it?'
'I don't know what we
Hector sighed and looked unhappily at the children. 'I know I should have said something,' he told them, 'but I was far too skittish. The Council of Elders is so imposing that I can never say a word in their presence. However, I can think of something that we can do to help.'
'What is it?' Klaus asked.
'We can enjoy these huevos rancheros,' he said. 'Huevos rancheros are fried eggs and beans, served with tortillas and potatoes in a spicy tomato sauce.'
The siblings looked at one another, trying to imagine how a Mexican dish would get them out of their quandary. 'How will that help?' Violet asked doubtfully.
'I don't know,' Hector admitted. 'But they're almost ready, and my recipe is a delicious one, if I do say so myself. Come on, let's eat. Maybe a good dinner will help you think of something.'
The children sighed, but nodded their heads in agreement and got up to set the table, and curiously enough, a good dinner did in fact help the Baudelaires think of something. As Violet took her first bite of beans, she felt the gears and levers of her inventing brain spring into action. As Klaus dipped his tortilla into the spicy tomato sauce, he began to think of books he had read that might be helpful. And as Sunny smeared egg yolks all over her face, she clicked her four sharp teeth together and tried to think of a way that they might be useful. By the time the Baudelaires were finishing the meal Hector had prepared for them, their ideas had grown and developed into full- fledged plans, just as Nevermore Tree had grown a long time ago from a tiny seed and Fowl Fountain had been built recently from someone's hideous blueprint.
It was Sunny who spoke up first. 'Plan!' she said.
'What is it, Sunny?' Klaus asked.
With a tiny finger covered in tomato sauce, Sunny pointed out the window at Nevermore Tree, which was covered in the V.F.D. crows as it was every evening. 'Merganser!' she said firmly.
'My sister says that tomorrow morning there will probably be another poem from Isadora in the same spot,' Klaus explained to Hector. 'She wants to spend the night underneath the tree. She's so small that whoever is delivering the poems probably won't spot her, and she'll be able to find out how the couplets are getting to us.'
'And that should bring us closer to finding the Quagmires,' Violet said. 'That's a good plan, Sunny.'
'My goodness, Sunny,' Hector said. 'Won't you be frightened spending all night underneath a whole murder of crows?'
'Therill,' Sunny said, which meant 'It won't be any more frightening than the time I climbed up an elevator shaft with my teeth.'
'I think I have a good plan, too,' Klaus said. 'Hector, yesterday you told us about the secret library you have in the barn.'
'Ssh!' Hector said, looking around the kitchen. 'Not so loud! You know it's against the rules to have all those books, and I don't want to be burned at the stake.'
'I don't want
'Absolutely,' Hector said. 'Lots of them. Because the rule books describe people breaking the rules, they break Rule #108, which clearly states that the V.F.D. library cannot contain any books that break any of the rules.'
'Well, I'm going to read as many rule books as I can,' Klaus said. 'There must be a way to save Jacques from being burned at the stake, and I bet I'll find it in the pages of those books.'
'My word, Klaus,' Hector said. 'Won't you be bored reading all those rule books?'
'It won't be any more boring than the time I had to read all about grammar, in order to save Aunt Josephine,' he replied.
'Sunny is working to save the Quagmires,' Violet said, 'and Klaus is working to save Jacques. I've got to work to save
'What do you mean?' Klaus asked.
'Well, I think Count Olaf must be behind all this trouble,' Violet said.
'Grebe!' Sunny said, which meant 'As usual!'
'If the town of V.F.D. burns Jacques at the stake,' Violet continued, 'then everyone will think Count Olaf is dead. I bet
'That's true,' Klaus said. 'Count Olaf must have found Jacques — whoever he is — and brought him into town. He knew that Officer Luciana would think he was Olaf. But what does that have to do with saving us?'
'Well, if we rescue the Quagmires and prove that Jacques is innocent,' Violet said, 'Count Olaf will come after us, and we can't rely on the Council of Elders to protect us.'
'Poe!' Sunny said.
'Or Mr. Poe,' Violet agreed. 'That's why we'll need a way to save ourselves.' She turned to Hector. 'Yesterday, you also told us about your self-sustaining hot air mobile home.'
Hector looked around the kitchen again, to sure no one was listening. 'Yes,' he said, 'but I think I'm going to stop work on it. If the Council of Elders learns that I'm breaking Rule #67, I could be burned at the stake. Anyway, I can't seem to get the engine to work.'
'If you don't mind, I'd like to take a look at it ' Violet said. 'Maybe I could help finish it. You wanted to use the self-sustaining hot air mobile home to escape from V.F.D. and the Council of Elders and everything else that makes you skittish, but it would also make an excellent escape vehicle.'
'Maybe it could be both,' Hector said shyly, and reached across the table to pat Sunny on the shoulder. 'I very much enjoy the company of you three children, and it would be delightful to share a mobile home with you. There's plenty of room in the self-sustaining hot air mobile home, and once we get it to work we could launch it and never come down. Count Olaf and his associates would never be able to bother you again. What do you think?'
The three Baudelaires listened closely to Hector's suggestion, but when they tried to tell him what they thought, it felt like they were in a quandary all over again. On one hand, it would be exciting to live in such an unusual way, and the thought of being safe forever from Count Olaf's evil clutches was very appealing, to say the least. Violet looked at her baby sister and thought about the promise she had made, when Sunny was born, that she would always look after her younger siblings and make sure they wouldn't get into trouble. Klaus looked at Hector, who was the only citizen in this vile village who really seemed to care about the children, as a guardian should. And Sunny looked out the window at the evening sky, and remembered the first time she and her siblings saw the V.F.D. crows fly in superlative circles and wished that they, too, could escape from all their worries. But on the other hand, the Baudelaires felt that flying away from all their trouble, and living forever up in the sky, didn't seem to be a proper way to live one's life. Sunny was a baby, Klaus was only twelve, and even Violet, the eldest, was fourteen, which is not really so old. The Baudelaires had many things they hoped to accomplish on the ground, and they weren't sure that they could simply abandon all those hopes so early in their lives. The Baudelaires sat at the table and thought about Hector's plan, and it seemed to the children that if they spent the rest of their lives floating around the heavens, they simply wouldn't be in their element, a phrase which here means 'in the sort of home the three siblings would prefer.'
'First things first,' Violet said finally, hoping that she wasn't hurting Hector's feelings. 'Before we make a decision about the rest of our lives, let's get Duncan and Isadora out of Olaf's clutches.'
'And make sure Jacques won't be burned at the stake,' Klaus said.
'Albico!' Sunny added, which meant something like, 'And let's solve the mystery of V.F.D. that the Quagmires told us about!'
Hector sighed. 'You're right,' he said. 'Those things are more important, even if they do make me skittish. Well, let's take Sunny to the tree and then it's off to the barn, where the library and inventing studio are. It looks like it's going to be another long night, but hopefully this time we won't be barking up the wrong tree.'