What a great day to be reading this book. It is pouring down rain, and we expect to get 4 inches along with flooding.
Just the other day I was thinking that I wished that Steven K. Smith would write another teen mystery because I was ready for a fun, light read again. One or two days later I got an email from him. He has a new Virginia mystery, and those of his who he emailed could get a free copy of it in exchange for a review. Yeah!
I have grown to love the kids in his Virginia mystery series. And you always get a history lesson that is pretty cool and not boring like they were in high school, that is, if you had a boring teacher.
So, now it is time to find out what kind of mystery they are solving this time. But first, I need to make myself a peanut butter and jelly sandwich on wannabe wheat bread.
The Mystery.
The kids, Caitlin and Sam were sitting in their class room getting a history lesson from their teacher, Mr. Byrd. He was teaching them how to make invisible ink using lemon juice. This was the same method that George Washington’s spies used during the Revolutionary War. I remember as a kid being taught how to do this, but I don’t think any teacher taught me, so perhaps another kid I knew or my brother had. Next they were learning how to make and decipher codes.
So when they each got to their own homes, Caitlin and Sam decided to send a secret message to each other by using techniques that their teacher had taught them: During the Revolutionary War a message would be hidden in a certain designated place, and a spy would hang a brightly colored dress on a clothesline to indicate that a message had been left in that secret place. I liked that idea. Well, the two friends didn’t have clotheslines, as their parents only had electric clothes driers. What fun is that? Even I have a clothesline, because I wanted one, and I wanted one exactly like my grandmother’s, a pulley. I loved all clotheslines in my youth. I don’t use even my own, so I guess it isn’t that fun anymore. So, Caitlin and Sam dream up another method that I found just as interesting, although I like the idea of a pretty colored dress hanging on the line.
After all their playing, Caitlin and Sam head to Washington Mall with Sam’s parents, and Sam’s brother Derek. The Mall is actually a large park with a lot of government buildings and museums. They also bring along real walkie talkies. When I was a kid my brother made a walkie talkie out of two tin cans with a very long string tied at each end of the can. He had made them by taking a nail and making a hole in one end. The other’s end was cut out with a can opener. They then put the string through each end and tied knots to keep the string from coming out. Then you have to pull them taunt. They really worked, but I never learned why they did. My brother had his in his bedroom. He opened the window, and the other end of the can was at his friend’s, stretched across the two properties.
During the kid’s time at the Mall, they learn that there is a spy, and they want to find out what he is up to. No good, I imagine. So now this is where the real spying begins, and they now have to decipher codes and follow the bad guys.
And now the rain had stopped at 2 inches and not the 4 promised. So, I am going to make me something to eat and pick up this book again and find out what happens next.