kitchen,â she said looking directly at Mr. Pin. âAnd if the freezers donât work, the ice cream might melt.â
âTerrible,â said Mr. Pin raising his plumes.
âWe have another problem too,â said Maggie.
âWhatâs that?â asked Mr. Pin.
âThat fish is getting dizzy.â
Just then a very tall white-haired man with spectacles walked into the diner carrying a wheel from his bicycle. Sally looked at the man then said, âIâm going to look for a bigger home for that fish.â
âYou must be Herb,â Mr. Pin said to the man with the wheel.
âNo, not Herb. Phil. Phil O. Dendrum,â said the white-haired man.
âA plant expert,â said Mr. Pin hopefully.
âAfraid not,â said Phil.
âThen youâre here about the fish,â said Mr. Pin.
âNo, Iâm here about the flood.â
âA plumber?â asked Mr. Pin.
âNot quite,â said Phil. âActually, Iâve heard all about you, Mr. Pin and I need your help.â
âReally!â said Maggie.
Mr. Pin hopped up onto a diner stool and met Philâs concerned gaze.
âChicago is flooding,â said Phil. âSomeone was drilling wood pilings into the Chicago River bed. An old freight tunnel that runs under the river and throughout the city was punctured. Itâs letting in the whole river. Now everyoneâs basement is flooding. Desks, chairs, books, papers, clothes, and fish are floating in several feet of water.â
âTerrible!â said Maggie, her eyes growing wider.
âThe electricity has been turned off so no one can be electrocuted,â Phil went on. âEveryone downtown in the Loop has been sent home. Trains are overloaded. Thereâs mass confusion.â
âSounds like a disaster,â said Maggie.
âThe worst,â said Phil. âProbably since the Chicago fire.â
âWhat can we do to help?â asked Mr. Pin.
âAt the moment, I just want to find out how to plug the hole. I want to help the city. Thatâs my job ⦠helping the city, that is,â said Phil. âIn any case, that used to be my job.â
âWhat do you mean used to be your job?â asked Mr. Pin.
Phil took off his round glasses, rubbed a crease between his eyes, then said: âIâve been fired.â
âFired!â shouted Maggie angrily.
âI donât know why,â said Phil. âIâm not even in charge of tunnels. But someone thought I was. My job is taking care of bridges, including the one above the leak. The terrible thing is I canât get near the place to help,â said Phil.
âNow,â said Mr. Pin quietly. âIt appears there are two cases to solve. We have to stop the flood. Then, of course, we have to get Philâs job back.â
âShouldnât be too hard,â said Maggie, looking at Mr. Pin hopefully.
Sally came out of the kitchen carrying a large glass cookie jar with the word YUM painted in bold green letters across the front.
âOnly a few more hours before the ice cream will melt,â she said, pouring the water and the fish into the larger jar.
âBut at least,â said Mr. Pin, âwe have saved a fish.â
3
Maggie wasnât sure a fish could look worried. But what fish would want to be in a glass cookie jar with the word YUM on the outside? Not only that, people were starting to call him Yum.
Sally looked worried too as Phil left with his bicycle wheel.
Maggie helped her make salami sandwiches while Mr. Pin paced back and forth, thinking.
âI hate to see all of this food go to waste,â said Sally.
âCould you sell it?â asked Maggie.
âMaybe. But the ice cream will be ruined anyway.â
âRuined,â said Mr. Pin. He thought for a moment then said, âWhat about a freezer truck?â
âSounds like a good idea,â said Maggie. âBut where will you find a freezer
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