âArthritis like Nana,â Zack says. âHis government is really scraping the bottom of the barrel to hire him to blow up Newfield.â
We donât dare peer around the steeple to see what Popâs up to. Pop not only looks like an eagle, his eyes are wicked sharp. We hear him, though. Heâs talking to Mom, whoâs telling him something.
âI know,â Pop says in a calming voice. âTheyâre barbarians.â
âGood thing weâre not involved in the Steadman caper,â Zack says, barely moving his lips.
Mom is still talking. âAnd with Tinwitty Night coming up, I have to judge those soup entries to see which one is closest to Lester Tinwittyâs secret recipe. Itâs all too much.â
âYou can say that again,â Zack says, forgetting to whisper.
Pop looks up and we almost bury ourselves in the roof tiles.
But wait. Diglioâs back door is opening slowly. We leanforward. Itâs Mrs. Diglio. She teeters across the yard on killer high heels. Mrs. Diglio is his accomplice?
Any minute weâll uncover a whole nest of spies.
Mrs. Diglio carries a box in her hands. She holds it out as if she canât bear to touch it.
âWhat is it?â I ask. âWhatââ
âA bomb. Just like TV. Theyâre burying it for now.â
I nod slowly. Zackâs a thinker, all right.
I wonder how powerful that bomb could be. Iâm thinking of the St. Eggie statue with its tons of bird poop blasting out in a million soggy pieces. Itâll hit our garden for sure. Pop will be fuming. He spends every weekend mucking around out back, planting, weeding, cutting, and screeching when he steps in one of Steadmanâs tunnels.
Now Mrs. Diglio bends down and carefully deposits the bomb in the hole.
âOlyushka,â Dr. Diglio says.
I whisper, âWeâll have to dismantle it. Good thing you can learn anything on the Internet.â
Diglio takes a spy look around. The sun glints off his thick glasses. He looks up and he must see us. His mouth opens like a fat round O.
Zack and I sit entirely still, as if weâre just a couple of extra slates connected to the roof. Diglio stares up at us, blinking hard, as if he canât believe what his eyes are telling him.
âYouâd think he never saw two kids on a church roofbefore,â Zack says. We move around to the other side of the steeple to get his mind off us.
I hear Popâs voice. Heâs yelling, actually screeching.
Something comes to me in a flash. I have a horrible memory of the bathroom sink. I see water. I see Steadmanâs men floating around. I see that I havenât turned off the water. Thereâs a lake in the bathroom. No, itâs an ocean.
âHunnnnn-terrrr!â Dad yells at the top of his lungs.
What next?
Whatâs next is another problem. Linny has locked the window. How are we going to get back into the house?
Zack stares at the window, too.
It certainly is a problem.
Chapter 6
Zack nudges me. âHow about the steeple?â
We raise ourselves up and crawl through a steeple window that has no glass. Inside, we hang next to two huge bells. If they clang, weâll be deaf for thirty years.
Below us is empty space all the way down. A rickety ladder leans against one wall. On the top rung, a pigeon perches on a messy nest.
âHey, pidgie, pidgie,â Zack says as we edge around her, reaching for a step. Iâve never been this close to a pigeon before. She looks at us suspiciously as we inch our way down. Zack does it one-handed to show me he could be an acrobat.
In two seconds we look like Steadman, with cobwebs in our hair and grit on our jeans. Whatâs the matter with the people at St. Ursulaâs, anyway? The inside of the steeple hasnât been cleaned in years.
As we reach the main floor, Father Elmo comes out of the sacristy, surprised to see us. We try to look as holy as possible while Pop screams for us