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“They can take a taxi.”

Zack nodded. He had seen some waiting in the hospital parking lot.

“Okay. Go. And, Malik?” Judy said.

“Yes, ma’am?”

“Set a new world record tearing it apart, okay?”

“Will do, Mrs. Jennings!”

“Come on!” said Zack.

He, Malik, and Zipper headed into the clock tower while Judy jogged across the street and up the block to the bus.

The crowd grew larger behind the hastily erected police barriers on Main Street.

Judy saw Scot Smith, the principal of the middle school; Sheriff Ben Hargrove and half the North Chester Police Department; Mr. Ickes and the gum-cracking hardware store employee from TV, Stephen Snertz; not to mention all sorts of TV camera crews, which kept piling out of vans with satellite dishes on their roofs.

Jack the Lantern was back on the bus with Azalea and the other schoolchildren, several of whom Judy could hear sobbing through the windows.

A police officer carefully tried to approach the horse and got a nasty kick for his trouble.

“He has guns!” Judy heard someone say behind her.

“Is it really Norman Ickes?” asked another.

“What’s with that mask? He looks like a jack-o’-lantern.”

“You mean a jackass!” shouted Stephen Snertz very bravely, because the police had their weapons trained toward the bus. Snertz stood with a small group in front of the hardware store. “Who does he think he is, anyway? Saying he wants me to ransom my stupid nephew?” Now he gave Mr. Ickes, Norman’s father, a quick shove. “I told you: Your son is nuttier than squirrel poop!”

Judy pulled out her cell phone and hit the speed dial number she had programmed to ring Aunt Ginny’s cell phone.

“Yes? Hello?”

“Aunt Sophie, the dybbuk is here on Main Street. He’s hijacked a busload of children!”

“Jack the Lantern strikes again, eh?”

“We three are needed. Immediately, if not sooner.”

“Has Zack found the black heart stone?”

“Not yet. But he will.”

“Wonderful. Ginny is in the recovery room. Hannah and I are on our way. She’s outside, organizing transportation. It’s time we sent the first and last of these Ickleby demons straight home to hell!”

After quickly sniffing the ground floor of the clock tower, Zipper charged up the spiral staircase.

Cheesy feet.

He smelled what he had smelled on Halloween night.

Every step smelled like cheesy feet.

Senses fully engaged, the dog zipped up five stories, round and round, to the top of the clock tower.

Zack and Malik were huffing and puffing behind him.

The two boys were breathing hard through their mouths.

That meant they weren’t using their snouts so they didn’t have to smell the stinky sock odor that oozed out of the hardware-store man’s shoes with every step he took.

That was a good thing.

Very good.

Because smelling this much funky foot cheese was a job best fit for a dog!

Charging up the spiral staircase after Zipper, Zack and Malik finally entered the clockwork room, a chamber on the fifth floor with a ceiling at least fifteen feet tall.

One whole wall was the back side of the massive clock face. Now that they were inside, Zack could see three or four places where chunks of the milky white glass had been broken out. Dusty shafts of sunlight shot through the holes, casting bright circles on the opposite wall.

“Fascinating,” said Malik. “I’ve never been inside a clock before.”

“Me neither,” said Zack.

There was a ten-foot-square wooden deck in the middle of the crowded room, its oak planks stained with globs of grease and machine oil. A series of toothy gears, spiraling springs, and cogwheels—each one larger than the one before it—climbed up to the cranks and axles that once turned the clock hands.

“Okay,” said Zack. “If you wanted to hide the stone puzzle, where would you put it?”

“Someplace high,” said Malik. “You could scale those gear teeth and prop it on a ledge or on top of an idle crankshaft.”

Zipper barked once. His nose was still glued to the floor, the way it had been all the way up the steps. Now he sniffed a straight line across the wooden deck and came to a large lead weight tied to a thick rope.

“You think he smells Norman’s scent?” asked Malik.

“Yes! That’s why he ran up the staircase so fast!”

Zip went up on his hind legs and barked at the rafters, where the rope looped over a pulley.

Great.

Zack Jennings, who had flunked every phys ed test he had ever taken, would need to shinny up a rope to see if Zipper was right.

“Wish me luck,” he said to Malik.

Zack knew he was the one who had to do the rope climb.

Because Malik Sherman was the only kid at Pettimore Middle School who had flunked more P.E. tests than he had.

The rope was tied to a bell-shaped lead weight, part of the old clock’s winding mechanism, similar to the chained brass pinecones that drove his grandfather’s cuckoo clock.

Zack grabbed the cord with both hands above his head. Pulling down on the rope while jumping, he lifted himself into the air. He quickly used his feet to pinch the rope and anchor himself in position.

Now he reached as high as he could with his arms and gripped the rope tightly so he could release his feet and, crunching his stomach muscles, bring his knees to his chest and once again snag the rope between his feet.

“How’d you do that?” asked Malik.

“Coach Mike taught me.”

Now he just had to do it five or six more times.

And not look down.

Looking down always made him realize what he was actually doing, and then he couldn’t do it anymore.

Grunting, groaning, grabbing, and gripping, he finally made it up to the pulley.

“Is it there?” Malik shouted from below.

“Hang on.”

Now Zack had to try something he’d never trained for: While holding on to the rope with one hand and squeezing his feet hard, he reached up and felt around on the top of the grimy crossbeam the pulley was bolted to.

He felt nothing but splinters.

So he slid his hand the other way.

And knocked something off the ledge!

“Got it!” shouted Malik.

Zack looked down.

His friend had made a perfect two-handed breadbasket catch.

Zipper barked and wagged his tail.

“Is it the black heart stone?” Zack shouted.

“Yep! Come on down.”

Zack slid down the rope.

Exactly the way his gym teacher, Coach Mike, had told him not to.

He had nasty rope burns on his palms and knees but he didn’t care. Malik was already twisting and turning the black heart stone and taking it apart!

“I need to find the signal mirror,” said Zack, rummaging through Aunt Ginny’s bag. “It’s time to call in the herbologists!”

He found the silvery square and ran over to the clock face.

There was a broken-out spot about two feet off the floor, between the V and the VI.

He knelt down to flash Judy the signal.

He could see her near the school bus, shielding her eyes with one hand, staring at the base of the tower.

He tilted the mirror back and forth a couple of times, bounced Judy a sunbeam.

She blinked. Looked up. Waved.

A raven cawed.

“Haw-haw-haw.”

Zack stuck his head through the hole.

The big black bird was perched on the frozen minute hand.

It ruffled out its giant wings and took off—flying straight for the big yellow bus!