The Case of the Library Monster

Read The Case of the Library Monster Online

Authors: Dori Hillestad Butler,Dan Crisp,Jeremy Tugeau

BOOK: The Case of the Library Monster
5.72Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The Buddy Files, #5
The Case of the Library Monster

Dori Hillestad Butler
Pictures by Jeremy Tugeau and Dan Crisp

Albert Whitman & Company

Chicago, Illinois

For my friend Amy, who sparked the idea for this book.

I also owe a huge thank you to Jenni Doll and Trish Wasek at Witty Kitties in Solon, Iowa.

They know a lot about “monsters.”

Table of Contents

1. What Is THAT?

2. Busted!

3. Whoever Heard of a Blue-Tongued Skink?

4. I Smell a Monster!

5. The Secret Door

6. Stay!

7. Locked In

8. What Did Maya Do?

9. Before It’s Too Late

10. Questions and Answers

1
What Is THAT?

Hello!

My name is Buddy. I’m a therapy dog. That means I get to go to school with Mom and Connor every day. I lie down on a pillow in Mom’s office, or here in the library, and people come and pet me all day long. I LOVE being a therapy dog. It’s a very important job!

I’m not just a therapy dog, though. I’m also a detective. A detective is someone who solves mysteries.

There are a lot of mysteries to solve around a school. Right now I’m working on a case I call: The Case of the Four Lakes Elementary School Ghost.

I don’t know if there’s really a ghost at this school. I don’t even know if I believe in ghosts.

Connor believes in ghosts. Connor is my human. He says a girl named Agatha went to school here a long time ago. She got burned in a fire and now her ghost haunts the school.

Here are some reasons I think there could be a ghost here:

I’ve seen doors close all by themselves.

I’ve felt cold air ripple through my fur.

And just eleventy-two days ago (or maybe yesterday) I heard strange noises under the floor in the library. Like a ghost was trying to get out!

But all of that could have been caused by:

The wind

My imagination

I’ve never seen or smelled a ghost before.

Some of Connor’s friends say they’ve seen Agatha. But they weren’t telling the truth when they said it. A dog always knows when a human is telling the truth and when a human is lying.

Cat with No Name says he’s seen Agatha, too. Unfortunately, there’s no way to know if a cat is telling the truth.

But my friend Jazzy also says she’s seen the ghost. Jazzy is a dog. Dogs don’t lie. If Jazzy says she saw a ghost, then she probably saw a ghost.

Except ... I’m still not sure I believe in ghosts.

“Mrs. Christie?” a small voice cuts through my thoughts. “I don’t think Buddy is listening.”

The voice belongs to a girl who smells like orange juice, toast, peanut butter, and dog. I think Mrs. Warner said the girl’s name was Jemma. Mrs. Warner is the alpha human at the library. Mrs. Christie is next in command.

“He’s listening,” Mrs. Christie says. “Just because he’s not sitting up doesn’t mean he’s not listening.”

Mrs. Christie is right.

But so is Jemma. I
wasn’t
listening. I was thinking about ghosts.

I’m supposed to listen when kids come to the library to read to me. It’s another one of my jobs at this school.

Mom and Mrs. Warner and Mrs. Christie all say it’s good for kids to read to dogs. Especially if those kids aren’t good readers. They say kids who read to dogs:

Feel more relaxed when they read

Enjoy reading more

Become better readers

Other books

Proyecto Amanda: invisible by Melissa Kantor
Cold Blooded by Lisa Jackson
La peste by Albert Camus
Identity by Burns, Nat
Seven-Day Magic by Edward Eager
Second Nature by Elizabeth Sharp
One Mississippi by Mark Childress
Love Confessed by Tracey, Amber