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    Nate the Great and the Missing Key


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      READ ALL THESE

      NATE THE GREAT DETECTIVE STORIES

      NATE THE GREAT

      NATE THE GREAT GOES UNDERCOVER

      NATE THE GREAT AND THE LOST LIST

      NATE THE GREAT AND THE PHONY CLUE

      NATE THE GREAT AND THE STICKY CASE

      NATE THE GREAT AND THE MISSING KEY

      NATE THE GREAT AND THE SNOWY TRAIL

      NATE THE GREAT AND THE FISHY PRIZE

      NATE THE GREAT STALKS STUPIDWEED

      NATE THE GREAT AND THE BORING BEACH BAG

      NATE THE GREAT GOES DOWN IN THE DUMPS

      NATE THE GREAT AND THE HALLOWEEN HUNT

      NATE THE GREAT AND THE MUSICAL NOTE

      NATE THE GREAT AND THE STOLEN BASE

      NATE THE GREAT AND THE PILLOWCASE

      NATE THE GREAT AND THE MUSHY VALENTINE

      NATE THE GREAT AND THE TARDY TORTOISE

      NATE THE GREAT AND THE CRUNCHY CHRISTMAS

      NATE THE GREAT SAVES THE KING OF SWEDEN

      NATE THE GREAT AND ME: THE CASE OF THE FLEEING FANG

      NATE THE GREAT AND THE MONSTER MESS

      NATE THE GREAT, SAN FRANCISCO DETECTIVE

      NATE THE GREAT AND THE BIG SNIFF

      NATE THE GREAT ON THE OWL EXPRESS

      NATE THE GREAT TALKS TURKEY

      NATE THE GREAT AND THE HUNGRY BOOK CLUB

      AND CONTINUE THE DETECTIVE FUN WITH

      OLIVIA SHARP

      by Marjorie Weinman Sharmat and Mitchell Sharmat

      illustrated by Denise Brunkus

      OLIVIA SHARP: THE PIZZA MONSTER

      OLIVIA SHARP: THE PRINCESS OF THE FILLMORE STREET SCHOOL

      OLIVIA SHARP: THE SLY SPY

      OLIVIA SHARP: THE GREEN TOENAILS GANG

      This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

      Text copyright © 1981 by Marjorie Weinman Short

      Cover and interior illustrations copyright © 1981 by Marc Simont

      Extra Fun Activities text copyright © 2007 by Emily Costello

      Extra Fun Activities illustrations copyright © 2007 by Laura Hart

      All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Delacorte Press, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, a division of Random House LLC, New York, a Penguin Random House Company. Originally published in paperback in the United States by Delacorte Press in 1982.

      Reprinted by arrangement with the Putnam Publishing Group, Inc.

      Delacorte Press is a registered trademark and the colophon is a trademark of Random House LLC.

      Visit us on the Web! randomhouse.com/kids

      Educators and librarians, for a variety of teaching tools, visit us at

      RHTeachersLibrarians.com

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available upon request.

      Paperback ISBN 978-0-440-46191-3 — eBook ISBN 978-0-385-37678-5

      Book design by Trish Parcell

      Random House Children’s Books supports the First Amendment and celebrates the right to read.

      v3.1

      To Mitch,

      with love and thanks

      for giving me the key

      to this mystery

      M.W.S.

      Contents

      Other Books by This Author

      Title Page

      Copyright

      Dedication

      First Page

      Extra Fun Activities

      About the Authors

      I, Nate the Great,

      am a detective.

      I am not afraid of anything.

      Except for one thing.

      Today I am going

      to a birthday party

      for the one thing

      I am afraid of.

      Annie’s dog, Fang.

      This morning my dog, Sludge,

      and I were getting ready

      for the party.

      The doorbell rang.

      I opened the door.

      Annie and Fang were standing there.

      Fang looked bigger than ever

      and so did his teeth.

      But he looked like a birthday dog.

      He was wearing a stupid sweater

      and a new collar.

      “I need help,” Annie said.

      “I can’t find the key to my house.

      So I can’t get inside

      to have the birthday party

      for Fang.”

      I, Nate the Great,

      was sorry about the key

      and glad about the party.

      I said,

      “Tell me about your key.”

      “Well,” Annie said,

      “the last time I saw it

      was when I went out

      to get Fang a birthday surprise

      to eat.”

      “To eat?” I said.

      “Yes,” Annie said.

      “Some surprise food.

      It’s the one present

      I had forgotten to buy.

      I got Fang lots of presents.

      A striped sweater.

      And a new collar

      with a license number,

      a name tag,

      a little silver dog dish,

      and a little silver bone

      to hang from the collar.

      See how pretty Fang looks

      and hear how nicely he jingles.”

      I, Nate the Great,

      did not want

      to look at Fang

      or listen to him.

      “Tell me more,” I said.

      “Well, Rosamond and her four cats

      were at my house,” Annie said.

      “She was helping me

      get ready for the party.

      When I went to the store,

      I left Rosamond and the cats

      in my house.

      I left Fang in the yard.

      I left the key to my house

      on a table.

      That is the last time

      I saw the key.

      When I got back,

      Fang was still in the yard.

      But the house was locked,

      and Rosamond and her cats

      were gone.

      Rosamond left this note

      stuck to my front door.”

      “That is a strange poem,”

      I said.

      “Sometimes Rosamond is strange,”

      Annie said.

      I, Nate the Great,

      already knew that.

      “You must go

      to Rosamond’s house

      and ask her

      where she put your key,” I said.

      “I went to her house,”

      Annie said. “But it was locked, too.

      I rang the bell, but no one was home.”

      “This is a big day

      for Rosamond

      and locked doors,” I said.

      “Who else has a key

      to your house?”

      “My mother and father.

      But they went out for the day.

      They don’t like dog parties,”

      Annie said.

      I, Nate the Great,

      knew that dog parties

      are very easy not to like.

      But I said,

      “I will take your case.”

      I wrote a note to my mother.

      Annie, Fang, Sludge, and I

      went to

      Annie’s house.

      “What does your key look like?”

      I asked.

      “It is silver and shiny,”

      Annie said.

      Sludge and I looked around.


      There were many places

      to leave a key.

      Under Annie’s doormat.

      In her flower garden.

      Up her drainpipe.

      In her mailbox.

      But they were not round,

      safe, shiny, and big.

      “I will have to look

      in other places,” I said.

      “Fang and I will wait

      for you here,” Annie said.

      I, Nate the Great,

      was glad to hear that.

      Sludge and I went to Oliver’s house.

      Oliver is a pest.

      But I had a case to solve.

      I had a job to do.

      I knew that Oliver

      collects shiny things.

      Like tin cans, safety pins,

      badges, poison ivy,

      and pictures of the sun.

      Each week he collects

      one new shiny thing.

      Perhaps this week

      it was a key.

      “Did Rosamond leave a shiny key

      with you in a big, round, safe place?”

      I asked.

      “No,” Oliver said.

      “This is not my key week.

      This is my week

      for shiny eels.

      Would you like to see

      my new eel?”

      I, Nate the Great,

      did not want to see

      a new eel

      or an old eel.

      I started to leave.

      “May I follow you?”

      Oliver asked.

      “No,” I said.

      “I will help you look

      for the key,” Oliver said.

      “All right,” I said.

      “When I go east,

      you go west.

      When I go south,

      you go north.”

      “But we won’t be together,”

      Oliver said.

      “Exactly,” I said.

      Sludge and I left Oliver’s house.

      I did not look back.

      I knew what I would see.

      Oliver.

      I, Nate the Great,

      was busy thinking

      and looking.

      All at once I saw

      a big, safe place.

      A bank.

      I knew there were many

      round, shiny things

      in a bank.

      Like pennies

      and nickels

      and dimes

      and quarters.

      Sludge and I walked inside.

      Oliver followed us.

      Sludge and I looked

      on desks and behind counters.

      Then we crawled on the floor.

      If Rosamond had been here,

      there would be cat hairs

      all over the floor.

      I saw paper clips

      and a broken pen

      and a penny

      and mud.

      And a bank guard.

      First his feet.

      Then the rest of him.

      “Do you want

      to make a deposit?” he asked.

      I, Nate the Great,

      wished I could deposit Oliver

      in the bank.

      I said, “Did anyone strange

      with four cats

      leave a key here?”

      The guard pointed to the door.

      Sludge and I left.

      Now I, Nate the Great,

      knew where I should not look

      for the key.

      A bank was not

      a strange enough place

      for a strange person like Rosamond

      to leave a key.

      I had to think of a strange place.

      I thought of a kitchen

      with bottles of syrup,

      hunks of butter,

      and stacks of pancakes.

      It was not a strange place.

      But it was a good place

      to think of

      because I, Nate the Great,

      was hungry.

      It was time for lunch.

      Sludge and I started for home.

      I felt something breathing

      on the back of my neck.

      I turned around.

      It was Oliver.

      “I will follow you forever,”

      Oliver said.

      I, Nate the Great,

      knew that forever

      was far too long

      to be followed

      by Oliver.

      Sludge and I started to run.

      We ran down the street,

      up a hill,

      around five corners,

      and into an alley.

      We lost Oliver.

      I sat down to rest

      beside a garbage can.

      Sludge sniffed it.

      Sludge likes garbage cans.

      I stared at the can.

      I had an idea.

      A garbage can

      would be a perfect place

      for Rosamond to hide a key!

      It was big and round and shiny

      with a shiny cover and shiny handles.

      It was safe because no one

      would look inside a garbage can.

      Except Sludge.

      And it was a very strange place

      for a key.

      Strange enough for Rosamond.

      There were not

      many places like that.

      Now I, Nate the Great,

      knew that I had to look

      in Annie’s garbage can.

      Sludge and I walked

      to the garbage can

      behind Annie’s house.

      We bent low.

      I did not want Annie

      to see me

      until I found the key

      in her garbage can.

      Then I would surprise her.

      I tried to pull up the cover.

      Sludge tried to push up the cover

      with his nose.

      I pulled harder.

      Sludge pushed harder.

      The cover came off.

      We looked inside the can.

      It was empty.

      I, Nate the Great,

      had not solved the case.

      Sludge and I slunk home.

      I was very hungry.

      I gave Sludge a bone.

      I made many pancakes.

      I sat down to eat them.

      But I did not have a fork.

      I opened a drawer.

      It was full of spoons and knives

      and forks all together

      in a shiny silver pile.

      I had to pick up

      many spoons and knives

      before I found a fork.

      It is hard to find something

      silver and shiny

      when it is mixed in

      with other things

      that are silver and shiny.

      I, Nate the Great,

      thought about that.

      Maybe Annie’s key was someplace

      where nobody would see it

      because it was with other

      shiny silver things.

      A strange place.

      A round place.

      A big place.

      A safe place.

      And now I, Nate the Great,

      knew the place!

      Sludge and I went back

      to Annie’s house.

      Annie was sitting in front

      with Fang.

      She looked sad.

      Fang looked big.

      I ran up to Annie.

      “I know where your key is,”

      I said.

      “Where?” Annie asked.

      “Look at Fang’s collar,”

      I said.

      Annie looked.

      “I see Fang’s name tag

      hanging from his collar,”

      she said. “And his license.

      And his silver dog dish.

      And his silver bone

      and ________________my key!”

      “Yes,” I said. “I,
    Nate the Great,

      say that Rosamond hung your key

      from Fang’s collar.

      We did not notice it

      because there were other

      silver things there.”

      “But why did Rosamond

      hang it there?”

      Annie asked.

      “Well, it is a very strange place,”

      I said. “And remember Rosamond’s poem.

      A round place.

      A big and safe place

      where things are shiny.

      Well, Fang’s collar is round.

      The things hanging from it

      are shiny.

      Fang is big.

      And safe.

      There is no place

      more safe

      to leave a key

      than a few inches

      from Fang’s teeth.

      No one would try

      to take off that key.

      Including me.”

      I started to leave.

      “Wait!” Annie said.

      She took the key

      from Fang’s collar.

      “Now I can have my party

      and you can come!”

      I, Nate the Great,

      was glad for Annie

      and sorry for me.

      Just then Rosamond

      and her four cats

      came up the walk.

      “You found the key!”

      she said. “I knew

      I left it in the perfect place.”

      I, Nate the Great,

      had many things

      to say to Rosamond.

      But the party was starting.

      Annie unlocked the door.

      We all went inside.

      We sat around the birthday table.

      Annie gave me

      the seat of honor

      because I had solved the case.

      It was next to Fang.

      I, Nate the Great,

      hoped it would be

      a very short party.

      Nate’s Notes: Keys

      Nate’s Notes: Banks

      A Map of a Buck

      How to Make a Fancy Dog (or Cat) Tag

     


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