fish with us,” Violet whispered to Jessie.
They were soon at the bus station and Frank was unlocking the door. He found Bill’s note and put it with the package that had come on the bus.
“If I close up like this in the morning, I don’t miss much business,” he said. “Too late for breakfast and too early for lunch.”
The Aldens had followed Frank into the station. They saw the sun shining in the clean windows. The flowers in the pots on the sills were bright and gay. Frank opened a window and the room was filled with a bird song.
Frank looked around as if the station was his own little kingdom. He said, “Sit down, kids, and let me tell you something. I think you’ll understand, and I need to talk to someone.”
The Aldens sat down quietly and waited. Frank was a puzzling person. He was angry one minute and gentle the next.
Frank reached down and pulled out the envelope Benny had handed him yesterday. He unfolded the letter.
He began, “You saw the chimney of the paint factory when you came to find me. The factory is right there on the river around a little bend from me. You might say it’s my neighbor.”
“We smelled it, too,” Benny said.
“ ’You can say that again,” said Henry.
“I will,” said Benny. “We smelled it, too.”
Frank laughed. “That’s just part of the problem. I don’t like it, but that isn’t the worst of it.”
Frank got up and put the letter down. He pulled out a big notebook. Opening it, he said, “I think you’ve guessed that maybe I’m not just a lunch-counter man and bus station keeper. I’m a chemist. I like living in a quiet place like this. I’m interested in growing plants without using chemicals. I like birds and wild animals. That’s why I’m here.”
“We understand,” Violet said quietly.
“Everything was fine until this Mr. Pickett came along and built his paint factory. There was no way to stop him. He bought the land. He could do what he liked out here in the country. He didn’t expect to bother anyone.”
“He can spoil the river and no one will care?” Henry asked. “Is that what he thinks?”
“Yes,” Frank said. “But he is wrong. He has to be stopped. But how? That’s the question.”
Frank dropped his head in his hands. Then he went on quietly, “I did some experiments to show how the water from the factory pollutes the river. The chemicals are carried in the water. They kill fish and water plants. I thought that if I showed this notebook about my experiments to Mr. Pickett he would stop polluting.”
“But that didn’t work?” Benny asked.
Frank shook his head. “Mr. Pickett just said it was too bad, but lots of people have jobs at his factory. It was too late to build somewhere else.”
Benny looked angry. “Build somewhere else? Pollute somewhere else? That’s no answer.”
“That’s what I said,” Frank continued. “I told him that there are laws to stop pollution. He told me I was a troublemaker. He said he’d get rid of me.”
“How?” asked Jessie.
“Easy enough, I guess,” Frank said. “Mr. Pickett bought all the land along the river. That means all the land around my house and garden. If he likes, he can keep me from getting to my house. That’s what he told me.”
“That’s not fair!” Henry said. “There must be some way to stop him.”
Frank said, “It takes money. I’d have to go to court. Anyway, now he has a new idea. He wants to buy my house and garden to make into a parking lot for the factory workers. Imagine! Tear down my house. Cover my garden with blacktop. That’s what his letter to me was about. I’m not rich. I can’t fight him.”
The Aldens looked at each other. Benny decided to ask another question. “What about Jud and Troy?”
“Yes,” Henry added. “We saw them giving out papers at the bus station when our bus stopped yesterday.”
Frank gave his angry short laugh again. “Oh, yes! They think they can change things. They tried to show how important
Carmen Rodrigues
John Paulits
Gayla Twist
Lincoln Cole
Jeffery Deaver
Eoin McNamee
Amy Fellner Dominy
Kathi S. Barton
Tom Swift, His Motor Cycle
Loreen Augeri