Authors: Gertrude Chandler Warner
“That is very suspicious,” Henry admitted.
Jessie crossed her arms. “And Josh did act strange when he noticed us standing next to his car.”
“He knows all about the legend of the vampire,” Benny added. “Remember how he told us the whole story?”
“Maybe Josh is behind the vandalism,” Henry said. “He could be using scenes from the book to scare people away. If no one wants to buy the house, Mr. Hudson will have to offer it for a very low price.”
Violet nodded. “And the person who Josh was speaking to on the phone would get a great house for not much money. That would be so unfair!”
“Maybe if we read Mr. Hudson’s book, we can find more clues to this mystery,” Henry said. “We might be able to find out what Josh will be up to next.”
“If it
is
Josh, that is,” Jessie added. “But what if it’s Mrs. Fairfax? She doesn’t want the house sold either. And since she lives next door, it would be easy for her to cause the damage and sneak back home.”
“That’s true.” Violet folded her napkin. “And Mrs. Fairfax always hears us when we are at Mr. Hudson’s house. Don’t you think she would have heard the person who broke the flowerpots and wrote on the porch?”
“There is another suspect as well,” Henry said. “We shouldn’t forget about the man who ran into Benny at the library fair.”
“But what could he have to do with it?” asked Benny.
Henry looked thoughtful. “I don’t really know. But it is suspicious that he ran away from you when you called him by Mr. Hudson’s name. And don’t forget that he had your library book. He must have taken it from your backpack at Mr. Hudson’s while we were inside having lunch.”
“The book! It’s gone again! I can’t believe it!” Benny slapped the side of his head.
“What’s wrong?” asked Jessie.
“I left it on the kitchen table at Mr. Hudson’s house. I set it down there so I could pull up the rug to use to cover the words written on the front porch. Afterwards, I forgot to go back inside for the book.”
Henry laughed. “I think there is something mysterious about that book. It never stays in the same place.”
“Can we go get it?” asked Benny.
“I suppose we can,” said Henry. “But it will be dark soon. We can’t ride our bikes.”
Violet looked out the window. “The rain seems to have stopped.”
The children cleaned up their dessert plates and put the cake away. They each found a flashlight to take on their nighttime walk. The air was slightly cool and the storm clouds were moving away. A round, full moon shone over Greenfield.
“What’s that?” Violet asked as the children walked up Whittaker Street. “Did you see that light in Mr. Hudson’s house?
The others had not seen it. “Maybe it was the moon shining on the window glass,” Jessie suggested.
Violet was not so sure. But now the light was gone.
The rain had made the ground wet and muddy. The children’s shoes squished in the lawn as they made their way toward the shed to retrieve the key to the house.
They each flicked on their flashlights. Jessie shone her beam on the shed door. Henry lifted the latch and the door squeaked open. The four Aldens stepped into the dark shed.
“Careful,” Jessie warned. “Don’t trip over the bicycle again.”
“That’s odd.” Henry pointed his flashlight at the bike. “Didn’t we move the bike to the left side of the shed today?”
“We did,” Jessie agreed.
“Well, now it is on the right side of the shed.”
Benny stood beside the bike. “And it’s wet!” He shone his flashlight on the roof above the bike. “Even though there aren’t any leaks in the roof.”
“Someone has been riding this bike.” Henry ran his hand over the dripping handlebars.
Violet walked over to look at the bike, but stumbled over an old suitcase. “What is this doing in the middle of the floor?”
“A suitcase?” Benny grabbed the handle and moved the suitcase against the wall. It was heavy. “Wouldn’t Mr. Hudson have taken his suitcase with him when he went on his trip?”
“It looks old,” Henry said. “Maybe Mr. Hudson has a newer one that he uses.”
Jessie shone her light on the flowerpot. She lifted it up. “It’s gone!” she cried. “The key is not here. I know I put it right back under this pot before we left this afternoon.”
“Are you sure?” Henry felt around on a lower shelf. “Maybe it fell down here.”
Violet and Benny searched the floor.
“I’m positive,” Jessie said. “Someone has taken it!”
The Aldens hurried from the shed. They quickly shut and latched the door and ran to the front of the house.
“Look at this!” Benny did not even need his flashlight. In the light of the moon, the children could clearly see a set of muddy footprints leading right up to Mr. Hudson’s front door!
Henry put his hand carefully on the doorknob and turned. It was not locked. He entered the house. “Hello! Mr. Hudson! Are you home?” Henry turned to the others. “There’s no one here.”
“Let’s get Benny’s book and get home,” Violet said.
Jessie flipped the light switch, but nothing happened. “The lights are out!”
“It’s probably the circuit breaker,” Henry said. “Sometimes a storm can shut it off, especially in an old house like this. I know where the switch is. Mr. Hudson pointed it out when he was showing me around the house. I might be able to get the lights back on.”
Henry and Jessie carefully walked down the stairs into the basement. Violet and Benny waited by the front door.
“Did you hear that?” Violet asked, looking over her shoulder.
Benny cocked his head. “Yes. It sounds like footsteps. Do you think it could be Henry and Jessie?”
“No,” Violet whispered. “I think it is coming from outside. I wish Henry and Jessie would hurry up.”
“You don’t think it could be the vampire, do you?” asked Benny.
“There’s no such thing,” Violet said, but her voice was shaking. She turned and shut the front door, quickly turning the bolt.
A shaft of moonlight was shining through the window and it fell across the carpeted floor. The rest of the house was dark. As Violet and Benny watched, a dark shadow flitted slowly across the moonlit carpet.
“What was that?” asked Benny, grabbing Violet’s hand.
“I’m not sure,” Violet answered. “Maybe it was a cloud passing in front of the moon.”
“But it was shaped like a bat!” Benny cried.
Violet didn’t want to frighten Benny, but she knew he was right. A large bat had just slowly passed by the window.
Suddenly the lights flashed on. Henry and Jessie pounded up the basement stairs.
“It was only the switch, just as I thought,” Henry said, coming through the door. He stopped in his tracks when he saw the kitchen. Sitting on the table was a glass of milk and a plate with a half-eaten sandwich. Next to them was Benny’s library book,
The Legend of the Vampire
, open to page 136.
Violet gasped. “Someone was here!”
“You’re right, Violet.” Henry walked to the table. “And whoever it was left in a hurry. This glass of milk is still cold.”
“And here is the missing key!” Jessie picked up the key from the kitchen counter.
“I think we should go,” Violet said.
Henry agreed. “We need to let Mr. Hudson know that someone has been inside his house.”
“And it wasn’t a vampire,” Benny said, nodding at Violet, “because vampires don’t eat sandwiches.” He picked up his library book and stared at the front cover. “They only like blood!”
“Benny and I heard footsteps outside while you were in the basement,” Violet explained. “We need to be very careful.”
The children stepped outside and peered up and down the street. Jessie locked the door tightly and put the key into her pocket. She left the porch light on. The children hurried home as fast as they could.
Later that night the Aldens sat in the living room each with a mug of hot chocolate and plate of cookies. Henry opened
The Legend of the Vampire
to Chapter One. He began to read.
The cemetery on Whittaker Street was dark and cold. Martha stood by the gate and pulled her coat close around her body. She wrapped her scarf tightly around her neck. A chill ran down her spine, and she turned just in time to see a strange man in a long, dark cape gliding toward her neighbor’s quaint little house. At first she had hoped that it was Francis, coming home after all these years. But when she saw the pale, white skin, the blood red lips, and the piercing black eyes of the stranger, she knew that it was not Francis. Those eyes held her for a moment and as they did, Martha felt the blood pounding through her veins. Was it fear or excitement that made her heart flutter so violently? Just as suddenly as he arrived, the stranger disappeared into her neighbor’s basement, so quickly that it seemed he simply melted himself through the walls.
“Oh my!” cried Mrs. McGregor standing in the doorway. “What a frightening book to be reading before bed. It would give me nightmares!”
Benny rubbed his eyes and yawned. “We’re looking for clues to a mystery in the story. Strange things are happening at Mr. Hudson’s house.”
“I’ve heard about it,” Mrs. McGregor said. “Oh yes, and a man named Josh called a few minutes ago. He said Mr. Hudson is coming home tomorrow. It seems he didn’t need to stay as long as he’d planned. Also, Josh said you left milk on the table and mud on the porch.”
The children looked at each other.
“We’ll go over there first thing in the morning.” Jessie said.
Henry nodded. “We need to tell Mr. Hudson someone was in his house.”
Mrs. McGregor held a bag of mini marshmallows in her hand. “Also, I thought you might like to have some of these in your hot chocolates. Goodnight, children.”
They all thanked Mrs. McGregor and wished her a good night.
Jessie reached for the marshmallows and sprinkled a few on the top of her hot chocolate. “Josh must have been at Mr. Hudson’s house tonight.”
“But why would he go over there so late?” wondered Violet.
Henry shrugged. “It does seem odd. I doubt he’d to show the house to a buyer late at night.”
Benny dropped a few marshmallows into his mug and a whole handful into his mouth. “Maybe he was looking for the vampire.”
Henry stood to take a cookie from the platter and
The Legend of the Vampire
fell to the floor. When he picked it up, he saw something sticking out from the pages. It was an old black-and-white photograph. The edges were a little crumpled, and a crease ran down one side.
“Look at this!”
Jessie, Violet, and Benny crowded around the photo in Henry’s hand.
“That’s Mr. Hudson’s house!” Violet pointed to the home that was in the background of the photo.
“Who do you think those two boys are?” asked Benny.
Two young children were posed in front of the porch. One looked to be about Henry’s age, fourteen, and the other one seemed to be a little younger than Benny The younger boy had his hand resting on the seat of a shiny, new bicycle.
Violet gasped. She pointed to the older boy. “That must be Mr. Hudson.”
“I’m sure you’re right!” Jessie exclaimed. “And the other one must be his little brother.”
Benny’s fingers were sticky from the marshmallows, so he did not touch the photo. But he pointed at the two boys. “They sure do look an awful lot alike.”
“Yes,” Violet agreed. “If they were the same age, I would think they were twins.”
“But how did the picture get in the book?” Benny wondered. “Do you think it was stuck in that book in the library for all those years?”
Henry turned the photo over in his hand. “No. I don’t think it was in the book before today. See this crease mark? I think the photo was folded and carried in someone’s wallet for a long time.”
Henry pulled his wallet from his back pocket. He slid the picture in and out of the billfold. “See? When it is folded at the crease, this photo fits perfectly in a wallet. You wouldn’t need to fold it if you were going to keep it in a book.”
“That makes a lot of sense, Henry,” Violet said.
“Look, there’s some faded writing on the bottom.” Jessie took the picture and held it up to the light. “It’s hard to read.”