Aliens in the Greenhouse
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About this ebook
Aliens In The Greenhouse is a fast and fun adventure about two children whose stay with their mysterious great-aunt, turns into an unexpected and unforgettable adventure!
Glenn Meganck
Glenn Eric Meganck is a nationally best-selling novelist and musician. In addition to writing novels as Glenn Meganck, he has written under numerous pen names, including JR Ripley, Nick Lucas and Marie Celine and more. As JR Ripley he currently writes the Todd Jones comic capers, A Bird Lover’s Mystery series and the Maggie Miller mysteries. As Marie Celine, he writes the Kitty Karlyle mysteries. Unfit for the real world and unable to hold a real job for long, prior to writing full-time, he worked at a multitude of occupations including archaeologist, cook, factory worker, copywriter, technical writer, editor, musician, entrepreneur, window washer and more – all grist for the writer’s mill. He currently resides in Florida and North Carolina. Visit www.GlennEric.com for more info.
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Aliens in the Greenhouse - Glenn Meganck
ALIENS IN THE GREENHOUSE
Glenn Eric Meganck
Beachfront Entertainment
Raleigh, NC
Praise for Glenn’s Meganck’s work for children:
...Engaging and entertaining...
– Children's Literature Council
Both books would make a delightful gift for any child.
– Borger News-Herald
For all you elementary kiddies, grades second through fifth, this (BIG DEAL) is the book for you.
– The Daily News
For all you elementary kids who enjoy villains and digging, this is the book for you. So dig an overwhelming tunnel to your nearest library or bookstore and check out or purchase
Big Deal At The Center Of The Earth."
– The Daily News
Glenn Meganck has written two exciting books for young readers. Young readers will eagerly look forward to the next thrilling adventure of Jimmy Deal!
– Midwest Book Review
Written with simple language and lots of action...Its fast moving plot should grab...
– Boca Raton News
Look for these other great Beachfront Entertainment titles:
By J.R. Ripley–
A Bird Lover’s Mystery Series
Die, Die Birdie
Towhee Get Your Gun
Maggie Miller Mystery Series
Buried in Beignets
Beignets, Brides and Bodies
Tony Kozol Mysteries
Stiff In The Freezer
Skulls Of Sedona
Lost In Austin
The Body from Ipanema
Bum Rap In Branson
Gunfight In Gatlinburg
Gendarme Charles Trenet novels
Murder In St. Barts
Death Of A Cheat
By Glenn Meganck–
George And The Angels
It’s A Young, Young World
After the Fall
For Children
Big Deal
Big Deal At The Center Of The Earth
No Big Deal
The Adventures of Jimmy Deal
Aliens In The Greenhouse
By Marie Celine–
Gourmet Pet Chef Mystery Series
Dishing Up Death
Lights, Camera, Murder!
Pet in Peril
By Nick Lucas–
Five Minutes
—Beachfront Entertainment—
This is a work of fiction. Any resemblances to actual places or events, or persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
Copyright © 2013 Glenn Eric Meganck
All rights reserved under international and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Beachfront Entertainment. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner without the written consent of the publisher, with the exception of brief passages contained in critical articles or reviews.
Beachfront Entertainment, Boca Raton, FL. Correspond with Beachfront via email at: Info@BeachfrontEntertainment.com
Trade paperback edition, October 2013
ISBN-13: 978-1492951674 / ISBN-10: 1492951676
(trade paper)
Cover Art By Rita
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your favorite ebook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
Aliens In The Greenhouse
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright page
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1
Come on, kids,
said Mrs. Leery, pulling open the right rear passenger door of the family Buick. The car was holding up nicely for seven years and one hundred-thirteen thousand miles. Katie Leery glanced nervously at her watch and pushed a windblown lock of tousled blonde hair from her face. A glimpse of herself reflected in the car window only made her wish all the more that she had found the time to go to the hairdresser’s before this trip.
Do we have to go, Mom?
Kevin asked. Twelve years old, with a mop of thick brown hair that could have sopped up a bowl of gravy, and sharp brown eyes, Kevin stood a head taller than his sister, Devin. She was nearly three years younger and had gotten her mom’s blue eyes, blonde hair and cheekbones. Kevin took after his dad.
Yeah,
chimed Devin, jumping up and down. Can’t we come with you?
Oh, children, we’ve been all over this,
Mrs. Leery said tiredly. Dozens of times.
Katie Leery pulled the kids’ suitcases from the trunk and extra books and toys from the backseat. I have to go to this job interview. It’s going to last for two whole days.
And that wasn’t counting the travel time. Katie was dreading the whole trip. She was going to be put through the ringer, she just knew it.
Please, Mommy?
Devin tugged Mrs. Leery’s hand.
No.
Katie Leery looked at her kids. They still didn’t seem to understand the importance of her pending trip. We need this job. Since Daddy—
Mrs. Leery paused. She still missed Ken madly though it had been three years since he passed away. But somehow they had to go on. As a family, like their father would have wanted.
And money was tight. Without this job, Mrs. Leery didn’t know what they would do.
Let’s just go,
Mrs. Leery said, giving Devin a push, trying desperately to change the subject. Aunt Hilda is waiting for us. She’s so anxious to see you both.
Kevin grabbed his and Devin’s suitcases.
Thank you, honey.
Mrs. Leery mussed Kevin’s hair and he groaned. She glanced again at the cheap watch on her wrist, wishing the time didn’t go so quickly. I’m going to miss my plane if we don’t hurry.
She scooped up the remainder of the children’s things. Devin clutched her favorite doll, Jasmine Princess.
Arms loaded down with the kids’ playthings and a one pound bag of Aunt Hilda’s favorite plant fertilizer, Katie Leery marched quickly, if unsteadily, up the long walkway stretching from the curb to the house.
Katie maneuvered carefully up the narrow steps and set her things on the porch. She knocked. Oh, no.
Mrs. Leery rapped on the big, old mahogany door again and again. She rubbed her knuckles, which had turned red from knocking. The door looked old enough to have come over on the Mayflower. For that matter, the wood might well have been part of the ship itself, recycled for other uses once the Pilgrims had reached the New World.
I don’t understand it. I spoke to her on the telephone not six hours ago.
Mrs. Leery stepped back from the porch and called up to the second floor rooms. Aunt Hil-da!
The kids chimed in. Aunt Hil-da!
With no answer, Mrs. Leery dug the spare key out of the tiny glass box buried in the potted geraniums where Aunt Hilda had been known to be keeping it forever. Let’s just go in. Maybe your Aunt Hilda is napping.
Or dead. . .
Kevin!
admonished his mother. Must you?
Kevin had a blunt sense of humor. And since her husband’s departure, jokes about death and dying were particularly acute and the children knew it.
Sorry.
Kevin hung his head in contrition.
Devin stuck her tongue out at him.
Let’s watch the bad jokes, okay?
Okay, Mom.
Behind Mrs. Leery’s back, Kevin made his wrinkled monster face at his little sister.
Mrs. Leery fiddled with the house key. Hilda Margaret Leery, with silver hair and hazel eyes as sharp as any hawk’s, was Katie Leery’s aunt and, thus, the children’s great-aunt. Mrs. Leery wasn’t quite certain of her aunt’s age. Somewhere between sixty-five and sixty-five thousand,
Aunt Hilda was known to say. She was certainly pushing eighty.
And without Aunt Hilda, Mrs. Leery didn’t know what she would do. Mrs. Leery’s own mother lived in Europe and she and the kids rarely saw her. The children’s grandmother lived in a sort of self-imposed exile. Katie’s husband, Ken, had passed away several years ago. The doctors said he’d had a heart attack. A heart attack at thirty-four! Katie still couldn’t believe it.
And life was getting harder and harder, or so it seemed. Money problems, mostly. And the struggle of trying to raise two fast growing kids on her own.
And now, she had an interview for an executive position at a decent salary, plus benefits, with a mid-sized computer firm. If she got this job, they’d all have to move to Richmond, but aside from that, the kids would be better off. Far better off. She was certain.
Mrs. Leery struggled to fit the tarnished, old key in the lock. The cylinder hesitated then turned over with a click. She pushed the door open with her toe. Aunt Hilda?
The grand foyer was dimly lit and musty smelling. Mrs. Leery picked up her things and set them on the hardwood floor. A fly buzzed by. Close the door, please, Kevin.
The foyer went two shades darker as her son did so.
Man, this place is spooky.
Kevin’s eyes went from the floor to the ceiling. He and his sister had never been to Aunt Hilda’s house before. On the rare occasions they had seen their mother’s aunt it had always been on her visits to them.
I don’t like this place, Mommy.
Devin tugged on her mother’s skirt.
You’ll get used to it, honey. You’ll see.
Yeah.
Kevin poked his sister. The ghosts and spooks only come out at night when you’re sleeping!
Mom!
Devin clung to Mrs. Leery.
Really, Kevin, must you?
Now, they’re only children after all.
Katie and the kids jumped. Aunt Hilda had appeared out of nowhere. Aunt Hilda,
smiled Mrs. Leery.
Katie.
Aunt Hilda leaned forward and embraced her niece. And you two,
Aunt Hilda said, turning to the children, must be growing an inch a month.
She held out her hands. Come give me a hug.
Kevin looked up at Aunt Hilda. She was tall and gaunt, with snow white hair and a long, well-formed face. Her eyes sparkled blue like Devin’s and his mom’s. But Aunt Hilda towered over his mother by as much as six inches. She wore a simple gray frock and an incongruous pair of muddy, low-top white sneakers with high white socks. Her shoelaces were untied and scraped across the ground.
If Kevin’s mother had caught him walking around the house in those grungy things, she’d have had a fit. He’d never have gotten away with it. His mom would have been exclaiming about ‘just cleaned floors’ and ‘using a little common sense.’ As a kid, he naturally noticed such inconsistencies and felt it his duty to point such double standards out to his mother at any opportunity. In the case of Aunt Hilda, he demurred.
Besides, this was Aunt Hilda’s house. Maybe the rules were different?
He stepped forward and allowed himself to be scrunched against his great-aunt’s ribs. His sister did the same.
Aunt Hilda smelled funny. Sort of flowery.
"Have time for a cup of