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    Nate the Great and the Fishy Prize


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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 © 1985 by Marjorie Weinman Sharmat

      Cover art and illustrations copyright © 1985 by Marc Simont

      Extra Fun Activities text copyright © 2004 by Emily Costello

      Extra Fun Activities illustrations copyright © 2004 by Jody Wheeler

      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, a Penguin Random House Company, New York. Reprinted by arrangement with the Putnam Publishing Group, Inc., on behalf of Coward-McCann, Inc., New York.

      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.

      eBook ISBN: 978-0-385-37687-7

      Trade paperback ISBN: 978-0-440-40039-4

      Book design by Trish Parcell

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

      v3.1

      for my father, Nathan “Nate” Weinman,

      who inspired this series,

      and who was in every way

      Nate the Great

      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 solve important cases.

      I do important things.

      This morning I was doing something

      very important.

      I was at the supermarket

      buying dog shampoo

      for my dog, Sludge.

      Today Sludge was going to be

      in a contest in the park

      to choose the smartest pet

      in the neighborhood.

      I, Nate the Great, knew that

      Sludge was the smartest.

      And the dirtiest.

      I wanted Sludge to be a clean winner.

      I bought dog shampoo,

      and flour, eggs, butter, milk,

      salt, sugar, and baking powder

      to make pancakes.

      I like pancakes.

      I bought so many things

      that the grocery bag bulged open.

      I put the bag in the basket

      on the back of my new bicycle

      and started to ride home.

      I rode past Rosamond’s house.

      Strange noises

      were coming from inside her house.

      I wondered what was happening.

      But I kept my eyes straight ahead

      to see where I was going.

      Besides, strange noises

      were the right kind of noises

      to come from Rosamond’s house.

      Because Rosamond is strange.

      When I got home,

      Sludge was waiting for me.

      “I bought you some shampoo,”

      I said.

      Sludge did not think

      that was good news.

      Sludge hates baths.

      I put the grocery bag on the floor.

      Before I could unpack it,

      the telephone rang.

      Rosamond was calling me.

      She said, “I am in charge

      of making the prize

      for the Smartest Pet Contest.”

      “I know that,” I said.

      I, Nate the Great,

      hated to think

      what the prize would be.

      “Well, I made the prize,

      but it disappeared,” Rosamond said.

      “What was it?” I asked.

      “It was an empty tuna fish can

      with the word SMARTEST

      hand-painted on it

      in big gold letters,”

      Rosamond said.

      “Any pet would love to have it.

      But now it’s gone.”

      “You will have to make

      another prize,” I said.

      “It’s too late,” Rosamond said.

      “The contest starts in an hour.

      Will you look for the tuna fish can?”

      “I have to get Sludge ready

      for the contest,” I said.

      “But there won’t be a contest

      unless you find the prize,”

      Rosamond said.

      I looked at Sludge.

      He looked smart.

      There had to be a contest.

      “I, Nate the Great,

      will take your case,” I said.

      “Sludge and I

      will be right over.”

      I hung up.

      I said to Sludge,

      “We must look for a tuna fish can.

      There is no time

      to give you a bath.”

      Sludge thought

      that was good news.

      I wrote a quick note to my mother.

      Sludge and I rushed to Rosamond’s house.

      There was no time to say hello.

      “Show me where the prize was,”

      I said.

      Rosamond took me to her room.

      It smelled fishy.

      And there were things knocked over.

      And things upside down.

      And things all over the floor.

      It was a mess.

      “What happened?” I asked.

      “Everyone came with their pets

      to sign up for the contest,”

      Rosamond said.

      “An
    nie came with Fang.

      Pip came with his parrot.

      Finley came with his rat.

      Oliver came with his favorite eel.

      Claude came with a pig.

      And Esmeralda came by herself.

      She doesn’t have any pets,

      so she is going to be the judge.

      Well, Fang ran after Claude’s pig.

      The pig ran after my four cats.

      My cats ran after the rat.

      Pip’s parrot got all excited

      and flew around and around.

      Even Oliver’s eel got excited.

      They barked and squawked

      and oinked and all sorts of things,

      and they messed up my whole room.”

      “Yes, I, Nate the Great,

      heard all the strange noises

      when I rode by on my bicycle.

      But where was the tuna fish can

      when all of this was going on?”

      “I had opened the window

      and put the can on the sill

      so the gold paint could dry

      in the air,” Rosamond said.

      “When did you notice

      that the can was gone?” I asked.

      “Right after the stampede,” Rosamond said.

      “Everyone left,

      and I started to clean up the room.

      That’s when I saw

      that the prize was gone.

      I looked all over the room for it.”

      “I will look again,” I said.

      “It could be somewhere in this mess.

      It must have been knocked off

      the windowsill.

      Then perhaps one of those pets

      who’s supposed to be so smart

      pushed or pulled

      or dragged or kicked it.”

      “My cats are smart,” Rosamond said.

      “They are all going to win first prize.”

      Rosamond’s cats could win first prize

      for being strange.

      I, Nate the Great, looked around the room.

      “Did you paint the can in this room?”

      I asked.

      “No,” Rosamond said.

      “Good. I am looking for smudges

      of gold paint. They might be a clue

      to where the can went.

      But if you had painted in this room,

      you could have left smudges.”

      “I don’t smudge,” Rosamond said.

      I, Nate the Great, went to the windowsill.

      If I could find smudges of gold paint

      inside the sill

      or outside the sill,

      I would know whether the can

      went inside or outside.

      But the can

      had not left any clues behind.

      Sludge was sniffing. And sniffing.

      I asked Rosamond,

      “Did you wash the tuna fish can

      before you made it into a prize?”

      “Sort of,” Rosamond said.

      “Sort of?” I said.

      “How do you sort of wash

      a tuna fish can?”

      “My cats licked it,” Rosamond said.

      “They do a good job.

      They love tuna fish.”

      “But they don’t use soap,” I said.

      “That means the prize

      may still smell fishy.

      That is a clue.”

      I turned to Sludge.

      “Fishy smell,” I said.

      Sludge and I could not find

      the can in Rosamond’s room.

      “The can is not here,” I said.

      “Perhaps it went out the window.”

      Sludge and I rushed outside.

      We looked around.

      There was no tuna fish can.

      There were no smudges of gold paint.

      There was nothing but a sidewalk.

      We walked back and forth.

      Perhaps the can had been

      pushed or pulled

      or dragged or kicked up the street

      or down the street.

      But we could not find anything.

      We went back inside.

      “This is a very fishy case,”

      I said to Rosamond.

      “The can was on the windowsill.

      So it had to be knocked

      inside the house

      or outside the house.

      But it isn’t inside and it isn’t outside.”

      “Maybe someone took the can on purpose,”

      Rosamond said.

      I, Nate the Great, did not want

      to tell Rosamond that no one

      would take her tuna fish can on purpose.

      That it was the dumbest prize

      for the Smartest contest.

      “I will have to speak to everyone

      who was in this room,” I said.

      “Perhaps someone saw what happened

      to the tuna fish can.”

      Sludge and I rushed to Claude’s house.

      Claude was there with a pig.

      Claude is always losing things.

      I was glad

      he had not lost the pig.

      Claude was brushing the pig’s bristles

      while she ate a big pile of food.

      “I am getting Anastasia ready

      for the Smartest Pet Contest,” Claude said.

      Anastasia oinked.

      I watched her eat.

      The food was disappearing fast.

      I was thinking.…

      The tuna fish can had completely disappeared.

      Maybe it had disappeared inside something.

      One way to make something disappear

      is to eat it.

      I, Nate the Great, spoke up.

      “Pigs are supposed to eat like pigs.

      Would Anastasia eat a tin can?”

      “I don’t know,” Claude said.

      “She’s not my pig. She lives on a farm,

      and I borrowed her for the contest.

      But I keep losing her.

      She finds her way back to me.

      She’s smart. That’s why

      she is going to win the contest.”

      Anastasia oinked again.

      “May I open Anastasia’s mouth?”

      I asked.

      “If you really want to,” Claude said.

      I, Nate the Great, did not really

      want to open Anastasia’s mouth.

      But I had a case to solve.

      I had a job to do.

      Slowly I opened her mouth.

      Quickly I closed her mouth.

      “Anastasia did not eat

      the tuna fish can,” I said.

      “How do you know?” Claude asked.

      “Because the gold paint on the can

      was wet. Anastasia would have

      a gold mouth if she ate the can.

      Tell me, did you see the can

      on Rosamond’s windowsill?”

      “I saw it and I didn’t see it,”

      Claude said.

      “That is an interesting answer,”

      I said. “I, Nate the Great, say

      that is an interesting answer.”

      “Well, I saw the can on the windowsill

      just before everyone started to run around,”

      Claude said.

      “When it was all over,

      I didn’t see the can anymore.”

      “That is an old clue,” I said.

      “I already know that the can disappeared

      during the animal stampede.

      I, Nate the Great, need a new clue.

      And I need it fast.”

      Sludge and I left.

      I was sorry I had seen Anastasia.

      She made me feel very hungry.

      I wished I had time to go home

      and make pancakes with the things

      I had bought at the supermarket.

      But I hadn’t even had time

      to unpack them.

      And I knew there was not enough time left


      to talk to everyone else

      who had been in Rosamond’s room.

      Annie, Oliver, Pip,

      Finley, and Esmeralda were left.

      I decided to go to Esmeralda’s house.

      I had two reasons.

      Esmeralda is smart.

      Esmeralda does not have a pet.

      Perhaps she had a chance to see something

      when everyone was busy

      with their pets.

      Esmeralda was sitting quietly

      outside on her steps.

      She did not have anybody

      to wash or brush or feed or brag about.

      I said, “I am looking for the tuna fish can

      that was on Rosamond’s windowsill.

      Did you see it?”

      “Yes,” Esmeralda said. “I saw it

      before everything went wild.

      Fang was standing under it.”

      “Fang?” I said. “Tell me,

      which way was he facing?”

      “He was standing with his right side

      next to the window,” Esmeralda said.

      “His fangs were showing,

      and his tail

      was swooshing back and forth.”

      I, Nate the Great, was thinking.

      This was a new clue.

      But did it mean anything?

      Suddenly I knew that it was important.

      Sludge and I

      rushed to Annie’s house.

      She was giving Fang a bath.

      He was sitting in the bathtub

      all soapy and foamy.

      And fangy.

      “I am getting Fang ready for the contest,”

      Annie said. “Everyone knows he is pretty.

      Now they will find out he is smart.”

      I, Nate the Great,

      already knew more about Fang

      than I wanted to know.

      Annie started to scrub Fang’s tail.

      “Stop!” I yelled.

      “Fang may be wearing a clue.”

      “Fang isn’t wearing anything,”

      Annie said.

      I, Nate the Great, got close to Fang.

      I did not want to do that.

      But I had to see his tail.

      I was glad the clue

      was on that end of him.

     


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