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  “That was us,” Frank admitted, standing up.

  “Well, what do you want in my classroom?” Kit demanded.

  “Um . . . music lessons?” Joe squeaked.

  Kit folded her arms and said, “Try again.”

  “Joe and I wanted to find out who ripped the Green Crawler balloon yesterday,” Frank said as they walked out from behind the drums.

  “You just said on your phone that you took care of the Green Crawler,” Joe said bravely. “So it must have been you.”

  Kit stared at the boys, then began to laugh.

  “I didn’t rip the Green Crawler balloon!” Kit said. “I meant that my band finally learned the Green Crawler tune!”

  “You mean the song Kevin wanted you to play?” Frank asked.

  Kit nodded and said, “I didn’t think they’d learn it so fast—but the Boomerangs are the best!”

  “Okay,” Joe said slowly. “Then what were you doing, crawling under the balloon yesterday?”

  “I was looking for my lost watch,” Kit said.

  “Why under the balloon?” Frank asked.

  “Because we had been practicing on the field before they laid out the balloon,” Kit explained. “I was pretty sure I dropped it there.”

  Joe nodded at the conductor’s baton sticking out of Kit’s pocket. “You still could have poked a hole in the balloon with that thing,” he said.

  “I didn’t have my baton with me then, smart guy,” Kit said. “I didn’t find my watch, either.”

  Joe shot Frank a glance. Was Kit telling the truth?

  “I don’t need a watch to know I’m wasting time here,” Kit said. “Why don’t you kids leave so I can get back to work?”

  The brothers walked toward the door. Joe noticed Frank staring at a nearby coatrack. Hanging on it was a tan coat and brown scarf.

  Once in the hall Frank said, “I didn’t see any motorcycle helmet or jacket.”

  “She could have come here in a car,” Joe said. He shook his head. “I just don’t know if I believe Kit about that lost watch.”

  “Or about her not having the baton,” Frank added. “I just wish we had some kind of proof.”

  A cold blast of fall air greeted the brothers as they walked outside. Frank dug his hands into his jacket pockets for his gloves. Instead, he felt his camera—still there from the day before.

  Frank pulled out his camera and checked the last few shots.

  “What are you looking for?” Joe asked.

  “Here’s a shot I took of the Bayport Boomerangs practicing,” Frank pointed out. “Right before we saw Kit under the balloon.”

  Frank enlarged the picture. Instead of Kit, a student was waving a conductor’s baton.

  “That’s the same pointy baton!” Joe observed.

  “So Kit didn’t have her baton under the balloon,” Frank said.

  “But how do we know she was really looking for her watch?” Joe asked.

  “Hey!” Frank said, his eyes lighting up. “We can borrow Phil’s metal detector and look for the watch.”

  “And if we find it,” Joe said, “we’ll know she was telling the truth!”

  • • •

  Aunt Gertrude was thrilled with her successful bird-watching from that morning. She offered to drive the boys anywhere they wanted, and the boys figured they should take advantage of her good mood.

  “To Phil Cohen’s house, Aunt Gertrude,” Joe said. He quickly added, “Please.”

  From Phil’s house the brothers walked straight to the park—with the King of Ka-Ching Coin and Metal Detector.

  “What if we find something gross with this thing?” Joe asked. “Like somebody’s retainer.”

  Suddenly—BEEP, BEEP, BEEP!

  “We found something!” Frank exclaimed.

  Frank and Joe looked down to see a metal button, half covered with dirt.

  “It’s not a watch,” Joe sighed. “But at least we know this thing works.”

  The detector went off again. This time it found a dime. A few feet away it beeped over a metal key chain with no keys.

  Joe was getting impatient. It was a big field. What if they never found a watch? But then—

  BEEP, BEEP, BEEP!

  Something silver was sticking up out of the dirt. Frank pulled it out and said, “It’s a watch!”

  “How do we know it’s Kit’s watch?” Joe asked.

  Frank flipped it over. On the back was an engraving that read To Kit for 10 years of band excellence.

  “Kit told the truth about losing her watch here,” Joe said. “But now we have no more suspects.”

  “I know,” Frank sighed. “We’d better keep this and return it to Kit.”

  He was about to slip the watch into his pocket when—

  BEEP, BEEEEEEP!

  The brothers looked down at something shiny.

  “It looks like a pocketknife,” Frank said.

  Carefully Joe picked it up. It was a pocketknife—with green fibers stuck to the blade!

  “Green like the Green Crawler,” Frank said. “The balloon could have been cut with this knife, but whose is it?”

  “Let’s ask Dad to run a fingerprint test on it!” Joe said.

  “Not enough time,” Frank said. “The parade starts in less than two hours.”

  “But what if the balloon ripper tries again?” Joe asked. “At the parade?”

  “Don’t even think of going to that parade,” Frank said. “If Kevin or Lynn sees us, they’ll send us straight home.”

  “Unless . . . no one sees us,” Joe said with a slow smile. “Frank, I have an idea!”

  10

  Raid on Parade

  It was Sunday afternoon, and it was time for Frank and Joe to go undercover again. Covering their heads and faces were rubber Green Crawler masks.

  “Hey, Frank?” Joe asked, his voice muffled under the rubber. “Do you think we look like balloon handlers?”

  “The most important thing is that we don’t look like ourselves,” Frank replied. “We’re lucky the party shop had leftover masks from Halloween.”

  “We’ll be luckier if we find the real balloon ripper,” Joe said.

  The brothers reached Bay Street. A crowd stood in front of Snyder’s Department Store, waiting for the parade to kick off.

  “My nose itches!” Joe complained. “And I can’t scratch it under this mask!”

  “Tough it out,” Frank whispered through his own mask. “We can’t let anyone know it’s us.”

  “Frank, Joe, over here!” Chet’s voice called.

  The brothers froze. They turned to see Chet waving from the crowd.

  “How did you know it was us?” Frank asked.

  “We’re wearing masks,” Joe added.

  “You’re also wearing the same sneakers you always wear,” Chet said, pointing down at their feet.

  “Oh,” Joe said.

  “Don’t let anyone know we’re here, Chet,” Frank warned. “We’re not supposed to be in the parade.”

  Chet wrinkled his nose with surprise.

  “But Joe won the contest!” Chet said. “You’re supposed to be balloon handlers!”

  “We’ll explain later,” Frank said, looking around. “Where is the balloon, anyway?”

  “It’s around the corner,” Chet said. “I got a peek of it, and it’s awesome!”

  They were joined by Iola, who was carrying two cups of hot chocolate. She looked down at the brothers’ feet and said, “Hi, Frank. Hi, Joe.”

  Joe rolled his eyes behind his mask. “So much for undercover.”

  Frank and Joe walked past the crowd and turned the corner. As Chet had said, the block was lined with parade floats, clowns, and the Bayport Boomerangs. Behind the band was the Green Crawler balloon, weighted down by sandbags. Even on the ground, it towered over everything.

  “It is awesome!” Frank exclaimed.

  As they were approaching the balloon, Joe glanced down an alley. There was a red motorbike leaning against a wall.


  “Frank, look!” Joe said.

  The brothers slipped into the alley to examine the bike. It looked exactly like the bike that had almost run them over.

  “So the driver is in the parade,” Frank decided. “But who is it?”

  Joe examined the helmet for a name. All he found was a decal above the visor. The decal looked like an insect.

  “Maybe it’s a grasshopper,” Joe wondered.

  Frank didn’t look at the sticker. He tugged at Joe’s arm and said, “Come on. We’ve got to get to that balloon!”

  No one tried to stop Frank and Joe as they walked toward the Green Crawler balloon. The masks were doing the trick.

  Joe gazed up at the balloon. “It’s bigger than our house!” he exclaimed.

  Standing around the balloon were the handlers. Most were not wearing their masks or handler gloves yet.

  “There’s Brett,” Frank whispered.

  Brett was standing off to the side. His eyes darted back and forth as he rubbed his chin thoughtfully.

  “What’s he looking for?” Joe whispered.

  Suddenly Frank noticed something on Brett’s hand. “Joe,” he hissed. “Brett’s tattoo —it’s a praying mantis!”

  “You said the guy who played Mo Mantis had a praying mantis tattoo,” Joe said. “Could that guy have been Brett?”

  The brothers inched over to Brett. Joe checked out the tattoo and gasped.

  “Frank!” Joe hissed. “That wasn’t a grasshopper sticker I saw on the motorcycle helmet. It was a praying mantis!”

  “So that was Brett’s bike in the alley,” Frank whispered. “And it was Brett who tried to run us over!”

  “I don’t get it,” Joe whispered. “If Brett is Mo Mantis, why is he working as a balloon handler?”

  Brett began walking slowly toward the balloon. Something was sticking out of his back pocket.

  “Brett’s got something in his back pocket. It looks like scissors!” Joe said. “Let’s follow him.”

  Frank and Joe carefully followed Brett around the balloon. Brett stopped beside the Green Crawler’s giant head. There were no other handlers nearby.

  The brothers stood back, secretly watching Brett. He pulled out his scissors and pointed them at the balloon. But before he could jab—

  “Stop!” Joe yelled.

  Frank and Joe pulled off their masks as they ran toward Brett. When Brett saw them, he scowled.

  “What are you kids doing here?” Brett demanded. “I thought you were sacked.”

  “What’s with the scissors?” Joe asked. “Can’t find your pocketknife?”

  “What about a pocketknife?” Brett demanded.

  “We found one right where the balloon was, in the park,” Frank replied. “It had green stuff on it.”

  “FYI,” Joe added.

  “Where is it?” Brett demanded angrily. “Give me back my knife!”

  “Your knife, huh?” Joe asked. “Was that a confession?”

  Brett growled under his breath as he took a step toward Frank and Joe. Before the brothers could call for help, they heard a voice shout, “Brett Marshall, stop right there. And drop those scissors!”

  The brothers turned to see Lynn, Kevin, and Mitch Snyder of Snyder’s Department Store. The three were dressed as toy soldiers for the parade.

  “What’s going on?” Lynn asked.

  “We have to get that balloon off the ground in ten minutes!” Kevin exclaimed.

  “The Green Crawler balloon will never get off the ground if Brett has his way,” Frank said.

  “Or should we say . . . Mo Mantis?” Joe said.

  The three stared at Brett.

  “Was that you playing Mo Mantis at the mall?” Mitch asked.

  Brett’s eyes lit up at the mention of Mo. “That was me under that mask!” he said proudly.

  Joe turned to Kevin, Lynn, and Mitch. “We found Brett’s pocketknife in the park,” he said. “We think he ripped the Green Crawler balloon!”

  “Brett?” Lynn said, folding her arms. “Do you have something to tell us?”

  Brett’s face turned redder and redder, until he finally said, “Yeah, I slashed that dumb balloon, and I’d do it again!”

  “Why?” Kevin cried.

  “Because the Mo Mantis balloon should be in the parade, not the Green Crawler,” Brett explained. “The bigger a star Mo is, the bigger a star I am.”

  “Is that why you volunteered as a handler?” Lynn asked. “So you could get at the balloon?”

  Brett nodded. “I ripped the balloon while we were spreading it out on the grass,” he said. “I hadn’t planned on losing my pocketknife.”

  “Did you plan on running us over with your motorbike?” Frank asked angrily.

  “You were in my way!” Brett growled.

  Joe saw Lynn motion to two guys wearing shades. They were Dash and Boris, Taylor Smyth’s bodyguards.

  “Tell the cops about it, balloon boy,” Dash said as he grabbed Brett’s arm.

  “Let’s go,” Boris said, grabbing his other arm, “so these nice people can have a parade.”

  Clowns, balloon handlers, dancers, and the Bayport Boomerangs stepped back as the bodyguards led Brett away.

  “Mo Mantis rules!” Brett shouted. “The Green Crawler drools!”

  Joe looked up at Kevin. “Does this mean there’ll be no more Mo Mantis in the movies?” he asked.

  “Don’t worry, Joe,” Lynn said, and chuckled. “They’ll just get another guy to play the villain.”

  “How about Adam Ackerman?” Frank joked.

  “Okay, everybody!” Lynn called to the handlers. “Let’s get the Green Crawler off the ground!”

  While handlers untied the Green Crawler balloon, Kevin thanked Frank and Joe for their help.

  “No problem.” Joe smiled. “You can tell Kit we found her watch, too.”

  The brothers were turning to leave when Kevin called, “Wait! Aren’t you guys going to join the other handlers?”

  “You mean in the parade?” Frank asked, surprised.

  “Sure!” Kevin said. “The Green Crawler may save the world from Mo Mantis, but you saved the parade.”

  “Does that make us superheroes too?” Joe asked.

  “I don’t know about that,” Kevin said, smiling. “But you two are super detectives.”

  Frank’s and Joe’s balloon handler gloves thumped as they high-fived. They were back in the Fall Fest parade. And the minute they got back to their tree house, they would write on the board in huge letters . . .

  Secret Files Case #13: Solved!

  CATCH UP ON ALL THE HARDY BOYS® SECRET FILES

  #1 Trouble at the Arcade

  #2 The Missing Mitt

  #3 Mystery Map

  #4 Hopping Mad

  #5 A Monster of a Mystery

  #6 The Bicycle Thief

  #7 The Disappearing Dog

  #8 Sports Sabotage

  #9 The Great Coaster Caper

  #10 A Rockin’ Mystery

  #11 Robot Rumble

  #12 Lights, Camera . . . Zombies!

  #13 Balloon Blow-Up

  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and events are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or places or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division

  1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020

  www.SimonandSchuster.com

  First Aladdin paperback edition December 2013

  Text copyright © 2013 by Simon & Schuster, Inc.

  Illustrations copyright © 2013 by Scott Burroughs

  Series design by Lisa Vega

  Cover design by Jeanine Henderson

  All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.

  ALADDIN is a trademark of Simon & Schuster, Inc., and related logo is
a registered trademark of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

  THE HARDY BOYS is a registered trademark of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

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  The text of this book was set in Garamond.

  Library of Congress Control Number 2013939358

  ISBN 978-1-4424-5371-5

  ISBN 978-1-4424-5372-2 (eBook)