13

An Escaped Mushroom

THE NEXT DAY BLACK clouds swarmed over the Garden of Lost Things. Gertie awoke early to the sound of rain lashing her bedroom window. She switched on a lamp and lay there in silence, watching water run down the glass, and hoping the bad weather meant a return of that all-important Keepers’ key.

But Gertie knew the B.D.B.U. was unpredictable.

It was Sunday, and so as usual, Kolt was most likely under the cottage. It was a ritual he had, to polish the various modes of transport, from atomic snowmobiles to Santa Cruz zombie-head skateboards with light-up wheels—very useful on twentieth-century city streets.

She pulled a robe over her pajamas, then climbed the spiral staircase to the upper part of her bedroom. The rain was whipping against the large window. Gertie stood looking out at the rough, open sea.

A part of her still wondered how she had gotten to the island, and hoped that one day she might see one of the ships Kolt said got beached occasionally.

There was a book on her desk about pirate ships. She had become interested after seeing the film a few nights ago. Gertie carried it to her couch and sat down, tucking her feet under her. By the intensity of the storm, she knew there wouldn’t be long to relax. If Kolt didn’t come knocking soon, she’d have to go down to the basement and notify him of a return.

The upstairs of Gertie’s bedroom was more like a workshop now that she’d lived there for a while. There were two large desk surfaces, coffee and tea cans full of pencils and markers, brushes, and different-sized pairs of scissors. She also had various reams of paper for drawing, mapmaking, and any other craft she fancied having a go at.

Gertie looked up from her book on pirate ships, and scanned the cubbyholes over her desk—thinking how interesting it would be to draw a map of the basement. List all the things in the different rooms on the various levels. With 945 bedrooms in total, and thousands upon thousands of lost objects—it would take years, but no other Keeper had ever attempted such a feat. The Cave Sprites would be there to help. Gertie relished the idea of getting to know them better. Maybe she could learn to speak Cave Sprite with the same confidence Kolt spoke Mouse.

But of course, all big plans such as these were on hold until she could begin the process of rescuing Keepers. She felt that this was her life mission now. Knowing that children, Keepers like her, were somewhere in the world living miserable lives kept her awake at night. She would never have said it to Kolt—but she felt deep down that rescuing Keepers was more important than returning lost things, and perhaps even more vital than rescuing her estranged brother.

Gertie looked out to sea again. She hoped the upcoming mission had to do with returning the key to its Keeper. But what would this new Keeper be like? What if she didn’t like him or her?

When Kolt finally made it upstairs from the basement through the trapdoor, Gertie was at the kitchen table with Robot Rabbit Boy playing cards. The rain was now coming off the roof like small rivers.

“I had no idea the weather had turned!” he said.

“How’s the cleaning going?”

“I was actually trying to find out where those robotic hands have been coming from, but the Cave Sprites haven’t got a clue.”

Gertie put down a card. Then Robot Rabbit Boy did.

“You should have fetched me!” Kolt said. “It must be an urgent return with this sort of tempest. Have you been up to see the B.D.B.U. yet?”

“We were waiting for you.”

But Kolt knew her too well. “Sure you’re not just scared of being disappointed again?”

Gertie blushed. “It might be more convincing if the three of us go up there.”

“Mashed potato?” said Robot Rabbit Boy, laying down three queens to win the game.

Moonberry bush branches were now rattling fiercely against the windows. Kolt fetched his bowler hat from the shelf and tightened his apron strings. It was time to climb the tower and find out what needed to be returned, where it had to go, and to whom.

Please let it be the key . . .” Gertie said, as they shuffled toward that fowl volume, The History of Chickens. Kolt pulled the book from the shelf, and the secret passage opened to the tower. Just as they were about to start climbing, Gertie noticed the Keepers’ key on the table.

“Look, everyone!” she cried. The Keepers’ key was glowing again.

Kolt and Robot Rabbit Boy turned quickly.

“This is it, gang!” shouted Kolt.

Gertie was so excited she took the stairs to the tower three at a time.

Gertie told herself that she absolutely had to complete this mission. It was probably the most important one she would ever undertake. Not only would another Keeper mean a new friend (hopefully), but it also gave her a better chance of defeating the Losers’ next evil plan (whatever that was), which meant the opportunity to rescue her brother.

Soon they were in the tower standing over the B.D.B.U.

As usual, its pages flashed, hummed, and turned by themselves to reveal strange scenes. One picture was of an avalanche, and there was suddenly a mighty tumbling of snow across the page covering several paragraphs. Another was of a meteor ripping through space with a tail of fire and ice. A third image was of a tall beast ripping the tops of trees with sharp teeth. Gertie knew they were sharp because she heard the snap of tearing leaves.

Eventually the whipping pages slowed, and the old book settled on a paragraph of illuminated gold writing. There was also an illustration of a knobbly person in a green costume with long, pointed shoes.

“That doesn’t look like a Keeper,” Gertie said.

They all stared at the strange, sickly figure on the page who was sniffling and rubbing its joints as though they ached.

“Looks like the flu,” said Kolt. “Better stock up on ginger and echinacea before we leave.”

But then in another picture was a glass vial full of green powder. To everyone’s disappointment, the glowing key downstairs was not the object to be returned. It was something from bedroom 469, medicine of some kind. It was this that the B.D.B.U. was telling them to take back, to someone called Dr. Girolamo Fracastoro, who lived in Italy in the late 1400s.

“A vial of green junk!” Gertie said. “It can’t be!”

The old book let out a deep burp and snapped shut, making Robot Rabbit Boy’s ears fly back.

“Well. Maybe next time,” Kolt said.

“But the key was glowing!”

“That’s true . . . maybe the B.D.B.U. changed its mind at the last minute?”

“There must be a mistake.” Gertie was livid. “I’m not sure we can trust it anymore!”

“Come, come, let’s not be rash. It’s only one small mission to Venice; we’ll be home before you know it.”

Just as they were about to leave the room, the B.D.B.U. sprung to life again. The three Keepers turned around excitedly. The book flipped and flapped, as the thousands of pages turned.

Kolt seemed pleased. “It must be a double return! When we take two items back to the world, one after the other—like with the mathematician’s stick and the watch!”

Gertie just stared at the B.D.B.U., waiting for the flipping to slow and then stop in the place with all the details of where else they would be going.

With a faint, repetitive drumming of four beats coming from the pages, Gertie leaned into the book and read the name Sequoyah.

“Who is that?”

“Hmmm, it does ring a bell—but look! North America in the early 1800s . . .”

“Is that good?”

“It’s dangerous, Gertie.”

Once again, the item was not the Keepers’ key, as Gertie had hoped. It was a piece of thick paper with symbols written on it. Kolt couldn’t tell why it was important, but was happy the item was conveniently located in the kitchen, hidden in one of Kolt’s books on the healing power of plants.

All the way down to the basement from the tower, Gertie was quietly seething about having to return a pair of items—neither of which was the key. Robot Rabbit Boy seemed annoyed too, and kept saying “strawberry mush dollop room,” over and over again.

“I know you’re upset,” Kolt said, as they descended the basement stairs. “You have a right to be. If it makes you feel any better I agree with you—that old book has been driving me loony all these years, but it’s still in charge. It’s still the brains behind the Keeper operation.”

When they were deep under the cottage, a Cave Sprite appeared—probably Thursday, as it was quick and a bit pushy.

Each Cave Sprite had once been the soul of a brave warrior, but the little glowing balls of light were now guides of the Skuldarkian underworld.

“I just don’t get it,” Gertie went on, as the Cave Sprite led them down to level four. “We have a Keepers’ key with no Keeper, AND it was glowing!”

“Gertie, stop, please, there’s nothing we can do. It wasn’t glowing when we passed it again on the way down here, the B.D.B.U. knows things we don’t, have faith. . . .”

“Yeah, yeah.”

“Mush dollop.”


BEDROOM 469 HAD A peculiar smell that had wafted out into the corridor before they even got a Keepers’ key in the lock. It was like leather, eggs, and soil. Once they were inside, Gertie realized immediately that bedroom 469 wasn’t like the other rooms with things just piled up, crammed into corners, and stacked dangerously on top of one another. This was a library of sorts, but instead of shelves, there were glass-fronted cases running along all four walls, and instead of books, there were specimens. The Cave Sprite lit the room by hovering in the center.

“Sorry about the smell!” Kolt said with a whistle. “But this room is all plant-based medicine in the form of lost herbs, powders, gasses, leaves . . .”

“And slime,” Gertie said, watching a green blob move slowly around inside a glass bell jar.

“Yes, slime too, along with barks, vapors, and fungi . . .”

“Like those?” Gertie said, pointing at some glowing toadstools behind glass doors with a skull and crossbones painted on them. She recognized the symbol from her pirate book.

“Deadly poisonous!” Kolt said. “But only to men with beards for some reason—oh, there’s really so much in here, Gertie, from powdered wolfsbane to crushed beetle wings, which are blended with unstable magnesium and dried kidney beans to make a formula that gives a person the ability to fly for about two minutes—or however long he or she can hold the burp for.”

“Eggcup?” Robot Rabbit Boy said, reaching a paw toward the jar with the brown clumps inside. “Mush?”

“No!” Kolt said firmly, looking at Gertie. “If he can’t get a plate of double-Dutch-chunk cookies across the kitchen without getting lost, then imagine what would happen if he learned to burp-fly.”

Gertie sympathetically patted Robot Rabbit Boy’s head. “I’ll take you up in the Spitfire once we’re back from this mission,” she promised, “and we can pretend we’re in that space film with the gold and white robots you like so much.”

Robot Rabbit Boy blinked, then snorted rudely at Kolt.

In the center of the room were tall racks of different-sized test tubes and glass jars of pickled things. Some objects were in liquid that bubbled, giving off strange gasses. Kolt said these reactions often forced lids off, which accounted for the odor they were having to deal with.

Gertie sniffed. “It’s like a wet forest meets . . . very old shoes, mixed with rotten eggs.”

“Sorry to dampen your poetic nose,” Kolt said, pointing. “But this particular aroma is from that giant fungus lurking in the corner. It broke out of its jar last year and is now moving around. If you see it, wave.”

“Wave!”

Gertie looked down and noticed several sticky trails on the floor. Then she peeked around the corner. A gray mushroom with a red top slurped across the tiles. It was taller and fatter than Robot Rabbit Boy—who must have decided that he didn’t like it, and went to wait by the bedroom door.

Gertie stepped cautiously toward the creature. “Hello,” she said nervously. The entire mushroom turned and bent its red top toward the sound of her voice like an enormous ear.

“Aargh!”

Kolt laughed. “Oh, it likes you!”

“You speak Mushroom too?”

“No, but when it’s afraid, it fires hundreds of tiny spikes.”

“Thanks for telling me now!”

Then the Cave Sprite began blinking. Gertie and Kolt followed it to a cabinet of glass vials.

“This must be it,” Kolt said, opening the door and taking out the glowing glass bottle of green powder.

Then Kolt led Gertie to another part of the room. He took two small bags and two little spoons out of his pocket.

“We’re short on growing spice,” Kolt explained. “If you’ll excuse the pun.”

Gertie watched him take the top off a glass jar and scoop some powder with a teaspoon into one of the bags. Then she looked around. “What’s the other bag for?”

“The complete opposite herb—shrinking spice,” Kolt told her, reaching into another glass jar. This powder looked exactly the same as the other one. Kolt brought up a heaped teaspoon carefully.

“Don’t you have to measure it?”

“Not really,” Kolt said. “One is for growing, and one is for shrinking, like in that book Alice in Wonderland. You only need a pinch to feel the effects. That author must have gotten hold of some.”

Gertie stared at the two jars. “But they look the same. How do you know the difference?”

“I keep them in different pockets,” Kolt said. “A big pocket for growing spice, and a little one for shrinking spice. Ready to go?”

“Shouldn’t we do something about the creepy mushroom roaming around?”

“Live and let live, is what I say.”

Then Gertie noticed the giant red top had turned to listen. She was worried it knew what she had said.

“It’s such a nice thing,” Gertie added.

“Maybe so.” Kolt nodded—then in a loud voice said, “But if I come down and find any glass broken, or specimens on the floor—then it’s back in the jar forever!”

Gertie watched as the rubbery mushroom blades trembled, and the living mold retreated to a far corner of the bedroom, where it tried to make it itself look smaller than it actually was.

“That should do it,” Kolt said. “I wouldn’t want to live in a glass jar, would you?”

“No,” said Gertie, thinking about all the missing Keepers who were probably living in much worse conditions.


NEXT STOP WAS THE Sock Drawer, one of the biggest rooms in the cottage, and accessed directly from the kitchen.

At the center of the room was an enormous revolving globe, and beyond, rack upon rack of clothes from every period in history.

Gertie had learned that dressing for the time meant blending in, which made it easier to return an object. Early on, Kolt had told her that being fashionable for them was actually a matter of life or death. For the trip to Venice, they would need clothes from the Italian Renaissance.

For a while they stood before the enormous revolving Earth, mesmerized by the deep blue of the sea, and the way light crept along the continents. It was a beautiful sight, and the Keepers watched it spin from west to east, their faces like three bright moons.

Kolt said it was a complete mystery how the enormous globe had come to be in its current position in the Sock Drawer. It was clearly too big to fit through any of the doors.

“So remind me what happens with a double return?” Gertie asked. “Do we take another outfit?”

“If possible, yes,” said Kolt. “Especially when it’s somewhere dangerous like North America in the 1800s.”

Kolt gave Gertie a large cotton bag to put the change of clothes in.

“Remember it’s vital,” he reminded her, “that we don’t draw attention to ourselves.”

After finding out which rack held the clothes for their adventures, they each went off and picked out things to wear. Once they’d decided on garments for North America, they searched a different rack for something that would blend in with the locals in Renaissance Italy. In Kolt’s personal opinion it had to be practical—but with charm—which for him usually meant a sequin or two. Gertie, on the other hand, didn’t know what she liked until she saw it, and could actually feel the fabric in her hands.

“I think we should take the new key with us!” she cried from her dressing room. “I mean, it was vibrating!”

Kolt shouted a reply from his own dressing room.

“But if we run into any Losers, that’s a third key we have to worry about! Think it’s worth it? It wasn’t glowing when we came back from the tower, was it, Gertie?”

“I suppose,” Gertie shouted back, dangling a corset in her hand, wondering why anybody would wear such a thing. “But the Losers can already travel through time because of Vispoth—so what use would a third key be?”

Kolt gave a muffled response, which meant he was putting something on.

Robot Rabbit Boy didn’t have a changing room, as there wasn’t much that fit his unusual rabbit body. He made himself useful though, by scooting back to the racks if a different size was needed—like a real-life shop assistant.

“What is the late fifteenth century like in Italy?” Gertie said, appearing before Kolt in a long black velvet dress with a red pleated linen overskirt and a black hooded veil.

“Oh, Gertie, you look more like a spider-woman assassin than a Renaissance maiden.”

“There’s such a thing as a spider-woman assassin?”

“Yes! And pray you never meet her . . . Now, are you sure you can walk in all that heavy fabric?”

“Well, I couldn’t run a marathon,” Gertie said, trying to look comfortable, “but check this out, detachable bouffant sleeves with embroidered slashing, just in case I get hot!”

“I’m afraid you’ll have to leave the black veil hood thing behind.”

“But that’s my favorite bit!”

“Well, unless you’re a widow, it’s not going to work.”

“I could be the black widow assassin!” Gertie said, “Who destroys her enemies with—”

Kolt cleared his throat. “What shoes do you have on?”

“Er, well, the giant platform clogs with pearls and lace were too much, which reminds me—that corset thing looked like a personal torture chamber, so I had Robot Rabbit Boy put it back on the racks with the clogs.”

“Gertie, we have to fit in, we must—”

“I couldn’t even stand in those shoes! They made me look like a cake decoration.”

Gertie lifted the hem of her long red overskirt to reveal the green light-up sneakers Kolt had given her when she first arrived on the island.

“But, Gertie, those sneakers are twenty-first century!”

“But they’re so comfortable.”

“The whole purpose of the Italian pianelle platform sandal is to raise the hem of your skirt above the muck of the streets.”

“I’ll tiptoe,” Gertie said. “And don’t even get me started on the corset—humans wear their skeletons on the inside, thank you very much.”

“Fine,” Kolt said. “But if we stand out, it’s your fault.”

Kolt had opted for conservative robes in light green with olive tights to match. He had also picked out thin cloth shoes—which reminded Gertie of the ones she was wearing when she washed up on Skuldark.

Then, sheepishly, from behind a stand of wigs and false beards, Robot Rabbit Boy stepped out wearing a gigantic gold coin, which hung around his neck on a chain.

Kolt rubbed his eyes. “What the . . .”

It was the first time Robot Rabbit Boy had ever dressed up for a mission. He also had a silver dagger hanging from a leather sling, a purse, and best of all—a fake mustache.

“I don’t believe this!” Kolt said. “He looks like the fifth musketeer!”

“Weren’t there only three musketeers?”

“I can’t remember, but none of them were rabbits!”

“Eggcup. Lavender. Smush,” Robot Rabbit said matter-of-factly, admiring himself in the mirror. “Strawberry dollops.”

“Fine,” Kolt said. “I give up. Wear what you want, just don’t get us killed with your strange facial hair.”

Gertie gave Robot Rabbit Boy a secret thumbs-up, and his eyes flashed neon blue.

When they entered the kitchen to pack a few snacks for the journey, one of the old volumes in the bookcase was glowing. The three Keepers rushed over and took down a massive book on the healing power of plants.

“It’s so heavy . . .” Gertie said, plonking it on the table. When she opened the pages, they found the important piece of paper they needed to return to the person called Sequoyah. It was thick, but had yellowed with age. Printed on the front in black ink were strange markings—some kind of written language that Gertie had never seen. She counted the symbols. They numbered 85.

Walking to the Time Cat, Gertie asked why fifteenth- century Italy was also called the “Renaissance.”

“It means ‘rebirth’ in French,” Kolt explained. “It was a time of great discovery and optimism, a rebirth of ideas and culture from the Roman and Greek periods.”

“Oh no! Why would anybody want to bring back the cruel Roman ways?”

“It was more their arts and knowledge, Gertie, a time of rediscovering tools like maps that had been lost after the fall of the Roman Empire. In fact—many people during the Renaissance believed the Romans had been destroyed by God for their wickedness.”

Gertie was relieved. If there was one period that sounded horrible to her—more frightening even than the age of dinosaurs—it was the Roman Empire, an epoch when people seemed to delight in being cruel.

“What was the name of the doctor the B.D.B.U. said we’re returning the vial of powder to?”

“Doctor Girolamo Fracastoro.” Kolt thought for a moment. “I’d have to check my books, but I believe he was the first person to come up with a germ theory. He wrote a long poem about it.”

“A poem about germs?”

“Yes . . . the idea that diseases are caused by tiny creatures that get inside our bodies and multiply, I suppose. But don’t get me started on parasites. . . . Anyway, people in his time thought the old chap was mad—but it turns out he was right all along!”

“I’m surprised they even had doctors back then.”

“Oh, they did, but most were bonkers by our standards, basing their remedies on superstition, folk stories, or dots they could see moving around in space. But the Venetian food isn’t bad. During the Renaissance, everything from cooking, to painting, to architecture, to music, and even dressing was taken to high levels.”

“That sounds good.”

“Don’t get too excited, it was also a period when opposites thrived, and so we will have to be careful, because despite people’s openness to new and beautiful things—they had a shocking appetite for savagery.”

“Like their ancestors in Rome,” Gertie pointed out.


IT HAD STOPPED RAINING when they reached the Time Cat, but it was still clouded over. Climbing inside, Kolt described the various dangers of Renaissance:

1. Gangs of toothless robbers

2. Gangs of robbers with a few teeth

3. Gangs of robbers with excellent dental hygiene

4. Robbers with or without a gang (or teeth)

5. Condottieri (professional killers)

7. Bravoes (hired thugs)

8. Mosquitos (tiny vampires)

9. The Black Death, a horrible disease spread by the bites of fleas

10. Getting burned alive in public—which hurts, but is also embarrassing as everyone sees your underwear on fire

Once Gertie had typed in the date for their new destination, they could hear the 101 automatic watches spinning under the hood, but the Time Cat didn’t want to go. Gertie checked the fuel levels, but they had more than a quarter tank of Skuldarkian seawater.

“I don’t like this at all,” Kolt said. “I have a funny feeling the 1400s are not going to be one of my favorite historical journeys—and it’s a double return too.”

“Don’t be so superstitious! This mission might be the one that leads us to finding those lost Keepers!”

Kolt noticed the end of the newly discovered Keepers’ key sticking out of Gertie’s richly adorned black robe.

“If you have to bring it, Gertie, just keep it out of sight,” he warned her. “Don’t fall prey to Venetian pickpockets. You’re a real target in that velvet finery—I’ll be surprised if we don’t get kidnapped and held for ransom—especially with DJ Rabbit Boy,” Kolt said, pointing at the Series 7 sitting quietly on the backseat playing with his mustache.

“We’ll be all right,” Gertie reassured him, “and hopefully we’ll make some progress in the hunt for missing Keepers.”

“You never know,” Kolt said. “Let’s just hope these back-to-back missions are a cinch.”

“Mashed potato, fly.”

“Hey, that’s a new word for him!”

“What, fly?”

“He must us have heard us talking about Attercoppes!”

“Or . . .” suggested Kolt, “he’s been spending too much time clamped to the Spitfire.”

“Room, fly,” Robot Rabbit Boy said again, “mush, fly.”

“Well, there’ll be plenty of flies where we’re going,” Kolt remarked, “because people of the fifteenth century were not known for their bathing habits—though they excelled at torture, witchcraft, and going to the toilet outside—while it’s fair to say they completely failed at food hygiene.”

“You’re worrying too much as always. We can’t let fear get in the way of our duties,” Gertie said.

Kolt put his Keepers’ key in the small wooden box that was the actual time machine, and the Time Cat began its usual fizzing. Then after a loud pop, everything went blurry. There was a white flash, a purple sizzle of gravitons, and they found themselves in the middle of a field.

But it was not an empty field. There were people all around who saw the Time Cat appear and were coming over to investigate.