Watch and Greta barked. Tate grabbed Greta’s collar and Henry held on tightly to Watch’s leash.
Jessie ran into the woods, but it was too late. Whoever it was had gotten too big a head start for her to catch up. Returning breathlessly, she said, “I couldn’t see who it was.”
“It was probably a reporter,” said Tate. He didn’t sound very concerned. He reached into the mailbox and took out a bundle of mail.
He drew out a single letter with the word Tate written on the front.
“Look,” said Benny. “Your letter doesn’t have a stamp on it.”
“Or an address, either,” Violet said.
“Looks like it was hand-delivered,” said Tate, sounding a little uneasy now. Carefully, he opened the envelope and unfolded a single sheet of white paper. Printed in big black letters they saw:
Twinkle, twinkle, little star
The world will find out where you are.
Henry frowned. “What do you think that means? Is it some kind of a threat?”
“I don’t know,” said Tate. He turned the sheet of paper over, but nothing else was written on it.
Jessie glanced up the road in the direction that the mysterious figure hiding in the undergrowth had fled. “I think I know who delivered your letter,” she said. “It was whoever was hiding in the bushes. Someone must have just put it into the mailbox when we came out.”
“It doesn’t make sense,” Tate said. “If someone knows I’m here, what does he or she want?” He groaned. “I hope this isn’t the beginning of more bad luck.”
“Maybe someone wants you to pay money to keep it a secret,” said Henry.
“There hasn’t been a demand for money,” Tate said.
“Don’t worry,” said Benny. “It’s a mystery and we’re very good at solving mysteries.”
Tate smiled at Benny. “Thank you,” he said.
“You’re welcome,” said Benny.
“One thing’s for sure,” Tate said as he walked back inside the gate. “I’m not going to tell Courtney about this. It would make her even more overprotective than she is now.”
“Be careful, though,” Jessie warned.
“I will,” said Tate. He smiled and waved. “Come back tomorrow. We’re still scouting locations for the movie and I don’t have much to do right now.”
“Okay,” said Benny.
The Aldens wheeled their bikes back out onto the road. Jessie folded her jacket into the basket of her bike and gave Watch a ride in it. He was still panting from playing with Greta.
As soon as they got started, Watch stood up in the basket and uttered a short, high bark. At the same moment, Henry slowed his bike and pointed. “Do you see that?” he asked. “Over there? Tire tracks.”
The Aldens stopped their bikes and went over to inspect the tracks.
“They weren’t here this morning when we went by,” said Violet.
“Let’s see where they go,” Benny said.
They followed the tracks to the edge of the woods and saw that branches and broken brush had been pulled over the tracks in an attempt to hide them. Pushing the branches aside, they saw that the tracks stopped just beyond where the children stood.
“No car now,” remarked Jessie. “But I’m sure there was one here earlier.”
“Maybe whoever sent Tate the letter left a car hidden here,” Violet said. “Or maybe it is a reporter, spying on Tate.”
“What if it was the bank robbers?” said Benny. “Maybe they had their van in here.”
“But the van was leaving when we turned onto Old Farm Road. And the tracks weren’t here,” said Henry.
Benny looked stubborn. “Maybe they came back,” he said.
“I guess they could have,” said Jessie. “But why?”
“Maybe they’re not bank robbers. Maybe they’re spies,” said Benny.
Henry chuckled. But Jessie frowned thoughtfully.
“Look at this,” Henry said. He bent down and picked up a piece of a bright red feather. “I’ve never seen a bird with a feather like this around here.”
“A cardinal?” suggested Benny. “Cardinals are red.”
“But too small to have a feather that big,” said Violet. “It’s pretty.”
“Maybe it’s a clue,” said Henry. He slipped the feather into his pocket. “We’d better get going, or Mrs. McGregor will be worried.”
“A red feather, a blue van, a funny letter, bank robbers, and spies,” said Benny. “Those are a lot of mysteries.”
Jessie said, “It seems like the more clues we find, the more mysterious everything gets.”
When they buzzed the intercom at the Radley house the next day, Tate answered immediately. “Wait there,” he said. “I’ll be right out.”
A few minutes later, an unfamiliar figure came hurrying down the driveway. He was wheeling a battered bicycle and Greta was walking alongside him. When he reached the gate, he stopped and put a leash on Greta. Then he punched in the code, pushed the gate open, and stepped out to join the Aldens.
“Tate?” said Violet in a puzzled voice.
The figure in front of them had frizzy brown hair and wore little wire-rimmed glasses. He had on an enormous shirt and looked almost fat. Then Benny saw the blue eyes behind the glasses and said, “It is you. It’s Tate.”
Tate smiled. “Yep. It’s a disguise. Not bad, huh?”
“If Greta wasn’t with you, I wouldn’t have guessed so quickly,” Violet said.
“Why are you in disguise?” Jessie wanted to know.
“Because I want to go into Greenfield. This way, no one will recognize me,” Tate explained.
“Where’s Courtney?” asked Benny. “Did she say you could go?”
“She went with my mom to run some errands,” Tate said. “This is a perfect time to slip away.”
Henry looked up and down the road. But he didn’t see any suspicious vans or anyone lurking in the trees. “Come on, then,” he said. He grinned at Tate. “Let’s go.”
As they walked through the peaceful streets of Greenfield, the Aldens told Tate about the history of the town and about some of the mysteries they had solved there.
“That’s the old train station,” said Jessie. “Greenfield used to have lots of trains come through it.”
“We found out about it when our boxcar got stolen,” Jessie added.
“But you got it back?” Tate asked.
Benny said, “We sure did. We can solve any mystery. We even found some stolen rubies.”
“Taken from the antique store over there,” said Henry, pointing to a store with a sign that read ANTIQUE TREASURES, W. BELLOWS, PROPRIETOR.
“Wow,” said Tate. “Greenfield only looks like a quiet little town. From the way you talk, I can tell that anything could happen.”
Suddenly Violet stopped. “There they are!” she gasped.
“Who?” asked Henry.
“The robbers,” Violet said. “I just saw them slip down the alley behind the bank!”
“Bank robbers?” Tate said, his eyes widening behind his glasses.
“Come on!” Jessie said. She hurried down the sidewalk and stopped to peer around the corner. “I don’t see them,” she said.
“Let’s go a little farther down the alley,” Henry whispered. “We can hide behind those trash cans.”
“This is great,” said Tate. “Just like the movies!”
“Shhh!” said Benny, frowning at him.
As quietly as they could, they all walked down the alley. They crouched down and stayed close to the wall. When they got to the trash cans, they squatted down behind them.
“Pee-eew! It stinks,” said Benny.
“It’s the garbage, Benny,” said Violet. “Pinch your nose together with your fingers.”
“I just did,” said Benny in a muffled voice.
Just then they heard footsteps.
“Shhh,” Henry warned.
A familiar voice said, “Well, we can’t shoot here. It would never work.”
“George Smith,” Violet breathed.
“You’re wrong. This bank is perfect, from every angle,” said the second voice.
“And Harper,” Henry whispered.
“Harper?” said Tate.
“Shhh!” said Benny.
But Tate wasn’t listening. He stood up!
Violet grabbed the sleeve of his sweatshirt. “Tate. Be careful!” she said.
Tate smiled down at Violet. “Don’t worry about me,” he said. “I know how to handle these bank robbers.”
With that, Tate began to walk down the alley toward the two men, leading Greta with him.
Henry jumped to his feet. So did everyone else. Watch began to pull Benny forward, after Greta.
“Harpo, Stefan, you’ve been caught,” Tate said. “Will you surrender quietly?”
The Aldens watched in amazement as the two men spun around. They were in disguise again today, but Harpo had on his bright silver sneakers.
Harpo’s eyebrows rose. He pushed up his glasses and peered at Tate. Then he said, “Tate! What are you doing here?”
The man that the Aldens knew as George Smith, whom Tate had addressed as Stefan, put his hands on his hips. “A good question, Harpo. Tate, what are you doing here? What if someone sees you and recognizes you?”
By then the Aldens had reached Tate’s side. Benny said, “You know the bank robbers?”
Stefan’s thick brows went up. “Bank robbers? How do you know about the bank robbers? Tate, did you tell them?”
Laughing and shaking his head, Tate said, “No. They don’t know anything about the plot of the movie. They think you and Harpo are bank robbers.”
Harpo said, “I know you kids! We saw you in the woods, when we were scouting a location for the hideout.”
Benny look confused.
Violet said in a faint voice, “Hideout?”
“Stefan, Harpo, allow me to introduce my friends the Aldens. Henry, Jessie, Violet, Benny, and Watch,” Tate said.
Hearing his name, Watch wagged his tail.
“And these two gentlemen are Harpo Woo and Stefan Kirk. Harpo is locations director and Stefan is the director of my next movie, Money in the Bank.”
Henry said, “We heard you talking about hiding loot in the woods and then we saw you in disguise watching the bank and we thought you were getting ready to rob it. But you’re not bank robbers.”
Harpo laughed. “No. I’m in charge of finding the best places to shoot scenes from the movie. We’re in disguise because we don’t want anyone to recognize us until we’re finished picking locations.”
“Why?” asked Jessie.
“It’s much harder to get things done when people are crowding around, watching and asking questions,” said Stefan crisply.
“That’s Stefan’s way of telling us to go away so he can get back to work,” Tate said.
Stefan smiled a little, but he didn’t disagree with Tate’s words. Instead he said, “And I might remind you, Tate, that you don’t want to be recognized, either. I thought you were trying to stay out of the spotlight after all the incidents that happened during the filming of your last movie.”
“I am. But I’m in disguise, too,” Tate said.
“As long as no one tells anyone where you are,” Stefan said, giving the Aldens a hard look.
Benny frowned. Then he said, “We won’t tell. We can keep secrets!”
“Good,” said Stefan. He turned back toward the bank.
Harpo said, “See you when we get back to the house, Tate. Nice meeting you kids—again.”
“Nice to meet you, too,” said Violet politely.
The Aldens and Tate turned and walked out of the alley.
“I’m glad your friends aren’t bank robbers,” Benny told Tate.
Tate laughed. “Me, too,” he said. Suddenly he stopped laughing. He frowned and looked around uneasily.
“What is it?” asked Jessie.
“I don’t know,” said Tate. “I just had the funniest feeling that someone was following me.”
The Aldens all stopped and surveyed Main Street. But they didn’t see anybody suspicious, just friends and neighbors going about their business.
“Who could be following you?” Henry asked. “Nobody even knows you’re here.”
Tate didn’t answer Henry’s question. Instead, he grabbed Henry’s arm and said, “Oh, no! Quick. Hide me!” |