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Robot Rescue!
Robot Rescue! Read online
AUTOMATION SENSATION
“A robot that makes ice-cream cones?” eight-year-old Joe Hardy exclaimed. “This I’ve got to see!”
“Seeing is believing,” Joe’s nine-year-old brother, Frank, said.
“And so is tasting!” their best friend, Chet, declared.
Frank, Joe, and Chet had lots to be excited about that spring Friday afternoon. They were on their way to Bayport’s newest ice-cream parlor—Robo Freeze!
“It’s so cool that you won that ice-cream-eating contest at the mall, Chet,” Frank said. “Thanks to you, we’ll get a sneak peek at Robo Freeze before it opens tomorrow.”
“A sneak peek plus a sneak lick!” Chet replied. “Sherbot makes ice-cream cones, remember?”
“How could we forget?” Joe asked, grinning.
Sherbot, the ice-cream-making robot, was the creation of the Andersons, a family of inventors living in Bayport. It had been their idea to open an ice-cream parlor on Bay Street where all cones were scooped by Sherbot!
The three boys couldn’t wait to check out Robo Freeze before the grand opening. But as they neared the store, they saw a small group of kids gathered outside. Some of them were holding signs.
“Don’t they know Robo Freeze doesn’t open until tomorrow?” asked Frank.
“I don’t think they want Robo Freeze to open at all,” Joe said, pointing down the street. “Check out their signs!”
As they neared the group, the brothers and Chet read some of the messages:
ICE CREAM—NOT NICE CREAM!
ROBO? OH NO!
ROBOT = RUST BUCKET!
“Definitely not Sherbot fans,” Frank stated.
“They’re fans of Len and Barry ice cream,” Chet explained. “My sister, Iola, is president of the fan club.”
“Len and Barry?” Joe asked. “You mean the guys who sell ice cream from a tie-dyed truck?”
“You mean the best ice cream,” Iola said, approaching the boys. “Len and Barry invented the awesome flavor Bubble Gum Yum, you know.”
“Bubble Gum Yum isn’t my favorite,” said Chet, shaking his head. “I mean, do you chew it or lick it?”
Iola rolled her eyes as if to say, Seriously?
Frank pointed at the sign Iola was holding, which read DEPROGRAM ALL ROBOTS! “I know you like Len and Barry’s ice cream, Iola, but what do you have against robots?”
She turned to two other club members. “Mason, Gabriela, tell them.”
“An ice-cream-making robot will take customers away from Len and Barry,” Mason explained.
“Soon robots will replace everybody,” Gabriela said. “Even teachers.”
“Robo teachers?” Joe joked. “Can they be programmed not to give homework?”
“Very funny,” said Iola, but she didn’t laugh. “I thought you guys were detectives, not comedians.”
Frank and Joe were detectives, who loved solving mysteries more than anything. The boys even had a notebook where they figured out the five Ws of each new case: Who, What, Where, When, and Why.
Iola led the club in a chant to close down Robo Freeze. Their voices were soon drowned out by a jingly tune played by a truck pulling up to the curb—the Len and Barry ice-cream truck.
Len leaned out of the truck’s window and shouted, “Peace out, kids! Ready for a far-out surprise?”
Barry appeared at the window, holding a tray of tiny cups filled with ice-cream. “Sample the new flavor we whipped up just for you,” he said. “We named it Fan Club Grub!”
“Omigosh! Fan Club Grub?” Iola said excitedly. “They named a flavor after us?”
The club members tossed their signs in a pile on the sidewalk, then raced toward the Len and Barry ice-cream truck.
“I wonder how it tastes,” said Frank.
“I like all of Len and Barry’s flavors except one,” Joe said, shuddering. “Lickety-Split Licorice!”
“Don’t tell that to Iola,” Chet warned. “The Len and Barry Fan Club loves every flavor the guys have ever made.”
“That’s cool,” Joe said with a smile. “But you know what’s even cooler? Trying ice cream made by a robot!”
The brothers and Chet approached the Robo Freeze entrance. The window shades were down and the door was locked.
“Let’s try this,” Frank said, ringing the doorbell.
After a few seconds, the door opened halfway. A boy poked his head out. Frank, Joe, and Chet recognized him as ten-year-old Holden Anderson. Holden went to a private school for kid geniuses in the next town.
“Hi,” Chet said. “I’m Chet Morton, the winner of the ice-cream-eating contest—”
“I know who you are,” said Holden. “Quick, what’s the secret password?”
“What secret password?” Chet groaned. “I didn’t know I needed a secret password to get in!”
“Chet, just make one up,” Frank murmured.
“The password is… marshmallow!” Chet guessed.
“Good enough,” said Holden as he flung the door wide open. “Are you ready to meet Sherbot, the man of the hour?”
“Don’t you mean can of the hour?” Joe joked. “After all, he is a robot!”
That earned Joe an elbow-nudge from Frank.
“No more robot jokes, okay?” Frank whispered. “The Andersons take their work very seriously.”
Frank, Joe, and Chet followed Holden inside Robo Freeze. Each wall of the ice-cream parlor was painted a different color: orange, blue, yellow, and red. Silver and red café tables with matching chairs were set up, ready for customers the next day.
“Hey, look!” Frank said, pointing toward the back of the store. Behind the counter, with a huge round head, a cheery smile, and flashing green eyes was—
“That’s got to be Sherbot!” Joe declared.
“The one and only!” said Holden proudly.
Chet and the Hardys rushed to the counter to get a better look. They were so busy checking out the robot, they hardly noticed Mr. and Mrs. Anderson standing behind the counter too.
“Guys, meet my parents,” Holden said. “They built and programmed Sherbot, and I helped with coding.”
“Holden is a microchip off the old block!” Mr. Anderson joked. “Right, Phyllis?”
“Right, Steve.” Mrs. Anderson chuckled. “Our name may be Anderson, but we’re thinking of changing it to Androidson!”
While the Andersons laughed it up, Joe whispered to Frank, “No robot jokes, huh?”
“Mom, Dad, this is Chet,” said Holden. “He’s the winner of the ice-cream-eating contest.”
“Thanks for inviting me and my friends for a sneak lick—I mean, sneak peek—at Robo Freeze,” Chet said.
“You’ll get to sample Sherbot’s ice cream too,” Mr. Anderson said. He pointed to a row of jumbo cardboard boxes standing against the yellow wall. “We didn’t stock up on all those for nothing.”
“What’s in the boxes?” Joe asked.
“Crunchy sugar cones,” Mrs. Anderson said with a smile, “waiting for Sherbot to fill them with delicious ice cream.”
* * *
Chet was busy studying a chalkboard on the wall. Listed there were fifteen different flavors.
“How does Sherbot know what flavors to fill the cones with?” he asked.
“Sherbot runs by voice commands,” Holden explained. “All you have to do is tell him.”
“Take a crack at it, Chet,” Mr. Anderson said. “Order the first official cone from Sherbot.”
“Just start with the command that makes Sherbot come to life,” said Mrs. Anderson. “It’s ‘Sherbot, make my ice cream.’ ”
Chet stepped up to the counter. “Sherbot, make my delicious, mouthwatering, lip-smacking ice cream!”
Sherbot’s green eyes kept flashing as his hea
d began to swivel back and forth. With a whirring noise, the robot faced Chet. “Greetings,” he droned. “Name your consistency. Scoop or soft serve?”
“Scoop, please,” Chet replied. “Make it a double.”
Sherbot’s robotic left hand lifted a cone. He faced the icebox and droned, “State your flavor clearly, please.”
“You’ve got so many, it’s hard to choose,” Chet said, looking up at the chalkboard. “But I really like chocolate.”
“Chocolate. Affirmative,” Sherbot said, grabbing an ice-cream scooper with his other hand. He was about to dig into a tub of chocolate ice cream when Chet blurted out, “Wait! I like banana rocky road, too. But I also really like almond fudge crunch. Not as much as peppermint candy, but only if it has real chunks of peppermint—”
“Cease commands! System overload!” Sherbot droned as his green eyes flashed rapidly and his arm waved the scooper through the air. “Begin again. Begin again. Begin again—”
“What did I do?” Chet asked.
“Sherbot is programmed to take one command at a time, Chet,” Mr. Anderson said. “Why don’t your friends get their cones while you decide on a flavor?”
“I’ll go next,” said Joe. “I know what flavor I want.”
Chet stepped back as Joe took his place at the counter.
“Sherbot, make my ice cream,” Joe commanded. In response to the robot’s questions, he ordered one big scoop of mint chocolate chip.
“Mint chocolate chip. Affirmative,” Sherbot declared.
Frank, Joe, and Chet watched wide-eyed as the big gleaming robot landed a flawlessly round scoop of mint chocolate chip ice cream in a sugar cone.
“Is Sherbot the perfect robot or what?” exclaimed Holden.
Still holding the ice-cream cone, Sherbot coasted toward the toppings bar. “Name your toppings, please,” he droned.
“That’s easy,” Joe said. “Make it hot fudge.”
Sherbot ground to a halt. “Negative. Command not recognized.”
“Sherbot hasn’t been programmed to squeeze hot fudge yet,” Mr. Anderson explained. “We’re working on it.”
“No hot fudge?” Chet complained. “How perfect can an ice-cream-making robot be if he doesn’t rock hot fudge?”
“Sherbot is perfect!” Holden insisted. “Why don’t you ask for whipped cream instead, Joe?”
“Whipped cream,” Sherbot droned. “Affirmative!”
The robot placed the ice-cream cone inside a holder. He then grabbed a can, pressed his robotic fist on the top, and—
PFFFFFFIIIITTTT! A torpedo of white cream shot over the boys’ heads. Behind them, a voice shouted, “Cheese and crackers!”
Frank, Joe, and Chet spun around to see a woman wearing a blue uniform and apron, with a blob of whipped cream on the front of her hairnet. The boys recognized her at once. She was their school lunch lady, Mrs. Carmichael.
“Oops,” Joe whispered. “Bad aim!”
SURPRISE IN STORE
Standing next to Mrs. Carmichael was the brothers’ friend Phil Cohen. What was he doing there?
“Mrs. Carmichael?” asked Frank.
“You were expecting Dolley Madison?” Mrs. Carmichael growled. She pulled her apron up to wipe her forehead, then said, “There will be no food fights. Not in my clean lunchroom!”
“Um… Mrs. Carmichael?” Phil said. “We’re not in the school lunchroom now. We’re in Robo Freeze.”
“So there’ll be no food fights in Robo Freeze!” Mrs. Carmichael snapped. “I hate food fights wherever they are!”
“We’re sorry for Sherbot’s whipped-cream slipup, Mrs. Carmichael,” said Mrs. Anderson.
“Thankfully, it’s an easy fix,” Mr. Anderson said. “We just have to code Sherbot’s arm to aim lower, that’s all.”
“You do know that Robo Freeze doesn’t open until tomorrow,” said Mrs. Anderson. “Don’t you?”
“I’m not here for an ice-cream cone with sprinkles,” Mrs. Carmichael said. “Tell them why we came, Phillip.”
Phil threw back his shoulders. “We came for Sherbot’s specs!”
Frank and Joe traded looks. A robot’s specs meant how it was built to work.
“I want my school lunchroom to have its own ice-cream-making robot,” Mrs. Carmichael explained. “Simple as that.”
Joe gasped. “An ice-cream-making robot in our lunchroom?”
He reached for his mint chocolate chip ice-cream cone—with no whipped cream—and gave it a lick.
“That would be awesome,” said Frank.
“Better than awesome—it’s a dream come true.” Chet closed his eyes, thinking about the possibility. “And I dream a lot about ice cream!”
“What makes you want a robot for your school lunchroom, Mrs. Carmichael?” Mr. Anderson asked.
“I’m tired of serving ice cream and frozen yogurt to dozens of kids every day,” Mrs. Carmichael explained. “By the time I’m finished scooping and squirting all those icy treats, the chicken nuggets and hush puppies are ice cold too!”
She pointed across the counter. “That’s why I want a robot just like your Sherbot. I like that he’s smiling, too, so I don’t have to.”
“Building a robot isn’t easy,” said Holden. “Have you ever built one before, Mrs. Carmichael?”
“No, but Phillip here has,” Mrs. Carmichael said, giving him a smile. “He’s won several science fairs, so he’s the kid for the job.”
While Mrs. Carmichael admired Sherbot, Joe whispered to Phil, “Are you really going to build Mrs. Carmichael a robot?”
“She promised me mac and cheese every day for the rest of the year if I helped her,” Phil whispered back. “What would you do?”
“I’d build ten robots for mac and cheese,” Chet whispered. “No-brainer.”
Mrs. Carmichael turned to the Andersons. “So let’s discuss Sherbot’s specs,” she said. “I can give you something tasty in exchange. How does a month’s supply of frozen meat loaf sound?”
“I’m sorry, Mrs. Carmichael,” Mr. Anderson said gently. “I’m afraid our specs for Sherbot are top secret.”
Mrs. Carmichael’s eyes didn’t blink for at least five seconds as she stared at the Andersons. “Top secret?” she finally exclaimed. “Okay—I’ll throw corn dogs into the deal!”
“Sorry. The only way to find out how Sherbot works would be to open him up,” Mrs. Anderson added. “And I know you wouldn’t do that, Mrs. Carmichael.”
“She definitely doesn’t know Mrs. Carmichael,” Chet murmured to Frank and Joe.
“I heard that, Chet Morton!” Mrs. Carmichael snapped. “No extra ketchup on your burgers from now on.”
“Phooey,” Chet grumbled.
Mrs. Carmichael frowned at the Andersons. “No specs, huh? Well, this is a pretty kettle of fish sticks.”
Phil was frowning too. And then his expression slowly shifted into a smile. “Don’t worry, Mrs. Carmichael,” he said. “I just thought of a way to get your ice-cream-making robot.”
As Phil left with Mrs. Carmichael, the brothers wondered what he’d meant, but their thoughts were interrupted when Mr. Anderson called out, “Who’s next for ice cream?”
The boys were about to reply when the door opened again. This time Cecil Mortimer and his son, Milford, walked in.
Frank and Joe knew that the Mortimer family lived in one of the biggest houses in Bayport. Six-year-old Milford got whatever he wanted—and what he wanted was a lot!
“We’re next, I believe,” Cecil declared.
“I’m sorry,” Mr. Anderson told them. “Robo Freeze doesn’t open until tomorrow.”
“I’m afraid that would be too late,” Mr. Mortimer said. “Milford’s birthday party is tomorrow, and we need your robot to make a large ice-cream cake.”
“Sherbot doesn’t make ice-cream cakes,” Mrs. Anderson said. “Only delicious ice-cream cones.”
Milford pointed to Sherbot. “Then I want an ice-cream-making robot for my birthday party, Dad! He can make ice-cream c
ones for everybody!”
“But Milford,” said Mr. Mortimer, “I thought you wanted a pony to give your little friends rides.”
“Not unless the pony has a big round head and makes ice-cream cones,” Milford insisted. “I want an ice-cream-making robot, and I want him now!”
“Come along, Milford,” Mr. Mortimer said, leading his son out the door. “I’ll make sure your birthday party tomorrow is perfect. I promise.”
With the Mortimers gone, Sherbot started making an ice-cream cone for Frank. But when it was Chet’s turn…
“I’ll pass, thanks,” Chet said. “Ice cream isn’t ice cream without hot fudge.”
“But—” Holden started to say before his dad piped up.
“We’ll have Sherbot squeezing hot fudge in no time, Chet. Don’t give up on Robo Freeze yet.”
Frank, Joe, and Chet thanked the Andersons, then filed out of the ice-cream parlor.
“Chet, since when do you turn down ice cream?” asked Frank, then took a lick of his vanilla ice-cream cone with rainbow sprinkles.
“Since Len and Barry are still giving out free samples.” Chet pointed to the ice-cream truck still parked at the curb.
“They’re for the fan club,” Joe reminded him. “And you’re not a member.”
“I may not be a member of the fan club,” Chet said with a grin, “but I am a humongous fan of their ice cream!”
As he walked toward the truck, he called out, “A double scoop of Fan Club Grub, please—with gobs of hot fudge!”
Still eating their cones, Frank and Joe started the walk home.
“Let’s go back to Robo Freeze tomorrow for the grand opening,” Joe suggested. “I want to take a video of Sherbot in action.”
“Great idea,” said Frank. “An ice-cream-making robot is history in the making.”
“Sherbot can make history,” Joe said between licks of his almost-finished mint chocolate chip. “As long as he keeps making awesome ice cream.”
* * *
Saturday morning Frank and Joe returned to Bay Street. There was already a big group gathered outside Robo Freeze.
“Wow,” Frank exclaimed. “It looks like all the kids in Bayport are excited to see Sherbot!”