Authors: R. A. Spratt
It took Friday's legs several days to recover from the ordeals of orienteering.
âOw,' said Friday as she gingerly got of bed. âExercise is bad enough when you're doing it, but it hurts afterwards as well. Indeed, from my observation, it hurts more on the third day than it does on the first.'
âI know,' agreed Melanie. âIt's a wonder fit people manage to walk at all.'
âI imagine if you exercise regularly your muscles get used to it,' said Friday.
âHow awful,' said Melanie. âI never want to find out.'
As they headed out to breakfast, Friday and Melanie came across a large group of giggling girls gathered in the lobby of their dormitory.
âWhat's going on?' asked Friday.
âThe police are on their way!' said Mirabella. âThey're going to be here all afternoon.'
The girls giggled again.
âWho for?' asked Friday.
âThey're looking for that escaped convict,' said Trea. âThey've been searching the whole region. Today they're searching here.'
âThey're bringing all the recruits from the police academy to comb the grounds,' said Mirabella. âJust think, hundreds of fit young men everywhere, searching for clues. I'm going to wag English so I can go and watch.'
âYou'd better be careful, Friday,' said Trea.
âThey might arrest you again.'
The giggling erupted into cackling.
âEnjoy your objectification of men in uniform,' said Friday. âWe're going to breakfast.'
âThere's a letter for you,' said Melanie, noticing an envelope in Friday's pigeon hole.
âReally?' said Friday, taking the official-looking envelope and inspecting the letterhead as she headed out the door.
âWho's it from?' asked Melanie.
âIt's from the university medical lab,' said Friday. âIt's my test results.'
âI didn't know there was something wrong with you,' said Melanie. âApart from the obvious social malfunction, and I doubt that could be measured in a blood test.'
âNo, it's the results from the DNA test on the string,' said Friday. âThe piece we found in the library. I got one of my mother's former PhD students to run it through for me.'
âYour mother is a theoretical physicist,' said Melanie. âWhy would she have a student working in a DNA testing lab?'
âThe student changed her major,' explained Friday. âAfter one semester of working with my mother, she grew to hate all things relating to quantum mechanics generally and M-theory, in particular.'
As they walked across to the dining hall, Friday tore open the envelope and began reading the cover letter. âI don't believe it,' she said. âThey found an exact match.'
âI thought you couldn't match DNA unless you had a sample from a suspect,' said Melanie.
âYou can't,' said Friday. âIf they found a match that means the saliva must belong to someone associated with the university, who voluntarily allowed their sample to be available.'
Friday flipped through the rest of the paperwork, looking for the name.
âLet's see,' said Friday, âit's a female, Anglo-Saxon Celtic, no genetic diseases, called â¦' She found the piece of paper with the name. âFriday Astrella Barnes.'
âWhat a coincidence,' said Melanie. âThe thief is someone with the same name as you, apart from the middle name. You'd never have such a ridiculous middle name.'
âMy siblings are called Quantum, Quasar, Orion and Halley,' said Friday. âOf course I have a ridiculous middle name!'
âDoes it start with an A?' asked Melanie.
âYes,' said Friday.
âIt isn't Astrella, is it?' asked Melanie.
âIt is,' said Friday.
âThat's either a really big coincidence,' said Melanie, âor they found your spit on that string.'
âI think the probability of my spit being on a piece of a string at a crime scene is much greater than two sets of parents thinking it was a good idea to name their daughters Friday Astrella Barnes,' said Friday.
âBut how did your spit get on that string?' asked Melanie.
âI don't know,' said Friday.
âDo you remember licking any string?' asked Melanie. âDo you think it is possible that you could have cleverly and elaborately broken into the library, stolen the map and then entirely forgotten about it?'
âNo,' said Friday.
âYou could have been hypnotised,' suggested Melanie.
âThat's not possible,' said Friday. âWhen I was eight I hypnotised myself and implanted instructions in my subconscious to never allow myself to be hypnotised again.'
âSo what did happen?' asked Melanie.
âSomeone must have stolen my spit,' said Friday.
âBut who would do something so unhygienic?' asked Melanie. âAnd weird?'
âIan,' said Friday. âHe's trying to get rid of me to protect his scholarship.'
âIan!' called Friday angrily as she strode across the dining hall with Melanie following.
Ian looked up from the paperback he was reading as he ate his bacon and eggs. âNot you. Can't you see I'm busy?'
âDoing what?' asked Friday. âPlotting to have me arrested again?'
âReading
The Curse of the Pirate King
,' said Ian. âIt's very good. Lots of violence.'
âDid you steal my spit?' demanded Friday.
âHas she lost her marbles?' Ian asked Melanie.
âShe doesn't play marbles,' said Melanie. âAt least, I've never noticed that she does.'
âYou put my spit on that string,' accused Friday.
âI wish I had,' said Ian. âIf I knew it would make you this angry.'
âFriday!' Chris called out from the other side of the hall.
Friday and Melanie turned.
âIt's your other boyfriend,' said Melanie. âIt really must be exhausting for you to be in a love triangle.'
âI'm not in a love triangle, or even a love straight line,' protested Friday.
âThen why is the second cutest boy in the entire school running over here to talk to you?' asked Melanie.
âChris isn't the second cutest boy in the school,' said Friday.
âYou think he's the cutest?' said Melanie. âOh dear, Ian will be disappointed about that.'
âI've had as much of this conversation as I can handle without taking anti-nausea medication,' said Ian as he tucked his book into his pocket. âI'm going.' He slouched away.
âFine,' Friday called after him, âbut this isn't over. I'll prove it was you.'
âFriday,' said Chris as he caught up with the girls. âI need your help.'
âHow romantic,' said Melanie.
âMelanie, perhaps you'd better go on to class,' said Friday. âI'll help Chris and catch up with you as soon as I can.'
âYou want privacy,' said Melanie. âI understand. I would say I would take notes for you in maths, but of course I won't, and I'd hate to lie.' She drifted away.
âWhat's the problem?' asked Friday.
âYou'll have to see for yourself,' said Chris. âIt will be easier than trying to explain.'
Chris took Friday by the hand, which Melanie would have noted made her blush, and hurriedly led her outside.
âWhere are we going?' asked Friday.
âYou'll see,' said Chris. He squeezed her hand tighter. If Friday had wanted to let go, she would have found it hard to do now.
They turned around the corner of the building and there on the gravel stood Mr Pilcher's ride-on lawnmower.
âA ride-on lawnmower?' said Friday. âYou know fixing machines isn't really my thing. Don't get me wrong, I have an excellent grasp of the workings of the internal combustion engine. But I am clumsy, and if I stuck my hands under a lawnmower, chances are I would cut my fingers off.'
âI'm not going to cut your fingers off,' said Chris.
âI didn't think you were,' said Friday.
âI'm going to break your arm if you don't shut up and get on that ride-on lawnmower right now,' said Chris.
Friday turned and looked him in the eye. Chris smiled his most charming smile.
âDid you just say you would break my arm?' asked Friday.
âYes, I did,' said Chris. âAnd I'm not going to repeat myself. If you don't do as you're told, I'm just going to do it.'
Friday evidently had a look of disbelief on her face. While Chris did not repeat himself, he apparently saw a need to explain. âYou're not the only one who knows about physics. I, for example, know that Archimedes stated that with a fulcrum and a lever he could move the world, which is how I know that if
I used my knee as a fulcrum and your forearm as a lever I could snap your elbow like a dry twig. Now, would you like to get on the lawnmower?'
Again, Chris smiled. It crossed Friday's mind that perhaps he didn't know what he was saying. That perhaps English was his second language and he had learned the wrong sentence from a phrasebook, but as she looked at him she could see that while his face was smiling, his eyes were cold and dead inside.
âAll right,' said Friday. She climbed onto the lawnmower.
âNot onto the seat, you idiot,' said Chris. âI'm not letting you drive. You can sit on the grass catcher.'
Friday climbed over the seat onto the grass catcher. Chris got in and turned on the engine.
âLet's go, we don't have much time. The police are due here in an hour,' he said. âBut first, I don't want you trying anything brave during the ride.' Chris produced a zip tie from his pocket and fastened Friday's hands to the grass catcher. He put the lawnmower in gear and took off across the rugby field.
âSomeone from the school is bound to see us,' said Friday. âA noisy diesel engine is hardly a subtle escape vehicle.'
âIf someone sees us they won't think anything of it,' said Chris. âYou do strange things for the Headmaster all the time. And I am very charming. Everybody loves me. They will assume I'm helping you out as a good Samaritan. Or that I'm mowing the lawn for Mr Pilcher. Either way they won't interfere.'
Friday looked back at the school. The buildings seemed to grow smaller as they steadily chugged away. Through the windows she could see tardy students hurrying to their classes. Not one of them looked her way.
They crossed the rugby pitch and went down an embankment, nearly tipping the mower over. Chris was not a cautious driver. They drove onto the soccer field and powered towards the tree line of the swamp in the distance. The mower could go at an impressive speed when the blades were up. They must have been travelling at twenty kilometres an hour, which was fast enough for Friday to not consider jumping off.
The lawnmower wound around trees with reckless speed. It scraped a pine tree at one point, causing the grass catcher to shudder so hard that Friday was worried it would fall off.
âMr Pilcher is not going to be happy about you scraping his lawnmower,' said Friday, noting the ugly marks on the paintwork.
Chris just laughed. âAs if I could care less.' He smashed through a rhododendron bush and headed straight for a mangrove tree.
âStop!' cried Friday.
Chris yanked on the handbrake and jumped out in one fluid movement. Friday toppled forward and landed on her back in the driver's seat with her hands still tied to the grass catcher.
âOw,' said Friday.
âYour clumsiness knows no bounds,' said Chris with a sigh. âCome on, sit up. I need you to read something for me.'
Friday struggled to get herself up in a sitting position. The best she could manage was to sit sideways in the driver's seat.
âWhat can I read that you can't?' asked Friday. âIs it something in Latin? Or Lithuanian? Or perhaps scrambled by the Enigma code?'
âIt's a map,' said Chris. He went over to a hollow log, reached in and pulled out a wad of paper. He unfolded it and held it in front of Friday.
âThe stolen map of the school!' exclaimed Friday.
âWell done, Sherlock,' said Chris sarcastically.
âWhy are you showing it to me?' asked Friday. âAnd why is it such a mess?' As Friday looked at the map she could see it had suffered hard use. It had dirt stains, frayed edges and even a mysterious red blotch. âIs that a bloodstain?' she asked.
Chris looked over the top of the map to see what she meant. âNo, that's strawberry syrup from when Mrs Marigold served sundaes for dessert.' Chris pointed to a brown stain in the corner. âThat's a bloodstain.'
âGood to know,' said Friday.
âI need to find the 1987 time capsule,' said Chris.
âWhy?' asked Friday.
âThat's none of your business,' said Chris. âYou're the one tied to a lawnmower. I ask the questions. Now look at the map and tell me where it is.'
Friday studied the sheet of paper being held in her face. The diagram of the school grounds was fairly detailed for a hand-drawn effort. Scattered across the page were numbers indicating where the different years had buried their time capsules. Most of them had been crossed out.
âYou've been digging up the time capsules,' stated Friday. âAnd you crossed them out as you went along. That's why holes have been appearing all over the school.'
âCongratulations, you figured it out,' said Chris as he rolled his eyes. âI can see why you have a reputation for genius.'
âThe Headmaster fell in the 1999 hole. Jacinta fell in 1991. Ian in 1980,' said Friday, fascinated to see such an accurate map of all the minor incidents of the last few months.
âLook, the map says 1987 should be here,' said Chris, stabbing the page with his forefinger. âBut I've dug and dug and I can't find it. You tell me where it is.'
Friday looked at the spot where Chris was pointing. It was where they were standing, along the edge of the swamp. Friday looked around her. She now noticed there were muddy holes in the ground. Holes everywhere. She looked at the map again.
âNo wonder you have such rough hands,' said Friday. âYou must have been out here, digging every night of the week.'
âLook, there's a picture of the skull and crossbones and two beans drawn underneath,' said Chris.
âThat's a pirate symbol,' said Friday.
âSo?' said Chris.
âPirate maps are written in code,' said Friday.
âI knew it,' said Chris.
âIt's a very simple code,' said Friday. âYou're going to kick yourself for not working it out.'
âJust tell me,' said Chris.
âOn a pirate map you reverse everything,' explained Friday. âLeft means right, right means left, up means down, and down means up.'
âOkay,' said Chris. âSo how does that help us?'
âIf you're looking for the '87 time capsule,' said Friday, âdig up the '78. The reverse.'
âI did dig up the '78 capsule!' exclaimed Chris. âI've dug up all the seventies and all the eighties.'
âHow deep did you dig?' asked Friday.
âDeep enough to find the capsule,' said Chris.
âThen you didn't do what the map said,' said Friday. âThose aren't baked beans. They're footprints.
One above the other. It means two feet. So you reverse the year and dig two feet.'
âYou're kidding me,' said Chris. âThat's just silly.' He was clearly getting very angry.
âBut that's just it, isn't it?' said Friday. âThis was done by kids. Eleven or twelve-year-olds. Kids think like kids.'
Chris snatched the map out of Friday's hands and looked at it again. â1978 is in the middle of the Headmaster's rose garden!'
âI bet they enjoyed that,' said Friday. âDoing it right under his nose. Although it would have been the former head. The current one started in 1989.'
âSomeone is going to notice if I start digging up the rose garden in broad daylight,' said Chris.
âSo wait for nightfall,' said Friday.
âI can't,' said Chris. âThere are going to be two hundred police cadets swarming over the grounds in an hour.'
âQuite the predicament,' said Friday.
âI need a diversion,' said Chris.
âIt'll need to be an impressive diversion,' said Friday. âSomething that will have the whole of the school looking the other way long enough for you to
dig a two-foot-deep hole in the rose garden and find the capsule.'
âSo what would you suggest, Einstein?' asked Chris.
Friday sighed. âEinstein was a theoretical physicist, therefore just the person to speak to if you wanted to invent a nuclear bomb. But he would have been wildly unqualified to make suggestions about petty crime. The man didn't even brush his hair, most days. Practicalities were beyond him.'
âJust shut it with the trivia facts and tell me what you suggest,' said Chris.
âPull the fire alarm,' said Friday. âThe whole school will be evacuated to the rugby field for roll call. The rose garden is on the far side of the school. That will give you at least ten minutes, perhaps fifteen, to dig up the 1987 time capsule.'