Cult of Crime Read online




  Hardy boys Casefiles - 03

  Cult of Crime

  By

  Franklin W. Dixon

  Chapter 1

  HE WANDERED AIMLESSLY as night fell on the New York City streets. The growling in his stomach reminded him of how long it had been since he’d eaten last. Though tall, he stooped when he walked, and even when trying to beg money from passersby, he could no longer look other people in the eye.

  Like many other teenagers who had left home and come to the city, he owned nothing but the clothes on his back. And he was homeless, with nowhere to go.

  He searched for a place to spend the night. He had no money to spend on a hotel, and he had learned long ago that if he went to a shelter, the authorities would learn his age and his name and send him home. He hoped he could find a doorway or an alleyway with a cardboard box to sleep in, but he was wary of the other people who slept on the streets. They didn’t like strangers, and choosing a spot that one of them had already chosen could get him beaten, or even killed. He kept walking.

  The bells were what startled him. It seemed strange to him that something so beautiful could be heard in a neighborhood of rundown buildings and vacant lots, where honest people didn’t come out at night, and where thieves and rats and insects crawled the streets.

  But there they were. Rhythmically they grew louder, then softer, then louder again, like some low, lovely song, and he found himself drawn to them.

  He was almost at the building before he realized it. The building rose out of the slums like a beacon, and men and women - boys and girls, really, as none of them were older than he was chanted and swayed both inside it and on the street in front of it.

  The men wore white tunics tied at the waist with a sash and long, white slacks that reached down to the cloth, sandals on their feet. The women had scarves wrapped around their heads and wore long, white gowns covering them from shoulder to ankle.

  They were happy, all of them. He could see it in their faces. They danced in the glow of the neon lights on the front of the building, the lights that read Mission.

  It was a church, unlike any he had ever seen in the little town of Bayport.

  He wanted to back away, to run, but the smell of food wafted out of the building. He inhaled hungrily, and on his stomach’s command, his feet marched forward. He moved out of the shadows and into the light.

  The dancing stopped and the bells died. Everyone was looking at him.

  He felt awkward. These people in their pure white clothes were everything he was not. He ran a filthy hand through his brown hair, and grime fell from it. Again he wanted to run, but the stares and the scent of food sapped him of strength, and without even thinking, he reached out his hands.

  “Please,” he croaked, and he could feel the tears welling up in his eyes. What right did he have to expect their help or to share their food?

  He didn’t even have to look in their eyes to know what would be there: the same disgust and fear he had seen in the eyes of everyone he had ever asked for help since he came to the city. He hated that look.

  A young woman touched him gently on the shoulder.

  She was smiling serenely, and on her face he saw none of the fear he had expected. Instead there was kindness. It was in her eyes and in her touch, and for the first time since leaving home, he felt warm inside. He felt almost as if he had come home again.

  “You’re tired,” she said, and he nodded mutely. Her eyes were a deep blue, and her skin was smooth and white. There was peace in the graceful way she moved, and her outstretched hand seemed to offer him that peace. “You can sleep in the mission tonight. And have plenty of food. Would you like some supper?”

  Before he could answer, the others surrounded him. They laughed and smiled and slapped him gently on the back, as if he were an old friend. He nodded fiercely and smiled back, and before he knew it, they were all going into the building.

  “What’s your name?” he asked the woman. His throat hurt, and he realized that he had barely spoken since arriving in the city. “Chandra,” she replied. “Chandra,” he repeated. “I thought you were American, but that name sounds-“

  “Indian,” she cut in. “I used to have another name, but that was before I received the Rajah’s peace.”

  Inside, the building was almost empty. He could smell food coming from somewhere - a kitchen, probably-but in the main room he saw nothing but rows and rows of woven flaxen mats, with a wooden bowl set in front of each. One by one, and one on each mat, the boys and girls sat down, crossing their legs underneath them. Chandra led him to an empty mat and then sat on the mat next to it. “The Rajah’s peace?” he said, looking at her with suspicion. “This isn’t one of those crazy cults, is it? I don’t want to get hooked up with that kind of thing. “

  Chandra smiled at him again, and the smile washed away his fears. “Don’t worry, brother. We make no one stay against his will. When you are fed and rested, you can return to the world if you like. But I pray that the Rajah’s peace will bless you, too.”

  A large lump of rice dropped into his bowl, dumped there by a boy who carried a large pot and a ladle. He reached down to scoop it into his mouth, but Chandra put a hand on his wrist and kept him from raising it again.

  “Not yet,” she said. “We have to wait, but not long. Do you like the city?”

  He sunk his head to his chest and took a deep breath. He could feel tears welling up in his eyes.

  “I hate it,” he said.

  “But you can’t go home,” she replied. It was a statement, not a question. I came to the city like you once, and I ended up like you. One thing saved me.” “What’s that?”

  “The Rajah.” Her eyes seemed to glow as she spoke the name. “He has a place far from here, out in the country. It’s a place where we return to the natural way, where we can be cleansed of the evil of the city and of this society.”

  Chandra stared straight into his eyes, and her fingers brushed his cheek. For a moment he felt as if his heart would stop. “You can go there, if you like,” she continued. “Our bus leaves in the morning.”

  “I don’t know,” he replied. There was suspicion in his voice, but she didn’t seem to mind.

  “Be calm,” she said. “We’re happy, and we only want you to be happy. You want to be happy, don’t you?”

  “Well … ” He sighed and thought of his days on the street. He remembered the cold and the hunger and the scornful looks. Finally he admitted, “Yes.”

  “The Rajah can make you happy,” Chandra said. “You don’t have to stay. You can leave any time you want. But if you really want to be happy, all you have to do is get on that bus.”

  “Well, well. What have we here?” a deep voice boomed above him. He looked up to see a golden haired man wrapped in gold-and-scarlet robes. The man gazed down at him with fire in his eyes.

  “Who’s he?” he murmured to Chandra. She bowed where she sat, her face to the floor and her arms outstretched before her.

  “Vivasvat, the right hand of the Rajah,” she whispered. “All glory to Vivasvat.”

  A strong hand gripped his collar and lifted him up, and he found himself gawking at the man in scarlet and gold. “This filthy boy has no place in the Rajah’s temple!” Vivasvat shouted. The room grew silent. “He is unclean.” Then Vivasvat shook him, and dirt flaked offhim and fell on the floor. The others began to laugh, and Vivasvat grinned and let him go.

  “Unclean things cannot stand the light of the Rajah’s truth. Take him upstairs and bathe him,” Vivasvat ordered two boys who sat nearby. “Burn his clothes and give him our finest garments to wear. For only when he is purified are we pure, and only then shall we eat the Rajah’s Food.”

  The boys each took him by an arm and began to hustle him out
of the room. They had almost reached a door leading to stairs when Vivasvat’s voice boomed again. “Boy!” he said. “What is your name?” “Frank,” he replied. “Frank Hardy.” Then they whisked him through the door and up the steps.

  Chapter 2

  WHEN THE BUS pulled away from the building the next morning, Frank Hardy was on it. He was dressed as all the others were dressed, and anyone would have mistaken him for one of the Rajah’s followers, except that his hair was-thick and full while theirs had been cut short.

  Long ago, the bus had been a school bus, but the Rajah’s followers had transformed it. They’d painted it, and slogans praising the Rajah were written all over the walls. Smiling, happy faces beamed all around him.

  This is where I have to be careful, Frank thought. A dinner and a breakfast that were heavy on starch, new clothes, getting up early in the morning. They never let me out of their sight, and they try to keep me involved in their activities. They want to break down my defenses. I can’t let them. For Holly’s sake, I can’t let them.

  “Let’s pass the time with a sing-along,” a jolly voice said. Cheers greeted the suggestion. Slowly someone started singing a familiar melody, and the song sped up as more people joined in.

  Chandra, seated in front of him, turned around. “Join in, Frank,” she said. “It’s fun.”

  He smiled and nodded. Blot it out, he told himself. Don’t play their mind games. Think about something else. Try to remember what you’re trying to do, how you got here.

  “Join in, Frank,” Chandra repeated, and immediately other voices chimed in, crying, “Join in, Frank. Join in.”

  In his mind, he drifted away, while his lips began to mouth the words of the song. And without realizing it, he began to smile. In his mind, Frank Hardy could see his family’s house in Bayport. It was an old house, built around the turn of the century, but it was large and warm in a way that more modern buildings never were. It was home. He and his brother, Joe, had grown up there, as had their father, the famous detective Fenton Hardy, and his father before him.

  Was it only a week since Frank had been home? It seemed as if years had passed since the morning Emmett Strand had come to their door.

  The weather had been unseasonably hot, and Frank, a light sleeper at the best of times, tossed and turned in his bed all night. He had dozed on and off for hours, getting up now and then to play a game of chess with his computer in the hopes that it would tire him out.

  Someone was moving about downstairs. Frank knew it wasn’t a burglar, because the alarms hadn’t gone off. He had put in the security system himself, so he knew the alarms worked. More likely, the “prowler” was either Joe or his father, who had been out of town on a case.

  Frank felt like going downstairs for a chat, but that wouldn’t help him sleep. He pressed his face into his pillow and closed his eyes.

  He was finally drifting off when a loud pounding on the front door of the house jarred him awake again. He looked at the digital clock on his nightstand. 5:03 A.M. No one comes around at this time of morning, he thought. He leaped out of bed and threw on his robe. Not unless there’s trouble.

  Frank heard the front door creak open. Footsteps echoed on the wooden floor of the foyer by the door. He opened the door to his room and jumped back.

  Joe was on the other side of the door. He was an inch shorter than Frank, and his blond hair was matted down on his head. Though a year younger than his brother, Joe was the huskier of the two. In the dim light of the hall, his blue eyes gleamed with surprise. They had both startled each other. “What are you doing out here, Joe?” Frank whispered. He sighed with relief. “Why aren’t you asleep?”

  “I can’t sleep,” Joe replied. “It’s too hot, and I had this funny feeling that something was going to happen. It looks like I was right. Dad got home half an hour ago and called Mr. Strand. He just came over.” “Emmett Strand? The banker?”

  “Right,” Joe said through a yawn. “And since I couldn’t sleep, I sneaked downstairs to find out what Dad was up to these days. I think he’s been doing some work for Mr. Strand, but it sounded like Dad couldn’t finish the case.”

  Frank blinked with surprise. “That’s not like Dad. Let’s-try to find out what’s going on.” Quietly they slipped down the hall, passing their mother’s room and then their Aunt Gertrude’s. Both women were sleeping soundly. The boys crept down the stairway to the main floor, trying hard to keep the old steps from creaking.

  From the stairs they could see that a desk lamp was on in their father’s office. Mr. Strand was there, too, pacing back and forth and dabbing the sweat from his face with a handkerchief. His eyes were wide and dulled with worry, and frustration and fear could be heard in his voice.

  In all the years Frank had known Emmett Strand, he had never seen him display the slightest uneasiness. Mr. Strand ran his life as he ran his business-with clear logic and very little emotion-and that style had made him one of the top bankers on the East Coast. Not even when his wife died, leaving him to raise their infant daughter alone, did Strand let his emotions run away with him.

  “Maybe I should have been more like you,” Strand was saying as the Hardys moved closer to the door. His voice cracked as he spoke. “Your boys turned out all right. Isn’t there anything we can do?”

  “I’m afraid not, Emmett,” Fenton Hardy replied. “And there’s nothing the police can do, either. Holly’s of age now, which means you can’t control her anymore. We can always hope she’ll change her mind, but in the meantime, you’d better protect yourself.”

  Holly? Frank was surprised. She was Strand’s daughter, and she and Frank had grown up together. Before he’d met Callie Shaw, he had even thought that they might fall in love one day. Apparently she was now in some kind of trouble - trouble so bad that even his father couldn’t get her out of it.

  “What do you mean, protect myself?” Emmett Strand asked.

  “I wish I didn’t have to bring this up,” Mr. Hardy said. “But keep in mind that Holly hasn’t simply run away from home. She has joined a cult. This man who runs it, the Rajah, demands that his followers turn over all their worldly goods to him. That’s the first step on their path to ‘enlightenment.’ “

  “Hah!” Strand snorted. “If he bates worldly goods so much, why does he have a fleet of Cadillacs? He’s a con man, pure and simple.” “Maybe so, but that’s not the point.” “What is the point, Fenton?”

  “The point is, Emmett,” Mr. Hardy replied, “that you’ve made millions in banking. Suppose something should happen to you. Who’d inherit the money and everything else you own?”

  There was a long pause as Strand sank into a chair. Finally he replied, “Holly, of course.”

  “And in her present frame of mind, I think she’d turn it all over to the Rajah,” Fenton Hardy went on. “Everything you worked for all these years would be in the Rajah’s hands. You’ve got to cut Holly out of your will, at least until she comes home.”

  “I can’t!” Strand exclaimed in anguish. “She’s my only child. I can’t cut her off just like that, even though she has cut me out of her life. There must be something else we can do.”

  “Face facts,” said Fenton Hardy gently. “Holly is living at the Rajah’s commune upstate. If there was a chance that you could convince her to come home, I wouldn’t have to suggest this. But I know they won’t even let you in to talk to her. I traced her up there, but I can’t go in and get her without breaking the law, and neither can the police. ” “The law! The law protects that … that thief! Doesn’t the law care about my daughter?”

  Hardy patted his friend’s shoulder, trying to comfort him. “I know this is hard for you, Emmett - “

  Emmett Strand stood up abruptly, shaking off the hand. “I’ve been a bad father, but I won’t abandon my daughter when she needs me most. I won’t do what you’re suggesting!” “Emmett, please!”

  “I won’t, Fenton! And it doesn’t matter if you refuse to rescue Holly. I’ll find someone who will. I�
��ll do it myself if I have to!” With that, Emmett Strand turned on his heel and stormed out of Fenton Hardy’s office, and out of the house.

  On the stairs, Frank whispered, “Let’s get back to our rooms before Dad finds out we’ve been eavesdropping.”

  But Joe stood where he was, clenching his fists, his lips curled in anger. “That Rajah character is stealing Holly’s life just like the Assassins stole Iola’s. Maybe he’s not killing her like Iola was killed, but she’s lost to us just the same. I wish there was something we could do to help her.”

  Frank Hardy rubbed his chin, thinking over what he had heard. “Maybe there is,” he said. “Maybe there is.”

  “Are you sure you want to go through with this?” Joe asked Frank as the train carried them toward New York City. “This cult stuff gets pretty strange. Suppose you knuckle under to them, the way Holly did.”

  “It won’t happen,” Frank replied. He wore old, crumpled clothes, and dirt smudged his face. “I’ve studied how cults work and how they brainwash the kids who fall into their hands. But those kids desperately want the approval the cult gives them. I don’t. As long as I keep my mind on what I’m there for, they won’t have any power over me.”

  Joe frowned. “I still don’t like it. We should just bust in there and get her out.”

  “We can’t. It’s illegal,” Frank said. “Besides, when I get in there to talk to her, I’m sure I can convince her to leave with me. If she leaves of her own free will, then we won’t be breaking the law.”

  “If you get in, they’re going to be suspicious if you just walk up and ask to go to their commune.”

  Frank smiled mischievously. “I don’t need to ask them. They’ll ask me. I know how their minds work. Once I’m in, they’ll want to get me somewhere where the only influence on me is the Rajah, where they can watch my every move and make sure I’m trying to be like them. And the only place for that is the commune.”

  “I still don’t like it,” Joe said, scowling. “What if something goes wrong?”

 

    The Great Pumpkin Smash Read onlineThe Great Pumpkin SmashWho Let the Frogs Out? Read onlineWho Let the Frogs Out?Return to Black Bear Mountain Read onlineReturn to Black Bear MountainA Treacherous Tide Read onlineA Treacherous TideBug-Napped Read onlineBug-NappedThe Disappearance Read onlineThe DisappearanceSea Life Secrets Read onlineSea Life SecretsThe Mystery of the Chinese Junk Read onlineThe Mystery of the Chinese JunkA Skateboard Cat-astrophe Read onlineA Skateboard Cat-astropheToo Many Traitors Read onlineToo Many TraitorsGalaxy X Read onlineGalaxy XThe Secret Panel Read onlineThe Secret PanelThe Secret of Wildcat Swamp Read onlineThe Secret of Wildcat SwampThe Secret of the Caves Read onlineThe Secret of the CavesThe Caribbean Cruise Caper Read onlineThe Caribbean Cruise CaperWithout a Trace Read onlineWithout a TraceThe Mystery of the Spiral Bridge Read onlineThe Mystery of the Spiral BridgeMovie Menace Read onlineMovie MenaceDungeons & Detectives Read onlineDungeons & DetectivesWater-Ski Wipeout Read onlineWater-Ski WipeoutThe Case of the Psychic's Vision Read onlineThe Case of the Psychic's VisionX-plosion Read onlineX-plosionDeathgame Read onlineDeathgameThe Apeman's Secret Read onlineThe Apeman's SecretA Will to Survive Read onlineA Will to SurviveMystery at Devil's Paw Read onlineMystery at Devil's PawBlood Money Read onlineBlood MoneyThe Mark on the Door Read onlineThe Mark on the DoorScene of the Crime Read onlineScene of the CrimeThe Gray Hunter's Revenge Read onlineThe Gray Hunter's RevengeStolen Identity Read onlineStolen IdentityThe Mummy's Curse Read onlineThe Mummy's CurseMystery of Smugglers Cove Read onlineMystery of Smugglers CoveDiplomatic Deceit Read onlineDiplomatic DeceitThe Haunted Fort Read onlineThe Haunted FortThe Crisscross Shadow Read onlineThe Crisscross ShadowSecret of the Red Arrow Read onlineSecret of the Red ArrowTrial and Terror Read onlineTrial and TerrorThe Short-Wave Mystery Read onlineThe Short-Wave MysteryThe Spy That Never Lies Read onlineThe Spy That Never LiesOperation: Survival Read onlineOperation: SurvivalDeception on the Set Read onlineDeception on the SetThe Sign of the Crooked Arrow Read onlineThe Sign of the Crooked ArrowHunting for Hidden Gold Read onlineHunting for Hidden GoldDisaster for Hire Read onlineDisaster for HireThe Clue in the Embers Read onlineThe Clue in the EmbersDanger Zone Read onlineDanger ZoneThe Hidden Harbor Mystery Read onlineThe Hidden Harbor MysteryEye on Crime Read onlineEye on CrimeA Game Called Chaos Read onlineA Game Called ChaosThe Bicycle Thief Read onlineThe Bicycle ThiefThe Missing Playbook Read onlineThe Missing PlaybookSurvival Run Read onlineSurvival RunThe Bombay Boomerang Read onlineThe Bombay BoomerangMystery of the Samurai Sword Read onlineMystery of the Samurai SwordBurned Read onlineBurnedDeath and Diamonds Read onlineDeath and DiamondsMurder at the Mall Read onlineMurder at the MallThe Prime-Time Crime Read onlineThe Prime-Time CrimeHide-and-Sneak Read onlineHide-and-SneakTraining for Trouble Read onlineTraining for TroubleTrouble in Paradise Read onlineTrouble in ParadiseWhile the Clock Ticked Read onlineWhile the Clock TickedThe Alaskan Adventure Read onlineThe Alaskan AdventureThe Lost Brother Read onlineThe Lost BrotherTunnel of Secrets Read onlineTunnel of SecretsA Killing in the Market Read onlineA Killing in the MarketThe Curse of the Ancient Emerald Read onlineThe Curse of the Ancient EmeraldThe Arctic Patrol Mystery Read onlineThe Arctic Patrol MysteryPast and Present Danger Read onlinePast and Present DangerThe Castle Conundrum (Hardy Boys) Read onlineThe Castle Conundrum (Hardy Boys)Farming Fear Read onlineFarming FearNowhere to Run Read onlineNowhere to RunThe Secret of the Soldier's Gold Read onlineThe Secret of the Soldier's GoldDanger on Vampire Trail Read onlineDanger on Vampire TrailThe Lure of the Italian Treasure Read onlineThe Lure of the Italian TreasureThe Mystery of Cabin Island Read onlineThe Mystery of Cabin IslandDarkness Falls Read onlineDarkness FallsNight of the Werewolf Read onlineNight of the WerewolfDanger in the Extreme Read onlineDanger in the ExtremeThe Lazarus Plot Read onlineThe Lazarus PlotThe Hooded Hawk Mystery Read onlineThe Hooded Hawk MysteryDouble Trouble Read onlineDouble TroubleForever Lost Read onlineForever LostPushed Read onlinePushedThe Great Airport Mystery Read onlineThe Great Airport MysteryThe Hunt for Four Brothers Read onlineThe Hunt for Four BrothersThe Disappearing Floor Read onlineThe Disappearing FloorMotocross Madness Read onlineMotocross MadnessFoul Play Read onlineFoul PlayHigh-Speed Showdown Read onlineHigh-Speed ShowdownThe Mummy Case Read onlineThe Mummy CaseThe Firebird Rocket Read onlineThe Firebird RocketTrouble in Warp Space Read onlineTrouble in Warp SpaceShip of Secrets Read onlineShip of SecretsLine of Fire Read onlineLine of FireThe Clue of the Broken Blade Read onlineThe Clue of the Broken BladeMedieval Upheaval Read onlineMedieval UpheavalWitness to Murder Read onlineWitness to MurderThe Giant Rat of Sumatra Read onlineThe Giant Rat of SumatraAttack of the Bayport Beast Read onlineAttack of the Bayport BeastThe Borgia Dagger Read onlineThe Borgia DaggerScavenger Hunt Heist Read onlineScavenger Hunt HeistNo Way Out Read onlineNo Way OutMurder House Read onlineMurder HouseThe X-Factor Read onlineThe X-FactorThe Desert Thieves Read onlineThe Desert ThievesMystery of the Phantom Heist Read onlineMystery of the Phantom HeistThe Battle of Bayport Read onlineThe Battle of BayportFinal Cut Read onlineFinal CutBrother Against Brother Read onlineBrother Against BrotherPrivate Killer Read onlinePrivate KillerThe Mystery of the Black Rhino Read onlineThe Mystery of the Black RhinoFeeding Frenzy Read onlineFeeding FrenzyCastle Fear Read onlineCastle FearA Figure in Hiding Read onlineA Figure in HidingHopping Mad Read onlineHopping MadDead on Target Read onlineDead on TargetSkin and Bones Read onlineSkin and BonesThe Secret Warning Read onlineThe Secret WarningFlesh and Blood Read onlineFlesh and BloodThe Shattered Helmet Read onlineThe Shattered HelmetBoardwalk Bust Read onlineBoardwalk BustTerror at High Tide Read onlineTerror at High TideIn Plane Sight Read onlineIn Plane SightThe London Deception Read onlineThe London DeceptionEvil, Inc. Read onlineEvil, Inc.Deprivation House Read onlineDeprivation HouseThe Mystery of the Aztec Warrior Read onlineThe Mystery of the Aztec WarriorFirst Day, Worst Day Read onlineFirst Day, Worst DayBonfire Masquerade Read onlineBonfire MasqueradeKiller Connections Read onlineKiller ConnectionsStrategic Moves Read onlineStrategic MovesWarehouse Rumble Read onlineWarehouse RumbleThe Chase for the Mystery Twister Read onlineThe Chase for the Mystery TwisterThe Tower Treasure thb-1 Read onlineThe Tower Treasure thb-1The Children of the Lost Read onlineThe Children of the LostThe Last Laugh Read onlineThe Last LaughTrick-or-Trouble Read onlineTrick-or-TroublePerfect Getaway Read onlinePerfect GetawayNightmare in Angel City Read onlineNightmare in Angel CityEdge of Destruction Read onlineEdge of DestructionFright Wave Read onlineFright WaveThe Jungle Pyramid Read onlineThe Jungle PyramidFootprints Under the Window Read onlineFootprints Under the WindowThe Gross Ghost Mystery Read onlineThe Gross Ghost MysteryA Monster of a Mystery Read onlineA Monster of a MysteryHouse Arrest Read onlineHouse ArrestMystery of the Desert Giant Read onlineMystery of the Desert GiantTalent Show Tricks Read onlineTalent Show TricksThe Sting of the Scorpion Read onlineThe Sting of the ScorpionThe Secret of Skull Mountain Read onlineThe Secret of Skull MountainThe Missing Chums Read onlineThe Missing ChumsKickoff to Danger Read onlineKickoff to DangerCult of Crime Read onlineCult of CrimeRunning on Fumes Read onlineRunning on FumesMartial Law Read onlineMartial LawThe Pentagon Spy Read onlineThe Pentagon SpyHazed Read onlineHazedThe Secret Agent on Flight 101 Read onlineThe Secret Agent on Flight 101Running on Empty Read onlineRunning on EmptyTop Ten Ways to Die Read onlineTop Ten Ways to DieThe Missing Mitt Read onlineThe Missing MittThe Melted Coins Read onlineThe Melted CoinsThe Rocky Road to Revenge Read onlineThe Rocky Road to RevengeThe Masked Monkey Read onlineThe Masked MonkeyLost in Gator Swamp Read onlineLost in Gator SwampExtreme Danger Read onlineExtreme DangerStreet Spies Read onlineStreet SpiesThe Wailing Siren Mystery Read onlineThe Wailing Siren MysteryThe Dangerous Transmission Read onlineThe Dangerous TransmissionHurricane Joe Read onlineHurricane JoeThe Crisscross Crime Read onlineThe Crisscross CrimeMystery of the Whale Tattoo Read onlineMystery of the Whale TattooThe House on the Cliff Read onlineThe House on the CliffCamping Chaos Read onlineCamping ChaosGhost of a Chance Read onlineGhost of a ChanceTagged for Terror Read onlineTagged for TerrorThrill Ride Read onlineThrill RideFossil Frenzy Read onlineFossil FrenzyThe Time Warp Wonder Read onlineThe Time Warp WonderGhost Stories Read onlineGhost StoriesSpeed Times Five Read onlineSpeed Times FiveWhat Happened at Midnight Read onlineWhat Happened at MidnightThree-Ring Terror Read onlineThree-Ring TerrorTrouble at the Arcade Read onlineTrouble at the ArcadeThe Clue of the Hissing Serpent Read onlineThe Clue of the Hissing SerpentTrouble in the Pipeline Read onlineTrouble in the PipelineThe Tower Treasure Read onlineThe Tower TreasureHostages of Hate Read onlineHostages of HateThe Crowning Terror Read onlineThe Crowning TerrorDaredevils Read onlineDaredevilsThe Vanishing Thieves Read onlineThe Vanishing ThievesKiller Mission Read onlineKiller MissionThe Mark of the Blue Tattoo Read onlineThe Mark of the Blue TattooThe Witchmaster's Key Read onlineThe Witchmaster's KeyThe Deadliest Dare Read onlineThe Deadliest DarePeril at Granite Peak Read onlinePeril at Granite PeakThe Secret Of The Old Mill thb-3 Read onlineThe Secret Of The Old Mill thb-3Rocky Road Read onlineRocky RoadThe Demolition Mission Read onlineThe Demolition MissionBlown Away Read onlineBlown AwayPassport to Danger Read onlinePassport to DangerThe Shore Road Mystery Read onlineThe Shore Road MysteryTrouble Times Two Read onlineTrouble Times TwoThe Yellow Feather Mystery Read onlineThe Yellow Feather MysteryOne False Step Read onlineOne False StepCrime in the Cards Read onlineCrime in the CardsThick as Thieves Read onlineThick as ThievesThe Clue of the Screeching Owl Read onlineThe Clue of the Screeching OwlThe Pacific Conspiracy Read onlineThe Pacific ConspiracyThe Genius Thieves Read onlineThe Genius ThievesThe Flickering Torch Mystery Read onlineThe Flickering Torch MysteryInto Thin Air Read onlineInto Thin AirHighway Robbery Read onlineHighway RobberyDeadfall Read onlineDeadfallMystery of the Flying Express Read onlineMystery of the Flying ExpressThe Viking Symbol Mystery Read onlineThe Viking Symbol MysteryThe End of the Trail Read onlineThe End of the TrailThe Number File Read onlineThe Number FileGold Medal Murder Read onlineGold Medal MurderBound for Danger Read onlineBound for DangerCollision Course Read onlineCollision CourseThe Madman of Black Bear Mountain Read onlineThe Madman of Black Bear MountainThe Secret of the Lost Tunnel Read onlineThe Secret of the Lost TunnelThe Stone Idol Read onlineThe Stone IdolThe Secret of Pirates' Hill Read onlineThe Secret of Pirates' HillA Con Artist in Paris Read onlineA Con Artist in ParisThe Mysterious Caravan Read onlineThe Mysterious CaravanThe Secret of Sigma Seven Read onlineThe Secret of Sigma SevenThe Twisted Claw Read onlineThe Twisted ClawThe Phantom Freighter Read onlineThe Phantom FreighterThe Dead Season Read onlineThe Dead SeasonThe Video Game Bandit Read onlineThe Video Game BanditThe Vanishing Game Read onlineThe Vanishing GameTyphoon Island Read onlineTyphoon Island