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Author Topic: Mario's Murder Mystery on the Excess Express  (Read 20929 times)

« on: June 14, 2005, 10:11:39 PM »
Here it is.  My forth story.  This is obviously a murder mystery story.  Please enjoy.....

Prolouge: The Murder of Professor Frankly ~ It was a dark, cloudy night.  The stars were covered by thick clouds, and only the full moon shone in the sky.  Here, an old Goomba sat on a bench in the run-down town of Rougeport, waiting for the Excess Express to arive at the station.  Frankly was an old professor who spent his time studying history, and ancient mysteries.  He was to arive at the very fancy town of Poshley Heights to meet with his old friend Pennington, the crime solving penguin.  Soon Professor Frankly heard the clickitee clack of the train on the tracks.  The Excess Express roled into the station, and Professor Frankly made his way off the bench.
"Good evening sir," the kind conductor Toad at the door of the train said, "Do you plan to be riding the Excess Express tonight, sir?"  Professor Frankly nodded as he took out his train ticket from the pocket of his trench coat and showed the conductor.  He examined his ticket and handed it back to Frankly.  "Very good sir.  You are located in room four.  Please be careful boarding," the Toad said as he opened the sliding door into the marvelous Excess Express.
"Thank you," Professor Frankly said as he boarded.  The old professor walked throughout the train, strangely feeling as if he was being watched.  He quickly shook it off and found his way through the train until he found room #4.  Professor Frankly quickly opened the sliding door into his small room.  Frankly suddenly felt cold, and scared.  This was quite strange.  He had ridden this train before, and found it comfortable and homey.  Now it seemed haunting and cold.  'Hmmm,' he thought to himself, 'Maybe it's just the room.  I was in #7 last time and it felt fine.  There is most likely just a draft coming in'.  Professor Frankly sat down on the bench located at the right of the fancy room.  He looked around.  The wallpaper was red with small gold designs in it.  The carpeting was a comforting red, along with the bench.  The was a bunkbed to the left of the room, and a desk next to the beds where a small lamp rested.  After a few minutes he heard the conductor yell,
"ALL ABOARD!!!" and a few seconds later the train lurched forward.  The engine started and the train grew faster and faster.  Professor Frankly looked out the window, watching the trees quickly pass by.  The professor suddenly began growing very tired.  His eyelids became very heavy, and he couldn't resist it.  He closed his eyes and fell asleep on the bench to the sway of the train and the delisious smell of something being cooked in the nearby kitchen.  That night, he had his final dream.  It was of his family and friends, and gave him a warm feeling in his heart.  It was perhaps the greatest dream he had ever had.  Remembering good times with family, and amazing experiences with friends.  Suddenly his dream came to an end.  He slowly opened his eyes.  Everything was blurry, but he saw a faint blue image in front of him.  He opened his eyes, and to his horor found a ghost watching him.  Professor Frankly was too shocked to scream.
"Geeet ooout," the ghost said.  Professor Frankly stared at the ghost in amazment.  Suddenly, the ghost disappeared, just like that.  Professor Frankly looked around the room.  He rubbed his eyes.  Was his mind playing tricks on him?  Did he really just see the ghost of a Toad?  It had told him to get out, but Professor Frankly didn't think of it as a serious matter.  He did feel very spooked though, and decided he would go to ask the conductor for an extra blanket.  He stood up and walked to the door.  Before he had the chance to open it, the door quickly slid open.  Frankly gasped.


"No ma'am, I'm sorry, we do not give any of our guests extra blankets," the Toad conductor said to Bow, the pampered boo.
"Are you sure?" she asked, "'Cause I really could use an extra cover for tonight.  Please?  Just for me?"  The conductor loosened his colar.
"I'm sorry-"
"AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!"  Bow gasped.
"What was that?"  The conductor rushed through the halls of the Excess Express, looking for the source of the horrid scream.  Finally, he found the door of room four open.  He rushed to the door and looked into the room.  He gasped.  There was Professor Frankly, lying on the floor, dead.  
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #1 on: June 15, 2005, 01:19:42 PM »
Chapter 1: An Urgent Message ~ Mario sipped his coffee as he read from the Daily Mushroom that early morning.  It was rather cloudy out today, but the sun still managed to shine.  Mario sighed as Luigi wrestled Mario for the comics once more.
"Luigi, here, just...just TAKE 'EM!" Mario threw the comics at Luigi, the papers flying all over the kitchen.  Luigi scrambled to pick them up.  Mario sighed as he took another swig of his hot, strong coffee and began reading about a grand theft auto in The Mushroom Kingdom.  Apparently a team of Goombas had successfully stolen Wario's "pimpin'" car.  Mario chuckled at the picture of Wario angrily talking to some reporters while strangling a policeman.  Luigi ate his cheerios while flipping through the comics, laughing at every single one.  It got quite annoying after a while.
"Hee hee...hahahaha....HAHAHAHA-"
"Luigi!" Mario said, interuptting his brother's annoying laughs.
"What?" he asked.
"Aren't you getting a little...you know...too old to be reading the comics every morning?" Luigi gasped.
"What?!?  You can never be too old!" Luigi cired, splashing more milk over his cheerios.
"Uh-huh...alright, nevermind," Mario said, getting back to his paper.  It was finally time for Mario to settle down.  He has had enough adventures for a while, especially after that one in Rougeport in which he ended up saving PRincess PEach from being possessed and taking over the world!  He decided not to travel anywhere for his vacation either.  Last time he wanted a vacation he had traveled to Isle Delfino and ended up being stuck on but another huge adventure.  Mario didn't mind them, really he didn't, it was just sometimes he wanted time for himself.  Just then he heard someone outside the door call,
"Mail!"  the Parakarry's wings could be heard as he flew away.  Luigi stood up from the table.
"I'll get it," he said.
"NO!" Mario cried, grabbing his brother's arm.
"Why not?" Luigi asked as he stopped and looked at his brother.
"Because everytime we get a letter it's always Princess Peach wanting me to go off on some crazy adventure!"
"So?"
"So, I don't WANT to go off on some crazy adventure!" Luigi seemed shocked.
"Is this Mario I hear?...THE Mario?...The same Mario who puut aside his troubles every time Princess PEach asked a favor?"
"Well..." Mario began.
"The same MArio who never gave up to bring peace to the Mushroom Kingdom, and quite recently, the world!"
"....yes."
"Then I'm gettin' that mail!" Luigi pulled away from Mario's grip.
"Wait!" Mario called out, even though he knew his younger brother wouldn't listen.  MArio shrugged.  Hopefully it was just a relative, or an old friend checking in on him.  After all, Koops DID forget to call him on his birthday.  Luigi came in with a smug smile on his face.
"Look!  It's NOT from Peach it's from the Conductor of the Excess Express!" he said as he handed the letter to MArio.  Mario sighed a sigh of relief.
"Oh!  I guess I made all that fuss for nothing," Mario said as he opened the envelope.  This is what was written in it:

Dear Mario,
  You many remember me from your last
adventure.  I am the conductor of the
Excess Express.  I have written this
letter to bring you terrible news.
Your dear friend Professor Theodore
Frankly passed away last night on board
the Excess Express.  It was a tradgic
accident indeed.  It appears that your
old friend was murdered on the train.
We have called forth Detective
Pennington, but I was afriad that he was
not enough.  I remembered you, and how
you solved that terrible mystery on the
train last time.  It would really help us
out if you came to help solve the mystery
of Professor Frankly's murder.  Please
meet the Excess Express in Rougeprt at
the local train station.  We have kept all
the suspects on board, along with the
professor's body.  Please come and help
disicover the mystery of who killed your
dear old friend.  Thank you.
                       ~The Conductor

Mario gasped as he read through the letter twice more.  Was it ture?  Was his dear old friend really murdered?  Mario sighed as he removed his hat and folded the letter.  Mario just thought of Goombella, Frankly's finest and closest student.  She would be crushed.  If it hadn't been for Professor Frankly, the world would have been in peril.
"Luigi," MArio said as he put his cap back on, "I'm going to Rougeport."
"Huh?" Luigi said as he looked up from his comics, "That filthy run-down place?  Why are you going back there?"  Mario sighed.
"An adventure."

Edited by - The Blue Toad on 6/15/2005 12:20:10 PM
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #2 on: June 17, 2005, 02:29:34 PM »
Chapter 2: And So It Begins ~ Mario whistled a song as he waited patiently for his boat to arrive.  He stood on the old dock that stretched out to sea.  Cheep Cheeps swam in and out of the long posts that held up the dock over the clear ocean water.  The sun was begining to set and a calming red tint filled the sky.  Mario sighed peacefully at the sweet silence as he sat down at the edge of the dock.  He knew that he would soon wish to be back at the dock once more, instead of in Rougeport.  Rougeport was a fowl town.  It was home to gangs, and theives.  When you first enter Rougeport you see the harbor.  It seems filthy enough, but not nearly as bad as what's next to come.  When you climb the stairs that are located at the end of the hardor, you enter Town Square.  Placed in the very center of town, is the gallows.  A tall platform with a rope hung from a post.  Luckily, on Mario's last adventure there, he saw it put to no use.  In the Town Square is the Toad Bros. Shop, along with a Chuckola Cola Bar and a nice Inn to stay the night.  If you travel into the back alley you will find graffiti covering the walls, and trash littering the streets.  This is where the rotten theives and bandits hide.  Normally you want to avoid the back alley, unless you REALLY want your money back from that bandit who pick-pocketed you as you innocently walked into town.  To the east of the Square you will find it to be home of the Robbos, a band of theives led by Ishnail.  You will also fing mysterious folk in the east side, including an old fortune teller, a dark boy who hides behind houses, and a strange man who tells fortunes.  It is also home to none other than Professor Frankly, the brilliant Goomba who was recently murdered on the Excess Express.  If you go into the west part of town, you will find it being the wealthier part.  More people live in this side, and it is obvious why.  The west side of Rougeport is home to the Pianta Parlor, a gambling area, along with the Excess Express boarding area, and the Cheep Blimp that flies to Glitzville.  The west also has the Piantas that basically rule the town.  Don Pianta used to be in charge until he decided to retire and leave the buissness to his son-in-law, Frankie.  If you mess with them, it may be the last thing you ever do.  Mario had dozed off thinking of the town and all the people he had met there.  Not exactly friends, but not exactly enemies either.  Mario tossed a rock into the ocean, Cheep Cheeps quickly swimming away, and rings gently floating out to sea.  Mario suddenly looked up to see that the boat was almost to the dock.  Mario stood up, getting ready for his next journey.
"Mario!" a gentle voice said from behind Mario.  He turned to find Peach running up to Mario, Toadsworth stumbling behind her, "Mario, wait!"
"Peach?" Mario said.  Mario must have looked confused, because Peach said,
"Well, you didn't think you were going on an adventure without me, did you?" Toadsworth finally caught up to Princess Peach, gasping for air.
"I'm too old for this," he said.
"But...how did you know I was going to Rougeport?" Mario asked.
"I heard all about it from Luigi.  He said I could find you at the docks," the princess replied, "I have been very bored around the castle, and simply had to get out.  I was going to invite you and your brother to a tea party, but this sounds so much more exciting!"
"Princess," Toadsworth said, "Are you sure you want to go back to that...that filthy little place?  I mean after all, you didn't exactly have a good time there."
"I know what I'm getting myself into Toadsworth," Peach replied.  Toadsworth sighed.
"Well I guess that's that.  Master Mario, we will be joining you on this little trip of yours.  I do hope we don't get in the way."
"What?" Peach said, "Toadsworth, you're not coming."
"Nonsense!" Toadsworth cried as the boat reached the dock, "I will not leave you to go to that place!"
"Mario will be with me."
"Mario has more important things to do than follow you around all day."  Peach blushed.  "That would be MY job."  Mario didn't really want any interupptions during this, considering the seriousness of Prfoessor Frankly's death, but he couldn't possibly say no to Princess Peach.  Together, they all boarded the boat.  Next stop, Rougeport.
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #3 on: June 17, 2005, 10:00:53 PM »
Keep it up, man! I'm reading it!

Ever notice how the name "Playstation" sounds more kiddy than "Gamecube" or "Nintendo 64"?
GEIANDGIRLCO DIRECT - The Sensitive Alternative

« Reply #4 on: June 17, 2005, 11:29:18 PM »
Thank you smfan.  It's good to know somebody's reading this.

Chapter 3: To Rougeport To Memories ~ Mario fell into a deep and relaxing sleep along the voyage.  The sound of the boat gently going over the waves soothed him.  Mario had a dream that he was with his old team again.  He had met Goombella, the smart, sassy Goomba who seemed to know just about everything.  Koops, his timid turtle friend, who was now the mayor of Petalburg had also joined Mario once more.  Then there was Flurrie, the wind spirit from Boggly Woods.  She had joined him in his dream as well.  Now adays, she was a huge star, acting in many plays and lots of times, starring as the main charactor.  The young, tough little yoshi who was fighting in the Glitz Pit, the sweet, shy shadow siren Vivian, and Admiral bobbery, the tough old sailor Bomb-Omb who sails the seas.  Even Ms. Mowz, the badge theif was there.  Mario could see all their kind faces and wished to see them once more in person.  Suddenly, the sound of seagulls slowly woke him up.  Mario peered out at the glare of the sun, and the noisy seagulls overhead.  Mario stood up, looking over the ocean.  He could see off in the distance, a town.  It was the town of Rougeport.  Momories flew back to him as he looked a the broken down builings and Cheep Blimp floating overhead.
"We should be arriving shortly Mr. Mario," said the Toad who was drving the boat.  Mario nodded.  Just then, Peach emerged.  She stretched and yawned, holing her umbrella up against the harsh sunlight.  Toadsworth waddled to the bow of the ship and looked out at Rougeport.  He sighed.  "I hate this place," he said rather quietly.  Toadsowrth prefered the Mushroom Kingdom over anything else.  Mario, on the other hand, couldn't wait to get there.

The boat arrived at the harbor shortly.  "Here you are," the Toad said, "Rougeport....I believe I've driven you here before, haven't I?" he asked Mario.  To be honest MArio really wasn't sure.  He shrugged.  "Yeah," the Toad said, "Yeah, I remember you.  The mustachio who saved the world last time you were here!  Why, I didn't recognize you!  Have you lost weight?"  Mario felt a little awkward as he left the boat and onto the harbor, Peach and Toadsworth following him.
"I wonder if they'll remember us," Peach said.  Sure enough, they did.  There were greetings by many a person as the walked through the place.  To Mario's surprise, it had cleaned up a bit since he last was there!  The grafitti was scrubbed of the walls, the trash was picked up, even the gallows seemed cleaner.  Peach waved at the residents happily.  Toadsworth kept an eye out for any suspicious looking people.  Mario wished he could stay longer in the small town, but simply had to get to the train station and solve this mystery.  It truley was urgent.  He remembered exactly where it was, to the west of the town.
"Come on," Mario said, "It's this way."
"But Mario," Peach said, "I'm so tired.  Can't we rest at the Inn?"
"But," Mario rejected, "you just had a nap on the boat."
"The sunshine and the seagulls kept me awake.  I really am very tired.  Please?"  Mario sighed.
"Come noe Master MArio," Toadsworth said, "The Princess does need her sleep."
"I'm sorry Peach," Mario replied, "But I have to catch the train.  There's no time to nap, a murder needs to be solved."
"Awww," Peach said.
"Well," Toadsworth said, "Why don't you catch that train without us, eh?  The Princess needs her rest and I need to keep her as safe as possible.  Going on a train that may have a murderer on it, I think not!"  He took Peach by the arm and lead her over to the Inn.  Peach pulled back.
"My nap can wait," she said, "I simply must go with Mario Toadsworth.  I would be terribly bored if I didn't."  Toadsworth sighed.  He knew she would say that.
"Alright alright.  Lets follow MAster Mario than, shall we?"  Mario lead the way into the west side of town.  More frienldy faces greeted them.  Mario smiled and nodded as he made his way through the town.  He took a right up ahead and down a tunnel that lead to the Excess Express.  To his surprise, when they reached the end, the train was not there.
"What?" Mario thought aloud, "Where's the train?"  a Lakitu nearby heard Mario and said:
"It hasn't arrived yet.  They say the Excess Express was delayed in Riverside Station.  I dunno, I just picked it up from the conductor a lil' while ago.  I've been waiting here for a hour for it to get back."  Mario looked at the empty spot where the magnificent train used to be.  What could be holding them up?  Perhaps a shortage in gas?  An accident of some sort?
"Well isn't that terrible luck," Toadsworth said, unlthough they could tell he didn't mean it, "The train is not back yet.  Well, I guess that lets Peach have her nap.  Come on now, Peach."  Peach reluctantly followed Toadsworth out of the train station.
"Geesh," she whispered, "you're not my babysitter for cripes sake."  Mario followed Peach back out.  It was then that he realised something.  He didn't even have a train ticket.  Last time he was so used to simply pulling out his ticket whenever he wanted to board, now he had to go through all the trouble to get one again.  There was one guy who gave away train tickets in this town.  The tough leader of the Piantas, the gangster himself, Don Pianta.

Edited by - The Blue Toad on 6/17/2005 10:33:30 PM
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #5 on: June 18, 2005, 02:34:11 PM »
Chapter 4: Old Friends ~ Peach made her way to the local Inn and opened the door.
"Ah, yes," Toadsworth said, "Just as I remember it."  The Chuckola Cola looked basically the same, even the same people were there.  "Come Princess," Toadsworth said, "The Inn is upstairs."  Toadsworth walked upstairs expecting PEach to follow.
"What will you do, Mario?" Peach asked.  MArio had been staring out the window  in a daze.
"Hm?" he said, "Oh, well, I suppose I'll just explore the town a bit."
"Alright," Peach said, "Be careful."  she walked up the stairs and in to the Inn.  Mario was quite thirsty after the journey on the boat.  He decided to buy a Cola.  Mario laid the money on the table as the bartender began preparing his drink.  Suddenly a familiar, annoying voice, said his name.
"Mario?"  Mario turned to see Flavio, the second richest man in Rougeport.  He had a fancy red suit on and a feathery hat.  His nose was long, and his elegant hair was purple, "Yes, hello there Mario.  Do you remember me?  It is I!  Flavio!  The 2nd richest man in Rougeport!"
"Yes, hello Flavio," Mario said, wishing he had just exitted the Chuckola Cola before Flavio could have seen him.  Mario had borrowed Flavio's ship last time he was here.  Unfortunately, it had sunk into the depths of the sea.  Flavio was very upset about this and blamed the whole crew for this when almost everything was his fault.  No one really liked him.
"Ah, yes.  The days of our voyage still flashes in my head," Flavio said.
"Here's your drink sir," said the bartender.  Mario put more money on the table.
"Can I make that to go?" he asked.
"Certainly," the bartencer said, snapping a lid over the cup so that it wouldn't spill.
"Thank you.  Well, Flavio, I must be going," Mario said standing up.
"Farewell old friend!" Flavio said, waving goodbye as Mario exitted the Chuckola Cola into Rougeport.  Mario decided to go find Frankly's house.  He remembered exactly where it was.  It was to the right of the old fortune teller's house.  Mario awkwardly knocked on the door to make sure none of Frankly's family or friends were already inside, packing up his things to keep as memorials.  When nobody answered, Mario entered the house.  I was dark, and lonely, yet exactly the same as he remembered it.  Books were everywhere, papers were scattered across the floor, and maps were hung on the high walls.  A desk sat in the room with scrolls piled there.  That used to be where Professor Frankly always sat, reading of the Thousand Year Door, or reading up on where Mario and his friends would go next for their adventure.  Mario scanned the books and sighed.  Even the smell was the same.  Suddenly, the door swung open, revealing a Goomba.  She was a shade of pink wearing an archiologist suit.  A blonde pony tail hung out the back of her helmet.  It was Mario's friend Goombella.
"...Mario?" Goombella asked, "Is that you?"
"Goombella!" Mario said.  Goombella seemed surprised as she entered the room, closing the door behind her.
"Mario!" she said, "What are you doing here?"
"I heard about the terrible news," Mario replied.  Goombella sighed.
"He was an old Goomba...it was his time anyway."  There was an awkward silence in the room in which Goombella kept her eyes to the dusty floor.  She was probably the closest thing Profesor Frankly ever had for a daughter.  They were very close.  Mario cleared his throat.  "I just can't believe someone would...would murder him...who could do such a thing?" she asked, looking up at Mario.  Mario shook his head and sighed.  Goombella walked over to the desk and picked up the scrolls.  "I'm devoting myself to finish all of Professor Frankly's unfinished work.  It is only right."  Mario nodded, still feeling quite awkward.
"I'm going to solve this murder mystery," Mario said suddenly, "On the train, as soon as it gets back."
"What?" Goombella said, "Is that why you're here?"
"Yeah," Mario replied, "I got a letter the other day.  The conductor of the Excess Express was asking me to come and help solve the mystery.  I really don't understand why they couldn't have just asked Detective Pennington at Poshley Heights, but it is an honor to be doing this."  Goombella quickly replied:
"I'm coming with you."
"What?" Mario said, though he knew what she said.
"I'm coming with you.  I feel that this is my fault...I should have been with him...I was his assistant...I have to do this, Mario.  This is just something I need to do."  Mario was already full with Peach and Toadsworth, but Goombella too?  That's four tickets!  That is going to be really hard to come by. "Please?"  Goombella pleaded, her eyes getting big.
"....alright," Mario said, "I guess you can come."  Goombella smiled.
"Good, because I know how to get the tickets."

Mario followed Goombella through the town.  She seemed to be in quite a hurry, and Mario was struggling to keep up with her.  She made her way into the harbor.
"But," Mario said, "isn't Don Pianta in the west side of town?"
"Used to be," Goombella said, "But he moved into Keelhaul Key to relax for a long vacation."  Mario remembered Keelhaul Key.  It was a tropical Island off at sea.  It was indeed, haunted, but last time Mario was there, he made peace with the ghost pirate Cortez and his crew.
"What about the train," Mario said, "Won't it be here soon?"
"No.  I heard that they completely ran out of coal at Riverside staiton.  They need someone to deliver them enough coal to get it started again.  Do you know how long that will take?" Goombella asked as she stopped at the Rougeport dock with Mario, "at least one more day."  Mario nodded.  She DID know everything.  Either that, or it was her tendancy to eavesdrop and gossip.
"...so," Mario said, "What exactly are we waiting for?"  Goombella was silent for a moment, and then pointed out at sea,
"That!"  She was pointing at an incoming ship.  It appeared to be a dark blue ship that was in perfect condition.  It had cream colored sails, and a flag that had a picture of a bomb with eyes on it.  "That would be Bobbery's ship.  He was finally able to afford his own.  Cortez is using HIS ship to find hidden treasure, but Bobbery still simply sails the seas to bring tourists to Keelhaul Key, or other places."  Mario gazed in amazement at the magnificent ship, but then looked back at Rougeport.  Maybe he should have told Toadsworth.  He gets extremely worried.  But then again, they really did need those train tickets as soon as possible, and didn't want to waste any time.  The moment Mario looked back at the ship, it was practically there.
"Ahoy!" Admiral Bobbery called over the ship, "Mario ol' boy!  Good to see you!" the old Bomb-Omb wore a captain's hat over his left eye, and had a large prickly white mustahe.
"Come on!" Goombella said as Bobbery threw down a rope ladder over the side of the ship.  Goombella began climbing the ladder as did Mario.
"Very good," Bobbery said, "Where will you be headed?"
"To Keelhaul Key!  We need to get train tickets from Don Pianta by the end of today," Goombella said.
"Well, hopefully Don Pianta's in a good mood today!  You might need to try pretty hard to get some considering what he's giving away today!" Bobbery said, "Are you sure I can't just sail you there?"
"Nope.  This has to be on the Excess Express," Goombella replied.
"Then Keelhaul Key it is!" and with that Bobbery went up to the sterring wheel and set of into the sea.  Mario watched as he gently floated away from Rougeport, hoping that Toadsworth wouldn't come out looking for him, which he obviously would.  He now realised what a mistake this was, not telling Toadsworth.  But it was too late now.  They were off at sea, and there was no turning back until they had those train tickets.
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #6 on: June 18, 2005, 11:37:22 PM »
Chapter 5: Pirates Ahoy ~ The waves pounded against the ship as rain poured onto the deck.  Thunder roared and lighting quickly flashed in the sky, hiding in the dark clouds a second later.  Bobbery was at the steering wheel, drenched with rain and salty ocean water.  He tried his hardest to keep the S.S. Charlette (the name of Bobbery's ship) sailing in the right path.  The waves were mountainous and splashed the ship like a fierce hammer.  A gigantic waved loomed over Bobbery's head.  He gasped as the wave pounded into him.
"HAHA!" Bobbery laughed as he jumped back up and spun the wheel.  He was a tough old bomb, mind you.  "Come on Charlette!" he cried over the storm, "We can get through this storm!!!....WhOa!" he cried as the ship fell down a huge slope of a wave.  Goombella was hiding in the safety of the dry cabin that was built inside the ship.  It was actually very comfortable as she sat in a large blue armchair by a lit fireplace, reading some of Professor Frankly’s scrolls.  The armchair slid left and right from all the terrible waves, which was a bit of a bother.  The two blue beds behind her almost toppled over (the desks and bookshelves already doing so).  Goombella read better in storms, but not when the whole house was moving!  Mario was trying to stand up, but as the boat tilted terribly he couldn’t help but fall every time.
“Mama Mia!” Mario cried as he slid into the wall.  Mario stood up and grabbed onto one of the beds.  He was panting desperately.  â€œDoesn’t this bother you, Goombella?” he asked as the bed began to slip.
“Yes,” Goombella said, flinching as the armchair almost fell over, “But Frankly’s writings are just so captivating.”
“You mean you’re not getting the least bit sea sick?”  Suddenly, a HUGE wave rammed the side of the ship.  The beds lurched into the air, and Goombella and the armchair came crashing down with a loud THUD!  Goombella groaned.
“Now that you mention it…” Admiral Bobbery grabbed onto his captain’s hat, making sure it didn’t fly off his head.  Finally, it appeared he has hit the last huge waves.  The storm continued on with the rain and thunder, but the waves seemed to settle down, for now.  Bobbery patted the steering wheel.
“I knew we’d get through it Charlette.  You were with me the whole time.”  Suddenly, he spotted another ship up ahead.  Bobbery squinted to take a look at it, and brought out his telescope.  From the looks of it, the mysterious ship was coming his way.  â€œHmmm…” he said, “Could it be?”  As he continued to watch the dark ship grow ever closer, he noticed that they began raising a flag.  A black flag, that is.  â€œPirates,” the old Bomb-Omb said as he spotted the grim skeleton of the Jolly Roger posted on the flag, “just as I suspected.”  Bobbery put away his telescope, realizing that the ship wasn’t as close as he thought it was.  They still had time to get ready.  Bobbery rushed down into the cabin.  â€œBad news everyone,” he said, “We’ve got pirates coming at us.”
“Pirates?” Goombella said, “Sounds exciting!”
“Yes, well, we’re going to most likely have to fight them off.  Is that alright with you Mario ol’ boy?” Bobbery asked.  Mario nodded.
“Of course!” he replied.  It had been quite a while since Mario had seen any action.
“Alright,” Bobbery said as thunder bellowed and lighting struck, “I’ll meet you up here, on the deck.”  He closed the cabin door.  Goombella began carefully packing away Frankly’s scrolls in her backpack.  Mario turned up the desks and straightened the beds.  He would pick up all the books later.  Goombella and Mario exited the cabin, heading upstairs onto the ship’s deck.  Bobbery could be seen bringing out a large black cannon.  â€œThis could come in handy,” he said as he loaded it with a large cannon ball.
“Uh, Admiral Bobbery,” Goombella said as she looked out at the pirate ship through her binoculars, “I think they have one of those too…”
“What?…” he asked.  Suddenly, there was a loud explosion from across the sea.
“INCOMING BULLET BILLS!” she yelled as she and Mario jumped to the side just in time.  To bullet bills had rammed into the S.S. Charlette, blowing a huge hole through it!  Bobbery was stunned.
“They blew a hole through my ship!” he cried as he lit up the cannon.  It sizzled for a bit as he and the others took cover, then BOOM!!!  A canon ball crashed into the pirate ship.  â€œBull’s eyes!  Mario, you keep firing!  I got to move ol’ Charlette out of the way,” Bobbery said, throwing a box of matches at Mario, who caught it.  Mario nodded as he rushed over to the canon.
“Hurry Mario,” Goombella said, continuing to look at the enemy ship through binoculars, “they’re loading up their canon!” Mario quickly loaded the canon with another canon ball as the S.S. Charlette began sailing once more.  Mario lit the match, but was too late.  BOOM!  BOOM!  They had fired two bullet bills this time.  One of them whistled loudly over Goombella’s head, the other smashing into the stern of the ship.  Mario quickly lit the canon once more.  BOOM!  A canon ball hit the pirate ship again, right at the bottom of their ship!  â€œYes!  Good aiming on that one!” Goombella cried, “You sprung a leak in their ship!”  Mario readied the canon once more, and prepared to fire.  â€œWait!” Goombella cried, as Mario lit the match, “One of them is holding up a white flag, apparently they surrender!
“I wouldn’t trust those no-good, lying pirates if I were you ol’ boy,” Bobbery said.
“I think they mean it!” Goombella said.
“Hmmm…Fine.  Hold your fire.”  The pirates were now growing extremely close, but quite slowly.  Their ship began slowly sinking into the deep.  Bobbery glared at the ship.  It was now far too close for comfort.  Mario too wondered if they simply had to pass them by to get where they were going, or if they had a robbery in mind.  Mario was almost positive he knew.  Where would they go with a sinking pirate ship?  The two ships were now side by side.  The S.S. Charlette and the black pirate ship with the name “Bloody Blade” written across the side.  Goombella was feeling very uneasy.  Why didn’t they just leave?  They DID surrender after all.  Suddenly, three pirates swung by ropes over to the S.S. Charlette!  â€œGet off my ship!” Bobbery cried, “Get off you bloody pirates, or I’ll have my first mate blow another hole though your ship!”  The pirates consisted of an orange-shelled Koopa with a bandana to match his shell, a pitch black Bomb-Omb with a dusty old eye path and a red bandana, and a Boo who had a golden tooth and a blue bandana.
“Take it easy old bomb!” the Koopa said, “We’re only here to…borrow something.”
“You surrendered!” Goombella cried, “A good pirate would leave us alone after that!”  The pirates laughed.
“Well, my pretty little Goomba,” the Koopa pirate said, “we aren’t good pirates.”

Edited by - The Blue Toad on 6/18/2005 10:38:01 PM
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #7 on: June 19, 2005, 04:17:24 PM »
Chapter 6: Held Captive On Your Own Ship ~ Goombella backed away from the terrible pirates, glaring at the Koopa.  Mario got in his fighting pose, as Bobbery was beggining to spark.
"I'm telling you, you better get off my ship and sink down in to the fowlest part of the sea!" Bobbery said.  The Koopa merely laughed.
"Tough bomb, are we?  Well, just let me introduce myself, be a gentleman."
"You can go be a gentleman in Davey Jone's locker!  Now go!" Bobbery looked him right in the eye.  The pirate seemed to ignore the old Bomb-Omb and continue with his introduction.
"I'm Kooparow.  The toughest pirate ever to sail the six seas!"
"There's seven you idiot-"
"Don't interupt me!" Kooparow said loudly.
"I'll interupt you as much as I want on MY ship!" Bobbery cried.
"Now, now Mr...."
"...I'm not tellin' you my name!"
"Fine then, Mr. Smith.  Don't make me have my first mates Boogore and Bombfrey have to tie you up and make you walk the plank!"  Bobbery had had enough.  If there was anything Bobbery hated more then pirates, it was stubborn, no-good, cheating pirates.
"That's it!" he cried, his fuse lighting up, "Mario!  Goombella!  Lets take on these vermon!"  Bobbery dived at Kooparow, and exploded loudly.  Kooparow was smashed into the wall.
"No one does that to Kooparow!  The toughest pirate ever to sail the-" Goombella jumped up, and slamed her helmet to his head.  The basic headbonk.  Goombella looked satisfied as Kooparow became very dizzy and fell down.
"Ahhhh....BOOGORE....BOMBFREY!" he cried, "DO SOMETHING!"  The two first mates seemed a little scared.  Boogor, the golden-toothed boo snickered as he disappeared.  Bombfrey seemed confused, but quickly lit his fuse.  Bombfrey began chasing Goombella around the ship, ready to explode at any moment.
"Mario!" she cried, "Help!"  Mario grabbed hold of the Bomb-Omb, the hissing growing louder.  Mario saw that Bombfrey's fuse was almost to the end.  He quickly hurled Bombfrey into the air, and overboard into the sea.  The water splashed as Bombfrey fell, and then a muffle BOOM sounded as he exploded.  Kooparow tried to get up, but Bobbery punced on top of him.
"Oof!" Kooparow cried as he laid back down.
"Wait a tick," Bobbery said as he looked around, "where's that Boo lad?"  Goombella looked over the edge of the ship to try and sea if he was hiding around the boat.
"...I don't see him anywhere," she said.  Suddenly, something shoved Goombella into the ocean!  "AHHH!" she cried as a huge splash followed her fall.  Mario gasped. And peered over the ship.  There was a dreadful laugh of Boogore, yet he couldn't be seen.
"Goombella!" Mario cried, "Are you alright?"  The Goomba girl rised to the surface, spitting out water.
"Yeah," she replied, "but all these waves are going to take me away at any second!"  The waves were still feirce, but the rain had reduced to a sprinkle.  Mario grabbed the rope ladder and threw it over the side for the Goomba to climb up.  Suddenly, Mario too was shoved overboard!
"WAAHHH!" Mario cried as he splashed into the ocean to join Goombella.
"Oops!" the voice of Boogore rang out, "Man overboard!  Gwah ha ha ha ha ha!"  He was still invisible to Bobbery's frustration.  Suddenly, the rope ladder was pulled back up to the ship.  Boogore laughed terribly again.  "AH!" Goombella cried.
"What is it?" Mario asked.
"Something just nibbled at my foot."
"Could it be," Mario asked, "those terrible Nibbles?"  Nibbles were a type of fish the were popular in the oceans by Rougeport.  They were black, and had HUGE sharp teeth.
"I think so," said Goombella looking into the water and seeing a large black shadow swim under her.  Just then, Mario felt something bite his foot.
"Ah!" he cried, "Yes!  They are Nibbles!"  Goombella looked pale and scared.  The Nibbles could eat them!
"BOBBERY!" she cried, "HELP US!" Bobbery carefully stepped off Kooparow, laying an anchor over his shell, and rushed over to the side of the boat.
"Don't worry!" he cried down to them, "I'll throw back down the ladder!"  Bobbery grabbed the rope ladder and threw it down the side of the ship.  It was here that he waited, and listened.  Everything seemed quiet escept for the sound of rain on the boat and Mario and Goombella splashing their way to the ladder.  Suddenly he heard a strange, ghostly sound behind him, and a small chuckle.  Boogore was trying to shove Bobbery into the ocean too!  Bobbery lit his fuse as fast as he could, and just as Boogore was about to push the old sea bomb, Bobbery exploded.
"EEEEEEHHHHHHHHHHHH!" Boogore cried as he flew back, becoming visible again.
"Ah-ha!"  Bobbery cried.  But then he had realised something.  Boogore had removed the anchor from Kooparow while he wasn't looking!  Kooparow suddenly came spinning at Bobbery, and hit him right in the face!  Bobbery groaned as he fell to the floor.  Mario followed Goombella up the rope ladder.  They had made it just in time, too.  The Nibbles were now rising above the ocean and jumping to bight Mario.  Mario felt shivers up his spine as he watched the nasty fish show their pointed teeth.  Once Goombella had reached the top, Mario heard her scream loudly.
"Goombella?" Mario asked, stopping, now at the middle of the rope ladder.  There was no reply.  Mario slowly began climbing the ladder once more.  An eerie silence seemed to be waiting for him at the top.  As soon as he peeked over the ledge, the invisible Boogore grabbed Mario and threw him onto the ship, Kooparow then ramming into Mario, knocking him out.
"Ha!" Kooparow said as he dragged Mario into the cabin, locking the door.  "Now, where's the jail cell on this ship?"
"I think it's at the very bottom, sir," Boogore said.
"Very good," replied Kooparow, "you drag our hostages to the prison.  I'm going to try and fish out Bombfrey."
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #8 on: June 19, 2005, 04:54:50 PM »
Um...is anyone else going to read this?  Is anyone reading this but just doesn't want to say anything?....This story WILL get to the Excess Express, have no fear, I just wanted to put a little action into it first, that's all.  You know.  A little variety to spir things up.

Why don''t they just give the stupid rabbit some Trix?

Edited by - The Blue Toad on 6/19/2005 4:07:38 PM
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #9 on: June 19, 2005, 05:09:12 PM »
This is an enjjoyable book Blue Toad. You've put good plot twists into this book.

Mini-golf makes my putts look big!
Werid Fortune Cookies- Hard work pays off in the future. Laziness pays off now.

« Reply #10 on: June 20, 2005, 05:12:42 PM »
Thank you Tingrio.  Next chapter:

Chapter 7: Escape ~ Mario was unconcious at the bottom of the ship.  The prison was quite small, and it was very cold.  Mario felt an icey draft suddenly sweep over him.  He shivered as he slowly began coming to his senses.  As Mario slowly opened his eyes, he realised that his clothes were wet, and water was splashing on him every so often.  He looked to his right.  There was a huge hole right next to the jail cell, letting in cold air and splashes of water.  Mario sat, up but then quickly laid back down.  He was very lightheaded.  He then heard someone groan behind him.  Mario slowly turned his head to find Goombella, sprawled over the wood floor of the prison.  Bobbery was next to her, sitting up and leaning against the wall.
".....what happened?" Mario said as he managed to sit up a little.  Bobbery looked up from his pondering.
"Mario, ol' boy!  You're awake!"
"Yeah," Mario said, rubbing his head.  It was now all coming back to him.  The pirates, the storm, falling off the ship.  Mario shivered once more as cold wind rushed over his wet clothes.  That hole in the ship must have been from when the pirates started blasting bullet bills at them.
"Those nasty pirates...I can't believe they took over my ship.  But they'll never keep her, not as long as I'm around." Bobbery said, "I've been trying to think of an idea to escape this horrible place...in fact, Boogore is probably spying on us as we speak!"  Suddenly Goombella's eyes opened slightly.  She had a huge bruise on her head from Kooparow ramming into her.  Bobbery most likely did too, his was just hidden under his hat.  Mario felt his forehead to find a huge lump there as well.
"...Where are we?" Goombella said slowly.
"In my prison," Bobbery replied, "I never thought I'de see the day.  A sea-bomb locked inside his own prison.  Huh."  Goombella found her helmet laying next to her, and gently put it back on her head.
"Hey, Bobbery," Mario said, "Can't you simply blow through these bars?"
"Already tried that," the bomb replied, "It didn't work, and I got in trouble for trying it too.  Came down here and whacked me over the head, knocking me out."  Mario looked at the bars.  They were cracked now.
"Were they like that before?" Mario asked, pointing to the cracks.
"Hmmm?" Bobbery said as he looked at the bars, "No.  After I blew up, the bars cracked."
"Then, aren't they weaker now?  Can't you try again?"
"I could, lad," Bobbery said, "But I'm out of energy, and it would take two more blows to blow those things up.  I'm not a young Bomb-Omb any more.  Plus, those pirates will hear the noise and kncok us all out again!  I don't know if my head can take that."  Mario sighed.  "I'll try it later.  Once I've rested up a bit more."  Mario nodded.  Indeed, it looked as if Bobbery was about to fall asleep at any minute.  Goombella was now examinging the huge hole in the ship.
"Hey Mario," she said after a moment of silence, "Do you think we could escape through this hole?"  Mario walked over to where she was standing, and looked down.  There were Nibbles swimming side-by side with the ship, and there were no good ridges along the side of the ship that they could hang onto and climb to the top.
"That's very risky," Mario said, "I'm not sure it would work."  Goombella was about to suggest another idea, when suddenly they heard footsteps coming down the stairs and into the dungeon.  It was Bombfrey.  He looked quite angry, and very wet.
"Hey!  *sniff*  You three!" he said.  It was very obvious that he had a terrible cold from being in the cold ocean water so long.  "I need to *sniff* question you a bit!"  Bombfrey walked over to the bars of the jail cell, peering in at them.  He tried to hold back a sneeze several times.  Bobbery saw this, and strangely grew excited.  He seemed to be trying to signal something to Mario.  Mario had no idea what Bobbery was doing, so he simply shrugged.
"Questioning about what?" Goombella asked curiously.
"Questioning *sniff* for Bobbery, and Bobbery only *sniff*  Stay outta this Goomba girl!" Bombfrey said.  He sounded very stuffed up.  Goombella looked offended as she looked towards Bobbery.
"What is it, ou rat?" Bobbery asked, standing up.
"Sit down bomb!" Bombfrey said threateningly.  When Bobbery didn't sit down, Bombfrey continued any way.  "We pirates were just wondering if ye had any...you know...*sniff* secret stashes."
"Secret stashes?"
"Don't play dumb old bomb!" Bombfrey cried as he suddenly began sniffing loudly about to sneeze.  Bobbery walked away from the bars.  To his disappointment, Bombfrey did not sneeze and continued his questioning.  "Now, listen up!  *sniff*  I want you to tell me where any secret stashes are, or this little Goomba girl is gettin' it!" Bombfrey suddenly pulled out a pistol and aimed it at Goombella.  Goombella jumped and backed as far away as she could, until her feet were at the hole.
"Take it easy!" Bobbery cried, "No need to do something you'll regret, lad!"
"Tell me!" Bombfrey cried.  It was obvious he was getting a little too into the moment.  Suddenly, a huge blast of wind swept through the hole, covering everyone with icey cold wind.  Bombfrey sniffed uncomfortably, trying to hold back a sneeze.
"Fine I'll tell you..." Bobbery said, "...You do want me to tell you, right?"
"TELL ME NOW!" Bombfrey cried.  The pistol was making him feel very feirce and mean.  Suddenly another even larger blast of wind came through the hole.  Goombella sneezed and sneezed again.  Bombfrey felt a small tickle at his nose and he began to sniff, "Ahhhh," he said, as Bobbery rushed over to the back of the jail cell "Ahhhhhh...AHHHHHHHH.....CHU!!!" Bombfrey made such an explosion, the bars completely shattered!  They were now free!
"Yes!" Bobbery said, "I knew it!  Whenever a Bomb-Omb sneezes, they create the biggest explosion they possibly can!  It's extremelt dangerous to stand next to a Bomb-Omb with a cold.  Afterwards they'll suffer from extreme dizziness."  Bobbery pointed to Bombfrey who had dropped the pistol and was sitting on the floor in a daze.
"Great!" Goombella said, "Come on, lets go before the pirates come down!"  The three of them rushed past the unconcious Bomb-Omb pirate.  Mario and Goombella beganing running up the stairs to get out of the prison.
"No!" Bobbery called, "The pirates will be coming that way!  We're in no condition to fight!"
"Then where do we go?" Goombella asked, looking confused, "There's no other exit from the prison except for the stairs!"
"Goombella, I thought would out of any of us would know," Bobbery walked over to a nearvy bookcase, and grabbed from it a large brown book that was resting on the middle shelf.  As the book pulled away. the bookcase began opening like a door, reavealing the entry way to a tunnel, "nothing is as it seems."  Goombella gasped.
"Perfect!  A secret passage-way!"
"Yes, I know every secret on this ship.  We can easily outsmart those pirates!" Bobbery said.  Suddenly, they heard footstep coming from upstairs.  "Quickly!" he said, as Mario and Goombella rushed inside the secret tunnel.  Bobbery put the brown book back in it's proper place, and closed the bookcase just in time.  Kooparow and Boogore came running into the prison.  All they saw was  broken jail cell, and an unconcious Bomb-Omb.
"....Where are they?" Kooparow asked.
"I'm...not sure," Boogore replied, lookking dumb-founded, "How could they escape without going through the door up there?"  Kooparow looked at the huge hole in the jail cell.
"They couldn't be stupid enough to jump out that hole!......could they?" Kooparow said.  He walked through the huge hole now in the jail cell bars, and looked out the hole in the ship.  Nibbles jumped in and out of the sea as the ship sailed on.  Kooparow laughed.  "They must have!  Haha!  They must have panicked after hearing us coming, and jumped out this hole here!  Haha!  The IDiots!"
"Complete idiots, sir.  Good job."
"Well, I guess that means they're out of out hair!" Kooparow said, as he walked back out the jail cell and up the stairs with Boogore.
"......but you don't have any hair."
"Shut up Boogore."
"Yessir."
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #11 on: June 21, 2005, 02:25:20 PM »
Chapter 8: The Plan ~ The three friends quietly walked down the secret tunnel in the S.S. Charlette.  The path was lit by the faint glow of small torches hung at the wall a few feet from the next.  Mario followed Goombella and Bobbery, continuly looking back to make sure the pirates didn't somehow discover thier secret.  Bobbery stopped in his tracks, as did Mario and Goombella.
"Shhhhh," he whispered as he looked up at the ceiling.  There was the sound of footsteps on the floor above them, and they could faintly hear te voice of Kooparow talking to Boogore.  They were now revieved to know that their secret was safe, but also very catious so that the pirates wouldn't hear them.  The torches now shown upon a small flight of stairs up ahead, that lead to a small wooden door.  Bobbery signaled them to be very quiet as he opened the door.  In front of this door was what appeared to be another door with on handle.
"This is the backside of a bookcase in the cabin," Bobbery said, "It's like another secret entrance."  Mario remembered that last time the bookcases had been knocked down because of the storm.  The remembered seeing a strange, rather small patch of wood where the bookcase once was, but didn't think any thing of it.  Apparently it could only be opened from the inside.  Good thing the pirates had put the bookcases up.  Mario was going to save that chore for later.  Bobbery slowly and quietly knocked twice on the backside of the bookshelf.  A peice of wood jutted from the bookcase, revealing a sqarue hole.  Now they could see a row of books covering the hole.  Mario watched as Bobbery slowly pushed the books part way aside, so that he could peer into the cabin.  Bobbery kept his eye to the peekhole for quite a while.
"What do you see?" Goombella whispered quietly.
"All I see," Bobbery replied in a whisper, "Is Bombfrey.  Laying on a bed, sleeping."
"Is that it?" Goombella asked, a little louder.
"Yes," Bobbery replied, "I think it's safe enough."  Bobbery said, jamming the square peice of wood back in the peek hole.
"Safe enough for what?" Goombella asked.  Bobbery grinned.
"Safe enough to have our sneak attack go as we plan," he replied.  "Now.  I am going to open this bookcase, like a doorway you see.  Then we are all going to sneak past that snoring sea-bomb, and make our way up to the top deck."  Goombella looked nervous, yet very excited.  She then realised something.
"But, what if the pirates are ON the top deck?" she asked.
"Well," Bobbery replied, "I guess we're just going to have to hope that they aren't."
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #12 on: June 23, 2005, 10:29:28 PM »
Sorry, TBT, I wasn't on the computer for a few days (Kirby: Canvas Curse was the reason). I'm reading your story again now, though.

EDIT: No offense or anything, but I didn't understand what Bobbery said right before he revealed the secret passage behind the bookcase in the chapter before the last. Could you maybe rephrase it?



Ever notice how the name "Playstation" sounds more kiddy than "Gamecube" or "Nintendo 64"?

Edited by - smfan1085 on 6/24/2005 9:04:39 PM

GEIANDGIRLCO DIRECT - The Sensitive Alternative

« Reply #13 on: June 26, 2005, 03:20:40 PM »
Yeah, I was thinking if that would be too weird to understand.  What Bobbery is saying is: "Goombella, out of all of us I thought you would know that nothing is as it seems."  Only there is a space in the middle where he reveals the secret entrance.  So it's like:  "Goombella, out of all of us I thought you would know *opens bookcase* nothing is as it seems."

Chapter 9: Taking Back The Ship ~ Bobbery began telling them what to do as soon as they entered the cabin, to clear things up so they wouldn't have to talk.  They were to all brag the bookcase into the center of the room.  They would then climb to the top of the bookcase where they could reach the ceiling.  They were find a trap door at the ceiling, push it open, and make their way onto the top deck.  Bobbery grew into a quiet whisper as he talked.
"Now I'm going to open the bookcase," he said quietly, "on the count of three...one..two...three."  Bobbery gently began pushin the bookcase aside.  It quietly slid across the cabin floor.  Once the bookcase was completely out of the way, the cabin was revealed.  Bobbery tip toed inside, Goombella and Mario close behind.  Goombella kept in eye on Bombfrey who was snoring soundly in a bed.  Bobbery signaled them to a bookcase that was located next to the secret entrance.  They all nodded as the three began slowly pushing it to wherever Bobbery thought necassary.  Mario tried his hardest to move the large bookcase.  It really was quite heavy.  He noticed Goombella struggling in the front.  Suddenly, two books fell to the ground with a hud.  Goombella's eyes widened as she turned to Bombfrey.  Luckily, he was still fast asleep.  Goombella was going to try and put the books in their proper place, but Bobbery shook his head and mouthed the words: "Just leave them".  Goombella nodded as they continued there way.  Finally, they had draggged it right in the middle of the cabin.  If the pirates found them now, they were surely in deep trouble.  Bobbery began taking off some of the books and carefully setting them down on the floor.  There were now gaps between the rows, a clever idea to make sure they could climb to the top relatively easily.  Bobbery went first, then Goombella, and Mario last.  They made it to the top where the bookcase began creeking under the weight of all three of them.  Bobbery quickly found a spot on the ceiling directly above them, and pushed.  A square trap door opened up, revealing sunlight.  Mario, being the tallest one there, had to look outside the door, and onto the deck to make sure the coast was clear before they began their attack.  Mario carefully looked through.  Right in front of him, he found the boots of Kooparow!  Mario was about to quickly close the lid, when he found that Kooparow's back was facing him, and the pirate koopa had not discovered him.  Mario signaled to Bobbery that there was someone right in front of him.
"Pull him down!" Bobbery whispered so quietly Mario could barely hear him.  Mario had a confused look on his face.  Bobbery made a motion that looked as if he were yanking a bell rope.  He was obviously signaling Mario to pull Kooparow into the cabin.  Goombella seemed a little unsure.  MArio shrugged and looked back through the trap door.  He was still standing there.  Acting quickly, Mario grabbed Kooparow by the ankles and silently pulled him down on top of the bookcase with them!  MArio's hand clamped over his mouth.
"Mmmph!!!  MMMPH!!!" Kooparow tried screaming, though it only sounded like muffled screams from under Mario's glove. Eyes wide and pale of shock, Kooparow tried to break free of MArio's grasp.  Bobbery quickly stomped on Kooparow, hitting him right in the head and knocking him out.  The strange muffled sounds came to a stop.  The bookcase was now creeking dangerously and they all decided to quickly get down before it broke.  Bobbery quickly tied Kooparow to a chair, shoving a sock in his mouth in case he woke up.  Bombfrey was still sound asleep.  Bobbery was planning to do the same with Bombfrey.
"Okay," Bobbery said, "He's going to wake up, and then, Goombella, you punce on him and knock him out.  We'll tie him so that he's dangling out the window."  Bobbery was thinking ahead.  If Bobbery woke up tied to a chair, he wouldn't think twice before exploding the chair into peices and breaking free!  Dangling him out the window by a rope insured him that if he was to blow up, he would snap the rope and go swimming with the Nibbles.  Bobbery jumped on Bombfrey so that he could not move, expecting him to wake up.  But, no.  Bombfrey was still sound asleep.  Bobbery looked confused.  "...he's still sleeping," he said, "...alright.  We'll tie him up while he's asleep.  Goombella, the rope."  Goombella handed bobbery the rope as he tied the snoring bomb-omb up.  Bobbery quickly made his way through the secret entrance back down to the dungeon, where he then tied on end of the rope to a non-broken steel bar, and the end with the sleeping Bombfrey on it, dangling outside the huge hole.  Surprisingly, the splahing sea water and cold wind still did not wake him.  Bobbery walked back up to the cabin to meet with Goombella and Mario.
"Plan's going good so far!" Goombella said as she headbonked Kooparow again, just in case.
"Yes, very good," Mario replied.
"Now we only have one to go," said Bobbery as he looked to the door of the cabin, "Boogore."
"Lets do it!" Goombella said as they began making the next plan.
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #14 on: June 26, 2005, 08:31:35 PM »
OK, I understand that part now. But one thing that confused me is that there appears to be a "would" in place of a "you" there.

I hope I am not being annoying.

Edited by - smfan1085 on 6/26/2005 7:35:13 PM
GEIANDGIRLCO DIRECT - The Sensitive Alternative

« Reply #15 on: June 26, 2005, 08:45:30 PM »
Ah, yes.  I see now.  I guess I tend to type a little too fast and miss most of the spelling (and grammar).
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #16 on: June 30, 2005, 02:06:40 PM »
Chapter 10: Arrival ~ Boogore looked out to sea from the crow's nest, breathing in the fresh, salty air.  Everything seemed so peaceful and quiet lately.  Kooparow had not yelled at him for a while now, and he couldn't help but wonder where the koopa was.  But, Boogore stuck to his orders and remained at the crow's nest with his telescope at hand.  There was not a cloud in the sky, and the sun shone warmly down upon the sea.  The gentle sway of the boat became like a soothing lullaby to Boogore.  He put down the telescope with a loud yawn, and slowly fell asleep.  Mario, Bobbery, and Goombella quietly snuck out from the trap door and onto the top deck.  They were expecting to see the dastardly Boo floating around below, but they saw nothing.
"Where is he?" Goombella whispered urgently.  Bobbery squinted his eyes, looking from left to right.  "Could he be invisible again?"
"I'm not sure," Bobbery replied, "Come on, follow me."  Mario and Goombella cautiously followed Bobbery down the stairs, making their way to the main deck.  They could find no sign of a ghost.  Just then Mario heard something.  Someone was snoring.
"Listen!" Mario said, pointing upwards.  Everyone became silent as they listened for any sound.  Indeed, the sound of snoring could be heard from the crow's nest.
"He's up there!" Bobbery said, looking up, "Well...This puts a bit of a turn on our plan...but we can still do this!"  Bobbery began telling Mario and Goombella what the plans were.  "It's simple.  We simply climb up to the top, knock him out quickly, and tie him up where we can see him."
"You're sure it will work?"
"...Pretty sure, Goombella.  Lets give it a try."  Mario nodded.  Slowly, he began climbing the loose rope ladder up to the crow's nest, followed by Goombella and Bobbery.  The snoring became louder as he climbed higher and higher, reaching the top.  Mario slowly peered over the side of the crow's nest.  There, lying on the base was Boogore.  He was sleeping very soundly, and this could end up being quite easy.  Mario signaled the other two to climb faster.  Bobbery and Goombella slowly peered over as well.
"Alright," Bobbery whispered, "On the count of three.....one....two.."
"THREE!" Boogore cried.  The sleeping Boo had suddenly woken up, shoving all three of them back down to the ship.  Goombella screamed as she hit the bottom, luckily, her helmet protected her from what might have been a very tragic accident.  Mario hit the bottom with a loud thud, pain running through his entire body.  Mario tried to quickly get up, his back searing in pain.  The terrible laughed of Boogore could be heard; now floating around invisibly at their level of the ship.  Goombella and Bobbery got up, looking around for the dreaded ghost.  There was a silence for a while, in which Bobbery was about to say something.  Suddenly, Bobbery was lifted out of the air, and thrown straight into the door of the cabin.  Bobbery groaned as he slid to the floor.  Goombella gasped as she rushed next to Mario.  There was another high-pitched laugh as Mario saw Goombella out of the corner of his eye, float into the air.  Goombella screamed as she was thrown right next to Bobbery.  Goombella didn't get up this time, her ponytail covering her unconscious face.  Mario now knew what Boogore was planning to do to him, and he was ready.  After a short while, Boogore laughed hideously once more, and as soon as Mario felt someone grab onto his trouser straps, he reached out in front of him and grabbed Boogore!  Boogore gasped as he became visible in Mario's grasp.  Mario spun around over and over again, causing Boogore to become very dizzy.  Then, he let go, sending the ghost flying to the cabin door, hitting it hardest of all.  Boogore didn't even groan.  He was out cold.

"That's right!  Put your backs in to it!" Bobbery cried at the three pirates as they began mending up the ship.  They were all very busy trying to cover up the hole they had made.  All were tired and out of energy.  Boogore could only go invisible for a second, and if Bombfrey exploded he would surely faint.  Mario kept an eye on them as well, in case they tried something unexpected.  "Yes, I rather like this better then just leaving them tied up.  Come on Kooparow!  You can do better then that!  Honestly Bombfrey!  You call that symmetrical?  Notice the pattern!"  Bobbery cried, ordering around the pirates.
"Mario!" cried Goombella from the top of the stairs, "We're here!  We're in Keelhaul Key!"  Mario sighed of relief.  It was about time!  He followed Goombella to the main deck.  Indeed, they were now only inches away from the Keelhaul Key dock.  Bobbery ordered the pirates to be locked up in his other jail cell (the one that wasn't broken) and warned them of what would happen if they even thought of escaping.  The pirates all seemed too exhausted to do anything at the moment, and simply laid down pathetically as they were locked in.  Bobbery put out anchor at the dock, making sure the S.S. Charlotte wouldn't float away.
"You two go ahead," he said, "I'm gonna make sure those pirates stay put."
"Alright," said Goombella as she followed Mario onto the dock, "We'll be back in a little bit!"  Goombella and Mario walked across the tropical, green island of Keelhaul Key.  It was just as Mario had remembered it.  Palm trees everywhere, mysterious caves.  Good times.  Good times.  They found themselves in what looked like a campground.  Tents were set up at the beach, a fire was burning with a kettle hanging over it, and Puh-Patch, a husky bomb-omb, was lazily staring out to sea, drinking a chuckola cola.  Puh-Patch suddenly looked over noticing Mario.
"Capn'!  Is tha' you?" he said, throwing his chuckola cola aside.  Mario waved.  "  Long time no see!  Wha' are you doin' 'ere?" he asked, "Not off on anotha adventure are ye'?"
"Actually, I am," Mario replied, "We're looking for a guy named Don Pianta.  Have you heard of him?"
"'Eard off 'im?" Puh-Patch said, "He practically owns the place now!"  Somehow that didn't surprise Mario.  Don Pianta always had seemed to have a tendency to want to be in charge (even if he is retired).
"Could you tell us where he is?" Goombella asked, "We need to get train tickets from him."
"Train Tickets?  Well, that'll be hard ter get, but if you're willin' ter try I guess I could tell ya.  You can find him over by the pond, yer know, right outside 'ere.  He seems ter like fishin'," Puh-Patch said as he pointed to his left at what looked like an entry way into a jungle.
"Thank you," Mario said, waving goodbye and heading in to the jungle.

Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #17 on: July 01, 2005, 12:01:23 PM »
Chapter 11:  The Don ~ Mario ducked under low hanging vines, and enormous tropical leaves.  The sound of exotic birds could be heard far above their heads.  Goombella quickly tried to keep up with Mario, stumbling over roots every once in a while.  Mario shoved plants and bugs out of their way, making a sort of path for them to get through.
“How much farther?” Goombella asked as she swatted a bug out of her face.  Mario picked up the pace through the dense jungle, hoping to hear signs of Don Pianta.
“Not much, I hope,” he replied.  To be honest, Mario wasn’t even sure he was headed in the right direction.  Suddenly, he stumbled out of the trees, and into a small clearing.  In the center of this clearing there was a small, dark blue pond.  Don Pianta was sitting on a rock next to it, holding a fishing rod, its line in the water.  To his right was a bucket filled with fish, and to his left was an even bigger bucket with a large rock covering the lid.  Don Pianta looked behind him; ready to ward off whomever it was that disturbed his fishing.  After a couple of short glances, Don Pianta realized who it was.
“Mario?” he said, “Is that you?”  Mario nodded as Goombella came stumbling out of the jungle behind him.  â€œWhat are you doin’ here?  Can’t a man have a relaxing vacation without someone disturbin’ him everywhere he goes?”
“We are very sorry to interrupt you, Mr. Pianta,” Goombella said unexpectedly, “but Mario and I desperately need four tickets to the Excess Express.”  Don Pianta looked at her as if this was some sort of joke that he didn’t find funny.
“You came all this way from Rougeport and expect me to just hand over four train tickets, just cuz you asked.”  Goombella seemed to be having a hard time trying to make words.
“Remember all the favors I’ve done for you?” Mario asked, “I got your daughter, brought back Frankie, and helped settle things between you and them.”
“Yes,” Don Pianta said, “AND you inspired me to retire.  The worst move I ever made.  I hate it.”  Don Pianta reached into his jacket pocket and pulled out a fat cigar.  He lit it and stuck it in his mouth.  â€œListen up, kid,” he said.  â€œIf you do me another favor, I might just think of givin’ you these four tickets.”
“Name it,” Mario replied, confident that whatever it was he could get it done.
“I lost by favorite pair o’ sunglasses yesterday.  I was bored, and I decided to explore one o’ them caves they got here.  I wondered pretty far in, and ended up coming back out without my sunglasses.  I dunno how it happened; they must have just fallen off when I…er…stumbled a bit in the dark.  If you go into that cave and bring me back my favorite pair of sunglasses, then I will give you those four Excess Express train tickets….do we gotta deal?” Mario nodded.  â€œExcellent.  Now go on.  You’ll find the cave by just going straight over there,” Don Pianta pointed left, taking out his cigar and letting a fog of smoke surround him.  Mario nodded once more and made his way through another part of the jungle, this time to find a pair of sunglasses.  The jungle was even denser this way, and Goombella sighed as she struggled to keep up once more.  Mario knew this wasn’t going to be easy.  It seems like he can never get something without getting something else for someone.  That’s just how the world works, I guess.  After a while of traveling through the tropical jungle, crossing bridges and taking detours, they found the cave.  It was quite dark inside, and looked deep.
“Don’t worry,” Goombella said, “I’ve got us covered.”  Goombella tapped the small light in the front of her helmet.  It turned on, shining a bright light that would help guide them in the cave.  Mario and Goombella began their journey into the dark, keeping their eyes open for any sign of sunglasses, or anything that looked valuable.
“…It’s strange,” Goombella said.  â€œWe haven’t seen any form of life in this cave.  I thought for sure we would’ve seen at least a – *gasp*” She stopped, Mario doing the same.  Right in front of them was a huge group of tiny black Fuzzies, all gathered around what appeared to be a skeleton of a koopa.  Goombella quickly tried to turn off her light, but it was too late.  The Fuzzies all noticed them and began jumping up and down in excitement.  Mario got in his fighting position, Goombella doing the same.  The Fuzzies dived at Mario and Goombella, almost as if they formed a giant wave of blackness.  Mario felt the life literally being sucked out of him.  Mario fell to the cold cave ground, but quickly got up.  He brought out his hammer, and began swinging it left and right, hitting Fuzzies away as if they were flies.  They kept coming back.  Goombella was having quite a hard time.  She tried kicking, and head bonked a few, but it didn’t seem to be working that well.  Mario squashed one into nothing with his hammer.  All of them gasped and began attacking even harder.  Squash!   Squash!  Squash!   There were too many.  Just than, as Mario squashed four at once, he saw one Fuzzie holding what appeared to be a pair of sunglasses.
“I found them!” Mario cried over the loud commotion of the Fuzzies.  Mario hammered his way through the crowd of Fuzzies, trying to get to the one with the sunglasses.  He was almost there, just inches away.  Suddenly, all the Fuzzies stopped jumping.  The ground below them began shaking.  Mario was confused.  He looked over to find Goombella was too.  The shaking slowly became stronger and stronger.  Rocks on the ground moved, as bats began flying away.  The Fuzzies began shaking as well, Mario and Goombella soon after.  The shaking suddenly stopped.  It was silent.  Suddenly, a huge Piranha Plant burst up from the rocky ground!  It quickly ate a few of the Fuzzies, including the one that was holding the sunglasses!  Mario and Goombella gasped.  The Fuzzies quickly ran away, hiding in crevices and cracks.  The giant Piranha plant roared loudly, it’s jagged, pointed teeth showing.  Mario then saw something.  Stuck in the Piranha Plant’s teeth were the sunglasses.  Luckily, it had not been able to swallow them, as it did the Fuzzies.
“Come on!” Mario cried, “The sunglasses are stuck in its teeth!  We can still get them!”  Goombella nodded as the Piranha Plant continued roaring angrily.  Mario looked hard at the Piranha plant, and quickly took out his hammer.
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #18 on: July 01, 2005, 05:28:45 PM »
Um...okay, are only two people reading this?


"Lord Bowser, do you like egg salad?" ~ Kammy Koopa - Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #19 on: July 01, 2005, 08:56:53 PM »
Chapter 12:  Train Tickets ~ Mario quickly jumped out of the way as the putrid piranha plant dived at Mario.  Mario rolled on the stone ground, getting back up and grabbing his hammer.  The piranha plant roared once more as it began nipping at Mario, trying as hard as it could to bight him.  Goombella watched in horror.  She quickly snapped out of it, and decided to fight.  Goombella lunged into the air, smashing her helmet into the piranha plant (which also caused her light to go out, making it pitch dark for the piranha plant to bight Mario before the light came back on).  The plant was completely unharmed.  It didn’t even seem to notice her.  Mario tried hitting the beast with his hammer.  There was a loud THUD as it smashed into it, but it didn’t seem to really notice.  Mario was confused.  Was this thing invincible?  He dived out of the way again as the piranha plant lunged at him.
“Goombella!” Mario cried as he dodged another one of the plant’s blows, “What am I supposed to do?”
“Uh…” Goombella said, as she quickly took out a book from her backpack, “Hold on!  I’ll try to find information on it!”  Goombella flipped through the pages of her book, trying to find the piranha plant.  She quickly searched, looking up at the putrid plant and then down at the picture to see if it was a match.
“Hurry!” Mario cried, blocking another blow from the plant with his hammer.
“Here!” Goombella said as she finally found the right page, “The Giant Putrid Piranha Plant.  The strongest specimen of the piranha plant..…Ability to poison victims (Mario had wondered what that strange green liquid the plant was squirting from its mouth was)…..Only found in dark, damp places…..Rated 9 in the danger scale…..Weakness:  When finding yourself face to face with a Giant Putrid Piranha, it is always best to aim for the lowest part of the stem!  Mario!  Aim for its stem!”  Mario heard Goombella and quickly dived at the lowest part of the stem, just as it was lunging at him.  Mario smashed it with his hammer.  The Giant Putrid Piranha Plant squealed loudly, allowing Mario to get back to a safer distant.  The Piranha Plant hissed, squirting more green liquid at them.  Goombella gasped as she quickly jumped over it.  It lunged at Goombella this time.  Goombella screamed as Mario blocked the blow with his hammer, circling inward and hitting the Piranha Plant’s stem once more.  It squealed even louder.  Just then, it made an unexpected dive at Mario, catching his foot.  It swung Mario around and around, and hurled him into the wall!  Mario groaned.  His vision was blurry, but he could see the Piranha Plant about to make its finishing blow.  Mario acted quickly.  He grabbed his hammer, and threw it at the plant, hitting it in the stem.  It squealed, giving Mario time to get up, grab his hammer, and hit it again!  The Giant Putrid Piranha Plant seemed to have had enough.  With a final shriek, it toppled over, almost landing on Goombella.  Green drool flowed from its mouth.  It was out cold.  Mario slowly approached it, and bent down to look in its mouth.  Being very careful, he reached in and quickly yanked the shining pair of sunglasses from its jagged teeth.
“Got it,” Mario said, showing Goombella the sunglasses.
“Good,” Goombella replied, putting her book away, “Now lets get outta here before those Fuzzies show up…or that thing wakes up.”  Goombella made a disgusted look at the Giant Putrid Piranha plant, and quickly led the way out of the dark cave.

Mario and Goombella found it a little easier getting out from the dense jungle this time, considering they had already sort of made a path the last time they went down that way.  They returned to Don Pianta, who still seemed to be fishing.  As they entered, Don Pianta turned to look at them.
“Did you get my sunglasses?” he asked shortly, not noticing that a fish had nibbled at his bait and swam off with it.
“Yeah,” Mario replied, out of breath, “Here you go.”  Mario reached into his pocket and pulled out the pair of sunglasses.  Looking at them, he noticed that they weren’t any different from the ones Don Pianta was wearing already.  Mario didn’t think too much into it, and handed the Pianta his glasses.  Don Pianta took them, and quickly examined it.  He had an unsatisfied look on his face.
“What is this?” he asked, pointing to two large scratch marks on the lens of his sunglasses.  Those must have gotten there from the piranha plant.  Mario sighed.  â€œDid you do this?”
“No,” Mario said quickly, “it was inside the...mouth….oh, forget it.”  Don Pianta gazed at the scratched up sunglasses once more.
“Well, I guess I won’t be needing these anymore.”  And with that, Don Pianta took the heavy rock off from the large bucket next to him.  Inside was a large Nibbles.  â€œI guess my pet, here, could use some feeding.”  Don Pianta tossed the sunglasses into the bucket, the Nibbles quickly devouring them.  Mario gaped at the huge black fish.  He shook it off and said,
“Anyway, Don Pianta, what about my four train tickets?”  He asked.
“Wha?” Don Pianta said, “Oh yeah.  Normally, I would blame you for those scratches on my shades, there…but I like you Mario.  You’re a good man.  Here are your four train tickets.”  Don Pianta reached inside his coat and pulled out four blue tickets.  Mario gratefully took them, thanking Don Pianta.  â€œYeah, yeah.  Now get outta here.  You’re ruining my retirement.”

It was back on the S.S. Charlette once more.  After saying goodbye to all their old friends on Keelhaul Key, Mario, Goombella, Bobbery (and the three pirates, to be exact) set off for Rougeport.  Going back was a lot better then getting there.  There were no storms, no pirates, just a good wind for sailing and a dark, starry night.  Mario lay back on the top deck, listening to the waves and counting the stars.  Goombella and Bobbery could be heard talking about the whereabouts, and what it was like devoting yourself to the sea.  Apparently, Bobbery loved it, and wouldn’t have it any other way.  The pirates weren’t doing so well.  They could be heard complaining a lot, but the good news is, they completely repaired the ship!  The S.S. Charlette was back to the way it was supposed to be.  Mario couldn’t help of think what was next to come.  The murder mystery on the train.  The death of Professor Frankly.  Who would do such a thing?  Mario really missed the old Goomba.  If he was still living, Mario was almost positive that he would have gone on the voyage with him.  Then again, if Professor Frankly were still living, Mario wouldn’t even be here in the first place.  Then Mario thought of Toadsworth and Peach.  He felt ashamed of not telling them before he left.  He could only imagine what they were doing.  Since they had a bit of a delay, the Excess Express was most likely already here by now.  True, it was very bad luck, but the excitement of the short voyage was almost worth it.


"Lord Bowser, do you like egg salad?" ~ Kammy Koopa - Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #20 on: July 02, 2005, 09:20:56 PM »
Good! This story's not dead!

Ever notice how the name "Playstation" sounds more kiddy than "Gamecube" or "Nintendo 64"?
GEIANDGIRLCO DIRECT - The Sensitive Alternative

« Reply #21 on: July 10, 2005, 04:06:58 PM »
No story of mine will die!…except for The Story Of The Blue Toad, but that story is long gone now.

Chapter 13:  All Aboard the Excess Express ~ Mario watched the great blue sea from the bow of the S.S. Charlette.  Up ahead he could see Rougeport, with its tall brick walls, and enormous blimp soaring above.  The waves splashed against the ship and the seagulls called, the sun was setting, and they were getting tired.  The darkening sky was gentle on Mario’s eyes, as he stared off in daydream.  He dreaded hearing what Toadsworth would say to him, but knew he would have to endure it, and gave up worrying.  Goombella was sitting on the main deck, going over Frankly’s scrolls and parchment, her eyes quickly scrolling across the old torn up papers.  Bobbery was sailing the ship happily, breathing in the fresh air that made him feel at home.  The journey back to Rougeport was very peaceful, and although Mario wished to go to sleep after the long day, he stayed awake knowing that they would be to the city of Rougeport soon, and the train would surely be waiting there.  He felt a bit guilty coming home so delayed, but as he reached in his pocket feeling the four tickets, he knew that he didn’t regret going.  He could just imagine how embarrassing it would be to confront the conductor, hoping to get on the train only to find he didn’t have a single ticket.  Mario thought of the Excess Express and what it soon had to offer him.  The warm boxcars, the delicious food, and the fabulous service.  It was all so welcoming.  There were exactly 8 rooms.  The first two were located in the front boxcar, right next to the train engine.  It was decorated in green and gold, and only suited the classiest guests.  The next boxcar held numbers 3, 4, and 5.  It was decorated in brown and red, providing a warmer, homier feeling.  Next to that boxcar was the dining room.  As he remembered it, it was beautifully decorated, a delicious smell pouring into the room.  Next to the dining room (in the same boxcar) was the kitchen where Chef Shimi would prepare the excellent dishes.  And next to the kitchen, was a small shop run by a Toad.  It is full of small souvenirs and knick-knacks.  The boxcar after that is the one that holds the numbers 6, 7, and 8.  It is decorated in blue and brown, a rather good combination.  In this boxcar, at the end of the hall, is the conductor.  He is there to provide any service to the guests, and to keep them from wondering around in the storage area.  Mario brought his ticket out from his pocket.  It read room #5.  He stayed in that very room the last time he was there.  Mario could remember falling asleep in the comfortable beds, listening to the sound of the train on the tracks.  Just then, something hit him.  How was he going to fit four people into one room?  There was a bunk bed for him and Peach, and a small couch for Toadsworth, but what about Goombella?  Mario decided he had better figure this out soon, for he was now at the harbor in Rougeport.  Bobbery slowly guided the S.S. Charlette into the space between the docks, and dropped anchor.
“Here you are,” Bobbery said as he stepped away from the steering wheel, “Rougeport harbor!”  Goombella stood up, packing away the scrolls and pieces of parchment in her bag (which was already quite filled with books in the first place).
“Thank you Bobbery,” said Goombella, “are you sure you can’t come with us?”
“Oh, no, Goombella.  I have Charlette to take care of, and a couple of pirates to take care of as well,” said Bobbery, motioning to the cabin door.
“Oh yes, what are you planning on doing with them anyways?” she asked.
“I’m sending those three to jail, most defiantly.  I hear that in Peddleberg they’re using Hooktail’s Castle as a prison now!  It seems like an appropriate place for them,” Bobbery said, shifting his hat and looking out to sea.
“That’s good,” Goombella said, “tell Koops Mario and I say hello!”
“Will do.”  With that, Mario and Goombella stood on the dock watching as the S.S. Charlette sailed back off to sea.  Mario was sort of sad to see it go, thinking that that could be the last he would ever see of his old friend.  Mario waved goodbye, just as he heard the voice of Toadsworth behind him.
“Master Mario!  Master Mario!” he cried, running down the steps.  â€œThere you are!  Where have you been?”  Mario took out his tickets as Toadsworth approached.  The old Toad seemed to not even notice Goombella, standing right beside him.
“I’m sorry Toadsworth,” Mario said, “I just had to get the train tickets.”  Mario held out the Excess Express tickets for him to see.
“Tickets?…” he said, “Ah yes, very good Master Mario.  But why didn’t you tell us where you were?!?!  Do you know how worried the princess and I have been?”  Mario blushed slightly.
“I guess I sort of forgot.”
“Forgot to tell us that you were going on a two day voyage?  That is unheard of!”  Toadsworth look flustered, though he could tell that Mario was quite sorry, indeed.  Instead, he turned his attention to Goombella standing by his side.  â€œAnd who is this?” he asked.
“This is-“
“I’m Goombella,” Goombella interrupted, “I helped Mario to save the princess last time he was here.”  Toadsworth raised his spectacles.
“Ah, yes…I sort of remember,” Toadsworth said.
“She is going to be coming with us as well,” Mario said, showing Toadsworth that he had four tickets, “she was a very close friend of Professor Frankly…”  Toadsworth appeared to be silently thinking this over.
“Alright then.  She’s coming to.  Just hurry, Master Mario, the train has been here for nine hours, now, waiting for you!”  Mario felt a serge of guilt run over him as he quickly followed Toadsworth out of the harbor, Goombella close behind.
“Mario!”  Cried a sweet voice, as a pink someone suddenly hugged Mario as he passed a corner.  It was Princess Peach.  â€œI was worried sick!  Where were you?”  Mario opened his mouth only to hear Toadsworth say:
“I’ll explain later, princess, but now we must quickly get on the train!”  Toadsworth signaled Peach to follow him.  She reluctantly did as he said, wanting to know all about Mario’s short journey.  Eyes followed them as Mario, Toadsworth, Peach, and Goombella quickly made their way through the west side of town towards the Excess Express.  The entered the tunnel leading to the train, and appeared right next to it.  The magnificent Excess Express.  The engine was a shining black, a golden light shining from the very front.  It was decorated with golden stars, and looked completely high-class.  Behind it was a row of colorful boxcars.  Mario just imagined the people inside.  Waiting for nine hours, not able to leave on account they were all suspects.  The conductor was standing at the entry door, looking very tired as if he had been standing there all day.  As soon as he saw Mario, he leapt to his feet.  Mario stood in front of the other three, and held out his four train tickets.
“Excellent to finally see you, sir!” the conductor said as he checked over all of the tickets, “You are in room #5.  Please, enjoy your stay.”  Mario nodded with a small smile as he began to enter the train, “Oh, yeah,” the conductor quickly said as Mario stopped and turned around to look at him, “Detective Pennington will be waiting for you in the Dining Hall.  He said that he wanted to see you right away.”
“Alright,” Mario said, nodding.  He turned back around and headed inside.  Although he dearly wanted to head straight to his room and sleep, he would go into the Dining Hall to find the great, crime-solving penguin, Detective Pennington.


"Lord Bowser, do you like egg salad?" ~ Kammy Koopa - Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #22 on: July 11, 2005, 01:31:43 AM »
Ah....I feel so peaceful in the Story Boards.....just writing simple little stories......nice and quiet, not like in the General Chats and stuff where every topic is looked at and judged critically!

Edited by - The Blue Toad on 7/11/2005 12:32:31 AM
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #23 on: July 13, 2005, 03:46:40 PM »
Chapter 14:  Detective Mario ~ The train was just how Mario remembered it.  Classy chandeliers hanging from the wall, expensive looking vases filled with flowers, and the most welcoming atmosphere.  Mario and Goombella had been on the Excess Express before, and knew what to expect, but Peach and Toadsworth were simply ecstatic about the train.
“Beautiful décor!” Peach would say.
“Fabulous craftsmanship!” Toadsworth exclaimed, examining the architecture.  Mario told them to follow him as he made his way down the hall of the first boxcar.  He opened a door that led to the next boxcar holding rooms 3, 4, and 5.  Mario led the excited group to room 5.  As Mario passed room #4, however, a strange chill went down his spine.  He remembered that that was the room the ghost Toad was in.  He had met him on the train last time he was here.  The ghost Toad had asked a favor of Mario.  That he would sneak into the storage room and find his missing diary.  Only then could the ghost Toad be free.  Mario returned the diary to him, only to find that he liked the Excess Express, and decided to stay there.  But Mario had never felt these chills before.  Perhaps it wasn’t just from the ghost…
“What a marvelous room!”  Peach suddenly said as she entered room five.  Mario now noticed that everyone had entered, and Toadsworth realized something.
“Four people and two beds?  This is surely not going to work!”  Mario stepped into the room just as Goombella said;
“I can sleep on the floor; it’s no trouble to me.”
“Yes, but where am I supposed to sleep then?  Hm?” Toadsworth asked harshly.  Their was a short silence as the four looked around the room.
“There,” Goombella said, motioning towards the couch that sat on the right side of the room, “you can sleep on the couch.”  Toadsworth examined the couch a bit before answering.
“Yes, alright,” he said.  â€œMaster Mario, would you be so kind as to ask the conductor for a blanket when you are finished with this Pennington fellow?”  Mario nodded.
“Of course.”

Mario closed the door of room #5 as he made his way into the Dining Hall.  He wished that the four of them were simply going on a fun road trip to Poshley Heights, instead of trying to solve the murder of his old friend.  Mario sighed.  How was he supposed to figure this out in the first place anyways?  He was almost positive that Pennington would solve this mystery in the end.  Why did they even want Mario here in the first place?  Just then, Mario looked up to find Pennington sitting at a table in the dining room, complaining to the waitress about something on the menu.  The purple pig-tailed Toad simply put her hands on her hips and shook her head after everything he said.  Pennington sighed as he looked up where he spotted Mario.  His eyes lit up.
“Luigi!” he said, “Or…uh…Mario?”  Pennington had always mistaken Mario for Luigi, but was apparently corrected by someone.
“Hello Pennington,” Mario said, approaching the blue penguin.  Pennington wore a plaid detective’s cap along with a red bow tie.  In his hand was a magnified glass, which he seemed to carry wherever he went.
“Come, Lu-Mario, take a seat,” Pennington said, correcting himself.  Mario sat down at the same table in the chair across from him.
“What will you have sweetie?” the waitress asked, taking out a pad of paper and a pen.
“Oh, um, nothing for me, thanks,” Mario replied.
“Alright, suit yourself,” the Toad waitress said, pocketing her paper and pen and moving on to the next table which consisted of a nervous looking Bom-Omb.
“It’s good to see you again Mario!” said Pennington as he took a sip from some sort of mushroom tea.
“As it is you,” Mario said politely.
“Alright, enough small talk Mario.  You have been well-trained as a master sleuth, and I’m going to need your help with this case,” Pennington suddenly said.  â€œNow, my dear friend Professor Frankly was coming to see me.  Yes, we go way back.  We were college buddies, you know…he was coming to see me to discuss something with me.  Some sort of discovery…as you know, before Frankly could reach Poshley heights…he was murdered…”  Mario realized that Pennington seemed to be taking this quite hard.  He had no idea that they used to be friends.  â€œWhen they told me the news about Frankly, I told the Conductor to keep every suspect on this train, never let them off until this case is solved…Mario, I’m going to need all the help I can get.  I’ve only met a few of the suspects so far, and can’t remember any of their names…lets see here….Well, in room two is a Yoshi couple, Mister and Missus Yoshers…In room seven is an old friend of Franklys’, apparently.  Says he went to college with Frankly, but I don’t remember him...”  Mario noticed the nervous Bom-Omb across from them shot Pennington a cold glare, “…oh yeah, there’s this brat of a ghost girl in room #1 with her butler…this strange fat guy with glasses and a big mustache in room #8…and that’s all I can recall, Luigi-er, Mario.”  Mario nodded.  That’s a lot of suspects to begin with.
“Do you have any thoughts on who the killer could be already?” Mario asked.  Pennington cautiously looked around and said quietly;
“I’ll tell you when we get some place more private Mario.”  Pennington suddenly took one last drink of his tea and hopped out of his chair.  â€œWell, Mario, I’m getting quite tired and require a good nights rest.  I suggest you do the same.  You can find me in room #3.  Good night Mario.”  Pennington exited through the same door Mario had entered.  Mario was about to do the same when he suddenly remembered the extra blanket for Toadsworth.  As he walked he looked at Chef Shimi, and the waitress…they could be murderers.  Anyone on this train could be a murderer, and he had to figure out whom…
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #24 on: July 13, 2005, 06:15:04 PM »
....*chirp chrip*....*cricket cricket*....sigh.  This reminds me of the days when I used to write Mario and the Golden Mushroom in the Story Boards.  Not ONE person read that story.  At least two (not so sure about Tingrio, so maybe one) people/person are/is reading this story.

Edited by - The Blue Toad  on 7/13/2005 5:15:42 PM
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

Markio

  • Normal
« Reply #25 on: July 13, 2005, 08:55:07 PM »
Hey, it could be worse.  I remember writing stories that people never read.  I just gave up on those.  But you don't give up!  Er, Don't give up!  GO THE BLUE TOAD! *parade music plays and balloons float into the sky*
"Hello Kitty is cool, but I like Keroppi the best."

« Reply #26 on: July 13, 2005, 10:00:47 PM »
Hey, I've been reading your story, and I think it's interesting.  You're doing a good job.  However, I do have to point one thing out: It's Scarlette, not Charlette.  Still, I like your story.
Now with more mink!

« Reply #27 on: July 13, 2005, 10:32:31 PM »
lol!  Whooo!  A parade for me!!!  EDIT: I had a feeling it wasn't Charlette!  Crap!  Oh well.  You people know what I mean.

Chapter 15:  The Suspects ~ Mario was luckily able to convince the Conductor to give him an extra blanket (after explaining how there were four people in one room).  It was now late at night.  The stars shone brightly through the train windows, and the lights glowed warmly in the peaceful dark.  The small gift shop was now closed, but the Dining Hall was still open.  In fact, sitting at the table were two Yoshis.  One was blue and was wearing a black tuxedo.  The other was pink and wore a dark red dress.  They looked as if they were talking over a very serious matter.  Mario figured that must be the Yoshers.  Mrs. Yoshers was looking very worried about something, and Mr. Yoshers seemed to be trying to calm her down.  Mr. Yoshers noticed Mario and shot him a nervous look.  Mario quickly avoided eye contact and made his way back to room #5 with his extra blanket.  He looked at room four as he was about to enter.  Another chill ran up his spine.  He quickly entered the warm room.  Peach was sitting on the couch gazing out the window.  Goombella was laying on the floor with her scrolls out once again, and Toadsworth was reading a book, sitting next to the princess.  Toadsworth looked up from his reading.
“Ah!  Master Mario!  There you are.  And with my extra blanket I see, thank you, thank you.”  Toadsworth put his book in the dower of a small desk by the side of the bunk bed where a vase of flowers rested on top.  â€œWell, I think we should all be heading off to bed then.”
“Yes.  I am very tired,” said Peach rubbing her eyes.  Goombella yawned as she put away her books and scrolls.  Mario felt sorry for Goombella sleeping on the ground, and pulled down his thick blanket for her to sleep on.
“Thank you, Mario,” she said as she removed her helmet and backpack.  Peach set her crown on the small desk beside her as she snuggled in to her covers at the bottom bunk.  Toadsworth put his glasses on the window sill next to the couch, and laid down with the blanket covering him.  Mario turned out the lights and climbed up to the top bunk where he tucked himself underneath the sheets and rested his head on the pillow.  It was very relaxing listening to the train on the tracks outside.  He looked out at the marvelous stars in the sky, and the mountains passing them by.  It was magnificent.  The other passengers must have finally been happy to get moving again.  Mario closed his eyes, and became very comfortable.  He wondered what Luigi was up to, and whether Bowser had tried to kidnap Peach or not, only to find she wasn’t even home.  Peach happily sighed below him.  She must have already been asleep.  Toadsworth was snoring slightly, but Mario could hear, on the floor, the soft tears of Goombella…

~BING BONG BING BING~ Mario eyes flickered open as a Toad began speaking over the announcements.
“Good morning passengers.  It is now 11:00 a.m. I repeat, 11:00 a.m.  Breakfast will be closing in an hour.  Today’s special is Mushroom Toast made by our wonderful cook, Chef Shimi.  Once again, thank you for choosing Excess Express.” The voice ended.  â€˜Yeah, I wonder if they’re thanking the murderer too,” Mario though as he sat up in bed.  Goombella had gotten up, however Peach and Toadsworth were still fast asleep.  Peach’s head was under the covers, and Toadsworth’s snoring just seemed to drown out the sound.  Mario quietly got out of bed and got dressed (keeping an eye on Peach).  Mario hadn’t realized how hungry he really was!  He quietly exited the room and headed down the hall to the Dining Hall.  As soon as he entered the smell of fresh mushrooms filled his nose.  As he looked around, he noticed the Yoshers were there again, and so was Goombella.  She appeared to be in conversation with Pennington.  Mario quickly made his way over to their table.
“Ah, Mario!” Pennington said, “Good morning to you!  Please, sit down!”  Mario nodded as he sat down at the table.
“Good morning Mario,” Goombella said as she drank from a cup of orange juice.
“We were just discussing Franklys’ marvelous work.  He really was a brilliant Goomba,” said Pennington, taking a large bight from what looked like Mushroom Toast.
“Yes, he was,” said Goombella, picking at her plate of Egg Surprise.  Pennington began going on and on about something, and Mario wasn’t even sure who he was talking to.  He took this moment to look over at the Yoshers.  They were talking quietly once more.  Mr. Yoshers seemed a little more up-tight this time.  Mrs. Yoshers eyes darted around constantly.
“Something to eat, hun?” asked the Toad waitress.  Mario quickly looked to her.
“Oh, um…” Mario quickly looked along the menu, “I’ll just have the Mushroom Toast.”  The purple Toad waitress quickly jotted something down on her notepad.
“And to drink?” she asked.
“I’ll have some orange juice, please,” Mario replied.  She jotted something else down.
“Alright, sweetie, I’ll be back with it in a moment,” and with that she walked back to the kitchen.  Mario noticed that the Yoshers didn’t order anything.
“Mario!” Pennington said, catching Mario’s gaze once more, “This would be a fabulous time for you to meet all the suspects.”  Pennington got up from the table and headed to the door that led to the second boxcar.  â€œI’ll be right back!” he said.  Mario looked at Goombella who shrugged and took another drink of her orange juice.  After a short while, the Toad waitress was back with Mario’s Mushroom Toast.  It was basically a toasted mushroom smothered in butter and syrup.  It was really quite good.  Suddenly, the announcements began again.
~BING BONG BING BING~  And Pennington’s voice rang out.
“Attention all.  This is Detective Pennington speaking, and I would like to ask everyone on the train…*mumble mumble*……….*mumble*…..except for the engineer to report to the Dining Hall immediately!  That is all.”  Mario had finished half of his Mushroom Toast by the time he was done.  He washed it down with some orange juice.  Suddenly, Peach and Toadsworth came in.
“There you are!” Peach said.  Toadsworth quickly followed her to sit with Mario.  Not long after Pennington arrived, followed by a Bom-Omb, two Boos, three Shadow Sirens, and an X-Naut.  Mario and Goombella stood up from the table and gathered by Pennington and the suspects who were now all standing in front of the small gift shop.  Mario told Toadsworth and Peach to stay put.  The Yoshers cast each other a nervous glance before going over and joining them.  Mario stood next to Pennington.
“Alright everyone.  Introduce yourselves,” Pennington ordered.  â€œYou all know me.  This is Mario, my partner in crime, and his friend Goombella.  Now that that’s out in the open,  I want to know you…”  Pennington gazed around at all the suspects.
“I already know Mario,” said a female Boo, quickly fanning herself with a pink feathery fan.  â€œMy name is Lady Bow.  I run an old mansion just north of here.  Mario and I go way back.  Mweeh heeh heeh!”
“Yes,” said and old, gray Boo next to her, “Mario needed the help of beautiful Lady Bow.  Without her we would all be in danger.  I am Bootler, Lady Bow’s longtime servant.”  Mario defiantly remembered them how could he forget?
“Alright.  Bow and Bootler.  Room #1.  Alright people, who’s next?”  The nervous Bom-Omb in the back spoke up next.
“My name is Professor Bom-Bers.  I teach history at the University of Boom…Frankly was a close friend to me…I only hoped for the best of him…”  Pennington nodded.  It was obvious he didn’t really like Professor Bom-Bers.
“Who’s next?” Pennington asked.
“My name is Beldam,” said the small, old looking Shadow Siren.  Shadow Sirens look almost like people, only are purple, and have no legs.  They rise from the shadows on the ground like genies from a bottle, “and these are my sisters.  Marilyn, and Vivian.”
“Ugh-Guh,” Marilyn said.  Marilyn was quite a fat Shadow Siren, and had red hair.
“Hello again, Mario.  Hee hee!” said Vivian.  She had pink, curly hair and rosy cheeks.  She had also helped Mario out in his last adventure.  Mario waved at her.  He was quite surprised to see the Shadow Sirens here.
“I’m Lord Crump,” the fat X-Naut in the back suddenly blurted out.  â€œI’m…uh…well, I used to work for a…a…company…”
“You worked for the evil organization of X-Nauts you half-wit!” Beldam suddenly spat out.
“I was getting to that!” Lord Crump said angrily, “I just was getting bored and wanted to take a ride on the Excess Express!  My boss was getting annoying and…and…listen, I didn’t kill anyone!  Believe me!”  Somehow, he wasn’t being very believable.
“Yes, okay, thank you Crump.  Alright.  Some one has to go next,” Pennington said.
“Alright,” said Mr. Yoshers in a firm voice.  Everyone suddenly turned to look at them, “I am Mr. Yoshers…this is my wife Mrs. Yoshers.  We were simply going to Poshley Heights to see the premiere show of the new Grand Theatre House-“
“Oh!  Me too!”  Bow interrupted suddenly, “I just have too see it!”  Mrs. Yoshers seemed very taken aback.
“Yes, well, we just want to get through this train ride without getting hurt.”  Pennington nodded.
“Yes, a likely story…what about you Chef Shimi?” Pennington suddenly turned to the brown Cheep Cheep who had very squinty eyes.
“What?  I just work here!  I make the food!  I would never kill anyone!” Pennington narrowed his eyes as he looked at the waitress.
“What?  I’m Toadina, and I just work here.  I’m a waitress.  That’s what I do!  Ewe!  I would never kill anyone!” she said.  Suddenly, the conductor spoke up;
“And I’m just the conductor!  I’m the one who found the body in the first place, does that really make me a suspect?”
“And I was talking to him!  I can’t be a suspect either!” Bow said.
“That is enough everyone!  I just wanted to get to know your names, that’s all…Now Mario and I will be by all of your rooms today for questioning…be there,” Pennington said.  â€œAlright, you can all go back to your rooms.”  Mario looked over at Peach at Toadsworth.  They seemed to be watching in interest.  Goombella was simply staring at her feet in deep thought…

Edited by - The Blue Toad  on 7/13/2005 9:45:30 PM
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #28 on: July 13, 2005, 11:40:14 PM »
Chapter 16: Questioning ~ Mario was given little time to finish his Mushroom Toast and orange juice before Pennington practically dragged him away to the second boxcar.
“I’m sorry I had to tear you away from your conversation like that, Mario,” said Pennington, for Mario had been talking to Goombella, Peach, and Toadsworth about when they would be getting home, “but we can’t waste any time.  We have to interview every person on this train.  You know.  Find out what they were doing at the time of the murder.  But first, I have to show you something.  Pennington had stopped in front of room #4.  Pennington slowly creaked open the door, and flicked on the lights.
“What’s in here?” Mario asked.  Pennington swung open the door.  Cold air rushed over Mario as he saw in the center of the floor what looked like a white blanket covering up a large lump on the floor.  Mario gasped.  â€œYou kept the body in this place?” he asked.
“Why, of course Mario!  We have to figure out how he was killed, what caused it and at what time...” Pennington entered room #4 and walked over to the covered up Professor Frankly.  Mario reluctantly followed.  Pennington sighed deeply as he slowly and cautiously pulled by the white sheet.  There was the lifeless body of old Professor Frankly.  He looked peaceful laying there on the floor.  They had taken his glasses off, and set them on the floor beside him.  It was hard for Mario to see this, and he hoped Goombella wouldn’t have to.  Not like this.  Pennington put his hands together.  Mario imagined that Pennington must do this quite a lot.  Mario then noticed something.  On the left side of Frankly’s head was a huge bump.
“Wh-…What is that?...There on the side of his head…” Pennington looked at the large bump.
“It’s from a bump to the head…that’s what caused Frankly’s death…”
“…A bump to the head?”
“Yes, Mario.  He was an old Goomba.  Didn’t disserve such a thing…didn’t ever disserve that a day in his life…”  Mario examined Frankly.  He seemed to be pretty close to the door.  Could someone have just accidentally swung the door open while Frankly was near it, and it hit hard enough to kill him?  No, that couldn’t be it.  â€œWell, Mario,” Pennington said, “shall we go to our first suspect?”  Mario nodded as he did the honors of covering his old friend.  Pennington quietly closed the door to room #4 and moved along to the front boxcar.
“Who are we questioning first?” Mario asked.
“We’re going from 1 down to 8, so first it’ll be Bow and Bootler,” Pennington said, stopping in front of the door to room #1.  Pennington knocked loudly.  After a short while, Bootler slowly opened the door.
“Yes?” he said in a slow, old voice.
“We’re here for the questioning,” Pennington said.
“The questioning?” Bootler repeated, “The questioning for whom?”
“You and Lady Bow,” Pennington replied, “please move aside.”
“I’m sorry, I cannot do that without the permission of Lady-“
“Oh just let them in Bootler!” said Bow’s voice from inside.  Bootler hesitated, but then slowly floated aside for Pennington and Mario to enter.  Bow was floating above the green couch fixing her make-up in front of a small mirror.  â€œWhy, hello Mario.  So good to see you again!” she said, waving her fan in front of her face again.  Mario nodded.
“As it is you, Bow,” Mario replied.
“Wait…you two…know each other?” Pennington asked as he looked back and forth.
“Of course, you silly penguin, I said that in your pointless introductory thing,” Bow replied.  Bootler came to hover next to the couch.
“Oh…yeah…well…lets just get down to the questioning, shall we?” Pennington asked for permission before sitting down on the bed, Mario doing the same.
“Now.  I have already questioned the Conductor a bit, and he told me that the murder took place on April 18th around 8:30 p.m. is that correct?” Pennington asked.
“Yes, I believe so,” Bow replied, gazing out the window.
“Where were you at that time?”  Pennington set down his magnified glass and took out a pen and notepad.
“Well, I was over at the end of the train asking the conductor for another blanket.  I was just about to do it too, but then there was a scream,” Bow replied.
“Professor Frankly?”  Pennington asked, writing something in his notepad.
“Of course,” Bow replied.  â€œSee?  It couldn’t have been me.  I was talking to the conductor at the time of the murder.”  Pennington though this over.
“Yes, but what about Bootler?” he asked.  Bow seemed a tad shocked.
“What?  Bootler is as loyal as a dog, he didn’t do anything,” Bow said, “and I suggest you leave this room and go find the real murderer.”  Pennington ignored this and turned to Bootler.
“Bootler, where were you at the time of the murder?”  Bootler struggled with his words a bit.
“Why, I was…well…out getting ice for Lady Bow…she does like her water cold after all…”  Bootler turned to Bow, looking as if to expect the worst.  Bow was simply gazing out the window in a dreamy like-state.
“Oh really…The ice machine is next to the kitchen.  You would have had to walk right past the murder scene to get there,” Pennington put the pen to his beak.
“Why…I…well…I went rather fast and got back after the murder…when I heard the scream I stayed in the room at fear of something happening to me-“
“And what about Bow?”
“Well, I-I was worried about her, but she came back soon enough…”  Pennington jotted one more thing down and closed the notepad.
“Alright.  I think that’s enough.  Thank you Bow, Bootler.”  Pennington opened the door, Mario followed.  Suddenly, Mario stopped and quietly asked Bootler;
“Did Bow tell you to get ice?”  Bootler looked at Mario, shocked.  He looked over at Bow who was still gazing outside.  Bootler shook his head at Mario.  Mario nodded as he followed Pennington out the door.
“Alright Mario, to room #2…”
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

Markio

  • Normal
« Reply #29 on: July 14, 2005, 08:58:56 AM »
Wow, there are a lot of "B"-named characters.
"Hello Kitty is cool, but I like Keroppi the best."

« Reply #30 on: July 14, 2005, 02:17:43 PM »
Bow, Bootler, Bom-Bers, Beldam. I guess I never realized!

 Chapter 16: Questioning Part 2 ~ Pennington waddled up to the door to room #2.  He raised his flipper and knocked three times.  Mr. Yoshers came to answer the door.  Mrs. Yoshers could be seen inside, sitting on the bed looking nervous.
“Hello Mr. Yoshers,” Pennington said, flipping to a new page in his notepad and taking out his pen.  â€œAre you ready to be questioned?”  Mr. Yoshers opened his mouth, and was about to say something when he noticed Mario was standing next to Pennington.
“Please…Please come in,” Mr. Yoshers said quietly, opening the door and stepping aside.  Pennington nodded towards the Yoshi and his wife as he entered their room.  It was decorated in green, just the same as Bows’.  Mr. Yoshers sat down on the bed, joining his wife.  Pennington and Mario sat down on the green couch across from them.
“Alright, Yoshers.  I’m going to ask you a few questions about the murder.  I want you to answer truthfully and not leave anything out, understood?”  The Yoshers nodded nervously.  â€œAlright…I thought I heard you say that you were going to the Grand Theatre House in Poshley Heights, is this correct?”
“Yes,” said Mrs. Yoshers.  Her voice was shy and soft.  She appeared quite sensitive and regretful.  â€œWe were going to see the play and stay for a week…you know…just get away for a while…”
“…uh-huh…” said Pennington as he began writing something down on his notepad. “Now…the murder of Professor Frankly took place on April 18th around 8:30 p.m. is that correct?”  Mrs. Yoshers looked to her husband.
“I…believe so,” said Mr. Yoshers.
“What were you and your wife doing at that time?” Pennington prepared to write as Mr. Yoshers said;
“Well…my wife and I were eating dinner in the Dining hall when we heard it…”
“…The scream?”
“Yeah,” said Mr. Yoshers, “we were just eating dinner peacefully, we heard a scream, and that was it.”
“Did you know Professor Frankly?” Pennington asked quickly.
“Why, no, we didn’t…” said Mr. Yoshers.  Mrs. Yoshers looked out the window, looking scared.  There was a silence as Pennington wrote something down in his notepad.
“Well you seem innocent enough……” Pennington said.  Just then, Mario thought of something.
“Did you see anyone get ice at the ice machine while you two were dining?” Mario asked.  Pennington got his pen ready.  Mr. Yoshers looked to Mrs. Yoshers.  They exchanged glances and said,
“No, we did not see anyone go to the ice machine…” said Mr. Yoshers.
“Uh-huh…” said Pennington, writing something down, “Are you positive you were at the Dining Hall at the time of the murder?”  Mr. Yoshers nodded.  Mario thought of Bootler.  He lied to them.  â€œAlright, thank you.  That’s all we need,” said Pennington as he got up from the couch, Mario following.  â€œStay safe, you two.”  Pennington and Mario left their room and headed into the next boxcar to rooms 3, 4, and 5.  Those rooms had Pennington, Frankly’s body, and Mario and his friends, so they skipped that boxcar and headed into the Dinging Hall.  But before they did, Mario had noticed something.  On the side next to room #3, was a small desk just like every boxcar had.  But this desk did not have a vase of flowers.  Normally, in every boxcar there are two desks at both ends, and both of those desks would hold a vase of flowers.  This desk next to room 3, however had a desk, but no flowers.  This could be a clue…but what could it possibly mean…
“Excellent sleuthing Mario!” Pennington said happily as they crossed the Dining Hall, “The Yoshers seem innocent.  I don’t think we have to worry about them too much.”  Mario nodded his agreement as the headed into the third boxcar, holding rooms 6, 7, and 8.  â€œRoom #6…The Shadow Sirens…”  Pennington knocked three times at the door.
“Who is it?” said the old, witch-like voice of Beldam.
“Detective Pennington.  Here for your questioning…”  There was the sound of frantic mumbling.  Pennington took out his notepad and pen once more.  The door opened revealing Beldam, the old, short Shadow Siren.  â€œMay I come in?” asked Pennington.
“What?  Oh!  Yes, of course, of course, come in,” said Beldam, allowing Pennington and Mario to enter their blue covered room.  Vivian and Marilyn floated from their shadows next to the window.
“Please, sit down,” Vivian said, motioning to the blue couch.  Pennington nodded as he sat down on the comfortable blue couch.  Mario took a seat next to him.
“…The Shadow Sirens……hmm…I hear that you three once tried to take over the World.  Is this true?”  Vivian looked ashamed.
“Well…Yes, but that was quite a long time ago…We learned the error of our ways,” Vivian said.
“Yes, we figured it was practically impossible anyways,” Beldam said.
“Guh,” said Marilyn.
“Right…” Pennington said writing something down.  â€œDid you three know Professor Frankly at all?”
“Yes,” said Vivian, “Such a kind Goomba…or, that is…He was when I switched sides.”  Vivian gave a small giggle.
“So, you used to be enemies, Frankly and you three?” Pennington asked.  The Shadow Sirens seemed to hesitate a bit.  Vivian looked at her sisters, wondering what they should say.
“Uh…Yeah, we were.  But we’ve ended that evil stuff now, we don’t kill people…anymore,” Beldam said, snickering.
“Uh-huh…” Pennington wrote another thing down in his notepad.  â€œThe murder of Professor Frankly took place on April 18th around 8:30 p.m.  Where were you?”
“Asleep,” Beldam replied rather quickly.  â€œWe were all sleeping…”
“Right…” said Pennington, “So, how do you people sleep?”  Beldam looked at her sisters and shrugged.  All three of them disappeared under the floor in shadow.  Pennington looked down at them and wrote something in his notepad.  They all sprang back up.
“That’s how,” Beldam replied.
“Alright…Did any of you hear a scream?” asked Pennington.
“A scream?  No…we didn’t hear a scream, did we girls?” asked Beldam.
“Guh-guh,” Marilyn replied, shaking her head.
“Well…Actually Beldam…I forgot to say…During the time of the murder I went out to get some water…”  said Vivian.  Beldam turned to looked at Vivian.  â€œI was very thirsty…and…I…”
“Vivian!  That’s enough!  Er-remember, who decided to come back inside after you heard the scream???” Beldam shot Vivian an angry look.
“Uh…right, right…” Vivian said quickly.  Pennington quickly wrote something down in his notepad.
“…Okay…Oh yes, I’ve been meaning to ask…When you three go into the shadows like that, can you move around?”  Beldam provided an example.  She went down into the floor once more, and Pennington watched as her shadow moved about the floor.  Beldam popped back up next to the door.
“Yes we can Pennington, now shouldn’t you be leaving now?”  She opened the door for Pennington to leave.  He wrote one last thing in his notepad and left.  Pennington got up from the couch, and headed towards the door.  Mario was about to follow him, when he suddenly spotted something.  An extra vase of flowers was sitting on the floor next to the door!
“Excuse me,” Mario said, “but where did you get those flowers?”  Beldam turned to the flowers.
“Those?...um….oh…I think those were just here when we got here…”  Pennington walked back in the room examining the vase.
“Actually, Beldam, I don’t remember that vase being here until after the…” Vivian said, Beldam cutting her off with a cruel look.
“I see…” Pennington said, writing another thing down.  â€œThank you, good bye.”  Pennington continued writing as they walked to room #7.  â€œWhat a tricky case…but, my dear Mario, I think I may already have it solved…”

Edited by - The Blue Toad  on 7/14/2005 1:18:12 PM
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #31 on: July 17, 2005, 05:38:23 PM »
Bravo The Blue Toad! I'm already teeming with excitement for the next chapter!

Mario Mario he''s our man, If he can''t triple-jump and ground-pound, no one can!

Glorb

  • Banned
« Reply #32 on: July 20, 2005, 12:25:51 PM »
The Last Chapter:

Suddenly, Mario realized that he was the killer, and killed everyone in the world before exploding.

THE END.

Well, this is where the signature goes...
every

« Reply #33 on: July 20, 2005, 03:16:57 PM »
Thank you all!  And no, that will not happen Glorb.

Chapter 17:  Questioning Part 3 ~ Mario scratched his head in thought as he stopped in front of room #7.  He thought for sure the Shadow Sirens had turned over a new leaf.  He couldn’t possibly see them killing anyone now.  Began looking over his notes a little, and turned to a new page in his notepad.  He raised his magnified glass and tapped it on the door several times.  It slowly cracked open, revealing a dark room.  Professor Bom-Bers stepped out into the hall, closing the door behind him.
“You are here for the questioning I presume,” he said, looking nervously from Pennington to Mario.  His wick was slightly bent and his bowtie was crooked.  Dark circles under his eyes showed that he had not slept in quite a while.  Pennington looked over him a bit before saying,
“Yes, Professor.  Why don’t we step back into your room here…” Pennington motioned towards the door Bom-Bers seemed to be guarding at the moment.  His lip slightly quivered.
“Can’t we just do this in the Dining Hall?” he asked.  Pennington looked him in the eye.
“I’m sorry, Professor, but we are entering everyone’s room.  You know, maybe find a little evidence...” Bom-Bers suddenly became very sickly looking.
“Well…Alright, fine.”  Bom-Bers opened up the door for them to enter.  The shades were drawn, and books were scattered around on the ground.  The bottom bunk of the bed was messy, and the lights were out.  It appeared as though he had been taking a nap.  Pennington gazed around the room, eyes darting from book cover to book cover, looking for any trace of what might be valuable evidence.  Bom-Bers politely offered them a seat on the couch (after shoving off all the books and papers).  Pennington took a seat with Mario and looked up at the sickly looking Bom-Omb.  Pennington licked the end of his pen as he began.
“Alright Professor, we’ll skip right to the questions…Where were you on the 18th of April, around 8:30 p.m.?”  Bom-Bers looked around the room.
“Well….that was the time of the murder, so…I was coming back from having…From having a discussion with an engineer…I was walking down through the Dining Hall, peering through the shop window thinking I might buy something, and I heard…I heard that scream…Bow and the conductor came flying through the door…”  Bom-Bers stopped to wipe his brow.  â€œI rushed back to my room, and heard about the terrible news the next morning…” Pennington jotted something down in his notepad.
“Now, you had crossed the path where the murder would take place…did you see anyone in the second boxcar?” the penguin asked.  Bom-Bers appeared to be thinking it over.
“No…I didn’t see anyone.  I had simply walked through, and entered the Dining Hall.  It was deserted…Of course…I was examining the items on display in the store…They could have simply snuck past me…Those Yoshers were sitting there.  They could have easily gone in and…and killed Frankly…” This appeared hard for Bom-Bers to say.  Pennington grew a suspicious look upon his face.
“You appear to be taking Professor Frankly’s death rather badly…why is this?  Did you know him?” he asked, getting his pen ready.
“Well…Yes, I did.  As I said before, I went to the same college as you, and I had worked with Professor Frankly all the time in Science.”  Pennington glared at him.
“Strange…I do not remember you being in any of my classes, Professor…” Pennington said.
“Well…Yes, I know.  I did not have any classes with you, but-“
“But when you heard Professor Frankly was going to be working on a new discovery with me, in Poshley Heights, you became jealous and decided to take all the glory!  You killed Frankly…and perhaps you plan to kill me next.”  Bom-Bers looked as though his best friend had struck him across the face with a shovel.
“What?!?!  No!  I would never!  I fully respect the fact that Frankly was going to work this out with you, I didn’t care!” Bom-Bers was sputtering for words at such a rude and sudden analysis.  Even Mario was a little puzzled.  What was Frankly studying that he needed Pennington’s help for anyways?
“For all I know, Bom-Bers, one of these books could be Frankly’s stolen discovery,” Pennington said, still glaring at the Bom-omb.
“Listen!  I know his work was stolen, but it wasn’t me!”  Mario was suddenly shocked.
“Wait,” said Mario, “Frankly’s discovery was stolen?”  Pennington looked down at Mario.
“Yes, it was…didn’t I already tell you that, my boy?”  Mario shook his head.  â€œOh…well…yes.  When we went through Frankly’s bag we found nothing but pieces of parchment.  Frankly had told me that he was bringing with his a book and his theory of something that would interest me.  I was very excited to find out what this theory was, but…the murderer had apparently stolen his theory as well……And who would want that theory more than you, Professor?”  Pennington’s gaze suddenly turned to Professor Bom-Bers once more.  After quite a while of arguments, learning nothing for the mystery, Pennington stormed out of the room Bom-Bers shoving out Mario and slamming the door behind him.  Pennington fiercely wrote something in his notepad with his pen, squirting black ink across the page.  Mario knew that Pennington was not going to let Bom-Bers off the hook so easily now, especially after that little scene.  But Pennington was right.  Bom-Bers seems like the most likely person on this train to want that theory.  He was, after all, a professor himself.  Pennington said nothing to Mario as he stormed off to room #8, the room of Lord Crump.
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #34 on: July 21, 2005, 09:03:50 PM »
Glorb, stay outta here if you're going to act annoying and violence-crazed.
GEIANDGIRLCO DIRECT - The Sensitive Alternative

Glorb

  • Banned
« Reply #35 on: July 22, 2005, 08:56:52 AM »
Look who's talking!! A MARIO MURDER MYSTERY?! Really now, murder? You should all be ashamed.

Well, this is where the signature goes...
every

« Reply #36 on: July 22, 2005, 02:21:07 PM »
Huh.  I thought you loved gore and blood and that kind of crap.  Glorb, please don't add anything more to this topic.  If you don't like the story, please, stop reading it.

“A wagon full of pamcakes?  In the Champeen ship?!  I’d like to see ya try!” ~ Homestar Runner        
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #37 on: July 22, 2005, 03:31:45 PM »
Chapter 18:  Questioning Part 4 ~ Pennington knocked roughly on door #8, his patience failing on him.  Mario watched in silence as the door flung wide-open revealing Lord Crump.  He was very round, and continued to wear his X-Naut uniform, even though the league of X-Nauts were long gone.  His large, red mustache covered his face, and a small pair of spectacles stuck out from between his massive facial hair and purple Vikings helmet.
“Yes?” he said as the X-Naut looked from Mario to Pennington.
“Good evening Lord Crump,” Pennington said, as if the fight with Bom-Bers had been hours ago, “I believe it is your turn to be questioned…” Lord Crump looked Pennington in the eye and said,
“What?  Oh, oh yes…step right in,” Lord Crump stepped aside allowing Mario and Pennington to pass him by, into his blue and brown colored room.  A few extra clothes were scattered around the room, most under the bed, and in the corner of the room was a rather large, black suitcase.  Lord Crump quickly picked up a couple of socks, throwing them under the bed for his guests to move about more easily.  Pennington helped himself to the blue couch and took out his notepad, clicking his black pen impatiently as Lord Crump sat down on the bed opposite from him.
“Alright, Lord Crump, I hear that you used to be in some sort of organization, correct?” Pennington asked.
“Yes, that’s correct,” said Lord Crump, fiddling with his thumbs.  Pennington quickly jotted something down.
“Tell me about it.”  Lord Crump looked out the window and rested his chin on his fist.
“The organization…” he slowly began, “Was called the X-Nauts.  I was one of the leaders in this organization, I was like a general of the X-Nauts army.”
“Did you work for anyone?” asked Pennington quickly.
“Yes,” replied Crump.  â€œI served Sir Grodus, the X-Naut leader…” Pennington wrote something else down.
“Now, Mr. Crump, were these ‘X-Nauts’ evil?…” asked Pennington.
“Oh yes,” said Lord Crump, the corners of his mustache rising.  â€œVery evil…We tried to take over the World, you know!  But this lad here,” Lord Crump looked over to Mario sitting to the left of Pennington, “…yes…HE was the one who stopped us…He saved the world you know.”  Lord Crump returned his gaze to Pennington.
“Yes, I know,” Pennington replied looking over his notes.  â€œSo, how long have the X-Nauts been…you know…laying low?”  Lord Crump looked up at the ceiling, thinking it over.
“Uhh…About a year, now…almost that,” Lord Crump replied, not so sure of himself.  Pennington wrote something down again.
“Alright…Lord Crump, the murder took place around 8:30 p.m. on April the 18th, where were you at this time?”  Lord Crump looked blank for a moment, but then said with a stutter,
“I-I was in my room.  Asleep.”  Pennington wrote that down in his notepad, nodding.  Suddenly, Mario noticed something on the floor.  It was Lord Crump’s train ticket.  It appeared to be from Poshley Heights.
“Excuse me,” Mario said to Lord Crump, “but this ticket you have appears to be purchased at Poshley Heights…” Lord Crump nodded as if this was something very simple to determine.  â€œBut the murder took place after the train stopped at Rougeport, allowing Professor Frankly to get on…didn’t you get off?”  Lord Crump struggled for words.
“Well-I-um-no.  It is true, I got on the train in Poshley Heights, but my destination was not Rougeport.  I just wanted to get away for a while, you know.  Enjoy the train ride from Poshley Heights, and back…” Mario nodded.  His attention turned to the large suitcase in the corner of the room.
“Normally, the conductor will allow you to unpack, but then take your suitcase to the storage room.  Why did he let you keep your suitcase in your own room?”  Lord Crump and Pennington turned to look at the suitcase.
“Well…Mario…I told the conductor that I was just going to Rougeport and back, not getting off the train until Poshley Heights, and that it would be better for me to just keep my suitcase in here since I would not be getting off the train in quite a long while…” He appeared to be telling the truth.  Mario decided that Lord Crump was not lying, and nodded again.  Pennington appeared to be surprised by Mario for saying this, for even he had not seemed to notice this.  He quickly wrote something down in his notepad, and stood up from the couch, Mario following.
“Well, Mr. Crump that will do.  Thank you for your time,” Pennington nodded to him as he turned and left the room.  Lord Crump nodded back to him and turned his gaze to the window.  Mario and Pennington headed back into the Dining Hall.  Mario did not realize that it was already getting very dark.  They still had the staff to interview, but by the looks of it, Pennington was too tired to do any more sleuthing.
“Mario, my boy, you are a fine detective!  A wonderful detective in fact!” Pennington said as the crossed into the second boxcar.  â€œIt has been a fine day, indeed!  Clues everywhere, I tell you!  This mystery just gets juicer and juicer!”  Mario nodded.  It was true.  There were quite a few suspects that seemed to have terrible alibis.  Pennington yawn as he headed past room #4.  â€œWe will continue our sleuthing in the morning, Mario.  Until then, me boy…good night.”  Pennington entered his room, apparently checking over his notes.  Mario was also very tried.  He opened the door to see Peach and Toadsworth were already in their beds.  Goombella was on the floor reading Franklys’ scrolls again.  When Mario entered, she quickly looked up.
“Oh!  Welcome back, Mario!” she said quietly, trying to disturb neither Peach nor Toadsworth.  â€œHow was your detective work?”  Mario shrugged as he walked farther into the room, his eye on the stars that quickly shot by out the window.
“There are too many suspects…a lot of evidence as well…” Mario said.  Goombella looked back to her scrolls.
“Hm…you’ll get them in the end, Mario,” she said.  â€œYou always do…”

That night, Mario could not sleep.  His mind was buzzing with the thought of who could have killed Frankly.  There were so many options, and all of them seemed pretty likely.  He couldn’t seem to narrow it down.  Finally, after counting the stars and struggling with the suspects, Mario closed his eyes and drifted off to sleep…


“A wagon full of pamcakes?  In the Champeen ship?!  I’d like to see ya try!” ~ Homestar Runner        
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #38 on: July 30, 2005, 06:07:16 PM »
Chapter 19: The Chef, the Waitress, and the Conductor ~ BING!  BONG!  BING!  BING!  Mario opened his eyes at the ringing tune filling his ears.  The ceiling was lit with sunlit pouring in from the window to his left, and a voice rang through the train.
“Good morning passengers!  It’s a wonderful morning here on the Excess Express.  The time is 11:00; breakfast will be over in an hour.  This morning our special is the Shroom Cakes, made by Chef Shimi.  Thank you for choosing the Excess Express.”  There was a clicking sound as the voice echoed away.  Mario peered down over the side of his bed to find everyone had already gotten up.  Mario sat up and climbed down to the soft, cushiony floor, grabbing his cap and placing it on his head.  Mario opened the door and made his way to the Dining Hall where he found Goombella, Peach, and Toadsworth sitting at a table next to a large window enjoying their breakfast.  Peach glanced over at Mario as he entered the room, and she motioned with her gloved hand for him to come over and sit down.  Mario sat down next to Goombella, opposite of Peach and Toadsworth.  Goombella appeared to be picking at her Mushroom Toast, hardly even noticing Mario had sat down.
“Good morning, Master Mario,” Toadsworth said as he took a bite from a large muffin.
“Good morning,” Mario replied politely.  When the waitress came to Mario, Mario decided he would try the Shroom Cakes this morning.  She nodded and pocketed her notepad and pen, moving along to the next table.  â€œAny sign of Pennington?” Mario asked.  Peach took a sip from her apple juice and said,
“No, Mario, I haven’t,” she said.  Mario stared at the door next to the gift shop, thinking that Pennington could arrive any moment to drag Mario away from breakfast, and ask him to sit next to him while he asked the train staff some questions.  Mario received his Shroom Cakes from the purple toad waitress.  They were basically like pancakes with a hint of mushroom to them.  They were smothered with Fungi Syrup, a bit too sticky for Mario’s taste.  Peach and Toadsworth both looked up.  Mario turned around to see Pennington heading towards him.
“Mario!  There you are!” Pennington said as he waddled up.  â€œTerribly sorry to keep you waiting.  I just decided to try and question the engineer while you were sleeping…you know…you can never be too careful…though I think it was a right bad idea…” Pennington rubbed his temples as if he had a headache.  â€œAny ways.  I’m terribly sorry to pull you away from your breakfast, Mario, but we must get going!  Crime never rests!”  Mario bid his farewell to Peach, Toadsworth, and Goombella, and got up from his seat to follow Pennington.  They didn’t go very far, actually.  Pennington stopped right in front of the kitchen and turned to Mario.
“Alright Mario, as you know it is time to question the staff…You wait here while I go and fetch the conductor at the other end of the train.  I’ll be back in a flash!”  Pennington was gone through the door by the gift shop, and could be seen hurrying along to the toad Conductor.  Mario looked around the Dining Hall.  He suddenly saw Bow and Bootler at one of the tables.  Bow was motioning for Mario to come over.  He looked back at the door Pennington had just exited, and decided it was safe to just see what she wanted.  Mario walked over to Bow and Bootler.  Bow cleared her throat and suddenly looked seductive as Mario walked over.
“Hello, Mario,” she said, holding up her pink fan over her face, “Would you like some Shroom Cakes?”  Mario looked down at Bows’ plate to see that she had taken one bite and decided she did not like it.
“Oh, um, no thank you,” Mario replied truthfully.  Bow shrugged.  Bootler kept his droopy eyes on his mistress.
“Suit yourself…Listen Mario,” Bow suddenly said, “you have to believe me!  I did not kill anyone!  Why would I in the first place, right?”  Mario looked over his shoulder to see if Pennington had gotten back yet.  â€œI mean, honestly Mario,” Bow bashed her eyelashes and fanned herself, “you don’t actually think it was me…do you…Mario?”  Mario cleared his throat.
“Um…Well…” Bootler suddenly eyed Mario harshly.  Mario tugged on the collar of his shirt.  She was trying to seduce him.
“Mario, come over here please,” said Pennington from behind Mario.  He had just entered the Dining Hall with the black and red toad conductor behind him.  Mario felt extremely relieved as he said,
“Sorry, Bow, I have to go,” and turned on his heel to head toward Pennington.  The penguin was able to gather up the conductor, the waitress Toadina, and Chef Shimi, the cooking Cheep Cheep.  They were all gathered around in a circle as they watched Mario approach.  He filled a gap in the circle and Pennington took out his notes once more.  Toadina rolled her eyes as if this was a huge waste of time.
“Alright everyone,” Pennington said, “I’m going to get right to the questioning…”  Pennington asked where they were at the time of the crime.  They had all answered at their posts.  None of them had ever known Professor Frankly in their lives, and would never commit murder.  It seemed as if they were all innocent.
“I love my job,” said Toadina, “I wouldn’t dream of throwing away my career with such a thing as murder, and not to mention my entire life!”
“Yes, yes…” Pennington said, “Alright then...” Pennington seemed to be struggling with questions.  â€œWhat about you Chef,” Pennington said.  â€œYou have a lot of hard work to do.  Do you ever feel…you know…stressed?”
“Oh, no!” Chef Shimi said quickly, “I love working on the Excess Express!  Cooking is my passion!  Besides, I was the one who suggested Mario in the first place!  I remembered how he found my missing bowl of soup for me, and I knew if anyone could solve this mystery, Mario could!”  Pennington seemed very taken aback.  He cleared his throat loudly.  â€œAnd you, of course,” said chef Shimi.
“Yes…” Pennington said as he wrote something down.  Mario was almost positive none of the staff did it…but you could never be too sure.  The conductor said he had seen no one in the second boxcar when he went to check the murder scene.  All there was was an open door, and a deceased Goomba.
“Um…Conductor,” Mario said, thinking over what he had said.
“Yes, Mario?” asked the bored Conductor.
“When you went to check on the murder scene, you said you saw nobody there, right?”
“Yes,” The Conductor replied.
“Were both the flower vases there?” Mario asked, hoping that the conductor would remember.
“Funny you should mention that…” the conductor said, “I believe both vases were there the night of the murder, but the next morning, the vase of flowers next to room three was gone…” Mario thought this over.  The next morning they were gone, and in the Shadow Sirens’ room…it could be a possibility that someone could murder Frankly with the vase, and the take it to their room that night realizing it would show finger prints…but the Shadow Sirens?…It was all very confusing.  Mario wasn’t sure what to think.


“A wagon full of pamcakes?  In the Champeen ship?!  I’d like to see ya try!” ~ Homestar Runner        
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #39 on: August 04, 2005, 11:17:06 AM »
Chapter 20:  Notes ~ Mario followed Detective Pennington as he waddled back to his room.  Pennington was rubbing his head and looking over his notes.  It was a bit obvious that he was suffering from a terrible headache.  Pennington suddenly made a groaning noise as he forced his notes into Mario’s hands.
“Mario, why don’t you look over these notes I took,” he said.  Mario looked down at the notepad, which had been scribbled upon messily and looked back up at Pennington.  â€œI think I’m going to go take a nap.  Yes, I didn’t get very much sleep last night.”  Pennington yawned and stretched as he began to open the door to cabin number three.
“Sleep well, detective,” Mario said as Pennington disappeared behind the door.  Mario seated himself at a table in the Dining Hall and began to look over Pennington’s notes:

Lady Bow Room #1 – Spoiled and bossy.  Claims to be asking the conductor for a blanket at time of murder.  Has complete faith in her butler.  Seems to be distracted easily.  Not very cooperative.

Bootler Room #1 – Claims to be out getting ice for Bow at the time of murder.  Had to walk past the murder scene to get to the ice machine next to the kitchen.  Claims to have gotten back to the room before the murder “fast”.  Was more worried about himself than Bow.

Mr. Yoshers Room #2 – On the train with his wife to see the opening play at the new Grand Theatre House in Poshley Heights.  Says that he and his wife were eating dinner in Dining Hall at time of murder.  Did not have any connection with Frankly.  Claims that no one went to get ice at the time of the murder (Bootler is a liar).

Mrs. Yoshers Room #2 – Lets her husband do most of the talking.  Very quiet and cautious.  Says that she only wanted to get away for a little while and –see the opening play.  Get some relaxation.  Does not seem very guilty.

The Shadow Sirens Room #6– Have tried to take over the World once, but seem to be ashamed of it.  Beldam seems a tad reluctant to give up evilness.  The beautiful one called Vivian knew Frankly and was the first sister to turn good.  Used to be enemies with Frankly.  The scrawny one (Beldam) claims that her and her sisters were sleeping at the time.  They are all able to hide in the shadows and have unusual powers.  Claim not to have heard a scream.  Vivian (being most innocent) says that she actually did hear a scream went she got up to get a glass of water.  Beldam seemed angry at her saying this.  Are able to move around in shadow, completely unnoticed.  The stupid fat one seems to be easily persuaded.  They have a stolen vase of flowers in their room.  The vase from the same boxcar as Professor Frankly, and Vivian says they suddenly appeared in their room after the murder.  Suspicious.

Professor Bom-Bers Room #7 – Seems reluctant to reveal his room to people.  Claims to be coming back from having a discussion with the engineer, looking through the shop window and wondering if he should buy something when he heard a scream.  Ran to his room afterwards.  Says the second boxcar where murder took place was empty as he walked through.  Claims to have worked with Professor Frankly in college.  Claims to have been his friend.  Could have been jealous of me working with Frankly and wanted revenge!  Wanted the whole discovery for himself!  Seems most likely.

Lord Crump Room #8 – Used to be in an evil organization that died down.  â€œX-Nauts” have been inactive for a year now.  Used to be a sort of General for the “X-Nauts”.  Claims to be asleep in his room at time of murder.  Says that he did not want to get off the train at Rougeport, but simply wanted to ride the train from and to Poshley Heights to get out a bit.

This was where the notes ended.  Mario took a sip from the Mushroom Juice he had ordered.  Who could have committed the crime?  And why was Bootler lying to them?  Mario suddenly looked over at the ice machine.  It read “Out-Of-Order”.  Mario stared at it for a while.  Then he pocketed the notepad and walked over to the kitchen where Chef Shimi was whistling a tune and cooking something in a pot.
“Excuse me,” Mario said to the Cheep Cheep.  Chef Shimi suddenly looked around at Mario.
“I thought the questioning was over!” he said suddenly.
“What?  Oh!  Yes, it is…I was just wondering…How long has that ice machine been out of order?”  Chef Shimi looked over at the broken ice machine and replied;
“Oh…I’d say…This entire trip.  Not many people get any ice, but yesterday that Boo butler told me that the ice machine was out of order, so I put up a nice sign there…” Mario rubbed his chin.
“Did you see anyone get any ice around the time of the murder?”  Chef Shimi quickly looked at Mario and the up to the ceiling, squinting as if trying to remember…
“Nope,” Chef Shimi said, “No one.  In fact, I don’t think anyone has taken any ice…” Mario thanked the chef for his time and then walked over to the ice machine.  Mario pressed down the button, which was supposed to allow cubed ice to fall.  Nothing happened.  Mario had to think of this for a while.  There were still a lot of clues to be found…


“A wagon full of pamcakes?  In the Champeen ship?!  I’d like to see ya try!” ~ Homestar Runner        
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #40 on: August 09, 2005, 11:14:21 AM »
Chapter 21:  The Ghost ~ The next day went by a lot more slowly then the others, partly because Mario had to spend most of his time simply watching the other suspects and see what they were doing.  Pennington had addressed him privately very early in the morning.  He had said he was feeling suspicious about the boos, and that he would keep an eye on them, and Mario should just try to casually examine anyone in finds in his path.  Mario was now eating lunch in the Dining Hall with Peach and Toadsworth.  Goombella had said she needed more time to work on Frankly’s writings.  She claimed it was getting extremely hard all of a sudden, and that Frankly stopped writing in side-notes.  For some reason this filled Mario with sadness.  Knowing that his old friend was really gone shook him terribly.  Mario sipped his Koopa Leaf Tea as he looked out the window.  Peach was having a talk with Toadsworth about her freedom and reminding him of her days when she was trapped inside her own castle with the tiny star kid Twink.  Apparently it was still a bad memory for Toadsworth.  The pretty, young waitress walked past their table and over to the Yoshers who appeared to be in another serious conversation.  Professor Bom-Bers was sitting over by the window, apparently feeling sorry for him self, and the Shadow Sirens were busily talking and laughing (mainly at Vivian).  Mario was sure that Beldam really missed her evil days.  It was very obvious.
“Mario, you remember, right?” Peach suddenly asked him.  Mario pulled his gaze from the window.
“What?” Mario asked.
“Don’t you remember how I took complete care of myself during Bowser’s triumph with the Star Rod?”  Even though it was a lot of Twink’s doing, Mario nodded his head and Peach turned on Toadsworth again.  The hours passed as Mario tried his hardest to spy on the suspects.  He got nothing.  All he found was Mrs. Yoshers drop her necklace and pink it up as if it would be horrid for anyone to see (yet it seemed like a normal reaction for her).  Chef Shimi tried to fix the ice machine; it ended in swearing and frustration leaving the Mushroom Casserole slightly burnt.  And then there was Bow getting angry with Bootler for following her so closely.  Nothing entirely unusual.  Mario was getting no luck.  He stopped in to see Goombella who appeared very frustrated, her hat lying across the floor and her hair in an extremely tight ponytail (as if any hair got in her face she would blow up).  The sky grew crimson as the day roared on.  Today they were supposed to take a brief stop at Riverside Station, but they found it too risky (much to the frustration of the Riverside residents).  Suddenly, as Mario was walking from the Dinging Hall, Pennington pulled him towards his room.
“Mario!  Hello there!”  Pennington said.  â€œLets have a chat with you I my room.  You know, discuss what we’ve seen.”  Mario agreed as he followed Pennington to room #3.  Pennington’s room had a warm feeling to it.  There was a hot pot of tea on the coffee table along with a few cups.  Pennington went to the couch nearby and quickly shoved an odd pair of reading spectacles, two books, and a pipe into his dresser, then offered the seat to Mario.  Mario sat down gratefully, not realizing how tired he really was.  Pennington waddled around the coffee table and poured two cups of steaming hot tea.  He offered Mario a cup.  Mario took the cup with gratitude and took a sip.  It burned his tongue terribly, but provided a very nice warm sensation in his stomach.
“So tell me, Mario,” Pennington said as he stood by the window, watching the dark trees and pink clouds go by, “did you see anything suspicious?…You know, anything out of the ordinary?”  Mario was tempted to say something, but what?  Make a lie?  No, Mario saw nothing out of the ordinary today so he simply told the truth.
“I’m sorry, Pennington, I saw nothing…” Mario said, taking a sip of tea once more despite the burning, “What about you?”
“Nothing.”  Pennington said suddenly, rubbing his forehead with his flipping and taking a rather large sip from his tea.  Mario could have sworn he saw steam rise from his beak.  â€œNot a single bad-doer…everything seems to be normal…I took another look on Frankly’s body, and sadly found no more clues…did you?”  Mario gulped his tea loudly.
“What?  Find more clues?” Mario asked.
“Yes, on Frankly…” Pennington replied.  Mario was not aware that he was suppose to check on the victim…perhaps Pennington had told him to do so after Mario accidentally zoned out.
“Well, actually, I haven’t checked on the body yet,” Mario said.
“Oh…well…alright, you can do that tomorrow I suppose.  That night Mario and Pennington had a chat about the Prime Suspect.  Pennington thought that it could be Bom-Bers or the Shadow Sirens.  Mario was not sure.  They talked until the sun went down and the stars twinkled brightly in the sky.  The sound of crickets and the click-clack of the tracks could be heard through the open window, a cool night breeze blowing through.  After three cups of tea Mario felt very warm, and tired.  He was finally able to say farewell to Pennington as he got up from the couch.  Pennington bided adieu as he waddled back over to his dresser, pulling back out the books and pipe.  After that chat with Pennington Mario felt more into the mystery then he had been in the beginning.  Mario slowly crossed the silent hall, passed room #4…..Mario felt like a true detective now, and decided that he would check on the body of Frankly like he was supposed to in the first place.  Mario slowly opened Professor Frankly’s freezing room.  Mario shuddered as he looked down at Frankly’s covered up body.  Mario closed the door behind him and walked towards him.  Mario had goosebumps everywhere; he could bring himself to pull back that sheet.  Mario decided to sit down for a while, get used to the atmosphere.  Maybe then he could bring himself to pull back that sheet.  Mario slowly walked over to the red couch, keeping his eye on the body as if he was expecting Frankly to rise up at any minute!  Mario sat down in the comfortable couch, his head finally resting.  Mario pulled his gaze away from Frankly for a moment, looking out at the stars.  So many of them, all so far away…Mario yawned and stretched, tiredness overwhelming him.  He slowly began closing his eyes.  Mario quickly opened them again, convincing himself to stay awake, but his eyes still began to close.  His eye-lids were an unbeatable sort of heavy, and he had to give into them…Mario slowly began drifting off to sleep……..Suddenly, the room began turning a strange tint of blue without Mario realizing it.  The ghost of a Toad suddenly appeared.  Mario felt a strange chill run over him, and woke up.  He suddenly opened his eyes to see the ghost.  Mario gasped.
“Shhhhhhh,” said the strange Toad ghost.
“You’re a…you’re a-“
“Ghost?  Yes, I am,” he said. “Greetings Mario.”  Mario rubbed his eyes with his cold hands.  He was now fully awake.
“But…. wait.  I remember you!” Mario said.  â€œDidn’t I meet you last time I was on this express?”
“Yes, you did…you were the fellow kind enough to return my diary,” the ghost said.
“Yeah…but…what are you still doing haunting this train?” Mario asked quickly.
“I like this train,” replied the ghost, “I don’t wish to leave.”  Mario looked from the glowing ghost to the body of Professor Frankly.
“Wait a minute…you didn’t…” Mario was gaping for words.
“No, no, I did not kill Professor Frankly,” the ghost said.  â€œOn the contrary.  I was trying to warn him that someone was coming…” Mario stared at the ghost.  He was proud of himself for handling such a paranormal event such as this so calmly.
“Trying to warn him…” said Mario, “So you know who the murderer is???” Mario asked excitedly.
“Yes, I do.” He replied calmly.
“Who?” Mario sputtered.
“I am sorry Mario, but I cannot tell you that…you have to solve this mystery on your own…” Mario grew a little frustrated.  Just then, another ghost appeared.  This next ghost was an old Goomba with a large, round pair of glasses.  It was Professor Frankly.  Mario gasped.
“…Professor!” Mario said.
“Hello Mario,” Professor Frankly said, “it is great to see you again!”  Mario was lost for words.  His old friend was now a ghost in front of him.
“…But…what are you doing here?” Mario asked quickly.
“Mario,” the ghost of Professor Frankly said, “I cannot leave this train and go into Heaven until you solve this mystery…” Mario felt his stomach go into knots
“…But…” said Mario.
“I know this is all quite hard to understand, Mario my boy,” Frankly said as he floated closer to Mario, but you need to trust me on this…I know that you can solve this mystery…you just have to try your hardest, and think outside the box!”  Mario stared at the glowing professor in awe.  â€œMario, I’ve known you never to give up…I know you can do this…” Mario’s mouth was open slightly as he squinted to see the two ghosts.
“…Thank you Professor…” said Mario, still shocked.  Frankly nodded.
“Well, Mario, that is all I can do for now…take good care of my dear Goombella for me…and good luck…” Frankly suddenly grew brighter and brighter until he finally disappeared.  The Toad ghost smiled at Mario.
“Oh and Mario,” the ghost said as he was about to disappear, “remember…. nothing is as it seems…” and with a flash of light, the toad ghost was gone as well…Mario sat on the couch of room #4, shocked, and completely in awe.


“A wagon full of pamcakes?  In the Champeen ship?!  I’d like to see ya try!” ~ Homestar Runner        
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #41 on: August 10, 2005, 03:35:26 PM »
...Wow....Glorb, although I disagree with your comment earlier, I must say that you might have apparently been right.  No one is reading this anymore...huh...Well, even if a Mario Murder Mystery is being frowned upon, I'm still going to finish it for anyone who might be reading this, just not commenting anymore.

“A wagon full of pamcakes?  In the Champeen ship?!  I’d like to see ya try!” ~ Homestar Runner        
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

Cro

« Reply #42 on: August 11, 2005, 01:39:25 PM »
You must WRITE ON!!
We must see the end...
and We must get Mario PASTA!!
One line signatures, please.

« Reply #43 on: August 12, 2005, 10:01:54 PM »
Then the show must go on!

Chapter 22:  Gone With the Lady  ~ Mario could hardly sleep last night.  All he could think about was the ghost of Frankly and what he had told Mario.  In the morning, Mario was more excited than ever to get back on the case!  He was thrilled with the overwhelming suspense of it.  The Excess Express was taking a very long route to Poshley Heights, as to give them more time to figure out who the mystery.  Mario wanted answers.  First thing in the morning, Mario rushed to room number three.  He knocked on the door three solid times.  No one came to answer the door.  Mario knocked threes times more.  Still, no one came to answer the door.
“Mario, we’ll be in the Dining Hall,” Goombella said to Mario as she entered the hallway from room number five.  Peach and Toadsworth followed her outside.  Mario nodded and waved to them as he watched them disappear behind the sliding door and into the Dining Hall.  Mario knocked again at Pennington’s door, and when no body answered, Mario allowed himself inside.  Mario creaked open the door to find that the windows were shades were drawn and Pennington was still asleep on his bed, a book in his hands.  Mario walked over to Pennington, thinking about if he should wake him up or not.  Mario looked at the bags under his eyes and then to his book.  He was reading through a roughly put together book called: “The History of Penguins”.  Pennington looked as though he had been up quite late last night reading.  Apparently he just wanted to get Mario out of the room to read his book last night when he had told Mario that he wanted to go to bed.  Mario snuck out of the room silently.  It was strange seeing Pennington like this, considering he was always an early bird.  Mario simply couldn’t wait to tell Pennington about the ghosts!  Until then, Mario decided to go get something to eat with his friends.  Mario walked through the sliding door and into the Dining Hall where he could see Peach, Toadsworth, and Goombella at a table next to Mrs. and Mr. Yoshers.  Mario walked over to them and sat down.  They greeted each other as the train roared on.  White, puffy clouds quickly dashed by high above the towering mountains.  Mario talked with his friends for a while until Toadina; the waitress came to their table.
“Good morning everyone!  What will you have?” she asked them politely.
“Princess, you first,” Toadsworth insisted.  Peach looked down at the menu she held in her hands, her eyes darting across it.
“Ummmm….” She said as she looked through the menu.  â€œI think I’ll just have a Marvelous Muffin, please.”  Toadina jotted something down.
“And for you?” she asked Goombella.
“I’ll have the pancakes,” Goombella replied.  Toadsworth then ordered the bran waffle, and Mario ordered the special; the Morning Pasta.  It sounded delicious.  Toadina walked to the kitchen, giving Chef Shimi a note that held all the orders.  Just then, Lord Crump walked in.  He looked very tired.  Apparently, the smell of Chef Shimi’s food got the best of him.  Lord Crump talked with Chef Shimi for a moment, asking what the special of the day was, and then sat down at a table ordering the same thing as Mario.  At this, Toadina quickly came back to their table with Peach’s muffin and Toadsworth’s tea, telling them that the rest of the food would be there shortly.  Mario and the others nodded as Toadina got back to work and Toadsworth sipped his tea.  After a short while, mister and missus Yoshers decided to go back to their rooms.  They both got up and headed towards the door.  As they walked by, Mario saw something drop from Mrs. Yoshers’ purse.  It appeared to be some sort of bulletin.  Mario picked it up.  He couldn’t help himself but read what it said.  It read:  â€œGone With the Wind.  The opening performance of the Grand Theatre House.  See the famous Madam Flurrie play the starring role of Ms. Scarlet, along with her supporting roles played by Zip Toad, Bombette, and Doopliss.  Technical support by Watt, Gourmet Guy and Grodus.  Please come to out famed opening event!  It will go down in history!!!”  Mario quickly pulled his eyes away from the bulletin, feeling rather guilty for reading it.
“Excuse me, Mrs. Yoshers!” Mario called after the pink yoshi who was just heading through the door now.  Unfortunately, she didn’t hear him.
“I’ll be right back, everyone,” Mario said to his friends as he dashed from his seat.  He opened the door following the Yoshers.  â€œExcuse me, ma’am.”  Mario said politely.  Mrs. Yoshers quickly turned around.  â€œYou dropped this.”  Mrs. Yoshers quickly looked down at the bulletin and took it from Mario’s grasp.
“Yes…Thank you…” Mrs. Yoshers said awkwardly.  â€œâ€¦Bye.”  She followed her husband through the next door.  Mario watched as they swiftly walked away, only to see heading through the door next, was Pennington.  Pennington saw Mario and quickened his pace.
“Ah!  Mario!  Good morning to you!” Pennington said.
“Good morning, Pennington,” Mario replied happily.
“I have been doing some research last…er…this morning, and I think I may be getting closer to who the culprit is!” he said.  Pennington seemed to be getting rather excited.
“Yeah, and, Pennington, there is something I want to tell you…”  and so Mario told Pennington the story of his meeting with the ghosts last now, and how he saw the ghost of Frankly.  Mario told him all of what they said, and everything.  At the end, Pennington was too shocked to speak.
“…..Mario……” he said, “…..This is amazing!”
“I know!” Mario said happily, “That ghost is our only witness!”
“Yes…That ghost,” Pennington said, a suspicious look in his eye.  â€œMario, are you sure you weren’t just dreaming, or something?….I mean, you were very tired, and it was late at night, you know.”  Mario knew he was going to ask this.
“I know, but Pennington, I could feel the ghost’s presence!  I know it was real!  It just has to be!” Mario replied to the rather puzzled penguin.
“Hmm…Well, Mario, I suppose who have the head on this mystery.  You’re going have to be very, VERY watchful for the next few days if we plan on solving this case.”  Mario nodded in agreement and followed Pennington and followed him into the Dining Hall.  Goombella and Toadsworth were eating their breakfast.  Peach had finished half of her muffin and was looking tired.  As the crossed over to the table, Lord Crump whispered to Mario;
“Peach isn’t lookin’ too good, Mario…I saw her almost fall asleep a little while a go…” Lord Crump cast a worried glance over at the princess.  Mario agreed.  Princess Peach really did look rather tired.  Mario sat down at his spot at the table, his Morning Pasta resting in front of him.
“Well, I suppose I’ll find another table then, Mario.  I’ll talk to you later,” Pennington said, seeing that the table was full.
“No, wait,” Peach said, “here.  You can take my seat…I’m not feeling too well anyways…I think it was that muffin…I’m going to go lay down…” Peach got up from her seat and made her way slowly to the door.
“Princess?” Toadsworth said, “Are you all right?  Do you need assistance?”
“No, thank you Toadsworth.  I can get there on my own just fine,” Peach replied with a little annoyance in her voice.
“Well…alright Princess…I hope you feel better soon.”  Pennington hoped in the spot of Princess Peach, sliding over the plate with the muffin on it.
“Good to see you all this morning!” Pennington said to Toadsworth and Goombella.
“Good morning Pennington,” Goombella replied.
“Good morning dear boy,” Toadsworth said.  â€œYou know…I think I’m going to have talk with that chef after I’m finished with this bran waffle…” The four of them talked away, chatting about the weather and simple topics like that.  Pennington checked his pocket watch and claimed that he should be going back to his room now to do a bit more research.  Lord Crump went back to his room as well.  A little while later, when the three of them had finished there food, they decided to go back to their room for a while as well.  Mario paid for the food and followed after Toadsworth and Goombella.  Mario did hope Peach was feeling all right now.  What did Chef Shimi put in that muffin?  Toadsworth opened the door slowly as not to awake the princess.  As they entered the room, they found Princess Peach huddled completely under the blanket, apparently already asleep.  Toadsworth made a “be quiet” signal to them as the walked in.  Toadsworth began reading his book as Goombella worked on her scrolls from Professor Frankly.  Apparently she was really getting into them.  Mario could swear she was about to cry sometimes as she read them, too.  Probably reading something that reminded her so of her old Professor.  Mario tried thinking of the case, but for some odd reason, Princess Peach was distracting him.  He kept looking over to where he lay hidden, completely still.  After a while, Mario couldn’t take it anymore.  Mario got up from the couch and slowly walked over to the bunk bed.  He very carefully pulled back the covers (Toadsworth luckily not noticing this) to see if Peach was really okay.  As he pulled them back, all he found was pillows.  Mario swiftly pulled off all the covers, revealing a pile of pillow on the bed.  This drew everyone’s attention as they just stared at the huddle of pillows, the place where Princess Peach was supposed to be resting.  On the pillows was a single sheet of paper.  On it, it read this:

sHe iS GoNe mR.DeTecTiVe.


“A wagon full of pamcakes?  In the Champeen ship?!  I’d like to see ya try!” ~ Homestar Runner        
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #44 on: August 13, 2005, 05:32:01 PM »
Chapter 23:  The Threatening Note ~ Toadsworth stood by the bedside, staring at the note, his mouth hanging open.
“Princess…” The princess had been kidnapped again.  Mario picked up the note and looked it over.  The handwriting was scrambled up as to note let Mario know who’s handwriting it was.  It was that muffin.  Someone put something in it.  But, why would Chef Shimi do such a thing?  He was the only one who could have done anything to Peach’s muffin while baking it.  Unless the ingredients were mixed around…hmm…
“Who could’ve kidnapped her like this?” Goombella said, shaking her head at the pillows.  â€œIt just sends shivers up your spine knowing someone was in here…someone who could even be…the murderer…” Mario didn’t waste any time.  He grabbed the note and took it off to Pennington’s room without another word.  Mario knocked at the door of room number three.  Pennington answered the door, sipping tea.
“Greetings Mario, old chap.  Did you discover anything?” Pennington asked.
“As a matter of fact, I have,” said Mario showing Pennington the note.  Pennington looked it over several times.  Even though this was a tragic accident, Mario could tell that Pennington was getting excited about how the mystery was beginning to really heat up now!  Pennington offered Mario tea.  He politely declined.  Pennington could not get over the note.  It was as if he thought if his eyes lost sight of that piece of paper, the mystery would go down the drain.
“This is truly unthinkable…Mario you must find her!  She could be harmed at any moment!”  Mario leapt at this.  Pennington was right.  Mario blood ran cold, and his heart pounded as he thought the murderer could have claimed yet another victim.  Mario apologized for his rudeness as he simply dashed from Pennington’s room and out into the hall.  The hall shook a little as the train road over a bump in the tracks.  Mario looked from left to right, his mind working fast.  She couldn’t have been anywhere to the back of the train, Mario would have seen the murderer run by.  She had to be somewhere in the front of the train.  Mario didn’t want to start charging into rooms yet.  He decided to take a visit to the front of the train.  Mario ran up to the engine.  He quickly slid open the door and walked through.  The engineer didn’t seem to notice Mario enter.  He was simply watching out the window of the train, keeping his eyes on the tracks of the train.  No sign of Peach anywhere.
“You,” Mario said.  The engineer quickly turned around, a panicked look on his face.
“Oh…Mario…It’s only you,” he said, catching his breath.  Everyone on the train was a little jumpy since the murder took place.
“Have you seen anyone come in here earlier?” Mario asked him.  The engineer looked a little confused.
“Why…No I haven’t…but then again, I didn’t hear you come in here either, now did I?” the engineer said.  Mario asked permission to search for something, which the engineer granted.
“Exactly, what are you looking for anyways?” asked the engineer.
“Oh, just something…someone, actually,” Mario said quickly as he looked around a piece of heavy equipment by the door.  The engineer grew pale.
“…Someone?” he said wearily, swallowing loudly.
“Yeah.  There’s been a kidnapping,” said Mario.  The conductor grew pale as Mario continued his search.  After a while, Mario found no sign of Peach.  He left the engine room, and decided to give each cabin a look down.  As Mario was about to knock on room number one, something struck him.  The room that held Frankly’s body.  Room number four.  Mario quickly dashed into the next boxcar, past Pennington’s room and stopped in front of room number four.  Mario took a deep breath, hoping to God that he wouldn’t find another lump under a sheet lying on the floor.  He slid open the door.  Mario saw the Toad ghost, floating near the beds.  He was looking down at the ground.  Mario quickly looked where the ghost was.  From underneath the bottom bunk Mario could see a slender, gentle hand covered with a long white glove.  Mario quickly rushed over to the bed, past Frankly’s body and slowly looked under the bed where Peach’s body lay.  Mario was afraid to see what he would find.  There was Peach, her eyes gently closed and her chest slowly going up and down.  She was still alive, only in a very deep sleep.  Mario gently pulled her out from under the bed.  She was out like a light.
“Mario,” said the ghost, “check her hand…” Mario looked up at the Toad ghost.  Mario looked down at Peach’s gloved hand to find her clutching something.  He gently pulled it out.  It was another sheet of paper.  Mario unfolded it and read:

KeEp YoUr NoSE oUt oF ThIs MyStErY iF yOu KnOw WhaTs GoOd FoR yOu.

Mario gasped.  Someone was threatening Mario.  And whoever it was is on this very train.  Mario picked up the sleeping Peach and headed to the door of room number four.
“Mario,” said the ghost.  Mario turned to hear what he had to say.  â€œKeep your eyes open, Mario.  Remember.  Don’t believe everything you hear…” The ghost slowly disappeared.  Mario looked down at Professor Frankly’s body, and then back at Princess Peach.  Mario walked back out in the hallway to bring her back to her peaceful sleep.


“A wagon full of pamcakes?  In the Champeen ship?!  I’d like to see ya try!” ~ Homestar Runner        
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #45 on: August 17, 2005, 02:45:47 PM »
Chapter 24:  Getting the Answers ~ “What in the name of Scott did you put in that muffin, Mr. Shimi?!” Toadsworth asked angrily the next morning.  Toadsworth had risen early in the morning to see if Peach would awaken yet, but the Princess simply continued to sleep on.  Pennington advised them to let her rest, for waking her up when the sleeping powder’s effect hadn’t worn off could cause a terrible health risk.  Chef Shimi trembled in his kitchen.
“I don’t know!  I put everything in the correct order!  Anyone could have changed the ingredients around when I wasn’t looking!  Anyone I tell you!”  Toadsworth walked off in disgust.  Mario sat at the table in the dining Room alone that morning.  He wasn’t very hungry for anything at the moment; his mind was too fixed on this complicated case.  Someone obviously wanted Mario out of this…but whom?  Everyone on the train seemed so nice.  Too nice to ever write a threatening note like that.  Who would do such a thing?  Mario thought it over in his head.  Who could do this?  Bow and Bootler seemed a little too self-occupied to do anything this drastic.  Although the Yoshers were very mysterious people, murder just didn’t seem to be their taste at all.  Professor Bom-Bers did seem rather likely, but he was taking Frankly’s death so hard, that it seemed almost sinful to accuse him.  The Shadow Sirens may be the most mysterious of them all.  Were they hatching a completely diabolical plan, or just trying not to seem like a prime suspect?  Lord Crump seemed a little too lazy to do anything like that.  After the X-Nauts stopped reining chaos on everyone, they appeared rather pathetic.  Mario tried to rouse up as many clues as he could in his head.  Bootler claiming to go to the ice machine when it was out of order during the time of the murder, and no one even saw him go into the Dining Hall in the first place.  That was one of the major mysteries in Mario’s mind, and he planned to figure that one out sometime soon.  The missing vase in the Shadow Siren’s room.  They could have snuck out of their room in shadow, made their way to Frankly’s room, knocked him out with a vase, panicked when he screamed, and brought the vase back to their room… or someone could have thrown the vase in their room to frame them… it’s a shame no one decided to notice if the vase was stolen right after the murder, or during the night of the murder.  It really would make a huge difference.  Then there was Lord Crump’s one way to and from ticket.  He just wanted to hit the tracks, and enjoy this way of travel, apparently having no desire to get off at Rougeport.  Not too suspicious considering a lot of people do that sort of thing, but still something to think about.  Then there was poor Professor Bom-Bers.  He seems most likely to kill Professor Frankly and steal his discovery, considering he too is a professor.  Any of those books on his floor could have been Frankly’s missing discovery.  But how would he murder Frankly while he was looking in the shop window?  Some sort of time bomb like thing?  He was a very smart professor after all.  This mystery was a lot to think about.
“Mario!  Hello there!” Pennington suddenly said loudly behind Mario.  Mario jumped slightly and quickly turned around.
“Pennington!  Hi,” Mario replied, gasping.
“I can’t get this mystery out of my head, dear boy!  I am going to go through rooms 6, 7, and 8 to have a bit more questioning done by myself, if you don’t mind.  I really feel like I’m not getting anything done, here!”  Mario nodded.  Pennington really was trying his best.  Although Mario could tell that Pennington was enjoying the thrill of the mystery, he could also tell that he was struggling a bit.  Pennington waddled off to his questioning, and hearing this sounded to Mario like a good idea.  He would do a little more questioning himself, starting with Mister Chef Shimi.  Mario pulled himself up from his table and walked into the kitchen.  Chef Shimi was whistling to himself over by the stove, apparently make a wonderful smelling stew.  Mario could almost taste the sweet tangy delight, but remembered what he was here for as soon as Chef Shimi turned around with a potato in his fin.
“Oh!  Mario!  It is you!  You scared me for a moment!  Ho ho!” Chef Shimi said as he began to peel the potato over at the counter, brushing the potato skins into a bowl.
“Chef Shimi, I know I’ve been questioning you a bit lately, what about the ice machine and what not, but do you mind if I ask you something else?” Mario asked.  Chef Shimi looked up from his peeling.
“Why, of course I do!  Or…not, wait… I mean, of course not!  I am sorry, Mario, my English still isn’t very good.  What is it you want to ask me?” Chef Shimi asked.
“Well, I was wondering.  Do you know of anyone who could have changed ingredients on you yesterday?” asked Mario, hoping desperately to get the answer he wanted.
“Well, Mario, anyone could have.  You could have just now while my back was turned.  Anyone is able to sneak into the kitchen day or night, you know.”  This really wasn’t much help to Mario.  That just narrowed the suspects down to about everyone on the train.  Mario sighed and thanked the brown Cheep Cheep for his time.  Mario left the Dining Hall and into the boxcar that held rooms one and two.  Perhaps he could do a little more questioning to the seductive Bow and worrisome Bootler.  Mario walked through the green and gold hallway and stopped in front of the door that led to room one.  Mario raised his fist and knocked on the door.  At his second knock, the door quickly flung open revealing Bootler.
“Please, Master Mario, Lady Bow is asleep!” Bootler whispered.  Mario noticed that indeed, the room looked rather dark.  But then again, Mario saw this as an even better opportunity anyways.  Mario only really wanted to question Bootler.
“Bootler, I need to talk to you?”  Bootler grew somewhat pale, even for a ghost.
“Me?” Bootler asked, he voice cracking a bit.  â€œCan it wait for Lady Bow’s awakening?”
“Oh, no,” Mario said, “this would best be done now, while she’s asleep.”  Bootler looked around his shoulder, obviously towards the slumbering Boo.  He then turned to Mario again and nodded, floating out of Mario’s way for him to enter the room.  Bow slumbered on the bottom bunk, covers pulled over her face and her two red and gold ribbons resting on the desk nearby.  Bootler hovered by the couch as Mario sat down.
“What is it you would like to talk about, Master Mario?” asked Bootler in a very soft whisper.
“I want to ask you something about the night of the murder,” Mario whispered back, just as softly.  Bootler’s eyes widened.  â€œBootler, you should just tell me what happened right now.  Bow won’t find out, and you’ll be clearing your case, because right now it doesn’t look too well for you,” Mario said honestly.
“Wha…What do you mean?” asked Bootler, looking panicked.
“I mean that you’re not looking exactly innocent right now…you see…we questioned the people who were in the Dining Hall at the time of the murder and they say that they did not see anyone go use the ice machine, which you claimed to be doing at the time…do you want to explain yourself?”  Bootler looked over at his sleeping master, and then back at Mario.  He heaved a heavy sigh.
“Oh, alright…Mario…It was night, and we had just gotten on the Excess Express after Frankly.  Lady Bow really did want to see the opening play ever so badly.  She was complaining right away about not having enough blankets in the room and told me to wait here while she went to persuade the conductor to give her more…well…I had brought a delicate wine with us that was very valuable, and I wanted to save it for when we got to Poshley Heights after the show…and I really didn’t want it to get cold…but it was going to be a surprise…it was, after all, Lady Bow’s favorite.  So I took this spare moment of time to grab a bucket and…well…let me show you…” Mario watched intently as Bootler floated over to a little bucket on the coffee table.  Bootler picked up the bucket, and suddenly he disappeared.  It looked as though the bucket was floating in mid-air.  But then, the bucket as well disappeared.  Mario suddenly understood.  Bootler and the bucket reappeared, and he set it back down.  Mario had completely forgotten about the power of Boos and how they can turn invisible, not only themselves, but other objects too!
“So, what you’re saying,” Mario said, louder than he intended, “is that you turned invisible with the bucket, moved through the halls and into the Dining Hall, and when you tried to get ice-“
“The ice machine simply wouldn’t work,” Bootler interrupted.  â€œI had done it for nothing.”
“But then you heard the scream,” Mario said.
“Yes.  Once I heard that scream come from the other room, I was shocked stiff.  I simply couldn’t move.  Then Lady Bow and the conductor burst into the Dining Hall.  Luckily I was still invisible, which explain why no one saw me, and they both rushed into the crime scene.  I took this moment to follow them secretly, and while they were frozen, staring at that poor Goomba’s body I rushed back into room number one as if nothing had happened.  Now I am looked to as suspicious and have a warm bottle of wine with me…”
“Bootler,” Mario said, “this explains everything.”
“Please, Master Mario, don’t tell Lady Bow,” Bootler pleaded.
“Don’t worry,” Mario reassured him, “your secret is safe with me.”


“A wagon full of pamcakes?  In the Champeen ship?!  I’d like to see ya try!” ~ Homestar Runner        
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #46 on: August 18, 2005, 12:11:48 PM »
Chapter 25:  And So it Seems the Mystery is Over ~ Mario exited Room number one, not sure of what to do next.  He had now solved the case of the ice machine, but the case of the missing flowerpot and of course the murder mystery were still left unsolved.  Perhaps those two cases mixed together in a way.  It was obvious that the kidnapping of Peach was definitely mixed.  Perhaps if Mario solved one case, the other would simply unroll.  Mario thought of this for a while as he aimlessly wondered in to the Dining Hall once more.  This seemed to be the easiest place to think.  Just to stare out the window, letting your mind wonder on and on.  Today, however, the Dining Hall seemed to be rather full.  Mr. And Mrs. Yoshers were there, the Shadow Sirens, and Lord Crump.  Mario took a seat at the table in the corner of the Dining Hall next to the window.  Just then, Pennington came waddling into the Dining Hall as well.  He waddled over to Mario’s table and took a seat without permission.
“Well Mario, I’ve quizzed all of them…Every last one…”
“And what did you learn?” asked Mario once Pennington stopped.
“Well…I asked them where they were around the time of Peach’s kidnapping.  Lord Crump said he was in his room, as usual.  The Shadow Sirens were heading into the Dining Hall, but get this.  Professor Bom-Bers says that he was up at the train engine with the engineer…either Bom-Bers is really interested in trains…or he has lately been using the engineer as an excuse to go to the scene of the crime…” Pennington finished on a suspicious note.  â€œMario, wait here…I’m going to go and…get something…” Mario nodded to Pennington as he hopped out of his chair and waddled over to the door that led to his room number three.  Mario curiously watched as the detective penguin disappeared into the hall.  Mario turned his gaze to the window once again, watching the trees dash by.  They had been on this train for quite a long time now, and although the food was good, and the beds were comfortable, Mario wanted to get back on solid ground.  Breathe fresh air.  How long was this trip anyways?  Mario thought that maybe he should run it over with the conductor or the engineer some time.  But still, every time Mario thought of having a talk with someone, he couldn’t help but think that he could be talking to a cold-blooded murderer.  Mario turned to look at the door.  Pennington was re-entering and he was carrying a very large, bulky black back.  He quickly waddled over to Mario.
“Take a look at this, my boy!” Pennington said.  He leaned over, showing the bag to Mario.  Inside was a large, strange, metal contraction.
“…What is it?” Mario asked.  Pennington looked excited.
“It’s a lie detector!  I haven’t used this thing in years!  But, once hearing the case of my dear Professor Frankly, I thought that I would give it another whirl…although I highly doubt that it will work.”  Mario examined the lie detector, reaching down to pull it out of the bag.  Pennington pulled back the bag before Mario could touch it.
“I think I’ll go test it out on Professor Bom-Bers!” Pennington said.
“Pennington,” Mario said, “why didn’t we just try this thing out in the firs place?” Pennington turned at the doorway.
“Well, Mario, I am almost positive the lie detector won’t work anymore, and it’s always better to juice up the brain with a good, slicing mystery, eh?  But, now that things are getting so drastic…I’ve decided to use it…” Pennington turned quickly and dashed into the hallway.  Mario had a strange feeling that the lie detector would work…but it was only a hunch.  Was Professor Bom-Bers really the murderer???  Just then, Goombella appeared by Mario’s side.
“Hey Mario,” Goombella said.
“Oh, hello Goombella,” Mario said.  Goombella sat opposite of Mario.
“So, I hear Pennington’s really excited about something.  Do you think this mystery will be solved today?” Goombella asked.
“Well, one mystery has been solved.”  Mario told Goombella about his little chat with Bootler and how it wasn’t likely that he was the murderer.  It definitely wasn’t much, but it did clear up a lot of fog.  Mario then remembered he still hadn’t told Pennington.  He probably should if he goes marching up to him with the lie detector.  After Mario told Goombella about Pennington’s lie detector, his stomach became knots.  He didn’t realize how anxious he was to find out if it worked or not.  If the lie detector worked, then they basically had this mystery in the hole!  But, then again, Pennington did say that he was almost positive it didn’t work, and Mario decided not to puts his hopes up too much.  Professor Bom-Bers seemed so innocent too…how could he have done it in the first place?  No devices were spotted by the crime scene that suggested no timed weapon could have gone off.  Suddenly, the door by the gift shop burst open.  Everyone turned to see who had walked out.  It was Pennington holding something up in the air with Professor Bom-Bers hurrying behind him.
“I’ve done it!” Pennington cried out loudly.  Everyone gasped and went to huddle around Pennington.  Professor Bom-Bers looked more nervous than ever.  His eyes round, his tongue dry, and sweat leaking from his forehead.
“What is it?” Lord Crump asked.  Goombella quickly jumped out of her seat to join the commotion.  Although Mario could hardly see over the crowd, it looked as though Pennington was holding some sort of book.
“This is Professor Frankly’s missing work!” Pennington cried.  Goombella gasped loudly.
“Where did you find it?” she asked.
“I found it,” Pennington said, suddenly turning to look at the poor nervous bom-omb standing behind him, “in Mr. Bom-Bers room.”  There were more gasps throughout the room.  Mister and Missus Yoshers exchanged nervous glances.  Lord Crump looked very excited.  Bow and Bootler suddenly entered the Dining Hall, now aware of all the commotion.
“What is going on in here?” Bow asked.
“He…uh…He found the culprit!” Lord Crump said.
“What?” Bow exclaimed.
“Yes everyone, I have found the culprit!” Pennington said very proudly.  Mario couldn’t believe it.  Bom-Bers was the murderer the whole time.  He killed Professor Frankly.  His old college friend.
“How did you do it?” asked Toadina.  Pennington grabbed Bom-Bers making sure he couldn’t get away.
“Well, it started when I decided to give Bom-Bers the lie-detector test.  Unfortunately, like I had guessed, it was broken.  When I was about to leave his room in despair, I looked upon his for to find this!” Pennington cried holding up the book for all to see.  â€œSomething told me to examine this book, and when I did…well…look!”  Pennington opened up the cover of the book and was showing something to the people.  Mario jumped to see what it was, but still he was too far back.
“Why!  That’s a book by Frankly!” Bow said.
“Yes!  It is!  I found Frankly’s signature on the backside of this cover, along with a little note that read this:  â€˜This book is dedicated to my dear friend, Pennington, who I couldn’t solve the case without’…” Pennington whipped a tear from his eye as everyone exchanged looks of sorrow.  Mario was pale.  How could he?  Little Professor Bom-Bers…who would do such a thing?  Mario looked over to Goombella who had tears building up in her big, brown eyes.
“Bom-Bers, why did you do this?” Goombella asked.  Everyone turned to Professor Bom-Bers.
“It-It-It wasn’t me!  I-I swear!  Someone framed me!” he said nervously.  â€œI wouldn’t kill anyone!  Especially not Frankly!  No!  It wasn’t me!”
“Oh be quiet Bom-Bers.  The evidence is all right here,” Pennington pointed at the book.  â€œThe murderer stole Frankly’s discovery, and since you have Frankly’s discovery, you’re obviously the murderer you underhanded bom-omb…why did you do it?”  Everyone shook their heads at the awe-struck bom-omb.
“…It…wasn’t…me…” he said.  Pennington shook his head as his eyes nailed into the bom-omb.
“You disgust me…” Pennington said.  Bom-Bers gave a look of fear around at everyone.  Chef Shimi’s jaw was dropped, and the Conductor seemed to be acting rather paranoid.  â€œSo…how did you do it Bom-Bers?  We know you did it, now I’d like to know how…”
“It wasn’t me!  I did not kill Pro-Professor Frankly!  The Shadow Sirens were in my room for a while today!  Yeah…we were talking!  They must have dropped the book in my room to frame me!  Yeah that’s it!” Bom-Bers said quickly.
“You know what, Bom-Bers.  I’m going to have the Conductor, Chef Shimi, and Mario take you back to your room.  I want you to think of what you did, and I’m going to come back tomorrow and you had better tell me everything…” Pennington said.  Pennington nodded to Mario, the Conductor, and Chef Shimi.  Mario and the Conductor walked by his sides while Chef Shimi took the back, making sure he couldn’t get away.  â€œWell, Mario, I guess this case is over,” Pennington said as Mario began walking towards the door.
“I guess so,” said Mario, “I guess so…”


“A wagon full of pamcakes?  In the Champeen ship?!  I’d like to see ya try!” ~ Homestar Runner        
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #47 on: September 02, 2005, 07:07:42 PM »
Chapter 26:  Trying to Get the Answers ~ Everyone seemed to be a little shocked after that little scene.  People also seemed a lot more relieved, and Mario couldn’t blame.  The murderer was locked away safe now.  He played a hard game, but left the evidence wide open, a terribly foolish mistake.  Not long after the murder mystery was solved, Pennington and Mario went back to Professor Bom-Bers’ to try to figure out not only how he did it, but why.  It was a tricky case that one could not just think up.  The Shadow Sirens were just scared that they would be accused of something they didn’t do.  They really were framed for the murder.  It was understandable to, considering that Bom-Bers was located right next to their room.  Pennington slowly walked down the hall followed by Mario.  They were silent as they stopped in front of room seven.  The room seemed almost haunting now, knowing that the murderer was in there.  Pennington raised a fist and knocked.
“Open up, Bom-Bers, time for questioning,” Pennington said.  They’ve been through a lot of questioning on this train, but none like this.  The door flung open revealing Professor Bom-Bers.  His wick was more crooked than ever, and his eyes were piercing.  His usual red bow tie was no longer there, and he looked rather tired.
“Fine!” he spat out quickly.  â€œCome in!  What do I care, I’m going to jail any how…”  Bom-Bers stormed into his room, leaving the door open.  Pennington exchanged glances with Mario as they both entered the room.  It was just as messy as last time.  Bom-Bers sat on his bed, staring at the floor.  Pennington shook his head as he seated himself on the couch, Mario doing the same.  There was a brief moment of silence.
“Bom-Bers, Bom-Bers, Bom-Bers…why?” Pennington asked in a very serious tone.
“Why what?  I did nothing, Pennington…nothing,” Bom-Bers said.  â€œI was framed.  I was framed!!!” Pennington shook his head.
“Bom-Bers, you seemed most likely to murder Frankly, and had the biggest clue of all just lying in your room…I believe it is time for you to stop denying your terrible mistake…” Pennington said.  Mario felt almost sorry for the mistaken little Bom-Omb.  How could he do such a thing?
“Listen to me you stupid penguin!  I DID NOTHING WRONG!  I wouldn’t kill my friend!  I had nothing against him!”
Pennington stood up and looked Bom-Bers right in the eye.  â€œListen, you!  Maybe you were framed, maybe you weren’t, but as far as I’m concerned right now, you’re a fat cat spittin’ feathers, now answer the questions in a civilized matter!”  Bom-Bers gave an awful glare at Pennington.  The penguin became stiff as he sat down once more.  Mario didn’t notice this however as he studied the facial expression of Professor Bom-Bers.  It was a look of terrible frustration, anger, and a hint of fear.
“Alright penguin…I’ll answer you in a civilized manner….I did not murder Professor Frankly.”  His expression turned calmer, but Mario could still uncover his fear hidden under his baggy eyelids.  Pennington stared hard at Bom-Bers for a few minutes.
The penguin shook his head and rubbed his eyes.  â€œYou know, Bom-Bers, I was hoping it wasn’t going to be you.  To kill your own friend is the most unloyal, lowly thing you could ever do.  But, the clues were all around.  Your grief.  It could have been for Frankly…or yourself.  I had the strangest feeling it was you…you got so testy when the murder was brought up.  I know I find you with Frankly’s discovery in your room, right next to your bed.” Bom-Bers suddenly seemed to be having a hard time breathing as he wheezed in and out.  His eyes stuck to Pennington like glue.
Mario looked at Professor Bom-Bers and shook his head.  â€œHow did you do it, Bom-Bers?” he asked.  Bom-Bers eyes broke away from Detective Pennington and switched over to Mario.  Mario felt the same cold glare on him.  He suddenly felt a little guilty for asking the question.
“I don’t know how I did it, Mario.  I didn’t do it.  I deny all of it,” said Bom-Bers.  Pennington appeared to be getting a little restless as he rubbed his temples.
A few minutes later Pennington returned a very serious glare to Professor Bom-Bers.  â€œProfessor that is enough.  Just confess yourself!”
“I have!” Bom-Bers shot back.  â€œI did!  I did nothing!  It was not me!”
“Bom-Bers either confess or I’ll be forced to take you straight to the police station as soon as this train stops!”  Pennington seemed to suddenly panic.
“I DIDN’T DO IT!  What is the matter with you?!”
Pennington stood up from the couch.  â€œAlright Bom-Bers.  Prepare for a very serious lie-detector test when we get to Poshley Heights!”
“Fine!”  Pennington rushed out the door, slamming it behind him.  Mario kept his gaze at the closed door, and stood up slowly as well.

Just as he began making his way toward the door, Bom-Bers said, “Mario….” Mario turned to look at him.  â€œâ€¦.It wasn’t me…”


Mario walked down the hall and into the Dining Hall.  Pennington was sitting at a table next to a window, sipping some tea.  Mario walked over and took a seat across from him.  Pennington sniffed loudly as he looked out the window.
“Pennington,” Mario said, “you do realize that there isn’t even a police station at Poshley Heights, don’t you?”  It was true.  Poshley Heights was filled with only the wealthiest and most famous people.  None of them were crooks, and they needed no police department.
“Yes, Mario, I just thought of that…We’re going to have to keep Professor Bom-Bers locked up on the train until we get back to Rougeport.  I think that Don Pianta and some of his crew will be able to help me get the answers out of the Bom-Omb…”  Mario nodded.  Pennington told Mario that they should just relax now that they seemed to have the murderer captured and away with.  Mario nodded at this statement.  It was true, there could now be a lot more relaxation.
Pennington got up and left Mario sitting at the table.  â€œGood night, Pennington.”
“Good night, my boy…”
As Pennington left, and Mario was left in the dark, empty Dining Hall, a chill raced up his spine.  There was still the thought of them catching the wrong suspect…what id Bom-Bers was telling the truth…was the murderer still out there?



It is better to be sworn to an honest fool than to a lying scholar.  ~  Eragon from the book Eldest by Christopher Paolini.  
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #48 on: September 18, 2005, 10:52:24 AM »
Chapter 27:  Guilt ~ Mario awoke to the clickety clack sound of the train tracks under the express.  He opened his eyes and peered out the window.  To his surprise, it was raining.  Droplets of water pittered and pattered across the window as low rumble sof thunder sound across the sky.  Mario sat up in his bed and rubbed his eyes, blood rushing to his head.  He slowly tried to rethink what had happened last night.  As he looked around the room at all his sleeping friends, he suddenly remembered Professor Bom-Bers and how he was accused for murder last night.  Mario suddenly felt a tad nervous for some, unknown reason…perhaps it was because Mario didn’t truly believe that Bom-Bers was the murderer.  Something in his gut simply told him otherwise.  There was hardly any proof to conclude this theory, other than having Professor Frankly’s stolen discovery found in his room, but anyone could have easily framed him for that.  However, Mario knew exactly how Pennington was feeling, for he felt it too.  Stress.  This whole murderer mystery was so stressful, that Pennington was to the point where he’d simply pounce on anyone if they had the slightest clue that they were the murderer.  However, finding Frankly’s missing discovery was not a slight clue.  Whoever murdered Frankly was the same person who stole the discovery, according to Pennington’s research.  But last night, while Mario was sitting with Bom-Bers, he felt pity.  He felt a great deal of sorrow for the Bom-Omb.  Sitting there, being strictly accused without any real, solid proof.  Mario felt an enormous amount of guilt on his shoulders as he thought that even though he thought it was wrong, he would still allow Bom-Bers to be framed.  This was probably the first time Mario had ever taken the easy way out.
Mario quietly climbed out of bed, his feet touching the soft, red carpet below.  The train felt cold now, probably because of the rainy weather.  Mario walked over to the window, curling up his toes as to try to keep them warm.  He looked out at the trees passing him by, and the thick, gray clouds suspended in the air, flashes of lightning illuminating them brilliantly.  Mario followed the raindrops along the window with his eyes as he watched them slowly drift down to the windowsill, then flying off to hit the ground, where they would remain.
Mario put on his shoes, and combed down his hair.  He grabbed his red cap from the dresser top and placed it firmly on his head.  Mario slowly, and quietly opened the door and looked out into the hallway.  It was just as cold, if not colder, out there.  Mario entered the hallway, sliding the door closed behind him.  Normally, he would go into the Dining Hall to eat some breakfast, mingle with the other passengers, or just to think about the mystery.  However, the mystery of the death of Professor Frankly was now solved, and none of this was truly needed anymore.  This morning he would go to visit the engineer and see when they were to get to Poshley Heights, for it had been quite a long journey so far.  Mario crossed the floor, passing door numbers 4 and then 3.  Then Mario came to the empty table at the end of the hall that was supposed to be holding the vase of flowers.  Mario’s stomach churned dangerously as he looked at the empty space on the table, thunder roaring outside.  He strangely became frightened and quickly walked past the table, and into the next boxcar.  The mystery of the missing flower vase was still not solved.  Although it could have easily been that after the murder, Bom-Bers (or whoever the murderer was) could have snuck out at night when no one was looking, taken the vase, and put it in the Shadow Sirens’ room, hoping to get them framed.  But still, this was not a proven fact and there were still so many questions that needed an answer in this mystery.  And Mario had a strange desire to solve them…
Mario walked by room number 2 and 1, thinking of how relieved Bow, Bootler, and Mister and Missus Yoshers must feel now that the so-called murderer was caught.  Did they really believe that Bom-Bers was the murderer, or did they just want to point the finger at anyone but them? Mario opened the door that lead to the train engine.  It was a place that had quite a bit of brilliant technology, along with a large window in the front, where the tracks could be seen, along with whatever may be in front of the train.  The engineer, a Toad wearing a black engineer suit, was at the front of the engine, looking out the window and keeping in eye of the button and levers in front of him.
“Excuse me,” Mario said politely.  The train engineer turned around to greet Mario.
“Hello there,” he said, “May I help you, Mario?”
“Yes, I was wondering when we would be arriving to Poshley Heights.”
“When we’ll arrive at Poshley Heights, hmmm… Well, I would make an estimate somewhere around this afternoon.”
“Would we be getting there in time for the Grande Theatre?”
“Oh yes, most definitely.”
Mario nodded and thanked the engineer for his help, then turned on his heel and left.  Everything was still rather quiet on the train, except for the gentle sound of the rain, and the fierce blows of the rumbling thunder.  Mario walked back through the halls, trying to divert his eyes away from the vase-empty table, and made his way into the Dining Hall, since he really didn’t know where else he would be going.  He took a table by the window, as usual, and waited for the waitress to come by.  He didn’t realize it, but he really was quite hungry.  The cold air of the train kept Mario’s tiredness at bay, as he held his head in the palm of his hands gazing out the window.  Just then, Toadina, the beautiful Toad waitress noticed Mario and quickly walked over to serve him.
Mario had ordered bacon, coffee, and some shroom eggs, a good meal for the early morning.
“It’ll be right out,” the Toad waitress said, as she happily waltzed away.  As Mario sat at the table, looking out the window, he thought of all his adventures he had had during this.  Sailing across the sea with Goombella, and Bobbery, bumping into pirates.  Doing Don Pianta’s bidding and exploring a cave, beating that dangerous piranha plant.  Then of course, arriving on the train, meeting with the suspects, having quite an experience with ghosts, and trying to solve a murder mystery.  This was an adventure Mario would never forget.  The waitress came back rather quickly with Mario’s food.
“So is it true?” she asked, “Is Bom-Bers really the murderer?”
“Well…” said Mario, “we think so…”
“Wow…that quiet little Bom-Omb…never would’ve guessed it.  I guess you have to look out for the quiet ones, don’t you?  Huh…Well, enjoy the food!”
Mario sat there, picking at his food.  He suddenly wasn’t very hungry anymore.
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #49 on: September 23, 2005, 10:22:53 PM »
Chapter 28:  Arrival ~ What a long, and tiresome journey it had been.  Mario was quite tired of all this mystery business, and wasn’t even sure that he would want to know that truth about Professor Bom-Bers or not.  Just the thought of it made him sick to the stomach.  This evening, though, would bring relief and joy to most of the passengers, for this evening they would finally reach their arrival point.  Poshely Heights, where most everyone would be seeing the opening play for the Grande Theatre.  What a thrilling performance it would be!  In fact, now, after all this terribly disturbing and somewhat unwelcome mystery was solved, seeing the play almost seemed like a long-earned reward for being able to withstand the mystery, as if they even had a choice to begin with.  It was obvious that Peach and Toadsworth were happy about it, but they also were looking deep enough into the mystery.  Goombella, however, seemed to.  She too was wondering whether or not Pennington was correct about his accusing of Professor Bom-Bers.  But, she didn’t seem to look too much into it, considering she seemed now to be finished with Professor Frankly’s scrolls, either because she had completed and translated all of them, or she grew bored of them, and found them confusing, and now she grew very curious with Professor Frankly’s missing discovery.  Pennington decided he would keep the discovery, and figure it out for himself.  After all, Professor Frankly was going to consult Pennington about it in the first place, so who else would fit for the reward better than he?
Goombella was stubborn, though.  She simply insisted on Pennington showing her the missing discovery.  But Pennington seemed to be greedy about it, never showing her the book, yet hardly ever reading it himself.  So, through with scrolls, and not being able to study anything new, Goombella had more time to think, which caused her to constantly think about her dear mentor’s death more than ever, which caused her to normally be in a depressed like state most of the time.  Mario hated to see her like this.  He had always been used to the sassy, smart Goombella, who was full of energy.  But Mario couldn’t blame her.  It had been a terrible loss, and those mysterious scrolls really did put her emotions on hold for a while.
Mario walked through the same sliding door he had walked through many times on this train ride, and entered the very familiar Dining Hall. He looked over to see Goombella and Bow sitting at a table by the window, the same table Mario often sat at.  Mario approached the table, able to hear a little of their conversation so far.
“Believe me, my dear, death is only a mere step in life!  For me, a very graceful and beautiful step.  Mweh heh heeh!” Bow laughed, fanning her make-up covered face with her fluffy pink fan rapidly.  Apparently, she was trying to cheer up Goombella.  It didn’t seem to be working very well.  The weather certainly couldn’t have been helping, for it was still pouring outside, and the wind was still pounding on the express, tilting the chandeliers.  Bow saw Mario coming and scooted over for him to sit.
“Mario dear!  Please, come sit,” she said in her fancy, pompous voice.  Mario did as she told him.  Goombella was looking at the table, a sad look on her face.
“Oh, hello Mario,” Goombella said more quietly than usual.
“Hello Goombella,” Mario said.  He would have loved to say ‘What a pleasant say we’re having, isn’t it?’ but obviously, looking outside, that was a far too optimistic statement.  Poor, poor Goombella, Mario thought.  Perhaps she is feeling the same way I am.  That perhaps we did not catch the right suspect, and that we failed to establish justice on Frankly’s behalf… It was such a terrible thought, and Mario felt depressed and nauseas thinking of it.  Frankly’s poor soul, trapped upon this train for good, like the toad ghost that haunts the express.
“Honestly Goombella, these things happen.  You really just have to let them go, and move on… Find interests, or hobbies!” Bow said.
“Like what?” asked Goombella.
“Well…” said Bow, biting on her fan as she thought, “How about traveling?  Yes, of course!  There’s simply nothing like traveling.  Why, when I was bored in my old, dusty mansion, I decided to travel the world!  I went to Glitzville, Toad Town, even the terribly hot Dry Dry Outpost, but I don’t regret any of it!  It was fun, and Bootler made sure I had the time of my life.  In fact, this is my second trip to Poshley Heights!  I simply love that place…so sophisticated… seems to suit me well… yes, indeed…” Bow appeared to be focusing on herself a little much once again.  She tended to do that during conversations.  Goombella didn’t appear to be listening any more though, anyways.  Quite frankly, neither was Mario.  She was rambling on and on about something or other, like how she used to own a poodle, or something like that, and Mario simply watched the water droplets slide across the window while Goombella stared at the wooden table, as though she was waiting for it to move.
“-but you know, I thought Princess was such a common name, and I wanted something unique like…Victoria.  But no, my foolish little sister just wouldn’t let me name her!  I mean sure she was her dog but…wait…” Bow looked up at the clock.  â€œOh I’m terribly sorry you two, I promised Bootler a game of bingo today over tea.  Quite a lonely ghost he is.”  Bow floated up from the table.  â€œOh, and Goombella, chin up, darling, things will get better…or at least…they usually tend to.”  Goombella looked at Bow and smiled as the ghost girl floated away.


~BING BONG BING BING!~ “Attention passengers, we will be arriving at Poshley Heights shortly, we will be arriving at Poshley Heights shortly.  Thank you once again for choosing the Excess Express. *Click*” The announcements were seeming to be less friendly and less friendly each day.  Mario was relieved that he was finally going to be able to touch solid ground once more.  Everyone was getting their things together as the conductor came around each room, collecting the people’s items to store them away in their bags in the baggage boxcar.  Mario, Peach, Goombella, and Toadsworth all handed the conductor their unpacked items of clothing as he continued around to each room.  Mario made his bed, as did the others, and Mario thought of his first night here on the Express.  What a worrisome night that had been.  It felt so good to get this murder mystery thing out of the way.  Like having a large weight simply lifted off of his shoulders.
“I can’t wait to see the show!” Peach exclaimed, “I hear it’s going to be fantastic!”
“Of course it will!” said Toadsworth, “It has to be with the money we’ll be paying!”  There was still a little time left before they arrived.  Peach and Toadsworth decided to go to the Dining Hall to get something to eat.
“I believe I need to talk with you, Princess, about this whole Bowser situation you keep having…it’s really beginning to be quite a problem…” Toadsworth said, as he and Peach left the room.  Mario looked over at Goombella who seemed to have cheered up a little bit.
“I’ll see you later Mario,” she said, “I’m going to…go…too.”
“Alright,” Mario said, “I’ll see you then.”  Goombella left the room rather quickly, her pony tail dashing behind the door along with her, and the door quickly sliding closed.  What is she being so mysterious about? Mario asked himself.  He looked over at the rain-drenched window and yawned.  He had time to figure that question out later, for now he decided that he would take a little nap before the big show.  He climbed up to the top bunk.  It was now neatly made, the comforter tucked into the sides of the bed.  Mario crawled up to the top and snuggled under the covers.  He had always simply used the sheets of the bed, always letting Goombella use his comforter.  It was so much more comfortable now.  Mario felt the sway of the train, and listened to the train, and the clickety clack of the tracks.  How relaxing it was…


--Shhhhh-Shhh-*click*--  Mario opened his eyes.  Someone had just opened and closed the sliding door into room number five.  Apparently, whoever it was thought Mario was still asleep.  Mario’s heart began to race.  Could it be the true murderer?  He stared blankly at the ceiling, not able to see who the culprit was without looking over the side of the bed and revealing himself.  He heard someone walking across the room, and then sitting down in the couch.  He heard the flipping pages of a book.  Mario stayed still for a while still, hoping that the person would not recognize that he was laying there, or that he was awake.  He listened hard for the tiniest sound of conversation.  Could there be two people inside?  It was completely hushed, except for the still sound of the rain outside.  How long had Mario been asleep, anyways?  Was this person entering and reentering the whole time he was asleep?
“Hmmm…” he heard someone say.  Mario recognized the voice.  He looked over and saw that it was only Goombella, sitting on the couch reading a book.  Mario sighed.
“Oh…Goombella it’s just you,” Mario said.  Goombella seemed to be quickly trying to hide the book.  The book looked awfully familiar.
“Oh, uh…Hi Mario,” Goombella said, trying to act casual.
“What book is that?” Mario asked.  Goombella continued to try and hide the book as Mario sat up.
“Um…just…a book…” she replied.
“It looks really familiar…” Mario said, “Goombella, just tell me.”  Goombella seemed very reluctant as she replied,
“I took this book from Pennington as he was sleeping.”  Mario’s heart skipped a beat.
“Stole a book?!  Goombella, the penguin’s a detective!  What book is it?”
Goombella flinched, “Its…Frankly’s discovery.”
“What?!” Mario cried.  â€œGoombella!  You have to return that!  That’s evidence!  You heard what Pennington said!”  Goombella sighed.
“Fine…I was just curious, that’s all…besides I only got to read one page after you woke up…Yes…but that was my mentor’s handwriting all right…good old Professor Frankly…”
“You better return the book soon,” Mario said, “Pennington could wake up any second!  This is a crime, you know!”
“All right, all right!” Goombella said as she hurriedly got up from the couch and darted out the door.  It was obvious that Mario had made her nervous about being caught as well.
A little while later Goombella returned to the room, to see Mario had remade the bed.
“Did he see you?” asked Mario as he took a seat on the lower half of the bunk bed.
“No,” replied Goombella, “he didn’t.”
“Good…there could have been severe consequences if he did.”
“I don’t even see what the big deal is.  I was Frankly’s right hand Goomba!  Pennington hardly reads the thing anyways…”
“He’s obviously tired from the long trip.  Now, come on, lets go-“
~BING BONG BING BING!~
“Attention passengers, we are now arriving at Poshley Heights, we are now arriving at Poshley Heights.  Please form an orderly line by the door, and prepare your belongings.  Your luggage will be hand delivered to you’re hotel.  Thank you for choosing the Excess Express for your traveling needs.  Have a nice day! *click*”  Mario exchanged glances with Goombella.
“Well,” Mario said, “lets go.”
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #50 on: October 08, 2005, 11:38:30 PM »
Wow.  I guess I really got lucky with The Mushroom Kingdom’s Annual Ball.
But my stories will never die!  So here’s the next, very very short chapter:

Chapter 29:  The Luxurious Poshley Heights ~ Mario stood in line behind Toadsworth who stood in line behind Peach.  Goombella stood behind Mario.
“Its about time we’ve arrived here!” Peach exclaimed.
“Indeed, my dear princess-“
“Stop agreeing with me,” Peach interrupted Toadsworth.  The door in front of them was slid open by the Toad Conductor on the other side as the people began moving forward.  Mario could practically smell the fresh, warm, clean air of Poshley Heights in front of him, and could picture the neatly cut rose bushes in his mind.  Mario finally made it to the door and stepped out into the warm air.  The stars shone beautifully, and clearly in the sky, and the dark, neatly cut grass swayed peacefully in the wind.
“Welcome to Poshley Heights!” the Toad Conductor said.  Everyone was in awe as they looked about.  The fancy houses, the clean streets, it was wonderful.
Three other Toad Conductors suddenly passed them by, hauling each one of the guests’ luggage (one having a particularly hard time with Sir Grodus’ enormous black suit case).
“Hear you are,” said the Toad Conductor, handing a small slip of paper to Mario, and then a slip of paper to the other passengers as well, except for Pennington and Lord Crump.
“On these tickets is noted the room of the hotel that you will be staying in.  We hope you enjoy out five-star hotel as much as our other guests.” And with that he walked back inside the train.  Mario looked on his card.  It read room #45.  That was a very high floor.
Suddenly, a small round object came bouncing up to Lord Crump.  After closer examination, Mario realized that it was, indeed, the head of the once high-ruling Sir Grodus.
“Lord Crump,” Sir Grodus said, “it’s about time you’re back!”
“Er…Greetings Sir Grodus,” Lord Crump said.
“Lord Crump, next time actually TELL me where you’re going!  Don’t just leave some stupid note!”
“I’m sorry, sir, I just…didn’t really have time.”
“Ah, whatever.  Come on!  You can feed me tator tots.  The other X-Nauts aren’t very willing to do this,” said Sir Grodus as he began hoping down the road to a blue house, apparently where he, Lord Crump and the X-Nauts lived.
“Oh…goodie,” said Lord Crump quietly as he followed the little bouncing head.  They were like an old bickering couple.  Oh how far the X-Nauts have dropped.
“Come Bootler,” said Bow as the glided towards the hotel, past two marvelous golden gates, “you can pour me a glass of the fabulous wine that you’ve been hiding from me.”
“What?!  I mean…how did you..? *clears throat*  Of course, my Lady Bow,” said Bootler awkwardly as he followed his mistress.  Mister and Missus Yoshers silently parted along with the Shadow Sirens.
“Well Mario old boy,” Pennington said, “I’ll see you at the play tonight.  As for me, I’ll be heading over to my old Sanctum to read what my good old friend had written in this book of his…farewell.”
“Farewell,” Mario said back as he watched Pennington heading down the road.
“Mario,” Peach suddenly said behind him, in her soft voice.
“Yes, princess?” asked Mario.
“What room number are you?”
“I’m,” said Mario, checking his ticket again, “number 45.”
“Oh my,” said Peach, “I’m number nineteen.”
“So am I!” said Toadsworth.  Peach sighed.
“And you, Goombella?” asked Mario.
“Number six,” she replied.  They all had very different numbers.
“Well, I’m going to go and freshen up,” said Princess Peach, “being on that train has really not been very good for my hair!”
“I’ll come with you!” Toadsworth said as he began chasing Peach down the road to the hotel.
“I think I’ll go inside too,” said Goombella, “I’ll see you at the show tonight Mario.”
“Yeah, I’ll see you at the show,” Mario replied.
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #51 on: October 09, 2005, 03:20:11 PM »
WOW!!! You're stories are great! Maybe when you grow up, you can help make the story line for the next Paper Mario game. Also, don't mind Glorb. He's just mad.

Naruto, Code:Lyoko, Zatch Bell, Bomberman, and Mario Pwns.

« Reply #52 on: October 10, 2005, 07:30:42 PM »
Horrah someone posted in this topic other than me!
Thank you very much Aarom, I take that as a high copmliment.

I would write the next chapter, but I have two huge projects to do.
Gotta keep up with honors!
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #53 on: October 18, 2005, 09:17:32 PM »
Oh, you thought there were no more chapters, but guess what – HERE’S ANOTHER CHAPTER!!!…
(In this chapter, the plot thickens...)

Chapter 30:  Discovery ~  *Ding*….*Ding*…*Ding*… Mario heard as he stood inside the elevator, watching the buttons on the wall light up as he passed each floor.  He was very tired tonight, and didn’t feel much like socializing right now, and he still had a few hours left before the big play.  Mario tried not to think of the murder.  He tried not to think of his terrible doubting of the quick conclusion of Professor Bom-Bers being the killer.  He wanted to take the easy way this time.  Nice guys finish last, he had to remember that.  There was no use trying to solve an already solved case.  That was just frustrating…
But Mario couldn’t help himself.
All he could think of was the poor ghost of Professor Frankly, doomed to stay in room number four.  -*DING!*-  The button that read number forty-five lit up in the elevator, and the doubles doors opened up.  Mario stepped across a small, narrow hall way and stopped in front of a wooden door that read #45.  Mario turned the brass door knob, and stepped into his hotel room.  It was very classy.  Even better than the room in the Excess Express.  There was a large, clean bed against one wall, with rubber, green plants to add to the decorative design of the room, along with miraculous paintings hung from the gentle, rosy pink walls.  There was even a comfortable looking couch at the end of the room, accompanied by to arm chairs on both sides, the couch facing a warm fireplace.  Mario saw that the Toad conductors of the train had already brought in Mario’s luggage and had apparently packed it all away in the dresser that stood against one of the walls.  It was quite an invasion of privacy, but as Mario examined his clothing he found all his overalls and shirts to be neatly folded and organized to his liking.  No wonder it was a five-star hotel.
Mario couldn’t think of anything better to do than lie down on his nice, soft bed.  Mario walked over to his large hotel bed, and let himself fall into the softness.  Mario crawled to the head of the bed, and laid his head down on the soft, fluffy pillow.  He felt something hard as he tried to get comfortable, and realized that he was laying his head down on a mint.  The reached under and pulled out the pillow mint, laying it down on the small desk beside him.
As soon as Mario began to feel himself drifting off into a hazy sleep:  *Knock*Knock*Knock*
Mario opened his eyes.  He wanted more than anything to just lay there and hope that the person at the door would leave, but since whoever was at the door obviously knew that Mario was in here it would be considered rude and anti-social to answer the door.  Mario reluctantly got out of the comfortable bed and made his way over to the door.  He looked through the peek whole to see who it was.  It was none other than Goombella. Mario opened the door.
“Why, hello Goombella,” said Mario.
“Hey Mario,” said Goombella, “sorry to disturb you and all, but I feel like a simply need to ask you…Are you positively sure that Professor Bom-Bers was the murderer..?”
“Well,” said Mario, “I think he might be…I’m not really sure.”  Mario wanted to tell Goombella straight out what he truly thought, but Goombella has gone through enough as it is, and doesn’t need to stress her mind so much anymore.
“Really?” asked Goombella.
“….Yeah,” Mario replied.
“Well……Alright.  Hearing that from you, Mario, just seems to really help…” said Goombella, looking towards the ground.  â€œWell, see you tonight.”  She turned around and began heading for the elevator door.
“Wait,” said Mario.
Goombella turned, “Yes Mario?”
“Did you happen to catch the title of Frankly’s discovery, by any chance?”
Goombella looked into the air, thinking for a while, and then said;
“Oh right, the title.  Uhhh…I forget the exact title, but it was something about _______.”
Mario’s eyes widened.
“Does that help with anything, Mario?” asked Goombella, once she saw his expression.
“Uhhh-h-hh…It might, Goombella…er…so, yeah I’ll see you tonight!”
“Yeah,” said Goombella awkwardly, “see you tonight.”
Mario closed the door and looked back into his hotel room, listening to the sound of his heart beat and his stomach churn, his breath short and fast.  â€˜Don’t jump to conclusions, Mario,’ he said to himself…
It could be anyone, really…
…But with this small piece of evidence…
… ‘No,’ he thought, ‘now you’re definitely jumping to conclusions…’
Mario felt his heart steady as he looked back towards his bed.  No…there was no solid evidence behind what Goombella had just said…but still…there was the possibility…

Was/Were they/she/he the murder/murderers?…
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #54 on: October 22, 2005, 10:34:05 AM »
Okay, I might have lost my password...and my email isn't working...so my next story might have to be on a different user name...

:-(

EDIT:  Hooray!  Nevermind!

Edited by - The Blue Toad on 10/22/2005 9:42:59 AM
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

Markio

  • Normal
« Reply #55 on: October 22, 2005, 06:48:05 PM »
Goodness, this is long!  I'm going to have top read this all on a long weekend or holiday or something.

“Of all the people I know, it is expected that Watoad will say ‘cheese’ first.”
"Hello Kitty is cool, but I like Keroppi the best."

« Reply #56 on: October 22, 2005, 09:32:41 PM »
*kicks himself for not keeping up with the story*

Keep up the good work, TBT!

_______
j00r 73h r0x0r, d00d!
GEIANDGIRLCO DIRECT - The Sensitive Alternative

« Reply #57 on: November 06, 2005, 07:12:26 PM »
Is there any more chapters?
Mario rocks and so does Petey Piranha!

« Reply #58 on: November 06, 2005, 07:58:52 PM »
Yes. It may be posted by a new TBT though.

« Reply #59 on: November 17, 2005, 03:44:59 PM »
Hey everyone.  I have not been to the Forums in such a long time.  So I went to check up on you all, and the Forums were “temporarily out-of-order” and lately I couldn’t get my mind off of this story that I haven’t updated in a looong time, and I think I’m letting school get the best of me.  Sorry for not updating, people.

Chapter ____:  Postponed  ~  Mario combed his hair as he gazed upon his round face in the fancy, gold-rimmed mirror located in his hotel room.  Mario had done some thinking over what he had just discovered, and it made perfect sense.  He wondered why he even panicked in the first place.  I suppose he just thought of it as some sort of sign, that’s all.  But once he thought about it, it all seemed to piece in all right. 
As of right now, he was getting ready for the grand opening of the Grande Theatre starring Flurrie and Doopliss.  Mario straightened his red bow tie against his “snazzy” black suit. 
Yes, thought Mario, I simply jumped to a conclusion, that’s all.  I mean, really.  Simply denying the entire case over a tiny clue.  No, nay, not tiny, miniscule.  A miniscule clue better describes it. 
What are you talking about?  Said another side of Mario; That clue could be the whole case right there!  You need to run it over with Pennington!  You have to!
No, said the other side, it is fine, simply give it a rest.  Justice had been served…though it was whether or not that justice was served correctly is what bothered him. 
*Knock*Knock*Knock*
“Hey Mario!  Are you ready for the show?” called Goombella from behind Mario’s door. 
“Yeah, I’ll be there in a second!” Mario called back. 
Mario fixed his tie once more while looking in the mirror and nodded to his reflection.  He made his way across the luxurious room and made a halt at the door.  He grabbed the gold door knob and swung open the door to find Goombella, looking slightly different.  She had taken off her helmet and tied her blonde hair back into a tight ponytail with a glossy red ribbon.  She had put on more cosmetics than usual, and was wearing an elegant red dress with high heals.
“Wow, Mario, you sure clean up nice!” she said looking at Mario from head to toe and back again.
“Thanks…” said Mario feeling a tad awkward, “…and you look-“
“UGH!  I hate what I’m wearing!  The sooner this play is over the better!” said Goombella giving a particularly evil glare towards her high heals which were now in place of her regular, comfortable, brown ones.  Mario and Goombella walked towards the elevator and pressed the down button. 
They made it down to the main floor of the hotel where they each departed the hotel and into the fresh, dark night.  It was now very late, and many people (mainly very wealthy or famous) were busily bustling about, gossiping about the show and exclaiming at how marvelous it would be. 
“Wow,” said Goombella, “sure does reak of money around here.  I…I think I’m going to go find my seat for the show.  You coming?” 
Mario was staring over at the little blue house on the corner, which belonged to the once fearsome, now gentle, X-Nauts.  The head of Sir Grodus was looking around anxiously as though he was looking for someone. 
“Mario?” repeated Goombella.
“Huh?” said Mario, returning his gaze to her, “Oh, right.  Um…I’ll catch up with you later.”
“Alright,” Goombella replied, “I’ll see you there.”
And with that she walked through the crowd of noisy, gossiping aristocrats and through the gates to wear the new Grande Theatre was located.  Mario quickly looked over, and to his strange delight, Sir Grodus was still there.  Mario walked down the steps leading to the streets and made his way over to the little blue dome, which was now Sir Grodus. 
I wonder if he’ll even talking to me after what I’ve done to him, Mario thought.  You see, Mario had given Sir Grodus a beating when he was trying to awaken the Shadow Queen.  Sir Grodus had managed to get away, and a few bruises and scratches, and succeeded in his plan of awakening the Shadow Queen.  So then he tried to command the evil demand, and claimed himself to be her master.  It was then that she destroyed him, leaving him with nothing but his head.
That wasn’t one of his better days.
“Hello, Grodus,” Mario said, clearing his throat. 
Sir Grodus suddenly turned his gaze to Mario and glared.
“Mario,” he said in a taunting voice.  “Will you please leave me alone?  I’m looking for Crump…that idiot…”
“Crump?”  Mario repeated.
“Yes, Lord Crump…Where is that stupid Crump…He told me that he’d escort me through the crowd and to the Grande Theatre!” Sir Grodus said, hopping angrily. 
“Oh,” Mario said, “well, good luck with that.”
Mario departed from the awkward scene just in time.  Everyone seemed to be slowly moving through the streets towards the theatre. 
Sir Grodus angrily growled as he slumped back on the front step of his blue house in a relaxed position. 
Mario walked through the crowd, trying to get a good view of the Grande Theatre.
Mario stood uncomfortably close behind a slender Toad woman who anxiously waited behind the rest of the crowd.  Mario kept his eyes to the crowd as the crowd slowly inched forward.
What an adventure he had been through.  He remembered when he first heard about the murder.  He had been filled with deep sorrow, and depression.  Then, waiting for the boat to Rougeport by the Mushroom Kingdom docks. 
And of course, how could he possibly forget the amazing adventure he had on the S.S. Charlette!  The koopa pirates, visiting Admiral Bobbery again, exploring that dark cave with Goombella. 
It had been quite eventful here.
Then, of course, there was the highly anticipated expedition on the Excess Express.  Meeting all the suspects, squeezing his brain for any slight clue to drop out.  The mysterious Mr. Yoshers, and his shy wife.  The black-hearted Beldam, her silent sister Marilyn, and the innocent Vivian.  The seductive Bow with her loyal butler, Bootler.  The blunderous, clumsy Lord Crump, and the worrisome Professor Bom-Bers. 
Mario had known that they would be exiting the train with one less passenger, but didn’t know for sure what he was preparing himself for.  Professor Bom-Bers was apparently that passenger, but it strangely just didn’t feel right.  Mario wasn’t feeling the sense of satisfactory knowing that the murderer was found, and that was because he simply couldn’t convince himself that he was the murderer. 
Every time Mario thought of this his stomach would turn to knots.  The story was over, wasn’t it?  The murderer was caught, that’s that.  No.  Something didn’t feel right.  Mario looked up to the sky at the many stars in the sky, and spotted the enormous crescent moon floating in the dark sky.  Mario had been to the moon.  Several times, actually.  Each adventure on the moon brought a new surprise, yet he had been there so many times over the years.  It was the same place as always, just with different adventures.  Suddenly Mario heard the slender Toad lady in front of him gasp. 
Mario looked in head of her to see what he was slowly walking towards.  The Grande Theatre sat in front of a pearly white fountain, as still as it’s glory built into it. 
It was an enormous, glamorous building made of marble.  The oak door in the front was positively enormous as it sat wide open.  Inside, the doors were lined with two velvet red curtains, and looked as though some sort of chandelier lit up the inside with a warm texture and moving atmosphere.  Although this was all breath taking, Mario couldn’t help but notice that no one was entering the Grande Theatre. 
Everyone was simply standing on the stairs that lead to the giant oak doors, being held back by six security guards. 
Mario pushed himself as far through the crowd as he could until he was stuck behind a rather large Cheep Cheep that would simply not budge.
“Mario?” said the sweet, soft sound of Peach’s voice.  Mario turned his head to see Princess Peach and Toadsworth. 
Peach was wearing a frillier pink dress than usual and had her hair tied up into a stylish bun, her cheecks rosy with make-up.  She even held her white parasol over her blonde head, casting her body in an entrancing blue shadow.  Toadsworth stood next to her wearing a glossy black vest, a white collar shirt, with a red bow tie. 
“Peach!” Mario said, “what’s going on?”
“I’m not sure,” Peach replied.  She turned to Toadsworth, “Toadsworth, go see what’s going on.” 
Toadsworth simply stared at Peach for a moment and then said, “Of course, Princess……Excuse me, large fellow, I’m going to need you to move out of my way.”
Toadsworth squeezed past the enormous Cheep Cheep and began his descent to the Grande Theatre. 
“It is a truly amazing building, isn’t it?” said Peach. 
“Yes,” Mario replied, admiring the fine craftsmanship of the romantic fountain flowing brilliantly in the light of the looming moon. 
What could be the trouble at the Theatre?  Mario asked himself.  “Perhaps they’re simply having technical difficulties,” Mario thought allowed.
“That could be,” Peach replied, staring at the gallant Theatre.
Mario could only imagine Madame Flurrie in there, powdering her nose and practicing her gallant solos.  She truly was a magnificent actress.  He had seen one of her plays.  She had acted in The Wizard of Oz as Glenda, the witch of the North.  It was a wonderful play, and Mario believed that it was a marvelous performance.  He couldn’t wait to see her in the grand opening.
“Oh, hey there Mario,” said a voice from behind him.  Mario turned to see Goombella.
“Hi Goombella,” Mario replied.  “Do you know what the hold up for the theatre is?”
“Yeah.  Apparently one of the actors was missing for a while, and just showed up.  They just have to get him ready, or something.  They say it’s gonna be another hour or so with practice rehearsals.
“Oh,” said Mario.
“Really?” Peach said from behind, “Well then there’s no need to wait around here.”
Peach left rather anxiously back towards the hotel, looking around her shoulder to see if Toadsworth was getting back yet. 
“Yeah, I guess I’ll head back to the hotel as well,” Mario said.  “See you around, Goombella.”
“Yep.  I’ll be waiting here!” Goombella said as Mario back-tracked through the crowd once more.
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #60 on: November 25, 2005, 10:59:35 PM »
Uhhhh...That should say Chapter 31 on the last chapter there......so.......?  Oh well. 

Chapter 32:  Strange Callings ~ Mario finally made it out of the bustling crowd where he could breath the fresh, open air.  It was much quieter next to the tall hotel sitting next to him.  It looked so elegant, and majestic. 
Mario straightened his rather annoying red bow tie.  It was quite tight around his neck, and provided him discomfort.  He grabbed the bow and pulled off his tie, feeling his neck beginning to breath easier. 
Mario shoved the bow tie in his breast pocket as he pulled at the collar of his white undershirt.  He walked to the hotel, his shoes shining in the bright light of the moon.  As he walked up the stairs to the double doors of the hotel, he suddenly heard something.  Mario turned his head toward the sound, in this case, to the left. 
He saw nothing but fresh, green bushed by the hotel's side.  Mario stood still for a moment, having that certain dreadful feeling that someone was watching him.  His blood went rather cold, and felt very much alone even though there were 20 dozen impatient people not too far off.  He quickly shook off the eerie feeling, and reached out a white gloved hand to open the door.
*MMMMMMMPH!*
There it was again.  Louder, and clearer it sounded out in the night.  Mario quickly turned his head once more, his hand still placed on the doorknob.  Was his mind playing tricks on him, or was someone in those shadowed green bushes nearby? 
"Hello?" Mario said in a shaky voice.  There was no reply.
Mario took his hand off the doorknob and walked back down the steps to the hotel.  He looked along the side of the hotel where a row of windows lined the building.  Mario could see that none of them were open, and the sound had to have been coming from outside, obviously right next to him.  He looked into the bushes once more, now closer than he used to be.
"Hello?" he said again.  Once more, the utter silence of the night was his only guest.  Mario shrugged it off.  It must have been a stray cat, or even just his mind playing tricks on him.  Then:
*MMMMMMM-MMMMMMMMPH!!* Mario jumped, his heart thumping.  Without thinking he began searching the thick, bushily bushes.  He felt through nothing but soft leaves as he continued deeper behind the hotel, into shadow.  His adrenaline flowed at the thought of suddenly stumbling upon someone stranded in the bushes.  Mario tossed up a few leaves, searching every nook and cranny.  Mario spotted a very large green bush positioned right next to the brick wall of the hotel.  He doved his hand through it, only to bring it back in a great singe of pain.  He had jammed his fingers into something hard inside the soft bush.  Could he have simply hit the brick wall behind the bush, or was something hidden in there?  The pounding of his heart echoed into Mario's bruised hand as he rubbed it with the other.  Again, slower this time, Mario reached his hand inside the bush until his numb fingers landed upon a hard, yet very smooth, surface.  Mario dug through the bush using his other arm until he revealed to himself what was hidden inside this particular bush.
It was a short, green pipe.  Down this pipe, it was filled with a blinding darkness.  Mario's heart began to thump as he stared down the dark, green pipe, his hands resting on the rim. 
"H-Hello?" Mario called down, his voice echoing.  Almost instantly came a horse reply:
*MMMmmmph!  Mmmm...mmm!*  It sounded throughout the pipe and into Mario's round ears. 
Taking a deep breath, Mario plunged himself into the depths of the tube, not sure of what he would find at the bottom. 
He felt a mysterious wind on his face as his hair lifted up, and then the solid ground suddenly appeared underneath his feet.  Mario stumbled a little, being in uncomfortable fancy shoes, and stared into the darkness surrounding him.  He looked up, happy to see the light of the moon could be seen through a circular opening at the top, which was in his jumping range so that Mario could leave this dark place at any time. 
Mario slowly guided himself over to a wall.  It was cold down here, and rather frightening.  Was someone in here?
"Hello?" Mario said into the room.  A voice responded to him, no longer echoing, but sounding as though someone was directly next to him.
"Mmmmm.  Dahh-lighhhed!" said a very muffled voice.  Mario jumped that the voice sounded so close to him.  He took a deep, steady breath as his stomach began to churn.
"W-What?" Mario asked.
"Dahh-lighhed!" the voice repeated.  Whoever was speaking sounded very horse, and sick.  Mario repeated the muffled phrase through his head.  What could he be asking for? 
"...Dah-lighed......the light?" asked Mario.
"Mmmmmm," said the voice, which sounded like an approval.  Mario blindly moved away from the wall, searching for some sort of chain that he could pull from the ceiling to light up the room.  He couldn't see his own hands in front of his face as he searched through the somewhat empty room.  He was afraid that he would run into this person he had been contacting.  What if they were dangerous?  Mario felt a large mount of anxiety on his shoulders.  Why would someone be down here?  The only thing MArio could come up with is that they were of victim of some sort of crime, and were thrown down here?  Was Mario going to turn on the light to see some sort of disfigured person who had been beaten and tied up?  He shivered at the thought.
Finally, Mario felt a cool, thin chain of beaded metal against his faced.  He grabbed hold of it, and closing his eyes, pulled.  There was a click at the room was dimly lit by a single lightbulb that hung on the ceiling.  Mario opened his eyes to find he was facing a gray, stone wall. 
"Mmmmph," the person said behind Mario, causing his to jump slightly.  Mario clenched his teeth as he turned around to see who it was.
And there, sitting in a chair tightly tied up in thick ropes was Lord Crump, looking as though he had been in this stone room for days.  Mario gasped. 
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #61 on: December 16, 2005, 11:23:58 PM »
Chapter 33:  Trouble in the Elevator ~ Mario felt sweat drip from his damp brow as his fingers shook with effort as he tried to untie the extremely tight knot around Lord Crump.  After much stuggle, Mario finally pulled on the knot so hard that it slipped undone, the rope ravaling to the floor.  Lord Crump raised his weary hands and untied a thick cloth that had been tied over his mouth.  He gasped for air, his hands shaking as they sank back down to his knees, whitch were wet with sweat. 
"Thank you," he said in a very horse voice.  Mario was still very shocked.  The Lord Crump he had just seen a while ago was full of good health, as he had seen the plump X-Naut running from Sir Grodus after being asked to give his master a head masage. 
"How long have you been down here?" asked Mario, quite astonished. 
"I don't know," said Lord Crump in a voice that was barely a whisper, "it feels like I've been in the mole hole for a week...maybe two...I lost count of the days." 
Mario watched in awe as his former enemy panted, staring at the floor.  The craving to ask Lord Crump many questions was itching terribly, as he had never found himself more curious than at that moment.  But Lord Crump obviously didn't look up to speaking, not to mention answering question after question.  He needed to calm down first, replenish his strength. 
"Er...do you need anything?" asked Mario awkwardly.
"Water," panted Lord Crump almost instantly.  Mario hesitated at first and said.
"Okay...I'm going to get water and come right back down here.  Stay put."  With that Mario walked towards the circle of light that shone on the floor, think of how stupid it was to telling Lord Crump to stay when clearly he was in no physical condition to get out.  Mario looked back at Lord Crump to find him closing his eyes in his chair, and slowly stretching his limbs.  "I'll be right back," said Mario as he leapt into the air, heading straight through the vertical pipe that lead back outside on the left side of the hotel.   As Mario looked back at the short green pipe, he pushed a few of the bushes over that spot, just making sure no one else discovered him. 
Mario sprinted into the hotel, past the desk clerk, and into the elevator.  He quickly punched the button, stubbing his finger.  The door slowly closed to his frustration and hesitated a bit before beginning it's slow-paced descent to the top floor.  Mario fiddled with his gloved hands which now felt rather wet and uncomfortable.  He threw off his gloves, leaving them to lie on the floor beside him.
This could be it.  This is the evidence he needed to proove who the real murderer was!  Professor Bom-Bers couldn't have possibly tied Lord Crump up considering that he is locked in the train, and whoever would have done such a thing was most likely the same person who put Professor Frankly's murderer into practice. 

*.....*...*.....Ding...*...*.....Ding.......*....*..*......Ding!

The door finally opened as Mario rushed out into the hall, his trampling feet pacing past the other doors on either wall until he arrived at door number 42.  His quivering hand grabbed the door knob and twisted it in a single movement as the door swung open with ease.  Mario rushed into his room making towards the sink. 
Mario could see his pale face in the bathroom mirror as he took a rather small plastic cup and filled it up with water from the marbel sink until it was completely full.  Mario hastily shut off the water, and made his way back to the door, spilling water here and there. 
He stepped into the elevator once more, his heart pounding, and jammed his finger into the button that was labeled FL, for 'floor level'.  After the same brief hesitation as before, the door closed and the elevator slowly began to go downward. 
Mario was breathing quite hard as the elevator began quickening it's speed slightly.  What if he was too late?  How was he going to get this cup of water down the pipe without spilling?  Mario clenched his teeth in frustration for not thinking this over well enough.  He was too impatient to wait for answers.  His stomach was churning with anger, when suddenly he heard a heart-stopping sound.  The elevator was making a loud screeching sound.  Mario dropped the cup of water in fright.  It splashed to the floor, soaking his right pant leg.  Mario cursed in anger, stompping his foot on the little plastic cup. 
Suddenly, the lights began to flicker.  Mario stopped and looked up. 
The elevator was slowly slowing down and it was only on the 24th floor.  Mario gasped as the lights suddenly all shut off and the elevator came to a halt. 
Mario was left in a pitch black elevator that could plummet to the ground at any second.  His heart churned, his heart pumpped, and his breathing began to shorten.  Silence filled the air, except for the occasional sound of a squeak or a hum.  Mario dared not move at fear of triggering the elevator into an endless fall. 
Sweat dripped from his head as he continued to stand in the hame exact position.  He was cramping up, and his mind was bursting with frustration and anger.  Would this elevator ever move? 
The elevator suddenly jerked downwards.  Mario's eyes widened and his clenched teeth tightened along with the rest of the muscles in his body.  But then, the lights suddenly began to flicker a bit.  Mario looked up to see a small light bulb near the top of the door.  It was in a glass orb that was labeled EMERGENCY LIGHT.  Mario sighed.  It wasn't much help, but at least it was a start. 
He looked towards the button on the right side of the door and scanned through them.  He skipped the many, many buttons that displayed numbers and looked towards the bottom wear there was a button that he saw to read:  EMERGENCY - OPEN DOOR.  This was certainly an emergency, and Mario desperately needed to get out of the confounded elevator. 
His eyes remained on the button for quite a while, expected a sudden jerk in the elevator at any moment.  Mario saw no other choice he had but to walk across the elevator to reach the button.  He swallowed loudly as he listened the the utter silence of the fragile elevator.  Being very causious, he moved his left foot slowing across the elevator floor, sliding it across it's green carpeting until he slowy let it rest. 
Mario sighed, relieved that nothing had happened on his first step.  With his stomach tight, MArio slowly moved his right foot, shuffling it along the floor until it was again even with his left foot.  Mario repeated this process twice more, each one more nerve-racking than the one before. 
Finally Mario appeared at reach with the button.  Mario's arm slowly reached across the elevator, his hand shaking, until his index finger could finally rest upon the emergency escape button.  He slowly applied pressure to the button, feeling it sink in to the wall behind it...
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #62 on: December 18, 2005, 09:16:51 PM »
Chapter 34:  Black Out ~ Mario was relieved when he heard a hum coming from the elevator doors, as they slowly began to open.  The elevator had come to an abrupt halt at the very top of door number 23.  There was a rather small opening at the bottom of th eelevator door, that MArio assumed he would be able to crawl under. 
Taking a deep breath he slowly got onto his hands and knees.  his arms were quivering under the suddenly heavy mass of the rest of his body.  He slowly inched his way through the narrow passage way, crawling into the dark hallway beyond the opening.  He turned around so that his legs went through first, and slowly began pushing his body through the opening, inch by inch.  He was half way through when he began to feel that he was getting rather stuck.  The unpleasant thought of what were to happen if the elevator suddenly plunged to the bottom at that very moment linger in his mind as he gently tried to nudge his way out.
As Mario tried to gain control of his coat to fit through the crevice, he heard a heart-stopping sound.

*EEEEEEEEEEeeeeeeeee......

It was the elevator.  Mario stood very still for a moment as another loud screech sounded.  Suddenly, Mario felt as though there was some sort of weight suddenly being forced on his back, as if a Thwomp was slowly falling on him.  In a swift movement,  Mario yanked his body out of the elevator, banging his head on the top of the door. 
Mario fell to the ground below him, just in time to hear the ear-splitting sound of the elevator plummeting to the bottom of the hotel, ending in a loud crash.
Mario's heart was racing as he felt the back of his throbbing head.  It was fairly numb for now, but there was still a stinging tinge of pain that ran through his body whenever he touched it. 
Instead of standing up Mario inched is way over to the wall behind him where he sat for a while, trying to recover his strength, and ease his heart rate. 
He was panting heavily as he looked up into the pitch black hallway, and then at the empty vertical tunnel in front of him, in which the elevator ran.  It seemed rather foolish to think that this black-out simply occured naturally, considering what had been going on lately.  But it would certainly reasure MArio if he knew that it was a simple accident, that the desk clerk would let him stay in the hotel for free for the inconvinience, and that the new Theatre seemed to have absorbed most of the town's electricity, thus causing a black-out.  But that wasn't true.  Poshley Heights had enough energy stored to last through any type of power surge, or sudden black-out. 
Someone must have seen Mario come in, and shut off the power.  The only for that would be if that person had seen Mario jump into that warp pipe to discover Lord Crump.  Whoever it was obviosuly didn't want Mario alive, and was more than likely the real murderer.  Either that or Professor Bom-Bers made some sort of random break-out. 
Either way, Mario was a sitting duck right now.  If the murderer finds out that Mario wasn't in the elevator at the time of the black-out (which he most likely planned) than he will most likely be searching for Mario at the very moment. 
Mario's stomach churned at the thought.  If he could just get out of this hotel, maybe he would be safe.  If only I had stayed to wait for the opening with Goombella, Mario thought to himself as his throbbing head began to slowing ease down.  None of this would have happened if he just stayed back with his friends.  Mario could be seated in the Theatre at the very moment, enjoying a high-class play with his friends, enjoying the sweet victory of solving a murder mystery.
But then again, the case never really seemed solved at all, in Mario's point of view.  It simply didn't feel right to him to accuse Bom-Bers, and he was convinced it wasn't him.  Perhaps if he had waited with Goombella he wouldn't have to deal with the stinging pain in the back of his head, but if he hadn't gone to rest in the hotel MArio never would have found Lord Crump, and the mystery would remain unsolved.
Professor Frankly would forever be nothing but a ghost with a prophecy unfilled because Mario decided to take the easy way out.
There was absolutely no way Mario was going to allow that to happen.  Never has he let justice slip by, and this certainly wasn't going to be the first. 
Mario slowly rose to his feet, feeling a bit of blood rush to his head.  His knees were crouched as he listened for any oncoming predators.  He had a simple plan.  For now he would try to find his way out of this cursed place, but if he was to be found by the murderer he wasn't sure what he would do. 
   
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #63 on: December 29, 2005, 01:00:49 AM »
Gah!!!  I really want this story to be done with so I can start a better one!  I still have a LONG way to go on the X'Nauts Strike Back, so I'll just tamper with that one while I write another story that I have in mind.... After I finish this one, that is. 
Okay...here we go, anonymous reader of mine.

Chapter 35:  Mysterious Encounters ~ Mario stood up inside the dark hallway, listening to the eerie echo of the elevator that now lay upon the floor.  He put his hand on the wall next to him, preparing to make his way out through touch, apparently.  He began going left for no apparernt reason, hoping that it would eventually lead him to a flight of stairs.  If he could only make it outside, he would be safe!  He would just have to ask to borrow water from someone else nearby.  What would he do with Lord Crump anyways?  Well, after handing him the water for him to drink up, he would ask Lord Crump to stay put until he came back.  He would tell Pennington about it, and then he would know what to do from there.  Yes, it sounded like a fair plan. 
He knew one thing.  The so-called "Lord Crump" that was on the train today is in for a lot of questioning.  For the X-Naut residing at the bottom of that warp pipe has obviously been there for days, not a few minutes. 
But then again, Mario hadn't seen Lord Crump in a long time since they arrived at Poshley Heights, perhaps he was someone banished into that pipe.  But how would that explain his terrible need for water, filthiness, sweat-stained clothes, and awful smell? 
Perhaps the X-Naut on the train was an imposter, and when he got to Poshley Heights he quickly got out of his disguise!  Yes, than that means that the imposter had tied up the real Lord Crump before getting on the train, and throwing him down there!.....  Wait a second.  Why would the murderer need a disguise if he wasn't going to be caught anyways?  Perhaps it was to create a perfectly clean alabi.  Mario's head was spinning.  This was truly confusing business.  All he knew, was that when they had reached Poshley Heights, the normal-looking and acting Lord Crump was seen walking off with Sir Grodus.  Then, MArio talked with Sir Grodus a little while later to find that Lord Crump was missing.  After that, Mario finds Lord Crump in a warp-pipe, looking as though he had been down there for days!  It was truly a mind-puzzler, and Mario was glad to know that he wasn't the only detective on this case.

Finally, Mario felt a gap in the wall.  Sure enough, it was an opening that lead to a flight of stair going downwards, exactly where he needed to go.  If he could just stay on these stairs the whole way down, he would be in the clear.  But suddenly, before Mario could make even his first step, he heard someone suddenly running down the hallway towards him.  Mario's heart leapt and his stomach churned as he looked down the hall to see a black figure charging towards him.  Mario's adrenaline pumped, his hands and legs shaking as he watched the figure come ever closer.  He felt it would be scarier to flee than to stay and fight.  Mario faced the stranger, gathering up his courage.
"HEY!" Mario cried, trying to intimidate whoever it was charging at him.  The figure did end up slowing down a bit until the mysterious person came to a halt.  There was an eerie silence between Mario and the shadow.  Mario's senses were keen and the shape of the shadow seemed almost familiar.  Mario saw the mysterious stranger lift up his arm, and before he knew it, something was thrown into Mario's head.  It felt cool like metal, and rounded smooth.  It hit Mario right in between the eyes.  He had become instantly dizzy as he dropped to his knees.  The more-than-likely murderer could be heard running over to Mario, picking up his/her throwing device.  Suddenly, Mario was clubbed in the back of the head by something that seemed to have a small, hard, round end to it.  It felt like the metal as the rounded object that had hit him in the face. 
Mario's hands fell to the ground beside him, and he collapsed to the ground, passed out.....

Mario was surprised to find himself waking up under the night sky.  His head was still blurry, and his mind felt blank.  His head was terribly bruised.  Mario groaned in pain as he looked about to see where he was located.  To his utter most surprise he found himself positioned in front of the gallant fountain that resided in front of the Grande Theatre.  There wasn't a soul outside, and the sprouting water of the fountain was the only murmuring sound that could be heard.  Mario saw that the doors to the Grande THeatre were closed.  It was clear that everyone had already made it inside, including his friends.  Mario stood up, feeling a strange tingle at the back of his head.  He felt it, to find a large bump.  He suddenly recalled everything that had happened inside the hotel.
Where was that mysterious shadow now? 
Mario's heart pumped and his stomach churned as he expected that the man/woman that had knocked him out would run out of the neatly trimmed green headges, ready to fight.  But there was no one.  There was nothing but the soft trickling sound of water splashing in the elegant fountain in front of him. 
He still needed to check on Lord Crump.  He was still down at the bottom of the warp pipe, waiting for Mario to return with water.  But first he had to go get someone to help him.  He didn't feel very safe to wander alone anymore.  Or at least, he certainly didn't prefer to.
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #64 on: December 29, 2005, 06:08:53 PM »
Okay, guys, it's winding on down.

Chapter 36:  Unwanted Discovery ~ Mario heaved open the two enormous doors that held the entryway into the Grande Theatre.  Inside was the main lobby, though there was no one to be seen.  The ticket booth was empty, and the place had a dark feeling to it.  The people who ran the Theatre clearly assumed that everyone in town had already paid their tickets and made it in.  How long had Mario been knocked out?
The echoing sound of voices could be heard in the distance.  The play was clearly going on, and it was utterly silent otherwise.  Mario made his way past the booths and binocular selling counters, to sudenly find Pennington walk out of the bathroom.  This was clearly a dream come true. 
"Pennington!" Mario said berathlessly.
Pennington gave Mario an odd look.  "MArio!  What are you doing out here?... And what on earth happened to you?" he asked.  Mario didn't have time for questions at the moment.
"PEnnington, I need to show you something important!" said Mario.
"Well, can it wait?  The show is still going on, afterall."
"No!  This is important!  It may change the whole outcome of this....this...murder mystery!" Mario sputtered. 
Pennington looked shocked.  "What do you mean, my boy?" he asked.
"Come on, I'll show you!" 
With that Mario guided Detective PEnnington back outside and over to the tall hotel.  Pennington looked confused as he grasped onto his magnified glass as tightly as he could, trying to keep up with Mario.  PEnnington noticed that the windows on the sides of the hotel were pitch black and his brow furrowed.
"What happened to all the lights at the inn?" he asked.
"I'll tell you about that later.  Right now I need to show you something... or rather.... someone..." Mario said as he began his way through the bushes, pushing them aside and looking for the warp pipe.  Pennington's interest had been sparked as he followed Mario through the brambles, stumbling over his feet.
 Finally Mario found it.  The short, green warp pipe that jutted out from the ground. 
"Down here," said Mario.  He jumped down into the dark warp pipe, only to be greeted by a dull light at the bottom.  Lord Crump sat in the chair that stood under the light bulb, looking exhausted.  His eyes were closed as he breathes heavily.  Mario heard Pennington flop down at his side.
"Look!" said Mario.  "Does this say anything to you?"  Mario gazed into Pennington's face, his heart fast and his breath heavy.  There seemed to be no hint of expression in Pennington's face.  It was as though he wouldn't have expected anything else.  And then the penguin detective slowly sighed. 
"You know my boy," he said, "you're a far better detective than I assumed............. And I really hate to do this." 
Slowly, Pennington raised his magnified glass at Mario.  In a swift movement the handle of the magnified glass came swooping down towards Mario's head!  Mario's heart raced as he dove out of the way just in time.
"What are you doing?!" he cried as Pennington gazed at him in a dull expression.
"You have discovered my secret, Mr. Mario," said Pennington, diving at Mario once more.  Mario may a quick jolt to the left as PEnnington ended up running into the wall. 
"What are you talking about?!" Mario asked loudly, backing up towards the wall.
"I think you can figure out what's going on here, Mario.  It isn't that hard..." said Pennington calmly.  Mario's blood became cold and his heart still.
"You.........You're the.....You're..."
Pennington charged at Mario top speed.  Acting quick, Mario leapt over PEnnington's head and landed with a thud to the floor.  Pennington halted and quickly spun around, now glaring at Mario, his feet apart and his arms outstretched.  Mario looked up to see the hole in the ceiling that lead back up outside.  In a quick movement he dove up the warp pipe, and hurridly crawled out.  He ran through the bushes on the side of the hotel, looking over his shoulder, ready to see that blue flightless bird come charging out after him. 
Mario ran into the center of the town square, and faced the hotel, ready to do whatever necassary.  Whatever was going on, the answers would be told.  Sooner or later, the truth of Detective Pennington would be out there.
Then Mario saw a dark figure coming out from the shadows of the tall hotel, magnified glass at hand. 
"Mario, I really had hoped it didn't come to this.  Honestly I didn't," said Pennington, truth being recognized in his voice.  "Though perhaps I was a fool to think that I could succeed at this without any punishment..."
"What did you.....How....?" asked Mario. 
"You'd like to know, wouldn't you?" said Pennington.  On his face MArio could sense a great sense of guilt and sorrow behind his pride.  "Unfortunately, this is one case that will not ever be solved..."
"What?" asked Mario, his stomach churned uneasily.
"The case of the missing plumber..."
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #65 on: December 30, 2005, 12:35:44 AM »
Chapter 37:  A True Friend Slipped Away ~ Pennington embraced Mario, trying to smack him in the head with the blunt end of his magnified glass handle.  Mario struggled to hold him back, his feet scraping against the gray pavement below his feet.  Pennington was surprisingly strong for a bird his age.  Mario was able to shove him backwards.
"Don't do this, Pennington," said Mario as they both glared at each other under the deep night sky.  "You can make things better, I swear!"
"It's far to late for that now, boy," said Pennington.  He looked down in grief for a moment, his eyes looking pififul.  In the next instance he charged towards Mario once more.  Mario quickly jumped over Pennington's head, landing behind him.  With a swift movement Mario lunged at Detective PEnnington, trying to pin him to the ground.  Pennington escaped, getting away from Mario's grasp.  Mario's heart pounded against his chest trying to get out, his hands were quivering.  He had hoped he was wrong when he found that first clue.  But no.  His suspisions had been right. 
On the train Goombella had discovered Frankly's new book that he had wrote about in the letter.  Goombella said that the book was something about penguins.  Mario could vividly remember walking in on Pennington once while he was asleep.  In his hands was a book.  Mario couldn't recall the title clearly in his mind.  It was something like, "The History of Penguins".  Mario had simply connected the two together, thinking that perhaps the entire time PEnnington was in possesion of Frankly's new discovery, and that he was the murderer.  And now, as it turns out, Mario appeared to have been right.  But the penguin also seemed to have a perfect alibi other than that.  When the murder took place, Pennington wasn't even on the train yet.  He must have had something up his sleeve...something clever and invisible to the naked eye. 
Mario dodged another attack by his former comrad.  Beads of sweat appeared on his plump face as he watched Pennington's every move, making sure that he wouldn't get taken advantage of while his mind was deep in thought.  Mario quickly decided in his mind that he would think over the status of the mystery later, for at the moment he simply needed to try and stay alive.
"Mario?!  PEnnington?!" said a familiar voice from the entrance between the hedges that lead out into the coldesac which held the Grande THeatre.  Standing there was Goombella, her face pale as she watched them both glaring at each other, in fighter's stances. 
"Goombella!" cried Mario.  PEnnington suddenly lunged forward, pinning Mario to the ground.  Mario gasped loudly as he watched the penguin raise his flipper, tightly holding a slightly shakey magnified glass in his hand, and holding Mario's throat with the other.  Goombella screamed.
"Farewell, old boy," said PEnnington.  "I'm sorry this had to happen, but-"
-KLONK-
Pennington suddenly stopped in midsentence, he looked very drowsy.  Mario was losing oxygen because of PEnnington's tight hand around his throat, grateful that the konking noise wasn't produced due to PEnnington hitting him over the head.  No, instead it was because of Goombella.  She had snuck up behind PEnnington and gave him a swift headbonk.  Mario fell to the side, unconsious, as Mario stood up, brushing off his pants and shirt. 
"Wha-wha....What's going on here?" asked Goombella, her body shaking nervously as she looked about feeling paranoid.  Her face sensed fear and her complection was pale. 
"I'll have to figure that out later," said Mario.  "All I know so far, is that Pennington may have been the true murderer."
Goombella's heart raced as she gaped in amazement. 
"What?!  How is that even possible!  He helped us!  He-he was a friend of Franky's, he-"
"I know," said Mario.  "But he had just attacked me after I discovered..... I'll be right back," said Mario. 
"Discovered what?" asked Goombella.  But she was too late, MArio was already headed off towards the inn.
"Keep an eye on PEnnington!" cried Mario, "I'll be right back!"
"Mario!!!" cried Goombella as MArio stumbled through the bushes on the side of the inn.
He searched desperately for the warp pipe, until at last he found it.  He jumped down inside, his stomach lurching at the falling sensation.  At the bottom it seemed that Lord Crump had fallen asleep while sitting on his chair.  He had taken off his vikings helmet, to reveal a very sweat-covered head.  Mario quickly grabbed the ropes that once bounded the plump X-Naut to the chair he rested in.  Feeling guilty that Mario still hadn't any water to give, Mario raced back up the warp pipe, rope at hand. 
At the top, Mario tied the unconsious Pennington up tightly in rope, explaining to Goombella all he knew while he worked.  Mario knew how he would get the answers out of Pennington.  He could find all the information he wanted through a device that was back on the train.  It was a device that Pennington had lied about, and now it was going to be put to use.
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #66 on: January 02, 2006, 10:25:41 AM »
I have a feeling that a superb story like this will never end.

« Reply #67 on: January 02, 2006, 09:25:54 PM »
Oh it'll end.....  or at least it better end because it's giving me a headache!

Okay, I was planning to write another chapter right now, but it's just plain too late.
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #68 on: January 09, 2006, 05:29:13 PM »
Gah!  I need to bring this story back!  Stupid thing.  Always... there.  And I feel sort of bad since I'm not able to read anyone else's stories.  After this one is done, I'll probably try to focus on The X-Nauts Strike Back for a little while, and then create a new story.

Chapter 38:  The Truth is to be Told  ~  Mario slid open the door the lead into Pennington's room on the strain.  The air seemed thick and condensed inside, the open outdoors taunting him.  Mario quickly opened Pennington's drawer by his bedside, only to find there was nothing to be found.  He quickly searched underneath his bed to find a bag that looked as though it held something rather heavy inside.  Mario reached in and grabbed the bag handle, tugging it out from under the bed.  He peered inside to see a strange looking device.  It was the very same lie detecting helmet that Pennington had brought out to question Prof. Bom-Bers.  He claimed that the thing was broken, though Mario thought otherwise.  It was obvious just a clever cover-up to make him look professional. 
Mario quickly walked back into the Dining Hall, the bag at his side.  Goombella stood waiting for him next to Detective Pennington, who was now looking as though he was coming about.  Mario reached inside the brown bag and pulled out the lie-detector, carefully cradling it in his hands.  Goombella took off Pennington's detective's cap as Mario placed it upon his blue head. 
Mario found an 'Off' and 'On' switch at the back of the helmet.  He flicked the switch upwards as the machine began to greet him with a low humming sound.  Pennington was suddenly arroused as he suddenly flung his head up, looking about the room and coming to his senses. 
"Mario..." he said as he tried to get out from the chair.  "Get me out of this thing!" he said once he realised that he was tied down.
"Not until you answer a few questions for us, Pennington," said Mario.  Pennington glared at Mario as he stopped his struggle, afraid he might tip over. 
"...And what is this thing on my head?" he asked.
"You know very well what it is," replied Mario.  "It is the very same contraption that you yourself brought onto this train as a foolish attempt to look as though you had everything under control."
"Er... it's broken, though!" he said foolishly.  It was obvious he had not yet comletely come to his senses, for the helmet was still making the sound of a low hum and was obviously working well, for as soon as the statement left Pennington's beak the humming grew louder, and a soft beep resounded from the helmet. 
"A lie," said Mario.  "You see, detective, Goombella and I are determined to get all the answers out of you one way or another, and this is how we are going to do it."
"No!  You can't get anything out of me!" said Pennington, as the helmet began processing once more and let out yet another beep. 
"Come now, Pennington, don't be so stubborn," said Goombella, "just answer our questions and we won't have to get desperate."
"Bah!  See if I care," Pennington replied rudely.
"I don't think you want to see what we can do when we get desperate, Pennington," Goombella said, her eyebrows raised.
"Yeah," said Mario, "we can either do this the hard way, or the easy way.  Just answer the questions...... detective."
Pennington scowled deeply as he glared at the both of them.  He seemed as though he was feeling very out-numbered, and quite peeved at his sudden surroundment. 
"Very well...." said Pennington, his body filled deep with hatred, depression, and deep regret.  "I suppose my brilliant work must be told to someone... might as well be you."
"Good.... now lets start out from the very beggining.  Tell us what happened first.  And remember.  Ther is no lying allowed," Mario said as he and Goombella grabbbed two chairs from a table nearby and sat down to listen.
"...It all started out in a deep depression as you both could have guessed," Pennington began reluctantly.  "I lived in my large sanctum here in Poshley Heights, continuing my work as the mayor.  You know, that place has quite an eerie atmosphere to it, I tell you.  Not a very joyful place to live all the time..... I've always said to myself that I wanted a small home up north... where the winters were snow-covered, and the ice-fishing was-"
"Stick to the subject, detective," interjected Mario.
"Right, right..." Pennington replied as he continued on.  "I was the heir of a long line of great Penningtons.  They were all mayors, and all, ironically, detectives.  It's in our blood, sleuthing, you know.  Each one of them was more famous than the last, and they were greatly honored here in the town, and around many places of the world, as a matter of fact.  But I hadn't seen a single case in a year!  I was getting down their, Mario!  In fact... I believe the last case I solved was the case of the missing cat!  It was absolutely humiliating!  I didn't deserve such treatment as my father did, or my father's father, or my father's father's father, and so on.  I was rather pathetic.
But then there came that day.  I was sitting at home, moping about, when the mail arrived.  It was a letter from my dear old friend from college, Prof. Frankly.  Oh, we were always harsh rivals, and got in many a competition, but we became friends in the end.  In his letter he had stated that he had discovered something new regarding my own race.  He said that he wasn't completely sure what it was, and needed my help to complete the puzzle, regarding that I was of the race he was researching.  He told me that he would be arriving to Poshley Heights on the Excess Express in two weeks, for he still had other matters to attend to, and that he would bring along with him the work that he had so far.   
This deeply spoke to me.  I would finally have a bit of recognition once again!  But the thought came to me, would it be enough?  Would it be Prof. Frankly who ended up getting most of the credit on such a discovery.  The truth was, yes, probably.  Almost certainly.  I would play no more than a sidekick in this!  It was at that moment, a strange rage seemed to well up inside me.... I'm not even quite sure of what it was.  My deep depression of lack of recognization seemed to turn into a hot, blazing fire residing in the pit of my heart.  I simply couldn't take it!  It was my own race, after all, why shouldn't I be the one to discover this?  Why wouldn't that old Goomba consult me as soon as he found out about such a thing right away?  This discovery had to be mine!
I had come to the conclusion that I would not stop at anything to take claim for this discovery, and that is just what I would do.  But how would I do it, you ask?  Yes, I asked the very same question to myself.  But only one thought came to my mind.  It was the only possible way.  It was death.  Death to the Goomba and the reward to me.  That was how I would take credit for the discovery.  I had become crazy.  It was determined to the point of unhealthiness, and I had never wanted anything so badly in my life. 
Now, as you both know I am a detective.  And as such I have been around many tricky cases in my lifetime, and have learned from all of them.  I have been inspired by the actions of my victims, and influenced by the criminals that I catch.  I knew how to create the perfect alibi so that no one would expect that I, Detective Pennington, murdered Professor Frankly." 
The lie detector began to hum suddenly and a beep resounded from the helmet.  Mario was startled deeply.  That beep meant that Detective PEnnington didn't actually kill Professor Frankly.  Was this penguin simply crazy?
"Alright, saying that I killed him isn't exactly the truth, for I had someone else perform the action.  You see, I couldn't possibly face a man and kill him.  That's simply too hard for me to do.  No.  I needed a little help in this murder.... but I'll get to that later.  First I must explain to you how I got on to the train before Professor Frankly so that I could murder him the night he arrived.  You see, I simply needed a disguise to help me along and I would have this thing in the bag.  And who else better to dress up as than the man wearing so much clothing you can't even see his true form, none other than Lord Crump. 
So, this is how I did it.  I waited until night came, when most people were asleep, and knocked upon the door of the X-Nauts, who live quite close to me.  After I knocked I quickly ran into the bushes beside the door.  Once someone opened the door and I realised that it was indeed Lord Crump, I tackled him!  Yes, and the whole while muffling his alarmed cries so that he couldn't be heard.  I had disposed of this X-Naut into a warp pipe near the hotel where I had tied him to a chair and put a scarf around his mouth.  Hopefully, no one would discover him and I would be able to go through with my plan unnoticed.
Once he was down and tied up, and stuck into the X-Naut's house and stole a good helping of Lord Crump's clothes, being careful not to wake up the many slumbering X-Nauts nearby.  In the morning, the X-Nauts found the fake note I left them that Lord Crump needed to go on a vacation, and would be back sometime soon on the Excess Express. 
So now I had my disguise, but there was a problem.  Frankly had come on the train to see me, and if he was murdered, they would most certainly want someone such as me to be back at Poshley Heights to take care of that!  But how could I be Detective PEnnington if I was too busy being Lord Crump on the train?  Well, it's all thanks to a certain "friend" of mine.  You see, the Grande Theatre was opening soon, and many actors and actoresses were coming in, including a certain Duplighost that may prove helpful.  Yes, that's right.  I brived the actor, Doopliss, into helping me out with my plan of murder.  He obviously missed the life of crime and joined me. not to mention he would be paid handsomely for it.  So the next night I dressed up as Lord Crump, spectacles and all, and preapred to board.  In my suitcase were some extra clothes, and Doopliss.  Doopliss had transformed himself into another one of my helmets and was placed into the suitcase.  I paid extra for a ticket that took me to Rougeport and back again, so that I could dispose of Professor Frankly, and possibly create a suspicious looking alibi for Lord Crump. 
So, Doopliss and I stayed in room number 8 the whole ride to Rougeport.  I kept Doopliss hidden rather well so that no one would find him.  I had a plan all set out perfectly on how Frankly would be killed.  I had eavesdropped on the conductor talking to the chef to inform him where all the new guests coming on at Rougeport would be roomed.  This way, the chef would know what rooms to send his food service to.  It was room number 4, Frankly.  So I waited until the pitch of night, while everyone was asleep, and walked out into the box car of room number four with Doopliss.  I removed the vase of flowers on one of the tables, and replaced it with a fake vase.  That's right.  It was Doopliss.  He had shape-shifted himself into a vase of flowers and rested there while I gave him orders.  I said, on the night that Frankly comes aboard the Excess Express, transform back into yourself, murder him quickly, and run back to the table where he would turn back into a vase of flowers as though nothing had happened.  Once everything settled down, I told him to run back to room number 8 with me. 
So, Doopliss stayed transformed into a vase as stayed sitting there for the whole ride to Rougeport until we finally arrived, and Frankly got aboard.  Obviously, Doopliss was quite anxious, for not long after the old Goomba had come, Doopliss had transformed to his regular self, knocked upon Frankly's door, and done away with him.  He transformed back into a vase just in the knick of time, too. 
So, later that night, Doopliss came back to the room.  We were headed back to Poshley, and everyone that had boarded the train with Frankly were now suspects.
Next up was the tricky part, for you see, they were all headed back to Poshley Heights to retrieve me, so I could solve the murder, when I was actually the brains of the whole thing!  So, as soon as the train stopped at Poshley Heights, I snuck out the back when the Conductor left to talk to the engineer, and I rushed back to my sanctum, taking an unseen shortcut, obviously.  I had gotten out of my Lord Crump suit and everything.  I was now back to being the good old Detective PEnnington.  So, I luckily beat the Toad conductors to the sanctum so that it looked as though I had been there the whole time!  The perfect alibi!  So, I then got back on the train as Detective PEnnington.  As soon as I had left, Doopliss had transformed into Lord Crump, so that it seemed he was still on the train.  Do you not see my brilliance shining?  Not only would I take the credit for Frankly's discovery, but I would have solved one of the most difficult murder mysteries!  It was all going to plan!  Doopliss was now Lord Crump, the real Lord Crump was in the sewers, I had set up the whole murder and had the most perfect alibi!  It went without a flaw!  Or at least it did.... until that foolish chef made a suggestion to ask Mario for help..."
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #69 on: January 11, 2006, 06:29:25 PM »
Wow! What a story! I suspected that Pennington was in on the murder... Keep it coming! I love this story!

« Reply #70 on: January 11, 2006, 07:38:21 PM »
Alright!  This chapter won't be very long, but it's here anyways!  XD

Chapter 39:  A Mission at the Theatre ~ Mario was dumbstrick.  It all made sense now.  Everything seemed to connect together.  It was Doopliss who put the poison in Peach's muffin that one morning on the train.  Pennington must have ordered him to do so, scared that Mario may figure out the mystery.  It all made sense now... except for one thing that he still remembered.
"Pennington," he said bluntly, "how did you get your hands on Frankly's report?"
"Who ever said I have it?" asked Pennington.
"Don't play dumb," Mario shot back, "I saw you holding it!  The History of Penguins, or something like that.  You had the book!  That was Frankly's report!"
"Wh-when?  How?!" Pennington asked anxiously, feeling disappointed that his brilliant plan had, indeed, involved a small snag. 
"When I walked in on you while you were asleep with your book.  I just happened to glance at the cover, and I remeber specifically what it was about."
There was an eerie silence.  Absolutely nothing could be heard in the thick, still train.  Pennington's eyes burned right into Mario's.  Finally, he sighed and looked down.
"Yes, yes, alright.....  It was when the conductors of the train found me afterwards to talk to me about the murder...  I told them that I needed to examine Frankly's body alone.  Being the fools that they are, they left me alone.  I had searched in all of Frankly's bags until I discovered his report!  I then knew it was now mine, and all I had to do was falsely accuse someone of being the criminal.  I decided on Professor Bom-Bers, considering that he really seemed to annoy me."
"So, what is it then?" asked Goombella suddenly.
"What?" said PEnnington.
"Frankly's report.  What did it say?" she asked again.
"Oh.  I'm not really sure actually.  I didn't have much time at all to read it.  Though from the few pages I looked over, I realised it was brilliant writing... yes.."
There was another silence as Mario thought over all that Pennington had just said.
"So I suppose it was you who put the real flower vase in room number 7, wasn't it?" asked Mario.
"What?  Oh... that.  Yes, I suppose it was.  I should have disposed of it, but I thought of a better use for it.  It wasn't all that clever, but it was better than hiding it away in my room.  I simply tried to frame those Shadow Sirens, you see.  Perhaps I would decide on them to be the murderers.  But no, I went with Bom-Bers instead, which was a fine idea anyways...  You see, Mario, a true murder mystery involves the tiniest detail.  You just have to be aware of them," said Pennington. 
"I was aware of them," said Mario, not much emotion being sensed in his voice.  "Keep an eye on him, Goombella."  Mario suddenly began walking towards the door of the train.
"Where are you going this time?" asked Goombella anxiously. 
"To the Grande Theatre.  I won't be long.  I just have a ghost that I need to catch," Mario opened the door, the night air flowing inside the train.  "Feel free to ask Pennington any questions you'd like.  If I take any longer than an hour, come find me." 
Goombella nodded with a weak smile as Mario left into the night.  Once the door had been slided shut, she slowly turned back around to face Detective Pennington.  His eyes were shifty, and his face looked shadowed.  His head hung rather low, as if in some sort of sickness.  It was most likely from the great sense of pride weighed on his shoulders from after speaking out his brilliant plan.  All that pride had turned to guilt. 
Goombella looked him in the face.
"So," she said in a strong voice, "Detective........  How could you?"
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #71 on: January 15, 2006, 03:54:18 PM »
Chapter 40:  Stealthy in the Grande Theatre ~ Mario walked through the empty streets of Poshley Heights, his heart still racing from the events that had happened earlier.  He had just been explained the entire murder.  The whole time, Lord Crump had been Doopliss!  The the real Lord Crump was still in that filthy old street pipe.  Pennington's plan had been truly genius, though.  He had given himself the perfect alibi by making it look as though he was never on the train when the murder was committed.  Though he actually was.  Although Pennington dind't actually murder anyone, he still had planned out the entire thing.  He just bribed Doopliss to do his dirty work for him.
Mario looked up the street at the enormous, still Grande Theatre.  It would seem as though time had stopped if it wasn't for the gurgling fountain spewing crystal clear water ahead.  The air was calm, and the night was completely silent.  Inside the train, the air had been thick, and dusty.  It had seemed rather hard to breath inside, quite unlike how it normally was when the train was in motion. 
Mario walked up the thick marble steps to find himself standing in front of the enormous oak door.  He paused for a moment, and looked over his shoulder, half expecting to see Pennington running at him with Goombella at his heel.  Without thinking he budged open the door and stepped inside.  It was very silent inside the Grande Theatre, except for the murmured voices of the actors and actresses speaking or singing behind the next wall.  It was completely deserted as it had been before, and Mario slowly made his way through.  He walked past the ticket booths and binocular stands, and past the bathroom doors where Pennington had once emerged.  He made his way across the fancy hall and stopped in front of a large red door with golden handles.  The sound of a woman's voice could be heard on the other side of the door.  Slowly, Mario opened it, the sound of her voice suddenly much louder.  Inside, Mario was amazed.  It was the largest room he had ever seen!  He was apparenly on the first balcony from the floor.  He could see the seats in front of him were filled with people, and luckily, the door had opened and closed so quietly that no one had heard him come in. 
On stage Mario could see a curvy, purple woman, hovering about in a poofy red dress.  It was Madame Flurrie, the cloud spirit that had once joined Mario on his quest of the THousand-Year Door.  She was busy wasting away her breath on a awe-struck looking Yoshi beside her.  Mario thought it would be best if he found a seat for now, but it seemed as though everywhere was filled up, and he desperately didn't want to draw attention to himself at the moment.  And besides, he was here to look for Doopliss and bring him to the train, not to enjoy the show!  Mario needed someway to get backstage...
Hopefully Doopliss wouldn't be acting anytime soon, for he needed him desperately.  Mario exitted through the same door, closing it slowly.  He looked about the empty room, goosebumps rising through him at the sheer loneliness.  How was he to get backstage anyways? 
To answer this question he began searching the main lobby, looking for any kind of door that looked as though it may lead him in the right direction.  At the bottom floor of the Grande Theatre (which was down another floor from the lobby) Mario found a few more doors.  Though, he discovered, they all lead to the floor seats of the audience.  But then, he noticed a smaller door at the left side of the room.  It was the same color as the wall, and blended in well, if it wasn't foor a red doorknob that stuck out.  Mario allowed curiosity overcome him as he quickly walked over to it and turned the door knob.  The hidden door lead him into a hallway that was painted with white walls.  His stomach churned as he looked down the hall.  At the very end, there was a metal door with a sign on it that red:  "STAFF ONLY".  Mario ran down the hall (remembering that Goombella was still left alone with a murderer) and quickly opened the door.  This door was not a silent as the doors in the lobby, and Mario had to open it very slowly as to not have it creek to much.  He peered through the door to see that he was backstage!  He was next to the velvet red curtains that hung at each side of the stage.  He could look straight across at Flurries who was busy floating this way and that across the stage.  It was quite obvious that she had suddenly seen Mario, for she looked him right in the eye, though being such a good actress, she did not let it get in the way of her facial expressions nor her lines. 
Mario hated to be a distraction as he slowly closed the metal door once more.  Mario's stomach leapt as he discovered the door shut with a loud -CLUNK!-  He flinched at the sound, hoping it dind't disturb the play.  Suddenly, there came soft footsteps from back behind the stage set.  Mario quickly hid behind a model of a tree that was proped up against the wall next to him. 
A Doogan security guard walked by, looking around suspiciously.  Mario saw him shrug and walked back behind the stage set.  Mario heaved a heavy sigh of relief, staying behind the cardboard tree until his heart rate became normal once more.
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #72 on: January 15, 2006, 09:39:08 PM »
This is so full of suspense. Keep it going!

« Reply #73 on: January 16, 2006, 05:27:23 PM »
Okay!  Man... these stories... these stories!!!  I'll be so glad when I don't have to feel the pressure to write one.

Chapter 41:  Doopliss the Doppleganger  ~  Mario slowly peered out from behind the prop, checking to see if the coast was clear.  To his relief, it all seemed very quiet once more.  He couldn't help but feel a little paranoid, though, even as he stood behind the giant cardboard tree.  Mario slowly stepped out into the open, and moved back behind the stage set where the security had gone.  Perring around the corner, he found that there were two security guards chatting with each other.  The hair on the back of his neck stood up.  Could he just ask for Doopliss, or would he simply be asked to leave?  The answer was completely obvious.  He needed to stay quiet and hidden.  He would have to find the dastardly duplighost by himself. 
Mario's heart began to pump heavily as he stared at the two doogan security guards.  On the walls next to them were doors, all with stars on them.  One star said Flurrie, while another said Hoshi, and one that read Doopliss.  Those door were clearly the actors' and actresses' dressing rooms.  Mario simply needed to make it to Doopliss's dressing room, snatch the ghost, and take him back to the Excess Express for capture. 
Mario was busy trying to think of some sort of plan that would allow him to sneak past security and make it to his door.  But how?  They were clearly not moving any time soon.  But suddenly, to Mario's pure joy, Doopliss suddenly stepped out of his dressing room.  He basically resembled a white ghost, perhaps something you'd dress up as for Halloween, and had great red eyes.  He wore a blue bow tie and had a pointed blue hat with red stars.  A crooked black smiled lined his face.  It was the freak in the sheet himself, Doopliss the Doppleganger.  He walked swiftly passed the security guards and slowly began making his way to Mario's side of the stage.  Mario's heart raced.  This was his chance!

Doopliss wiped the crumbs from his doughnut off of his bow tie.  It was his turn to go on.  He would transform into the maid of Ms. Scarlette, and do his acting.  It was most certainly not a very flattering role to play, but Doopliss took the offer anyways, not being on the stage in over three months.  Doopliss shook himself off a bit and looked onto the stage.  How he felt so different from any other time he was about to perform.  Perhaps he was still a tad shaken from the whole... incident... on the train. 
A chill ran up his spine as he was waiting for his cue.  He was actually very early yet, but felt extremely bored locked away in his dressing room.  He had finished down the entire bowl of fruit they had left him, and was begginning to get butterflies in his stomach.  Suddenly, without any expection, a gloved hand wrapped around Doopliss's mouth and another hand pushed him into a wall.  Doopliss gave a muffled cry that was hushed enough for no one to hear.  He looked into the familiar face of Mario, the man that ruined his career as the monster of Creepy Steeple. 
"You!" said Doopliss to the gloved hand held tightly around his jagged mouth. 
"You're coming with me, Doopliss!" said Mario. 
Sweat dropped down Doopliss's face as panic struck him.  He had been discovered!  Detective Pennington failed to keep the murder a secret!  Thinking fast, Doopliss transformed himself into a small, purple mouse, with a bandana wrapped around his eyes.  He was too small to remain in Mario's grasp and quickly ran between the plumber's legs.  Mario panicked.
"Not today, slick!" said Doopliss with a chuckle as he ran across the room and up a steel latter that resided next to the metal door Mario had entered.  MArio quickly chased Doopliss up the latter, being as quiet as he could as to not disturb the security guards.  Mario reached the top to see that he was on a long, narrow bridge that went across over the stage.  This was up where the staff could adjust the lighting and change the setting.  There were ropes that hung from a loop in the ceiling, held there by a sack of sand.  The lights were located next to the side bars of each narrow bridge (as there were four, each one next to the other). 
Mario could see the purple rat running along the bridge.  Once he was at the far end, he turned to face Mario and tranformed himself back into the duplighost he originally was.  Mario glared at him.
"Come get me, plumber boy!" said Doopliss.
Mario slowly began to take steps towards Doopliss.  Looking down, he could see the tops of the actor's heads, and the floor of the stage.  If he fell, the whole show would be ruined.  Doopliss continued to taunt Mario, laughing egomaniacally. 
Mario fell into a run as he charged at Doopliss.  The ghost's shining red eyes glared at Mario.  Mario could feel the wind in his face, and could here the singing sound of Flurrie's voice below him.  Once he got close enough to Doopliss, he dived into the air.  Doopliss floated there for a while, cackling cleverly.  He then fell back down to the bridge opposing the one he had been on.  Mario galred at him. 
"Come get me slick!" said Doopliss as he proceeded to laugh once more.
Acting quickly, Mario grabbed the sidebar of the bridge, and lunged over at Doopliss, kicking him straight in the face!  He landed safely down to the narrow platform as Doopliss rubbed his face. 
He brought his hands down and growled at Mario.  Suddenly, he transformed into an enormous Pirhana Plant!  Mario quickly leapt out of the way as the carniverous plant lunged at Mario, it's pointed, white teeth directed at him.  Mario grabbed the plant by the stem and held it near its head to stop it from bighting him.  The Pirhana Plant squirmed dangerously as it suddenly turned into a blood-sucking bat.  Mario fell to the floor as the bat flew high into the dark ceiling above him.  Mario quickly got up, staring into the black abyss.  Mario waited for Doopliss to show himself, whatever form he may have transformed.  But instead, Doopliss never came down.  Mario soon felt foolish stand there, and quickly ran towards the end of the bridge, looking down.  Sure enough, Doopliss was back on the ground, and he was leaving the stage through the metal door! 
Mario quickly jumped over to the bridge on his right and climbed back down the steel latter.  Mario quickly went through the door as well, leaving it open as to not disturb the play again.  Mario rushed down the empty white hallway, silence slowly begginning to enclose on him once more.  He opened the hidden door, finding himself back into the downstairs lobby of the Grande Theatre.  The dark red walls and carpet greeted him warmly, let gave Mario a very paranoid feeling.  Doopliss was nowhere in sight. 
The crimson walls only made Mario think of the blood that may be shed if he let that creepy ghost get the best of him.  As Mario walked through the eerie silence of the theatre, he suddenly heard the cruel laugh of Doopliss, coming from somewhere in the lobby.   
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #74 on: January 20, 2006, 10:52:32 AM »
Chapter 42:  Who You Gonna Call?  ~  Mario crept throughout the theatre, his eyes frisky and suspiciously jolting around the room.  He slowly began his way up the stairs to the ground floor, where Mario had entered in the first place.  The chandelires that hung at the ceiling were so still, and eeire as they gave off an elegant, yet very subtle, glow.  There was not but the sound of Flurrie's voice through the thick red walls that could be heard.  Mario suddenly heard footsteps from behind him.  A lump formed in his throat as his hairs stood on end.  He quickly spun around with a cry, only to see there was no one.  Mario felt his heart racing.
"Come out Doopliss!" said Mario loudly so that his voice echoed across the lobby, bouncing off of the red walls and then back to his own round ears.  Mario felt his heavy breath, and tried to calm himself.  The echo slowly faded away as it became silent once more.  Suddenly, on the other side of the wall, Flurrie's voice grew into singing as the orchestra began to play a lovely tune.  At that very moment, Mario felt something hard hit him in the back of the head.  Mario spun around once more, his head pounding, only to find there was nobody there.  He could have sworn that at that moment he could hear the shrill laugh of Doopliss once more. 
"Mario?" said a familiar voice from behind. 
Mario looked over his shoulder to see Goombella standing at the doorway. 
"Goombella?  What are you doing here?  I told you to look after Pennington!" said Mario.
"What?.... Oh!  I know!  I was just...... what are you doing?" said Goombella as MArio came charging at her.  Mario's fist shot straight into her head as she flew back and hit the wall.  Her eyes remained closed for a while as Mario glared at her.  Suddenly, Goombella transformed into an emormous monster that Mario had most certainly seen elsewhere.  It was Bowser!  Mario's heart began to pump as the Bowser turned Doopliss suddenly roared at the top of it's lungs.  Mario finally caught his voice once more, trying to say something that may intimidate him.
"Give it up Doopliss!" he said, "You'll never get away with what you've done!" 
It did not seem to have much affect on him as the gigantic koopa began charging at Mario, its sharp horns pointed at the plumber, like a bull charging at the matador.  Mario stood with his legs apart, watching Bowser under a knotted brow.  Bowser's enormous footsteps shook the chandelires and began to make a few of the audience members inside the Theatre curious. 
Mario dived out of range of Bowser's enormous horns just in the nick of time, as Bowser went sliding away down the lobby.  He came to an abrupt halt and faced Mario once more.  His nostrils flared as he began to breathe his flaming breath.  Mario wasn't sure what came over him, perhaps the sense of repetition, though whatever it was, he quickly found himself charging at Bowser, only to dive around to his back!  Doopliss wasn't sure what was going on, until Mario took hold of his tail!
Mario felt Bowser trip to the floor as he tried to run away.  Using all his strength on the defenseless koopa, Mario began to spin him around in a clean circle around the red carpet.  It started off slowly, and then became increasingly faster.  Mario felt himself growing dizzy, but didn't let that stop him!  He spun Bowser around and around in a circle, until his body had lifted up and into the air.  Mario could hear Bowser's grunts of illness as he continued to be spun, faster and faster. 
Mario wasn't sure how much more of this he could take as well, or he hadn't done this is a very long time.  Finally he felt the enormous Koopa slowling down, and just like that, he transformed back into a dazed, and dizzy Doopliss.  Mario came to a halt as he found himself now holding the feet of Doopliss the Doppleganger.  Mairo picked him up, finding that the ghost was practically unconsious from all the spinning, and began to drag him to the doorway.  Mario sighed as he pushed open the door, stepping out into the dark, starry night.     
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #75 on: January 24, 2006, 08:55:41 PM »
Chapter 43:  The Penguin and the Sheet ~ Mario walked through Poshley Heights, the stunned Doopliss in his arms.  He was heavy for such a light-looking creature, and Mario wasn't sure how far he could continue to carry him.  The night now seemed humid, and the air was heavy.  Mario tried to think of a time in his life where had been under even more pressure then he was now.  Obviously, his first thought was taking down the King of the Koopas, Lord Bowser.  Mario had found himself in the raging hot belly of a volcanic lair of Bowsers' far too many a time.  The lava would develop thick, slow bubbles, filled with mirky, red lava.  The bubbles would burst upon the molasses of lava, sending red flares up at the thin metallic cage in which Mario would stand.  The goombas would be charging at him all the while, and the heat was unbearable. 
But Mario had always known of Bowser as being an evil being, and always knew that in the end it meant everything to him.  To be able to look into the calming blue eyes of Princess Peach at the end of his risky adventure was more of a treasure than silver or gold, or both melded together.
But Mario had no idea that his good old friend, Detective Pennington of Poshley Heights, was such a diabolical madman.  He used bribery, kidnapping, impressionation, and even plotted, along with attempted, murder.  He did all of this just so he could take credit for not only solving a big mystery, but to be known as a great discoverer.  He would do all of this just so his name would be known a little more than it was today. 
Mario thought that he knew Pennington better than that... but apparently, he didn't know him enough.
Perhaps if Mario would have taken a little more time to check in on old friends, this never would have happened...

Yes, Mario suddenly felt a strange guilt reside in his stomach.
If he hadn't been focusing on all his fame and popularity, he could have checked in on everyone.  The smallest of heroes are just as important, right?  I mean, what happened to all of his old friends after Mario had finished his adventure?  Would he simply say goodbye forever?
The least he could do is keep in contact here and again.  Even a tiny postcard would be nice...

Mario was now coming up to the Excess Express once more, Doopliss still in his arms.  He shook off his great feeling of guilt and slowly boarded the train.  Inside, the air was calm and the atmosphere was dark.  Everything looked strangely tall and large to him, yet at the same time small, and cramped.  It was a very strange feeling as he looked about the high-class train.  The marvelous wall-paper, and the amazing chandelirs.  The flowers and flower vases, the classy carpet, the golden door handles.  Yet, since nothing was really lit up inside, it looked rather haunting.  Almost as though it was an ancient train, that had been left on this very track years ago.  Filled with so much knowledge and memorable, that no one, no matter how old, would be able to keep track of it all.
Mario looked down towards the ground as he continued to move Doopliss into the Dining Hall.  There he found Goombella and Pennington (still tied to the chair) resting in the ringing silence. 
"Mario," said Goombella, sounding a little bit parched.  "You're back... and... who's that?"  Goombella rose from her chair that was positioned in front of Pennington and walked over to Mario, her brow in a knot as she look down at the unconsious duplighost. 
"This is-"
"Doopliss.... oh, Doopliss," Pennington interuptted as he looked up from the floor, which they had both assumed he had made good friends with. 
"Yes," said Mario.  "This is the murderer we've been looking for..." 

Mario and Goombella tied Doopliss to a chair as well, double tying the knots so that he cou'dn't escape through transportation.  Mario assured her that he was too weak to do anything trcky any ways, but they didn't have any room to not be as careful as they possibly could. 
"So here we have it," said Goombella.  "The brains of the murder, along with the brawns."
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #76 on: January 27, 2006, 07:32:57 PM »
Chapter 44:  So That's That ~ That night had lasted for a long time after the arrival of Doopliss.  There was a bit more questioning on his account, as they discovered that Doopliss had indeed gone along with Pennington's dastardly plan.  He had been so tired of show business, and didn't feel as though he was living his life the way he wanted to.  After going back to the life of crime, Doopliss had said that he felt satisfied, though a tad guilty.  It also helped him, though, that Detective Pennington was going to pay him ever so handomsely, a check for 1,000 coins!  They were both terrible crooks and deserved nothing less than jail.
Mario and Goombella had waited in the train for hours before they could truly conclude their mystery.  They were tired, absolutely exhausted, and had sweat stains on their clothes as a mark of their determination.
They had brought water to the true Lord Crump and helped him get back up into the open, where he was happy to recieve the chance to breath in fresh air once more.  Pennington and Doopliss remained in their regular chairs as they continued to be questioned of diffferent things, such as the relationship of Professor Frankly and Pennington. 
They had apparently been harsh rivals in college, yet remained some-what friends.  Mario had also discovered more behind the brawl inside the hotel.  Pennington had seen Mario discover the warp pipe containing Lord Crump, and had been keen to see him reappear in order to get the tired ex-conquerer a glass of water.  Pennington had seen it all through one of the side windows on the hotel, and being mayor of the town, knew exactly where he could find the hotel's power source. 
He had turned off the hotel's power, sending Mario (supposedly) crashing down inside the elevator.  It was lucky that Mario had excaped that one alive. 
Pennington had then snuck by the main desk in the dark, and hunted for Mario, making sure he would not live to tell this tail.  But then, as Pennington had found Mario, he found that he could not bring himself to do so.  Instead, Pennington had set Mario outside the Grande Theatre, hoping that not too much would come on his account, and that the knock on the head may have knocked some of the information out of Mario's brain.  As Pennington discovered, it did not, and he had attempted to murder him later on, as you know.
  Mario and Goombella had cramped heads by the end of it all, and were very ready to see to it that these two were brought to jail....

Goombella stood outside of the Grande Theatre alone.  Mario had stayed back with the two convicts inside the train.  The night sky remained blank and dark, and a view stars could hardly be seen anymore peering their way through the thick blanket of sky.  Goombella could feel her heart race.  Pennington's entire, brilliant plan had been revealed, and Doopliss had been captured.  They had rescued Lord Crump, were preparing to set Professor Bom-Bers free, and were now going to alert everyone of the great accident of this murder mystery. 
Goombella could see heads bobbing up and down from inside the Theatre from the door.  The show had obviously been postponed due to the lack of an actor and no back-up (which seemed foolish not to have). 
Goombella patiently waited outside until she could find one of the conductors walk out.
A few of the former suspects that walked (and floated) by gave her peculiar looks, for she was sweating, her hair was in a mess, and she obviosuly appeared nervous.  They knew that perhaps the mystery was, indeed, proved wrong... and where in the world was Detective Pennington and Mario? 
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #77 on: February 07, 2006, 04:44:52 PM »
Chapter 45:  Surprise  ~  Mario listened to the clinking sound of the train as it rode along the tracks...

Goombella had alerted one of the conductors as he stepped out from the Grande Theatre, and she quickly brought him to the place where Pennington was being held.  The conductor had to listen to the full story before anyone was to be arrested.  It took a while to tell, and consumed a lot of breath, but overall the story was fully told and the conductor understood.  When news had spread throughout the town of Poshley Heights, very many were surprised at the fact that the one person they trusted was, in fact, the murderer.  The actors and actresses of the Grande Theatre were shocked to see that Doopliss was in on the whole thing too, and the opening show had been postponed for later now that they unfortunately lost one of their supporting actors.
It was now official that Pennington had been arrested for robbery, developing the plans for murder, impersonation, kidnapping, and attempt at murder.  Doopliss was charged for murder.  All of the suspects that were aboard the train were shocked most of all.  Everyone was simply gaping as they saw Pennington and Doopliss walk from the train, heads held low in shame, their arms cuffed.  Even the stone-cold Bootler couldn't help but let his jaw drop.  Everyone was sincerely disappointed after they all heard PEnnington's awful (yet very clever) plan of getting aboard the Excess Express.  He had disguised himself as someone else and taken the trainride to Rougeport, and then back to Poshley, claiming (as Lord Crump) that he simply wanted to be on the road for a while, but didn't want to stay.  Then, during the night of Frankly's boarding Doopliss would resume his form as a duplighost rather than a flower pot sitting on the table next to the door to Frankly's room (where PEnnington had placed him one of the nights of riding from Poshely Heights).  It was then that Doopliss would knock on Frankly's door, and murder him, just like that!  Then, very quickly, Doopliss would have to resume his role as a flower pot until everything calmed down again and it was night.  Then he would transform into Doopliss, and run back to "Lord Crump"'s room. 
Then, at the moment of their stop at Poshley Heights, Pennington would sneak out the back of the train when no one was looking, asume his form as the penguin detective (leaving his Crump costume on the train) and taking a short cut back to the Snactum before the conductors could reach him first, hence making it look as though he was at the Sanctum the entire time.  Then, inside the train, Doopliss would transform himself into Lord Crump, whom he would act as until the train returned to Poshley Heights with the mystery "solved". 
Pennington would then allow Doopliss go back off to show business, rewarding him handsomely, and then would decide on what he might do with the real Lord Crump, the one he had thrown into a warp pipe by the hotel to keep him quiet.  But this plan was never fulfilled, for Chef Chimi had recommened that Mario, of the Mushroom Kingdom, ought to help out with the case.  And he did indeed...
PEnnington had looked at Mario right in the eyes before being brought off the train last night.  His look was not of anger, but of admiration, and somewhat of envy.  There was a certain gleam in his eye that Mario was not sure of.  All the same, the newly respected detective stared back at the penguin detective, showing no sympathy for him. 
"Well, my friend," said Pennington, despite what had just happened, "you win..."
And with that Pennington turned back around and allowed himselef to be led by the train conductors into the ocean of excited aristocrats waiting outside.  His beak held low, and his trademark magnified glass gone, Pennington looked rather pathetic, and as though he was a stranger Mario had never met before in his life.  Pennington had disappeared into his Sanctum, the great stone doors closing behind him, and the honorable pillars that lines his doors no longer representing pride and dignity, but disappointment and justice...
And that was the last that anyone really ever saw of Pennington, the world-famous penguin detective...

Mario stared at the blank ceiling abover him as he ly in the top bunk of his bed.  The bumps of the train tracks shook his body slightly, his hands placed behind his head.  His expression was calm, yet confused.  Mario wasn't sure whether he ought to be happy that he solved the true murder mystery, or to be sad that he had just lost a very good friend.  He simply couldn't shake the awful feeling that, indeed, this whole thing never could have happened if Mario had kept in touch.  Mario's stomach churned at the though of the thousands of friends he had made over the years, and how he hardly kept up with any of them, even the very close ones.  Perhaps if he had taken a little more time to check in on Pennington he wouldn't have been so depressed.  The smallest decision can change a lifetime after all..... or end one. 
He tried to think to himself that it was all in his head, and it was nothing too much to worry about.  These sort of things happen in everyday life.  People simply move off the path they ought to take, and somehow feel the need to go in some other sort of direction.  Whatever the reason was for Pennington's twist in heart, Mario knew he could have stopped in, even in the most simplest of ways...

Suddenly the door slid open to reveal the powdery-soft face of Princess Peach.  Mario sat up at the sight of here standing by the doorway, a single gloved hand rested upon the wall to the right of her.
"Mario," Peach said, "why don't you come into the Dining Hall, I have a surprise for you!"

Mario followed Peach through the corridors of candle-lit hallways until she reached the sliding, wooden door to the Dining Hall.  She slowly slid it open as Mario stepped into the golden light of the interior, greatly adding warmth to the dark, starry night outside. 
Sudenly, as though a storm had suddenly hit, the great thunderous sound burst into his ears;
"SURPRISE!!!"  Streamers decorated the air-conditioned atmosphere of the cozy-appearing Dining Hall as kazoos sounded and laughter popped about the room.  Mario was shocked to see that all of the past suspects were aboard the train and celebrating Mario's great conquest.  In the front there was Goombella, giggling happily with a pointed, glossy red had upon her head, holding a kazoo near her mouth.  Next to her, Mario could she that she was holding Professor Frankly's discoveries tightly with her, for they had been rightfully handed down to Goombella, free from the greedy hands of Pennington.  Bow was located next to Goombella as she waved herself with her fan, looking at Mario seductively.  Close byto her was Bootler of course, looking rather silly as he held a green and a blue kazoo in his mouth, along with an odd sort of shiney green bowler atop his white head.  Yet, he still managed to appear very proper.  Behind him was the Yoshers, looking rather awkward as they smiled, though it meant a lot to Mario that they even showed up in the first place.  Then, there was the real Lord Crump next to them, busy stuffing his face with sppetizers that were carried by the Toadina, the waitress, located next to him.  She looked rather frightened as Lord Crump piled in heeps of food at a time. 
Chef Chimi was standing next to Goombella, wearing the same kind of glossy, pointed hat as Goombella, only in the color of yellow.  Mario could smell a sweet aroma filling the air of the train, and knew that he was obivously cooking something delicious up.  It smelt very sweet, like strawberry cake, with the thick aroma of rich chocolate.  Mario's lips moisened at the mere thought.  Next to Chef Chimi was the three sisters, the Shadow Sirens.  Beldam looked as though she was was simply showing up because her sisters forced her, though Vivian appeared to be having the time of her life, blowing into her kazoo while sporting her glossy pink party hat.  Marilyn was looking at the food Lord Crump was eating, wanting to take of the appetizers as well, but a tad too scared to even get close to the bloated purple man.  Then there was Professor Bom-Bers, located right next to Chef Chimi.  He looked tired, but very happy.  There were bags under his eyes, squinting in sure joy of being proven innocent.  On his head his blue party hat seemed to be slowly tilting a little to the right, his tangled wisk appearing at the top of his round head. 
Mario couldn't help but smile greatly at the sight of all his friends gathered about, and felt instantly happier about the success of his great mystery solving.  He had paid attention to details, and dealt with all the suspects.  He discovered the reason behind Bootler's quiet ways, and respected the mysteriousness of the harmless Yoshers.  He was able to dodge the seductive attempts by Bow as a hope to get off of the suspect list, and was able to reason with the bewildered Shadow Sirens.  He managed to find the real Lord Crump, and respected the duties of the staff aboard the Excess Express.  Now it was time for something he recieved after every adventure, a nice plate of deliciously fluffy cake...     

(It's not over yet!)
« Last Edit: February 07, 2006, 04:52:44 PM by The Blue Toad »
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #78 on: February 07, 2006, 05:12:20 PM »
Chapter 46:  A Visit From Old Friends  ~  Mario laid in bed, silently chuckling at the thought of tonight.  It had been such fun.  The most delectable food was served, including many pastries and desserts as far as the eye can see.  There was also alcoholic beverages being served, and both Toadsworth and Bootler got drunk.  They began singing Sweet Home Alabama together.  MArio silently laughed as he remembered the sight of Princess Peach and Bow being so embarrased, hiding behing her fan, and pretending as though they didn't notice. 
Mario had a warm feeling in his stomach as he bundled himself up in the thick blankets before him, listening to the sweet lullaby of the tracks of the train.  The stars shone brightly outside the window next to him, and the trees and bushes upon the fresh grass passed by in a blur of shadowy green.  The air was warm and comfortable around, not at all like it had been when confronting Pennington.  It was true.  The train seemed a lot more open when it was in motion, rather than when standing still. 
Still, Mario found it rather hard to settle himself into sleep.  He kept thinking of Pennington walking through his big stone doors into Poshley Sanctum, ashamed of his brilliant yet utterly shameful idea.  To murder a person simply for the sake of fame and fortune was too low to see.  It was a deep as the blackest part of the ocean, where the water is freezing and the fish are unkind.  It is where evil thoughts of greed, revenge, and cruelness dwells, and it is a dangerous place to swim.  Sometimes we venture there by accident, other times on purpose.  Sometimes it seems as though we sink, making us to things that are low as some sort of last resort.  But no, there are many other resorts.  Some that may involve kicking your legs and trying to swim to the surface, but nothing is success without much work, and the easiest way out may not be the best. 
Mario finally felt his eyelids grow heavier as they slowly began to close themselves.  His breahs became heavier and louder as he let the warm air consume him in it's craddling arms, swooning him in the starry night.  But before he could find himself closing his eyes, a glimpse of something white and radiant caught his eye.  He blinked twice, clearing his head as he gazed across the room into the face of a pale, gleaming ghost. 
It was the ghost of a Toad, an old friend from the train.  The ghost looked warmly back at Mario as he gazed upon the shining ghost, eyes twinkling.
"Wha...what is it?" asked Mario in a hoarse whisper.  He hadn't come in contact with any ghosts since one of the first times he was on the train, and it was rather nerve-racking to see one nonetheless.
"What is it?" asked the hushed voice of the ghost, "What do you think, detective?"
Suddenly, another smokey figure appeared by the ghost's side.  It was the beaming spirit of Professor Frankly, hovering in the air happily.  Mario looked down to see Goombella slumbering softly on the couch, her books closed.  How she would love to see her old professor, though it may be a little much for her.
"Mario, dear boy," said Professor Frankly, "you have done it... I knew you could.  With you, and Goombella of course... I feel the world may sleep better tonight...and most certainly I....thank you.."
Mario wasn't sure what he could say.  But before he even had time to state a word, Professor Frankly was suddenly wrapped around but a shining, gloden light from above.  The old Goomba looked up, pure joy shone on his face.  And suddenly, he faded away.  Professor Frankly was no more, and his time had finally come. 
Mario looked back towards the Toad ghost, who simply smiled at him, and disappeared as well...     

So that was it.  Now Mario's mission was truly complete...

(Still not over yet).
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #79 on: February 07, 2006, 08:32:03 PM »
Chapter 47:  The Denouement  ~  The air was crisp as the tension hung thickly.  Mario felt as though everyone was watching him, and his stomach churned through pain, sorrow, and nervousness.  He swallowed hard, and painful lump moving up and down in his throat.  His eyes gazed upon his white-gloved hands that emitted from the silky black sleeves of his suit.  The grass under Mario's feet was turning slightly brown, a sign of calmness, remourse, and mourning.  The pianta preacher spoke softly ahead oof Mario, adding very kind words of Professor Frankly into his long speech. 
Next to Mario was Goombella, dressed in a black dress with a veil strung over her face that hung from her short rimmed black hat which held two beautiful white flowers.  Her hair was tied back into a tight, blonde ponytail, and her eyes never strayed from the casket that lay before her.  She felt tears well up in her eyes as the preacher talked on...
Behind Mario and Goombella was a series of others whom knew Frankly well, or even not so well.  There was Koops, Madam Flurrie, Yosh, Vivian, Bobbery, Ms. Mowz, Punio and Petuni, the Puni elder, the Shadow Sirens, even the X-Nauts.  There were very many familiar and unfamiliar faces about the crowd, some were students of Professor Frankly, others were old friends, and some were people who only came across him once or twice, but respected him dearly. 
Both Mario and Goombella had been surprised and how many people had showed up.  They had no idea that Frankly knew this many people. 
"...and we know today that Frankly is looking down on us from Heaven now, glad to know that his time on earth was spent with happiness, and many good friends.  For his life had not been one of a lonely Goomba, but of....."  The preacher continued on.  Mario briefly took in a few of the things that he was saying, though he couldn't help himself but to think of his memories from Professor Frankly.  He had been so excited when he found that dried mushroom in the Thousand-Year Door. 
Mario wasn't really sure he understood half the things the professor was talking about at times.  Actually, Mario was completely sure that he didn't really understand half the things the professor was talking about at times.  He always seemed to be thinking outside the box, and loved expressing enthusiasm for everything.  What a smart Goomba he had been, and how much of an old friend he was to all...
Once the service had ended and Frankly had been slowly lowered into the earth, everyone began talking with each other politely as to make some sort of light conversation as a failed attempt to lighten the mood a bit.  Most of the people came to hug Goombella awkwardly, or say some words to her as an effort of comfort, for all knew that she was closest to the old professor.  Goombella would nod to what they were saying, not looking up at them but sniffing loudly and wiping her watery eyes.  Flurrie gave her the biggest hug of all, practically knocking her to the ground.  Mario also made small talk with a few of the people as the sun began to lower itself behind a grassy hill, the high sky above growing darker. 
Mario watched as people began to leave the graveyard through their cars and other vehicles.  While they were all chatting and saying farewells in a group near the road of the cemetary, Mario could see Goombella still standing by Frankly's grave, staring into the grave hole that would soon be covered. 
Mario placed his hands in his black velvet pockets as he watched her begin to slowly cry over his grave.  He squinted in the light of the gleaming orange sun, his hair being blown like th edead grass by the warming wind coming in from the South.

Mario opened the round wooden door that was his home as he entered the familiar setting.  Luigi was found sitting at the table in the kitchen, eating some sort of mushroom dish.
"Hey!" he said, "Mario!  You're back!"
"Yeah," said Mario as he dropped his luggage to the floor.  It had been a long voyage over the seas, and even a longer goodbye from his friends at the Rougeport docks. 
"How was your trip, bro?" asked Luigi. 
"It was... interesting," answered Mario truthfully.
"Really?" said Luigi, "and how was Goombella?"
"She was fine," answered Mario.
"Good to hear, good to hear..."
There was a silence in the room as Mario looked about the house.  It seemed rather dark, and boring.  He felt a little strange being on solid ground now, instead of on a train swaying back and forth.  The tick-tocks of the clock nearby seemed loud and annoying to Mario's ears.  He hadn't realized how long he was away. 
"So.... what kind of adventure did you have?" asked Luigi as he began to raise another spoon full of mushrooms to his black, crumb-filled mustache. 
"One of a kind, Luigi," said Mario, "One of a kind..."


the end.
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #80 on: February 07, 2006, 08:33:30 PM »
And that ends my really long story!  My gosh this took a while to finish, but I'd say it was worth it...though....not too many people actually read it...but hey!  It was fun.
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

« Reply #81 on: February 07, 2006, 08:39:43 PM »
That was fantastic!! I really loved it! It was very well put out!

I haven't posted here because I didn't see a reason to, but I want you to know that it was great! You have a talent for writing, and I hope you will write another story like this!

« Reply #82 on: February 07, 2006, 08:43:34 PM »
:-D

Thanks!
Maybe there is more to me than there is to me...

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