freeze!â
Nobody paid any attention, as usual.
When Oliver came to, he could barely breathe, smushed as he was underneath U. Crumm. He heard Arthur, who had come to chow down at the Blue Burd with his mom and dad because it was his momâs bowling night and she liked to rest her arm, shout, âShe hit him like a ton of bricks! Heâll never get out of there alive!â
U. Crumm blushed a bright red color. She didnât like lying there with all the wind knocked out of her and her skirt hiked up so that everyone in the restaurant could see the big hole in the knee of her panty hose.
Finally, with a good deal of pushing and shoving and grunting and groaning, Oliverâs dad and several burly firefighters tied one end of a thick rope around U. Crummâs middle and swung the other end over a rafter. Then they lifted her off Oliver and into midair. For a few moments, she spun there like a top. Then they lowered the rope and U. Crumm set foot on solid ground once more.
Oliver lay there feeling as flat as any possum run over by a tractor-trailer. He was sure his arms and legs looked as if theyâd been ironed. He did not look like a hero, he thought sadly.
âMy baby, my baby!â Oliverâs mom cried in a loud voice. Oliver was so embarrassed, he felt like going through the floor. On the other hand, heâd just been saved from doing exactly that. So he jumped to his feet to prove he was as good as new.
âHip hip hooray!â the customers shouted in unison.
âOdds on Oliver!â Oliverâs dad cried.
Oliverâs mom frowned and said, âAre those your good pants?â
âWhew!â said Arthur, wiping his brow in an exaggerated way. âI thought you were a goner.â
âDonât you wish,â said Oliver.
Next morning, a package came to Oliverâs house by special delivery. Inside was a super-deluxe fishing rod, the most expensive kind.
Just what Oliver had wanted for ages.
The card said, Thanks for a lovely evening .
It was signed U. Crumm, Town Clerk .
3
G ONE F ISHING
Oliver and Arthur dropped everything and went fishing. Edna went too. Edna liked to bark at the fish. Sometimes the fish barked back. Those were the dogfish.
âI canât miss with this,â Oliver said, waving his new rod. âHand me a marshmallow, Arthur.â
âWe ate all the marshmallows,â Arthur said. âAll we got left is worms.â
âMarshmallows are better bait,â Oliver said.
âThis bozo smells,â Arthur said, handing over a worm.
âYouâd smell too if youâd croaked as long ago as he did,â Oliver said.
The mosquitoes dive-bombed them, the sun walked across the sky, and the fish were not biting.
âThis is getting very boring,â Arthur said.
In the distance, Edna barked. Long and loud.
âProbably sheâs going for a jackrabbit,â Oliver said. âShe likes to chase jackrabbits even if she never catches one.â
âSort of like you and fishing,â Arthur said.
âWhoa!â Oliver hollered. He had a bite. âHang on! Itâs a whopper! Itâs a monster goon shark. I can see his razor-sharp teeth and his mean yellow eyes.â
âSounds like a tiger shark to me,â Arthur said. âI read a book about tiger sharks. They eat people.â
âGet the net!â Oliver shouted.
âWhere is it?â Arthur said.
âI donât know! Heâs getting away! Get the net, Arthur!â
âItâs not here,â Arthur said. âSomebody must have stolen it.â
âCome hold the line!â Oliver yelled. âIâll find it.â
By the time Oliver found the net under a nearby willow tree and raced back, Arthur was floundering in the water.
âHelp! Help!â Arthur cried.
Arthur didnât like to get his face wet. He hated to put his face underwater, so heâd only learned how to dog-paddle.
âAre you