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    A Mammoth Mystery (Geronimo Stilton Cavemice #15)

    Page 2
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      whisker twitch.

      “Last night’s storm caused

      some very serious damage

      to the mammoth milkshake

      reserves,” Ernest continued.

      “No!” we all squeaked

      at once.

      “Water and mud seeped into the stone

      containers, and the mammoth milkshakes

      have turned into sticky, stinky, undrinkable

      sludge!”

      “No!”

      “Needless to squeak . . . our reserves are

      The mammoth milkshake

      reserves are ruined!

      completely ruined.”

      “No!”

      I couldn’t believe

      my ears!

      “So what now?”

      one rodent asked in

      despair.

      “Let’s go to the

      mammoths!” another

      suggested. “We can ask

      for more milk!”

      Ernest frowned.

      “Speaking of the

      mammoths . . . during the storm, our

      pachyderm friends ran away!”

      The crowd was in a full-fledged Paleozoic

      panic!

      “We need an emergency plan!”

      healer Bluster Conjurat exclaimed. “I propose that we split into teams.

      Each team can look for the

      mammoths on a different

      part of the island.”

      Massive meteorites,

      Bluster was right! We needed

      We need an emergency plan!

      to find the mammoths and

      bring them home. It was

      the only way to get more of our

      beloved mammoth milkshakes!

      I already knew what to do: I would team

      up with Thea, my cousin Trap, and my

      BLUSTER

      CONJURAT

      27

      friend Hercule Poirat, the best detective in

      all of prehistory.

      Ernest Heftymouse assigned us to look

      for the mammoths around the Cheddar

      Volcano.

      Bones and stones — that was the

      most dangerous volcano in the cavemouse

      world!

      28

      We need to leave right away!

      We can do it!

      IT’S RAINING . . .

      HUSKS!

      Our team was excited and energized, like mice on a cheese hunt. We needed to find our mammoth friends, and we needed to do it FAST!

      Squish!

      Slush!

      Splash!

      But with every step, our paws sunk into

      the mud left over from the storm. Petrified

      provolone, it was like walking through a

      swamp!

      After what seemed like a whole

      geological era, we arrived at the foot

      of the Cheddar Volcano. We ducked into the chestnut forest to rest our aching paws.

      30

      “Puff . . . pant . . .

      huff . . . I can’t go any

      farther!” I collapsed, leaning on the

      trunk of a tree.

      “You’re softer than Jurassic

      mozzarella, Geronimo!” Hercule

      teased me, nibbling on a banana.

      Before I could respond —

      BONK!

      Something hit me square on the

      snout.

      “Ow! What was that?” I

      squeaked.

      I looked up toward the tree

      branches just in time to see

      a storm of big, thorny

      You’re softer than

      Jurassic mozzarella!

      chestnut husks raining down on us!

      POcK

      POcK

      POcK

      POcK

      But who . . . what . . . where?!

      POcK!

      “Oh no — the flying squirrels!”

      Thea exclaimed, covering her head with her

      paws.

      FLYING

      SQUIRRELS

      Classification: rodents of

      the Sneer Sneer species

      Habitat: Chestnut woods

      Characteristics: speed,

      agility, and great aim. They fly

      from one branch to another,

      nibbling on Paleozoic

      chestnuts and playing pranks

      on anyone who crosses their

      path. They can be grouchy, so

      be careful not to make them

      mad!

      You may not know this, but flying squirrels

      are the rudest animals in all of prehistory.

      They spend their time flying from one prehistoric tree to the next, thinking up jokes and pranks to pull on whoever crosses their path. In this case, the unlucky target was . . . us!

      “Careful! Incominnng!” Trap warned,

      dodging a chestnut husk.

      The squirrels did some incredible leaps

      from one branch to the next. Holey boulders,

      it really seemed like they were flying!

      But we didn’t have time to admire their

      acrobatics. We had to avoid the hailstorm

      of husks!

      OUCH!

      AHHH!

      ACK!

      WHAT

      A

      PALEOZOIC

      PAIN!

      33

      Thea thought fast and came up with a

      solution. She pointed at the empty trunk of

      a fallen tree. “Let’s HIDE in there!”

      We all ducked inside the trunk as quickly

      as our paws would take us. Whew!

      “Great rocky boulders, why do those

      squirrels have it out for us?” I asked,

      massaging my aching head.

      “What a silly question, Geronimo!”

      Hercule said. “Those nice little animals don’t have it out for us — they’re just defending their territory.”

      “Nice little animals?” I cried. “They turned

      me into a Paleozoic pincushion!”

      “Come on, Cousin,” Trap said, rolling his

      eyes. “How about instead of complaining,

      you think of a way to get us out of here?

      Aren’t you the brains of the family?”

      “Yeah!” Hercule squeaked, elbowing me.

      “What’s your genius idea?”

      Bones and stones, what was I supposed to

      say now?

      35

      SHRIEEEEEK!

      SHRIEEEEEK!

      I didn’t have a single coconut of an idea what to do next!

      SHRIEEEEK!

      SHRIEEEEEK!

      A sudden sharp, piercing sound made us

      all jump out of our fur.

      “What was that noise?” I yelped.

      “Quiet, you Jurassic fool!” Hercule said.

      “You mean to tell me you don’t recognize

      it?”

      Had I lost my cheese? What was

      Hercule squeaking about? “Should I be

      worried?” I mumbled.

      36

      “Of course you should!” Thea said. “That’s

      the call of one of the most dangerous

      and cunning predators of the Stone Age!”

      Boulders of Brie, just what we needed! My

      whiskers began wobbling in fright.

      “It’s a Fiery Falcon,” my sister continued,

      “the flying squirrels’ number one enemy!

      And it must be verrrry hungry,

      based on how loudly it’s shrieking . . .”

      Sure enough, hearing the falcon’s distinct

      cry, the squirrels darted off to hide in

      Fiery Falcon

      Classification: A predator of

      the Fangoot Falconoot family

      Habitat: Anywhere there’s food!

      Characteristics: Falcon face, falcon beak, falcon

      talons, falcon feathers . . . but as hungry as a wolf!


      the tree branches. That falcon was definitely

      looking for a snack!

      We stayed still and quiet in our hiding

      place. After what seemed like a geological

      era, I felt an annoying tingling in my

      paw. Petrified provolone, I really needed to

      sit down!

      I changed positions and — squeak!

      I had accidentally sat right on top of a

      chestnut husk!

      I leaped up and popped right through

      the hollow tree trunk with my head.

      Ouch, what megalithic pain! But even

      worse . . .

      GULP!

      Now I was face-to-face with the Fiery

      Falcon!

      I let out a prehistoric squeak — a

      mixture of pain and terror. This was it! I was

      38

      1

      I burst through the top

      of the hollow trunk . . .

      really extinct now!

      Squeak!

      My squeak was so

      loud that I actually

      scared the falcon —

      and he

      flew away!

      Jurassic Jack cheese,

      I couldn’t believe it!

      But then I fell, as

      heavy as a boulder,

      and landed on my

      poor undertail again.

      BONK!

      Oh, for all the

      thorns on a cactus!

      I was sore all over

      and shaking from

      the ends of my

      Came face-to-face

      with the falcon . . .

      3

      2

      And landed smack on

      my undertail! Youch!

      whiskers to the tip of my tail — but I was

      safe. Whew!

      Thea, Trap, and Hercule rushed out of

      their hiding place in the empty trunk.

      “FABUMOUSE job, little brother!” Thea

      cheered.

      “Taking off like that was a marvemouse

      Fabumouse

      job,

      Geronimo!

      Umm

      .

      .

      .

      40

      idea,” Trap agreed, looking shocked. “How

      did you do that?”

      “Umm, well . . . I’ve been exercising . . .”

      I stammered, rubbing my sore tail.

      “SEE?” Hercule said, putting a paw

      around my shoulders. “You’ve learned a

      thing or two from spending so much time

      with me!”

      “Well, actually —” I said.

      “Quick!” Thea interrupted. “Let’s get our

      tails in gear before the flying squirrels come

      out of HIDING.”

      Together, we left the woods as fast as our

      paws would take us. We had to find those

      missing mammoths!

      41

      YUCK!

      We crossed a large, flat area. Unfortunately,

      the rain had made the ground really sticky,

      really muddy, and really squishy.

      YUCK!

      Walking was megalithically exhausting!

      Plus, we didn’t spot a single trace of the

      mammoths.

      Just when I thought things couldn’t

      possibly get worse, we found ourselves

      facing a stretch of quicksand!

      Hercule put up a paw. “STOP and hush!

      Something’s not right . . .”

      “You’re telling me,” I said. “I’m not going

      42

      through that quicksand!”

      “No, Geronimo, that’s not what I mean!

      Don’t you smell that horrific STENCH?”

      Hercule is the best detective in all of

      prehistory (plus, he’s the only one!) and he

      almost never makes a mistake.

      “Let’s see . . . how strange!” he went

      on, sniffing the air with a concerned

      Dinosaur

      expression on his snout. “I can’t

      droppings?

      figure out what type of stench it

      is.”

      Umm

      . . .

      Rotten

      bananas?

      Is it Trap’s

      paws?

      “I don’t smell a thing!” Trap said,

      sniffing with his snout in the air.

      “I believe that,” I said. “You haven’t taken

      a bath in at least five geological eras!

      You have such a strong stench, you can’t

      smell anything else . . .”

      “Hey, I just bathed two months ago!” Trap

      protested.

      Hercule suddenly squeaked and clapped

      his paws over our mouths. “Hush! I figured

      it out — I smell the stench

      of the saber-toothed

      tigers!”

      Holey rolling

      boulders! Saber-

      toothed tigers?

      The ENEMIES

      of us cavemice?

      The sharp-fanged

      44

      clan of Tiger Khan? We were in enormouse

      trouble!

      We couldn’t go back, because we would

      end up in Tiger Khan’s clutches. But we

      couldn’t go forward, either, because the

      path was covered with quicksand.

      We were trapped! Doomed! Extinct!

      Mousemeat!

      I was about to etch out my last will and

      Follow me!

      testament, when Hercule led us into a grove

      of reeds. He grabbed a hollow reed and said

      seriously, “Follow me!”

      Hercule darted out from behind the reeds

      and jumped into an enormouse muddy

      pond next to the path.

      SPLOOSH!

      A moment later, Hercule’s reed popped

      out of the mud.

      Bones and stones, now I understood!

      We would hide in that super-stinky

      muddy pond, using the hollow reeds as

      snorkels for breathing.

      “Fabumouse idea!” Thea cried.

      A moment later, she and Trap each

      grabbed a reed and leaped into the mud

      and muck. Petrified provolone, what choice

      did I have but to follow them? With a reed

      46

      in my paw, I stepped up to the edge of the

      horrifyingly

      muddy

      swamp.

      Fossilized feta, what a horrible stench!

      Before heading in, I noticed something big

      and round floating nearby.

      “Guys, I found a . . . a . . .”

      I had no idea what I had found!

      “Well, I found something that we can hold

      on to while we’re in the mud!”

      Hercule stuck his snout up out of the

      mud. “Wow, Geronimo, you’re right! That

      will work perfectly — we can grab on to

      this so that we don’t get pulled away by the

      current.”

      On Hercule’s signal, all four of us held

      on and ducked under the mud. We stayed

      pawsitively still as four saber-toothed

      tigers passed by.

      I was as petrified as an ancient fossil!

      Thankfully, the nasty cats didn’t notice

      anything unusual and disappeared out of

      sight.

      “Phew!” I squeaked, popping up out of

      the mud. “That was close!”

      “Yeah, but where were those fanged felines

      headed?” Thea asked.

      Trap shrugged. “Hopefully FAR, FAR

      AWAY from here!”

      Once the coast was clear, we climbed out

      48

      of the mud puddle, dragging that
    strange

      megalithic floating mass behind us.

      Hercule pulled out his magnifying glass to

      take a closer look at it.

      “Holey boulders — this is a fossilized

      dinosaur dropping!” he squeaked.

      Thea, Trap, and I looked at one another

      with horrified expressions on our snouts.

      While we were submerged in that stinky

      mud, we’d been holding on to . . .

      DINOSAUR

      POO?

      How prehistorically

      gross!

      49

      A TERRIBLE

      SURPRISE!

      We continued our search, but we didn’t spot

      even the shadow of a mammoth!

      With our tails between our legs, we

      decided to turn back. Unfortunately, a truly

      terrible

      surprise awaited us in Old Mouse

      City . . .

      The fence that protected the city was

      surrounded by fierce saber-toothed tigers,

      led by Tiger Khan himself.

      I clapped my paws over my eyes. “Petrified

      provolone, we’re finished!” I squeaked.

      This was where the nasty cats we’d hidden

      from had been heading! They wanted to turn

      the citizens of Old Mouse City into rodent

      50

      kabobs! And without our mammoth friends

      to defend us, we were in a megalithic ton

      of trouble.

      We spied on the tigers from a safe distance.

      “Now what?” I whispered.

      I couldn’t help the Paleozoic panic rising

      inside me. My beloved nephew Benjamin

      was inside the village. I had to protect

      him!

      Thea looked more determined

      than ever. “Never give up.

      We’ll figure something

      out!”

      Meanwhile, the tigers

      were building wooden

      ladders that they could

      use to scale the wall.

      Just then Hercule pointed a paw.

      “LOOK!”

      Never

      give

      up!

      51

      Take

      this!

      Bring

      this!

      Move

      the

      other

      one!

      The

      tigers!

      Jurassic

      Jack

      cheese!

     


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