Milo stuffed the notebook and one of the special pens in his back pocket. He grabbed the spy shades, too, and went downstairs.
His mom was in the kitchen slurping green slime from a spoon. Gross, but not unusual. She ate a lot of yogurt, and her favorite flavor was key lime pie.
Still, he might be missing something. He squinted, trying to make his eyes sharper.
âWhat?â said his mom. âDo I have yogurt on my nose?â
Outside, Milo found his little brother, Ethan, playing pirates with a friend.
That was unusual. Usually Ethan played dinosaurs.
âHow come youâre not a dinosaur today?â Milo asked.
âI am,â Ethan said. âA pirate dinosaur.
Arrr!â
Â
Milo sighed. His brother was a mystery, all right. But not the kind even a super sleuth could solve.
He could see that he was not going to get very far watching his family. Heâd have to find someone else to observe.
A few blocks over, he saw a girl reading on her porch. She was in his class at school. Her name was Jasmyne, but heâd heard the other girls calling her Jazz.
That magazine she was reading looked familiar. . . .
Jazz glanced up. Quickly, Milo crouched down, pretending to tie his sneakers. What was she reading? If only he could get a closer look. This observing thing was harder than Dash made it sound.
Â
Then Milo remembered the spy shades. Now was the perfect time to try them out.
He turned his back to Jazz and slipped the glasses on. They had little mirrors on the sides, just like a car.
Cool. There was the front walk. The porch steps. The porch. An empty chair, with a magazine lying on the seat. He tried to read the title on the cover, but the mirror lenses turned the letters backwardâ
Wait. An empty chair?
Where was Jazz?
Milo tilted his head a little farther, and the glasses fell off. As he dove after them, they hit the sidewalk, bounced, and landed by a purple flowered clog.
A purple clog?
Slowly he looked up. Jazz stared back down at him, fists planted on her hips.
âWhy are you spying on me?â
Â
Milo jumped up. âHow could I be spying on you? I wasnât even looking in your direction. I was looking atâatââ He glanced around wildly. âThat car!â
Jazz raised an eyebrow. âOh, yeah?â
âYeah.â
Suddenly her hands shot out. Before he could duck, her fingers clamped over his eyes. âWhat color is it?â
âHuh?â
âWhat color is the car?â
Milo tried to think. Uhh. . . . He had no idea. So much for the first step toward becoming a super sleuth. âSilver?â he guessed.
She took her hand away. The car was brown.
âI meanâkind of silvery brown. You know.â
Jazz crossed her arms. âI know you were spying on me. You even faked tying your shoelace.â
âWhat makes you think I was faking?â
She pointed at his sneakers. âVelcro.â
Milo scowled. She was a better observer than he was, and she hadnât even read Dashâs lesson.
Â
Jazz reached for the spy shades. Sounding friendlier, she said, âI saw these in
Whodunnit
magazine. Do they really work?â She tried them on and craned her head.
Ohh, Milo thought, sheâd been reading
Whodunnit
! No wonder the magazine had looked so familiar. He said, âYou like reading mysteries?â
She nodded. âAnd Iâm good at solving them, too. When youâre the youngest of four kids, no one tells you anything. So I always have to figure stuff out by myself.â
She handed him back the glasses. âSo, what are you playing? Spy? Detective?â
Milo stood up straighter. âIâm not
playing
anything,â he said. âI happen to be a real private eye. In training. And Iâm trying to solve a mystery.â
âReally?â Her eyes widened. âWhat is it?â
âUm, well . . . actually, I donât know yet,â he said.
She looked confused.
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