The Secret of the Shadow Bandit
Page 1
The Biggest Curious Cat Spy Club Mystery Yet!
Kelsey and her family are moving into a new house—on the same property as a castle! It’s not a real castle, but it does have turrets, winding staircases, a dungeon that’s kind of creepy—even its own mystery! A valuable chess piece has gone missing from the castle’s collection, and Kelsey is determined to use her sleuth skills to unmask the thief.
But there’s another mystery on the property. A shadowy creature roaming the grounds leads the Curious Cat Spy Club to an abandoned clubhouse hidden in a tree! Kelsey, Becca, and Leo need to work together to find out who used to meet in the tree house and why they left in such a hurry.
Are the mysteries connected? Could the elusive creature be the link? The Curious Cat Spy Club is on the case!
ALBERT WHITMAN & COMPANY
Publishing award-winning children’s books since 1919
www.albertwhitman.com
Printed in the United States of America
Praise for
“A fun mystery series that’s a sure bet for animal lovers.”—School Library Journal
“This first book in a new series is definitely for the animal-lover, and the Scooby-Doo vibe makes it a perfect fit for the budding mystery fan. Young readers will enjoy following the clues along with Kelsey as she learns about friendship and animals.”—Booklist
“There’s plenty of action in this series opener, but Singleton also handles the emotional layers well. Pet lovers will enjoy the animal-centric focus, and the mystery will keep them guessing.”—Publishers Weekly
“This enjoyable mystery has a satisfying ending and a neatly calibrated level of suspense.”—Kirkus Reviews
“This is a feel-good book with a myriad of unexpected twists, turns, and surprises.”—VOYA
“Ultimately as fuzzy and accessible as a kitten chasing a ball of string, this story—and subsequent titles in the series—will likely find a ready audience among animal lovers, amateur sleuths, and the fairly common combination of the two.”—Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books
The Curious Cat Spy Club Mysteries
The Curious Cat Spy Club
The Mystery of the Zorse’s Mask
Kelsey the Spy
The Secret of the Shadow Bandit
This book is dedicated to the juvenile series book collecting community who will recognize the series books tropes woven into this mystery.
Special thanks to Jennifer Fisher, president of the Nancy Drew Sleuths fan club and publisher of the Sleuth fanzine, and to Garrett Lothe, publisher of the Susabella Passengers and Friends—two great juvenile series book publications that celebrate series books for young (and young at heart) readers.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication
data is on file with the publisher.
Text copyright © 2016 by Linda Joy Singleton
Published in 2016 by Albert Whitman & Company
ISBN 978-0-8075-1385-9
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Printed in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 LB 20 19 18 17 16
Cover illustration by Lora Lee
Interior illustrations and hand lettering by Jordan Kost
Design by Ellen Kokontis
For more information about Albert Whitman & Company,
visit our web site at www.albertwhitman.com.
Contents
Prologue: Three Months Ago…
Chapter 1: Monstrous
Chapter 2: Houdini Cat
Chapter 3: Cat-Napped
Chapter 4: Up in a Tree
Chapter 5: Cash and Clues
Chapter 6: Dinner Rules
Chapter 7: Bragg Castle
Chapter 8: Game of Bones
Chapter 9: Tailing a Tail
Chapter 10: Ferreting Out the Truth
Chapter 11: Surveillance
Chapter 12: Doggy Dilemma
Chapter 13: SOS!
Chapter 14: The Cat Guy
Chapter 15: Pawn
Chapter 16: A Sticky Situation
Chapter 17: Cash, Clues, and Crushes
Chapter 18: Dog-Gone Lucky Day
Chapter 19: Road Trip
Chapter 20: Mystery Solved?
Chapter 21: Accused
Chapter 22: It’s a Trap
Chapter 23: Shaker Shake-Up
Chapter 24: A Thief Unmasked
Chapter 25: King, Queen, Pawn
Chapter 26: The Mystery Name
Chapter 27: Treasure Quest
Chapter 28: The Emerald King
Chapter 29: Club Mates
- Prologue -
Three Months Ago…
RJ peered up into the dense leaves of the towering oak tree. Opening his palm, he held up raisins and called softly, “Bandit!”
He heard a rustling sound overhead and saw a flash of a gray tail.
RJ couldn’t see the small animal’s face, but he knew Bandit’s black eyes would be shining. He’d found out the best foods to feed his semi-wild animal from reading online and talking to a veterinarian. Fruit, veggies, and meat were good. Not too much sugar, though, as Bandit’s teeth could get cavities. Bandit wasn’t fully grown. She was a teenager like him—in animal years anyway. When he found her half-dead in a ditch, she had an indentation around her neck like she’d recently worn a collar.
Bandit wasn’t the only wild creature he’d nursed back to health. There was the bunny with the bleeding foot that he and his friends had found when they were exploring the woods behind the cottage, a baby bird that had fallen out of its nest, and a lizard that was nearly frozen to death. His friends helped, of course, but RJ discovered he had a natural talent for healing. So he read about animal science and James Herriot’s stories of being a country vet. RJ couldn’t wait to be old enough to go to college and study to become a veterinarian.
Smiling at the image of himself in a white doctor’s coat with a waiting room of people and their pets, RJ climbed through the trap door into the tree house.
A furry head peeked out from a tiny hole in the wall. Bandit hesitated, still wary of humans. While RJ waited for her to come inside, he set the table with three sodas, three fruit snack packets, and plastic silverware.
Out of the corner of his eye, RJ saw furry paws scamper toward him. He held out the raisins to Bandit. Her whiskers were inches from his fingers when he heard a squeal of tires and a slammed car door.
RJ bumped over a chair as he rushed to the window.
Why was his dad home so early?
Climbing to the ground, RJ glanced up and saw Bandit peering down at him from a gnarled branch.
His father stomped over with an expression so hot with rage that RJ drew back. He felt like he was looking at a stranger instead of his easygoing, soft-spoken father. “Go inside the house and pack!”
Then his father told him something so horrible that RJ gasped like he’d been punched in the gut. Stunned, he barely noticed when the raisins fell from his hand to the ground.
Only when his father went into the house did he look back up into the tree.
Of course timid Bandit was gone.
And soon RJ was gone too.
- Chapter 1 -
Monstrous
A shrill scream rips through the house.
I jump off the window seat, fling my mystery novel aside, race out of my bedroom and—Wham!—into the solid mass of big brother.
“Whoa, Kelsey!” Kyle’s hair is mussed like he just
woke up from a nap. He puts his hands on my shoulders and peers into my face. “Why’d you scream?”
“Not me…Kiana, I think,” I say as another scream echoes through the hall. I whirl around and run into her room, my brother close on my heels.
My older sister is perched on her bed, clutching a stuffed pink bunny to her chest like a shield. “Get the monster out of here!” she shrieks.
“What monster?” Kyle scrunches his forehead, looking around.
“It moved too fast to get a good look, but I think it’s a fanged snake or horned lizard with a spiky tail,” Kiana says in a rush.
A fanged horned monster with a spiky tail?
I want to believe Kiana because she’s nicer to me than Kenya and sometimes she even helps me with my homework. But there’s no monster in her room.
“It’s in my closet!” Kiana points a shaky finger. “I saw a horrifying shadow on the wall then heard claws running into my closet so I kicked the door shut. It’s still there!”
“You only saw a shadow?” Kyle scoffs. “Don’t you know that shadows are always more exaggerated than reality? I’m not surprised you’re imagining monsters after you and Kenya stayed up late watching Jurassic Park.”
“That has nothing to do with this…this creature!” Kiana squeals, her gaze glued to the closet. “I came into my room to get my backpack and heard a crunching sound—and look! That thing chewed my book report!” Kiana picks up a shredded paper from her bed and waves it at us.
I stare at needle-sharp punctures and clawed stripes, and my stomach knots. As Spy Tactics Specialist in the Curious Cat Spy Club, I’ve trained myself to observe and analyze evidence. The claw and teeth marks are proof I can’t ignore. A horrible suspicion grows in my mind.
“A monster ate your homework?” Kyle throws back his head and laughs. “Try getting that excuse by your teacher.”
“It’s true! And it’s probably devouring my clothes and best shoes right now!” Kiana twists a curl of her dark hair around her finger. “Hurry, Kyle! You’re older and stronger than we are. Get rid of it!”
My brother’s smile fades fast. While he’s tall and can play a mean game of hoops, he’s not made of muscles or courage. And lately he’s been too busy researching colleges to play any sports. He glances uneasily at the closet, backing into the hall like he’s poised for a quick getaway. “I’ll go ask Mom to help. Catching animals is her job, so she’ll know what to do.”
“She’s working in the garden,” Kiana says.
“No need to bother Mom on her day off,” I say calmly even though my heart is thudding. I step forward. “I’ll do it.”
My brother and sister stare at me, shocked. I’m the youngest in the family after all, the little sister who’s usually so quiet no one notices me. They probably think I’m trying to prove I can be brave, but my offer has nothing to do with bravery. It’s the opposite. If my suspicion about the “monster” is right, I’m going to be in big trouble. My only hope is to get my sister and brother out of the room.
“I can handle this.” I imagine I’m a fearless detective from one of my novels and lift my chin confidently. “I’ve learned a lot about dealing with wild animals from hanging out with Becca at her wild animal sanctuary. Alligators, lions, and bears—they don’t scare me. Becca’s taught me how to protect myself, but I can’t protect both of you, so wait in the hall.”
Kiana frowns at her ripped homework then jumps off her bed and comes over to me. “I can’t leave you in here alone,” she says anxiously.
“Really, it’s okay. Don’t worry.”
As I say this I hear rustling sounds from the closet and wonder what will happen if I’m wrong. Could there really be a spiked-tail snake-lizard in the closet?
“Kelsey knows a lot about wild animals, so she can take care of this,” my brother says with a shrug. “Come on, Kiana. Let’s get out of here.”
“But Kelsey could get hurt.” She tugs my hand. “Better my shoes get eaten than my baby sister. Let’s all leave and go get Mom.”
“Get Mom to do what?”
I spin around as Mom strides into the room. Her curly brown hair falls out of a red scarf and her gardening gloves are dirt-stained. Before she became a county animal control officer, she worked for a florist because she loves gardening.
I wish she’d stayed outside in the garden.
Things get worse when I hear Kenya’s and Dad’s voices.
Drats! Now my whole family is here.
“What’s going on?” Dad squeezes in beside Mom. He must have been in the kitchen working on a culinary masterpiece because he’s wearing his Eating Is a Necessity but Cooking Is an Art apron.
“Kiana, did you scream?” Kenya pushes past everyone to hug her. They both have long dark-brown hair like Mom’s and full lips like Dad, and everyone says they’re identical. But I can tell them apart. It’s Secret 8 in my notebook of secrets.
“Mom, Dad!” Kiana gestures wildly. “There’s a monster in my closet!”
Dad wipes his hands on his cooking apron as he chuckles. “Aren’t you a little old for imaginary friends?”
“It’s not a friend or imaginary! See what it did to my book report!” Kiana waves the ripped homework in the air. A corner breaks off and flutters to the carpet.
Mom pushes her hair from her eyes, leaning in for a closer look at the paper. “Hmmm,” she murmurs. “What does this monster look like?”
“Horrifying! It was huge like a giant lizard or dragon with wicked fangs!” Kiana spreads her arms and juts out her teeth like fangs. “And it had a spiky tail!”
“But you only saw its shadow,” I point out, hoping to calm everyone down and convince them to leave. “I’m sure it’s just a harmless rat. I can get rid of it.”
“No, you will not, Kelsey,” Mom says firmly as she steps in front of me. “Rats carry diseases. Kyle, go out to my work truck and grab my net.”
We all wait as if frozen in a movie frame. Kiana and Kenya stand close, their hands dramatically clasped together and their gazes fixed on the closet door like they’re actors in a horror movie. Dad stands by awkwardly like an extra, while Mom waits to direct the action.
Minutes later, Kyle’s footsteps pound down the hall and he hands Mom the net before he quickly ducks back into the hall.
Mom raises the net in one hand, reaching for the closet with the other.
I hold my breath as Mom twists the knob.
Slowly, the door opens…
- Chapter 2 -
Houdini Cat
“Stand back, kids,” Mom warns.
The others huddle in the hall, but I step forward to look inside the closet.
Just as I feared, I recognize the “monster.”
Of course, there’s nothing monstrous about my sweet kitten. Honey is adorable with long marmalade-colored fur, white patches across her back, and a stubby tail that’s twitching as if she’s annoyed.
“Honey!” I rush forward to scoop up my cat. She mews with attitude, letting everyone know she does not appreciate being locked in a closet.
“Some terrifying monster.” Mom chuckles, the net dangling from her hand.
Kyle swaggers into the room. “I thought the monster had a spiked tail.”
“It did!” Kiana waves her arms emphatically. “It can’t be a kitten!”
“You only saw its shadow.” Kyle smirks. “I can’t believe you freaked out over an itty-bitty kitty.”
“I did not freak out.” Kiana glares at him.
“Your scream probably registered on the Richter scale,” Kyle jokes.
“You were too scared to even look in the closet.” Kiana whirls away from Kyle to point at me, her fear switching to fury. “Kelsey, this is all your fault! Your cat destroyed my homework!”
Uh-oh. Now I have a monster to deal with—my angry sister.
“She’s only a kitten and doesn’t know any better,” I say in a mouse-squeak. Usually Kiana is nice to me, but when she’s angry—watch out! Arguing never works. My best
strategy is to apologize and beg forgiveness. “I’m really sorry, Kiana. I’ll help you rewrite your book report.”
“As if a seventh grader could do high school homework.” She makes a harrumph sound.
I hug Honey tightly to my chest, not sure which of our hearts is beating faster. “She won’t do it again.”
“She better not,” my dad puts in firmly. “Kittens are too full of energy to run loose in a house—especially a house we’re living in rent-free due to the generosity of my new employer. We have to be careful not to damage anything. No stains on the carpet or broken windows or marks on the walls.”
I groan. Not another lecture about taking care of our new home. Sure, I’m grateful to Mr. Bragg. (That’s King Bragg from the resort hotel commercials with him wearing a crown while skydiving into a luxurious swimming pool.) But Dad is so afraid something will go wrong and he’ll lose another job that he’s stressing everyone out. It’s not like we’re toddlers who draw on walls or spill juice on the carpet. Besides, the only reason King—I mean, Mr. Bragg—offered us this house is because he wanted his new personal chef nearby to prepare his meals 24/7.
“I assured Mr. Bragg that my family was responsible,” Dad continues, not noticing that my siblings have sneaked away. “But Kelsey, I can’t allow a destructive animal in this house.”
“She’s not destructive, just playful,” I argue as my kitten bats at my hair.
“And very sweet,” Mom adds, stroking Honey’s silky fur. “But I agree with your father. Kelsey, you must keep a close watch on your kitten.”
“I will,” I assure my parents. “Her litter, food, and water are in my room. I’ll make sure she doesn’t sneak out.”
“If she causes any more trouble she has to go,” Dad warns.
“No!” I hug my kitten to my chest. “Honey won’t do anything wrong again. She’ll be a perfect little angel. I promise.”
I hope this is a promise I can keep.