“Let me get this straight,” Grandfather said after Henry explained what they wanted. “You want me to give you a ride to the new mall, but you’re not sure you’re actually going to the mall?”
Violet giggled. “That’s right.”
“We’re looking for more geocaches,” said Jessie. “That’s why we don’t know exactly where we want to go.”
“Ah.” Grandfather nodded knowingly. “More geocaching. Sure, I’ll give you a ride. I have some errands to run out that way, anyway.”
“Thank you, Grandfather,” the children said.
“Should we bring Watch?” Benny asked as he scratched his dog’s ears.
Everyone else turned to look at Watch, who wagged his tail when he heard his name.
“Of course we should bring him,” Violet said. “He’s our geo-dog! A lot of people at the geocaching club had dogs.”
“Okay, Watch,” Henry said, clapping his hands. “Let’s go find your leash.”
Watch barked once, then ran for the back porch, where they kept his leash.
Henry snapped the leash to Watch’s collar, then they all got in the car.
Violet and Benny sat in the back seat and watched the GPS as Grandfather drove toward the new mall. They had the GPS set to find the ‘Nesting Place’ cache first.
Benny announced when they were 5 miles from the cache. Then 3 miles. Then 2 miles. Then 1 mile. When Grandfather pulled into the mall parking lot, the GPS still said they were half a mile from the cache.
“That’s okay,” Henry said. “Half a mile isn’t far to walk.”
Grandfather pulled up in front of a small coffee shop across the street from the mall. “I’ll go run my errands, then I’ll come back here and read the paper,” Grandfather said. “I’ll meet you in the coffee shop in an hour and a half.”
The children agreed. Then they got out of the car. Henry held Watch’s leash and Benny held the GPS.
“So, which way, Benny?” Jessie asked after their grandfather had driven off.
“That way,” Benny said, pointing to the shopping center.
Henry saw how close they were to the building, then glanced down at the GPS in Benny’s hand. “I wonder if it’s behind the mall,” Henry said.
“Maybe,” Violet said. “Let’s walk around and see.”
There was a small parking lot behind the mall and a wide grassy area behind that. The grass went all the way to the woods. A row of bluebird houses sat at the edge of the woods.
“Ah, now we know where the ‘Nesting Place’ cache got its name,” Jessie said.
Something in the woods caught Watch’s attention. He started barking and pulling on his leash. The Aldens looked toward the woods and spotted four people dressed in matching blue jackets: a mom, dad, and two kids. They stopped at the edge of the woods and stared back at the Aldens.
“Hey, isn’t that the Zellers?” Benny asked.
Violet squinted. “It’s hard to tell for sure from way back here, but it does kind of look like them,” she said.
“Hey, Mr. and Mrs. Zeller!” Benny called, waving his arms. “Is that you?”
The people, whoever they were, immediately turned around and disappeared into the woods.
“That was strange,” Henry said.
“Maybe it wasn’t the Zellers after all,” Jessie said with a shrug. “How far are we from the cache, Benny?”
“Not far,” Benny replied. “About 80 feet.”
The Aldens followed the GPS until the arrow started spinning. Then they started looking around.
They were right between two bluebird houses. There were no trees or bushes for a cache to be hiding in.
“Do you think it’s inside one of these houses?” Jessie asked.
“I wouldn’t think so,” Henry said. “I don’t think the birds would like that very much.”
Benny walked all around one of the bird-houses. He jumped up to see the top, then peered underneath. “Hey, there’s something stuck under here.”
Henry, Jessie, and Violet bent down and looked under the birdhouse. A small black box about the size of a deck of cards was stuck to the bottom of the birdhouse.
“I don’t think that’s it, Benny,” Jessie said. “It’s not big enough.”
But Benny pulled the box off the bird house anyway.
“Hey, it’s magnetic. There’s a piece of metal screwed into the bottom of the bird-house and that’s how the box was stuck to it.”
Benny opened up the box. The inside lid read, Official Micro Cache. Congratulations! You’ve found it! The box held a folded paper that was half-filled with nicknames of geocachers and a tiny pencil.
“I think this is it,” Benny said. He held the box so everyone could see it.
“I think you’re right, Benny,” Violet said. “I read about micro caches on the geocaching website. They’re really tiny caches. You usually don’t trade anything in a micro cache. You just write that you found it.”
“Well, at least this one isn’t missing,” Henry said.
“It looks like this piece of paper is the log,” Jessie said as she took it out of the box and unfolded it. “Most people just signed their nickname and their date. Do you want to sign it, Benny? Then we can see if we can find the other cache.”
“Okay,” Benny said. He took the paper back from Jessie and laid it flat against the birdhouse. Using the birdhouse as a table, he wrote “Boxcar Kids” and the date in his best handwriting on the next line.
Then Jessie took the GPS and set it to the Round the World cache. “It looks like the other cache is three-quarters of a mile southwest of here,” she said.
Benny folded the piece of paper, stuffed it back in the box, and closed it up. Then he put the box back where he found it underneath the birdhouse.
“Let’s go,” Henry said. He gave a little tug on the leash and Watch turned around and headed back across the parking lot with the children.
They walked around to the other side of the mall, then followed the GPS straight west.
“Hey, look!” Violet pointed straight ahead. “There’s a little playground over there past those houses.” The playground sat on a triangle of land where three streets came together. It was just big enough for a tetherball, slide, and a row of swings.
“I didn’t know that playground was there. Did you guys?” Jessie asked.
“No,” Henry replied. “That’s one of the fun things about geocaching. It takes you places you might not have gone to otherwise.”
Benny leaned over and checked the GPS in Jessie’s hand. “Well, the GPS is pointing straight ahead,” he said. “And we’re getting close. Just a little over 200 feet to go. So I bet the cache is in the playground.”
“Isn’t ‘round the world’ a game you can play with tetherball?” Violet asked.
“I think so,” Henry said. “Maybe the cache is around the tetherball.”
They crossed the street and spread out around the tetherball post. There was a tree with a hollowed-out spot behind the tetherball area. Benny ran to the hollow, but there was nothing inside.
Jessie and Violet checked the swings. Henry and Watch checked under the slide. But nobody found anything.
“Where could it be?” Violet asked, turning around.
They checked the flower bed and all the stones around the flower bed. They checked bushes. Then they checked all the playground equipment again, just in case they’d missed something the first time. But they didn’t find the cache.
“I think this one is missing,” Henry said.
“Let’s check the whole playground one more time,” Jessie said. “I’d hate to think we just didn’t look in the right place.”
So the children combed the playground one more time. But they still didn’t find anything.
“I give up,” Violet said, plopping down on the grass. “The Round the World cache is definitely missing.”
“Do you think someone stole it?” Benny asked.
“I don’t know,” Jessie said. But she was wondering the same thing. Maybe there really was a thief who was trying to ruin the geocachers’ fun? |