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And, as the books tumbled to the floor, Randall knew he was about to face the greatest dilemma of his life so far.

Chapter 10

A Completely Serious Chapter

AS RANDALL lay on the cot in the hidden room, he wondered what was going to happen next.

Chapter 11

If This Were Chapter Twenty-Eight,

The Book Would Be Over

“WAKE UP,” said Frederick, prodding Randall with a turnip.

“Why exactly are you prodding me with a turnip?” he asked.

“Oh, I don't know,” admitted Frederick, staring at the turnip in his hand as if he'd never seen it before. “I guess it was available, and I needed something to prod you with, and the two factors sort of merged.”

“That's all right,” said Randall. “I just thought it was unusual is all.”

“Well, rise and shine. It's time to assassinate the king.”

“Oh, happy, happy day.”

“You should know that sarcasm is grounds for bug-squashing. Now get up so we can go over the plan.”

* * * *

RANDALL SAT at the table with the other four men. He was wearing a set of clothes they provided which managed to avoid the adjectives “dapper", “tasteful", “comfortable", and “color-coordinated.” Even the pocket lint managed to be well behind current fashion.

“Now, what's the plan again?” Maverick asked.

“Don't screw up or Bug's dead,” Randall replied.

“Good.” Maverick slid a gold necklace across the table toward him. “You're going to wear this. It's magic, and will let us see everything you do and hear everything you say, so don't try anything sneaky.”

Randall picked up the necklace. “I'm really not into adornments. Too superficial.”

“Put it on,” said Maverick.

“It clashes with my shirt.”

“Tuck it under the shirt.”

“It clashes with my chest.”

“Don't be a dipwad.”

“What exactly is a dipwad?”

“Somebody who ticks me off and gets a foot up their nose.”

“Whose foot? Yours or mine?”

“Both. One in each nostril.”

“That would make me look goofier than just wearing the necklace, right?”

“Right.”

Randall put it on. “I don't suppose this would be the fabled Necklace of Power?”

Roderick shook his head. “Never heard of the Necklace of Power. Remember, if this necklace comes off, the bug gets stomped.”

“You guys are getting a little redundant with those bug threats. I'm liable to become desensitized.”

The men stood up. “Let's go,” said Frederick. “You know what to do.”

“Question: If I legitimately forget what I'm supposed to do, am I going to be penalized?”

Frederick sighed. “Are you really that stupid or are you just trying to lull us into a false sense of security?”

“I'm really that stupid,” Randall replied. Actually, he was trying to lull them into a false sense of security, but was far too intelligent to reveal such a thing.

“Come on, let's go,” urged Roderick. “You've got a lot of work to do today.”

* * * *

THE WALK through the secret tunnel was very long, but was kept interesting by the graffiti that lined the tunnel walls. Randall learned lots of new rhymes for body parts he didn't even know existed.

After about an hour, they reached a trap-door in the seven-foot-high ceiling that was labeled “The King's Bedroom.” As they proceeded down the tunnel, they passed other trap-doors labeled “Library", “Kitchen", “Stables", “Locker Room", “Martial Arts Training Facility", “Marital Arts Training Facility", and “Room With The Cow Figurine.” Finally they reached one labeled “Castle Entrance.”

“This door leads to a small area hidden by bushes,” Frederick explained. “That way nobody will see you come up. Good luck.”

“Yes, good luck,” said Rick. “Please don't let the fact that we're forcing you into this detract from your job satisfaction.”

He reached up and yanked on the handle of the trap-door. Some dirt and leaves dropped down into the tunnel as the door opened, as well as a ten-foot-high marble statue of the king. It struck the floor with an ear-shattering crash.

“Hmmmm...” said Rick. “That didn't happen last time.”

“Yes it did,” Frederick reminded him.

“Oh, that's right. I promised I'd do something about it. How embarrassing.”

“Shouldn't we run?” asked Randall. “Somebody had to have heard that.”

“Maybe,” said Roderick, “but that's not our problem. We'll help you squeeze past the statue so you can get to work.”

As Randall reached up and grabbed the edge of the trap door, Roderick, Maverick, and Frederick hoisted him up to the surface, while Rick dealt rather poorly with the realization that the statue had come down upon his foot, wrecking his pedicure. Upon reaching solid ground, Randall stood up to find himself nose-to-sword with a savage-looking guard.

“What's going on here?” the guard demanded. He obviously wasn't a particularly bright guard, as evidenced by the “Kick-Me” sign on his chest.

Randall pointed to the statue head, which protruded through the open doorway. “Statue fell.”

“You're absolutely right, it did.” The guard peered through the gap between the statue and the doorway. “Is anyone else down there?”

Randall shook his head.

“What about the person screaming in pain?”

“He doesn't count.”

“Ah, I see. So why are you here?”

“I desire an audience with the king.”

“Is that so? What makes you think the king is interested in anything you have to say?”

“I was part of the escort group responsible for bringing Princess Janice of Mosiman here.”

“I don't see Princess Janice.”

“Well, there's a little of her right here under my fingernails—er, I mean, that's what I wanted to discuss with the king.”

“I'll have to think about it,” said the guard.

“How long will that take?”

“I'm already done. Might as well get the stuff you hate out of the way, right? Okay, I'll take you in to see the king, but you have to promise you won't make elephant sounds at him.”

“Does that happen very often?”

“Actually, you'd be surprised how rarely it occurs. In fact, I'm considering not mentioning it any more when people like you want to talk to him, especially with all the more serious problems we've had lately involving assassination attempts.”

“Those are a pain.”

“Tell me about it. I'm not a man who takes pleasure in torturing guilty parties to death. The only good part of it is that the torture usually lasts long enough to get me some overtime. But I really prefer not to be in such close proximity to a man's privates, even if the actual contact is made by red-hot pliers.”

Randall began to feel light-headed.

“Anyway, I'll raise the drawbridge for you.” The guard handed Randall a ticket. “They'll tear this at the entrance to the royal chamber. Hang on to your stub for the raffle later tonight. You can win a monkey.”

The guard led Randall to the edge of the moat, then gave a loud whistle. The drawbridge dropped, smashing into the ground in a cloud of dust and pieces of wood. An important-looking board in the center fell off into the dark water.

“We need to think about putting shorter chains on this thing,” the guard remarked.

“Is that safe to walk across?” asked Randall, nervously.

“Oh, sure. Lots of people have walked across it safely. You can see all the places where the wood has bent in their footsteps.”

Randall peered down into the moat. “What's down there?”