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In Which Nick and Laurie Are Surprised by Their Visitor
Nick pressed his finger down harder on the controller, making his car on the screen accelerate. He swerved it in front of Laurie's Volkswagen, knocking into its side and making virtual sparks fly.
She scowled, biting her lip in concentration.
Rockets shot out of her bumper. His car exploded in a whoosh of orange flame as she crowed with laughter. "I'm getting better," she said with a huge smile.
He grinned too. He didn't mind her winning. He was having fun. The air-conditioning filled the house with cold, sweet air, and just breathing it in made him feel safe. Rain smeared the windows, making the outside blurry and far away. And the more he concentrated on the game, the less he had to think about the nixie waiting in her pond for him to find the rest of her sisters, or all of the giants that might be waking up, or how some blind old guy thought that they could do anything about it. This was how summer was supposed to be.
Besides, this could be considered a kind of training. Maybe. Laurie's reflexes were definitely improving.
Downstairs, a door slammed and his father shouted. "That's not what I said!"
Nick stopped smiling.
"You didn't say you would be home early?"
Charlene demanded. "You said you would call if something came up. The kids ate hours ago."
"I said I would try. The weather, the rain, it's making things hard."
Didn't they realize that just because they couldn't see anyone else didn't mean they couldn't be heard? His father was a contractor; shouldn't he be aware of vents?
Laurie put down the controller with a sigh, looking at Nick's face. "Everybody fights."
"You tell me everything will be different after the development is done, but there's always going to be another crisis," Charlene yelled. "I don't think you're ready for this. For being married again."
Nick didn't hear the rest because he clapped Jules's headphones over his ears and plugged them into the game. He turned up the sound and set it to single player. He didn't want to hear anyone say anything about his mother. Didn't Charlene know you were supposed to shut up about the dead?
He blew up three of his own cars before Laurie tapped his arm. He shook her off.
"Nick," she said, pulling one side of his headphones down. "Jack's here."
He blinked at her in confusion. "What?" Nick looked around, like Jack was hiding somewhere in the room.
"He's downstairs. Says he has something to show us." She wore a satchel on her hip and had her flip-flops on. "Your dad is freaking out."
"Uh..." Nick hadn't even realized she'd left. He took off the headphones and followed her downstairs.
Charlene's back was toward them, her shoulders hunched and shaking slightly as if she were crying. She walked into the study and slammed the door.
Jack stood in the front entrance. He was grinning like a loon.
"Come on, kid," he said. "We got work to do."
"Do you know this man?" asked Nick's dad.
Laurie smiled and started in on one of her elaborate lies. "He's my friend's dad. From where we used to live. Turtle eggs are hatching at the beach and he promised to take us."
"It's very late," Nick's dad said, but he glanced toward the room Charlene was in. Nick bet he wanted to get back to his fight. "Where are you all going? And what did he mean about work?"
"Down to the beach," Laurie said. "My friend Emily is waiting in the car. Her dad thinks we can do a science project about it."
Jack smirked in a way that seemed too amused to be parental.
Nick cleared his throat. "Isn't Jules there? Maybe we can meet up with him."
Jules was always at the beach. It didn't matter if it was sunny or raining, early or late. He could be counted on to surf until his skin wrinkled up and he got hungry or tired enough to come home.
Nick's dad looked at Noseeum Jack's bare feet and the machete at his hip.
"It's for cutting open fruit," Nick said, following his father's gaze. "And cutting weeds, of course."
"Fruit," repeated his dad. "Fine. Why don't you call your brother?"
"I'll do it." Laurie went to the phone and punched in a bunch of numbers. Then she waited for a few moments, like it was ringing.
"Hi, Jules. It's Laurie. Yeah. No. Um, we were wondering, if we came down to the beach, would it be okay if we hung out with you? No, we wouldn't have to be really close by or anything. Just so you could see us. We promise not to bother you. Okay. Okay." She put down the phone.
"He says okay," Laurie reported. If Nick hadn't watched her hold the off button on the phone the whole time, even he might have believed she'd really had that conversation.
Nick's dad looked at Noseeum Jack again and sighed. Then he glanced at the study again. "All right. Be back by ten." He pulled his cell phone out of his pocket and handed it to Nick. "Call me if you can't find your brother. Oh, and look out for a raccoon on your way out. Something's been getting into the garbage."
Nick and Laurie walked out onto the lawn with Jack. As the door closed, Nick heard Charlene say something in a shaky voice and his dad shout something back. Thunder cracked overhead, but the rain had slowed to a drizzle.
"Let's go," Jack said.
The lake was choked with newly planted water lilies. Raindrops rippled the water, but there was no sign of the nixie.
"Hey," said Nick, "we promised to help Taloa find the rest of her sisters. Maybe we should -- "
"Later! I came to show you both something important, not to dawdle."
"Just one more second," Laurie said. She grabbed a stick of gum out of her bag, chewed it, then used it to affix a piece of paper to the garage door.
Nick watched her as she scrawled on it: JULES -- WE SAID WE WERE WITH YOU. DON'T SQUEAL ON US.
"You're crazy! What if they see that?"
She rolled her eyes. "They're going to fight for ages."
"What if one of them storms out?" Ladies on the soap operas his aunt watched did that all the time.
"Into the rain?" Laurie was looking at him like the idea was ridiculous.
"Come on!" said Jack. He made a sweeping gesture with his hands and started walking. They followed him.
Copyright © 2008 by Tony DiTerlizzi and Holly Black --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Giant Leap Ahead,
This review is from: A Giant Problem (Beyond the Spiderwick Chronicles) (Hardcover)
I loved the original SPIDERWICK CHRONICLES. I devoured the whole set of five books within the same day. At the end of THE WRATH OF MULGARATH, Holly Black and Tony DiTerlizzi had hinted that there might be more to the Spiderwick story, and that definitely made me excited. A GIANT PROBLEM is now book two in the new BEYOND THE SPIDERWICK CHRONICLES series, and I must say that it's taken until this book to really make me enjoy these further adventures.
The story picks up immediately from book number one, and I had to go glance back through THE NIXIE'S SONG to remember different plot details. Pretty much, Nick and Laurie are off on further adventures to stop the coming onslaught of giants destroying by fire the whole of the state of Florida. A daunting task for two kids and a blind old man named Noseeum Jack. I had been hoping all along through the first book and in beginning this second one that the story would grow beyond stopping giants from randomly destroying things. Yes, the problem seemed large, but just not enough for me -- especially after the original five books. That's why I was pleasantly surprised and chilled to come to the twist ending of A GIANT PROBLEM. It took the whole series to a new height, and I am extremely excited to get my hands on book number three, which I won't even tell the title of since it holds a bit of the secret. The writing is as usual superb, and the illustrations dazzling in that throwback style that DiTerlizzi is so brilliant at. Just looking at his drawings sucks the reader into another world. My only complaint is that I had to wait so long for book number two. I really hope that we don't have to wait another year before the final installment.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
The giants are revolting (yes, they certainly are),
By Amanda Richards (Georgetown, Guyana) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (TOP 500 REVIEWER) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: A Giant Problem (Beyond the Spiderwick Chronicles) (Hardcover)
Down in the Florida swamps lies a giant problem. No, make that several giant problems. The fire-breathing giants are beginning to wake up, and only people with "the sight" can see them.
When the giants lay waste to an entire housing development project, it's high time for the giant slaying team to do something about it. Unfortunately, the giant slaying team is made up of an old blind man, a chubby youth named Nick, his stepsister Laurie, his older brother Jules, and Jules' girlfriend Cindy. Continuing the adventure from book one, The Nixie's Song, this episode pushes the envelope trying to cram too many things into one little book. You also get the impression that the author was in a bit of a hurry, as there are loose ends, continuity problems and far too many coincidences. A quick read, and as usual, beautifully illustrated, but certainly not in the league of the original Spiderwick Chronicles. On the bright side, the ending of the book indicates that there's lots of excitement to come. Get this if you've already read The Nixie's Song, and hope that the next one will be better. Amanda Richards, October 4, 2008
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Grandson's Books,
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This review is from: A Giant Problem (Beyond the Spiderwick Chronicles) (Hardcover)
The continuing saga and just as good as the original Spiderwick series. We always sign up as soon as these series are available for our grandson, who loves them. Since we originally were stationed in Florida, we miss it and this book also captures the essence of the way Florida used to be. This is another excellent book for young people, so much better than other currently available series for this age. My wife and I enjoy it too.
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