,” Frank said. He put the baked fish on the table. After serving the fish with an old-fashioned pie knife, Frank sat down.

  Henry and Frank and Mr. Alden talked together. But Benny kept wondering what the mystery dessert could be. He had guessed who Jud’s and Troy’s father was, but he couldn’t guess what the dessert was. It was in the refrigerator, but it wasn’t ice cream. And Frank wouldn’t tell what it was.

  Benny thought, “I’m sure it isn’t a pudding, and I don’t think it could be a pie or a cake. I guess I’ll just have to wait.” That was hard to do. But he enjoyed every bit of Frank’s fish and stuffing.

  All the Aldens enjoyed the delicious dinner Frank had cooked. Soon their plates were clean.

  “Let me help you clear off the table,” said Jessie.

  “I’ll clear,” said Frank, “and you can pile the dishes up. You’ll see where they go in that sink.”

  Then the moment came when Frank opened the refrigerator to get dessert. Benny twisted around in his seat to see what it was.

  “A watermelon!” he exclaimed. “But you never raised that, Frank.”

  “Oh, yes, I did!” laughed Frank. “You can go down to my garden and pick one any time now. I’m going to sell some of them.”

  “We’ll buy one, for sure,” Violet said. “We just love watermelon.”

  Everyone took a slice of watermelon, and soon it was gone, except for the green rind. “I save that,” said Frank. “I make watermelon pickle out of it.”

  “What about that!” said Benny. He snapped a watermelon seed across the room.

  “I wouldn’t do that, Ben,” said Mr. Alden in a low voice. “This is really Frank’s bus station, and he’ll have to sweep it up.”

  “I don’t mind,” said Frank, snapping a seed in Benny’s direction.

  Soon even Grandfather was snapping watermelon seeds!

  “What a party,” thought Jessie. “I don’t know when I have seen Grandfather having such a good time.”

  When everyone was tired of snapping seeds, Frank swept them up. Jessie and Violet said they would wash the dishes. But Frank had a dishwasher, so the work was soon done.

  “We ought to have a fish party next year,” said Benny. “Maybe at our house.”

  “Maybe at my house,” said Frank. “By next year it will be lovely down there by the river. We might even catch our own fish.”

  “Hooray!” said Benny. “Grandfather and I love to go fishing. Let’s make it a real date. What about my birthday? That’s the fifteenth of July.”

  “I’ll write it right down in my book,” said Mr. Alden, taking out his wallet. In a small notebook he wrote, “July 15. Fishing with Benny and Frank.”

  “I can remember that,” said Frank. “I don’t need to write it down.”

  A little later the Aldens said good-bye to Frank and drove home in their station wagon.

  “Everything turned out right,” said Benny. “Don’t you think so, Grandfather?”

  “Yes, Ben, it did,” Mr. Alden answered. “I think the river will be saved. And I think Mr. Pickett will be able to make the changes in his factory. He’ll be Frank’s good neighbor after all.”

  “I never guessed those two boys were Picketts,” said Jessie. “Frank didn’t trust the boys because he thought they were on their father’s side. But really, they picketed their own father’s business.”

  “Pickett’s pickets,” said Benny with a laugh. “You know, most of this adventure was just an accident. We would never have known Frank or the Pickett family or learned about the paint factory or started to clean up the river ...”

  “If the bus hadn’t been late,” finished Henry.

  “Right,” said Benny.

  About the Author

  GERTRUDE CHANDLER WARNER discovered when she was teaching that many readers who like an exciting story could find no books that were both easy and fun to read. She decided to try to meet this need, and her first book, The Boxcar Children, quickly proved she had succeeded.

  Miss Warner drew on her own experiences to write the mystery. As a child she spent hours watching trains go by on the tracks opposite her family home. She often dreamed about what it would be like to set up housekeeping in a caboose or freight car—the situation the Alden children find themselves in.

  When Miss Warner received requests for more adventures involving Henry, Jessie, Violet, and Benny Alden, she began additional stories. In each, she chose a special setting and introduced unusual or eccentric characters who liked the unpredictable.

  While the mystery element is central to each of Miss Warner’s books, she never thought of them as strictly juvenile mysteries. She liked to stress the Aldens’ independence and resourcefulness and their solid New England devotion to using up and making do. The Aldens go about most of their adventures with as little adult supervision as possible—something else that delights young readers.

  Miss Warner lived in Putnam, Connecticut, until her death in 1979. During her lifetime, she received hundreds of letters from girls and boys telling her how much they liked her book. And so she continued the Aldens’ adventures, writing a total of nineteen books in the Boxcar Children series.

  The Boxcar Children Mysteries

  THE BOXC
AR CHILDREN

  SURPRISE ISLAND

  THE YELLOW HOUSE MYSTERY

  MYSTERY RANCH

  MIKE’S MYSTERY

  BLUE BAY MYSTERY

  THE WOODSHED MYSTERY

  THE LIGHTHOUSE MYSTERY

  MOUNTAIN TOP MYSTERY

  SCHOOLHOUSE MYSTERY

  CABOOSE MYSTERY

  HOUSEBOAT MYSTERY

  SNOWBOUND MYSTERY

  TREE HOUSE MYSTERY

  BICYCLE MYSTERY

  MYSTERY IN THE SAND

  MYSTERY BEHIND THE WALL

  BUS STATION MYSTERY

  BENNY UNCOVERS A MYSTERY

  THE HAUNTED CABIN MYSTERY

  THE DESERTED LIBRARY MYSTERY

  THE ANIMAL SHELTER MYSTERY

  THE OLD MOTEL MYSTERY

  THE MYSTERY OF THE HIDDEN

  PAINTING

  THE AMUSEMENT PARK MYSTERY

  THE MYSTERY OF THE MIXED-UP ZOO

  THE CAMP-OUT MYSTERY

  THE MYSTERY GIRL

  THE MYSTERY CRUISE

  THE DISAPPEARING FRIEND MYSTERY

  THE MYSTERY OF THE SINGING GHOST

  MYSTERY IN THE SNOW

  THE PIZZA MYSTERY

  THE MYSTERY HORSE

  THE MYSTERY AT THE DOG SHOW

  THE CASTLE MYSTERY

  THE MYSTERY OF THE LOST VILLAGE

  THE MYSTERY ON THE ICE

  THE MYSTERY OF THE PURPLE POOL

  THE GHOST SHIP MYSTERY

  THE MYSTERY IN WASHINGTON, DC

  THE CANOE TRIP MYSTERY

  THE MYSTERY OF THE HIDDEN BEACH

  THE MYSTERY OF THE MISSING CAT

  THE MYSTERY AT SNOWFLAKE INN

  THE MYSTERY ON STAGE

  THE DINOSAUR MYSTERY

  THE MYSTERY OF THE STOLEN MUSIC

  THE MYSTERY AT THE BALL PARK

  THE CHOCOLATE SUNDAE MYSTERY

  THE MYSTERY OF THE HOT

  AIR BALLOON

  THE MYSTERY BOOKSTORE

  THE PILGRIM VILLAGE MYSTERY

  THE MYSTERY OF THE STOLEN

  BOXCAR

  THE MYSTERY IN THE CAVE

  THE MYSTERY ON THE TRAIN

  THE MYSTERY AT THE FAIR