Read The Case of the Missing Dinosaur Egg Online
Authors: Martha Freeman
Finally, Granny announced it was time for bed, but
Tessa wanted to stay up and watch Jan and Larry, our favorite TV newscasters.
“Maybe the dinosaur exhibit will be on,” Tessa said.
“You just want to see if
you're
on,” Nate said.
Tessa didn't disagree, and Granny said, “Okay, five more minutes.”
Nate grabbed the remote, turned on the TV and . . .
Uh-oh.
What we saw wasn't Tessa or a dinosaur egg; it was Aunt Jen's posterior as she hurdled and climbed over chair backs! At least the only visible underwear was her slip's lacy hem. Watching it, Nate was so embarrassed he had to close his eyes.
On TV, Larry tried to sound serious: “. . . First Auntie Jennifer Leone making a heroic attempt to catch First Daughter Tessa Parks at the National Museum of Natural History today . . . ,” while in the background Jan was giggling so hard she hiccupped.
After that, the view switched to some egg fossils, Nate and me doing the thumbs-up and Tessa saying we'd seen a dinosaur hatch.
Then Professor Bohn and the paleontologist from the museum, Professor Rexington, explained a little about birds and dinosaurs.
Finally, Jan said, “On a more serious note, Larry, unnamed sources tell us tonight that one of the dinosaur eggs from the exhibit has gone missing.” The screen showed a picture of the missing egg, which sure enough, looked like a gray, egg-shaped rock. “And
because the egg was a rare specimen excavated at a site in a certain nearby nation, its disappearance could have international political implications.”
Larry cut in: “You mean this story is no yolk, Jan?”
Jan rolled her eyes. “You're hilarious, Larry.”
After that they cut to a commercial, Granny said, “Bedtime,” and Nate turned off the TV.
A ramp leads from the solarium down to the White House third floor. Walking down it, I asked Granny if she knew what Jan and Larry had meant about the missing egg having “international political implications.”
Granny shrugged. “Try asking your parents,” she said. “It's a mystery to me.”
One thing about having your mom be president of the United Statesâyou don't get to see her all the time. That Saturday evening, she and Dad had to go to some dinner thing. Tessa and I were in bed reading when they came in to say good night.
“Mama!” Tessa said. “I need a snuggle! Hi, Daddy! Explain about the dinosaur egg, please. Granny said you could.”
Mom sat down on the edge of Tessa's bed, and Dad sat down on the edge of mine. The White House has tons of bedrooms, but we share because when we first moved in, neither one of us wanted to sleep alone.
“What dinosaur egg?” Dad asked. He was wearing a tuxedo, and Mom had on a dark-red dress and white beads.
Tessa told them how one was missing from the museum, and Mom said, “Oh, dear, muffinâit's complicated.” She looked at Dad.
He closed his eyes, yawned and nodded all at the same time. “I guess there's a legend in this certain nearby nation that no life existed there in prehistoric timesânot even dinosaurs. Supposedly, the first life didn't come until much later, when a heroic leader arrived and founded a city. After that came llamas and pyramids and cocoa beans and . . . well, you get the idea.”
Tessa shook her head. “No, I don't.”
But I thought I understood. “Jan and Larry said the egg was found in a certain nearby nation, right? So if that's true, the legend is wrong. There must've been dinosaurs there after all.”
Tessa shrugged. “Oh, okay. But big whoop.”
“Big whoop,” Mom repeated, “unless you're the president of the certain nearby nation and you claim to be the great-great-and-so-on-grandson of the heroic leader. In fact, you claim that's one reason you're entitled to be president in perpetuity.”
“What's per-pe-whatever you said?” Tessa wanted to know.
“Forever,” Dad said. “In other words, instead of having elections and somebody new getting to be president, you just stay president.”
Tessa looked horrified. “Oh,
no
! You don't want to do that, Mama, do you?”
Mom looked tired. “Not tonight, I don't.”
“But wait a second,” I said. “The president of the certain nearby nation is Manfred Alfredo-Chin, right? Whose dog is Hooligan's friend? Whose niece is our friend, Toni?”
Dad nodded. “That's the guy.”
“So if everybody found out the legend's wrong because now there's this dinosaur egg, it might be bad for President Alfredo-Chin,” I said. “And he's already got trouble because of those protests going on in his nation.”
In case you hadn't guessed, my little sister is a drama queen. Now she waved her arms the way she does. “Oh, come on! No way did President Manfred Alfredo-Chin ever steal any dinosaur egg! First, he's our friend. Second, he doesn't even live here. And third, presidents don't do stuff like thatâdo they, Mama?”
Mom said, “I have never personally stolen a dinosaur egg, nor, to the best of my knowledge, has anyone on my staff.”
Dad rolled his eyes. “Honey? You know you're speaking to your family, right? You're not on television.”
Mom smiled. “Right. Anyway, I doubt President Alfredo-Chin is responsible for the missing egg. If I had to guess, I'd say the problem is at the museum. And now, muffins . . .” She stood up and yawned. “I am going to say good night. Church tomorrow, remember? It's Palm Sunday.”
The next day started out normal . . . but got abnormal fast.
The normal part was Granny waking us for church at eight o'clock. But ten minutes later Charlotte knocked on Tessa's and my door while we were getting dressed. Charlotte is my favorite Secret Service agent.
“Mr. Webb and Mr. Morgan are in the Treaty Room, and they'd like to meet with you before church,” she said. “Nate is on his way down.”
Tessa didn't say a wordâjust yanked her dress over her shoulders and headed for the door.
“Shoes, Tessa?” I said. “Hair?”
“My hair's fine, and you can bring my shoes, okay? I'm in a hurry! But, oh . . .” She doubled back, opened her closet and grabbed a pink spangled baseball cap, the one she wears for detecting. “Don't forget your notebook!” she told me, and left.
Oh, Tessa.
I stepped into my own shoes, picked Tessa's up off the floor, got my notebook and a pen and followed.
When we first moved here, the house seemed hugeâmore like a hotel than a place to live. But now I'm getting used to itâpaintings, chandeliers, antiques, elevators and just plain bigness everywhere.
The first floor, the State Floor, is basically a public place. Tourists come through most mornings, and there're always staff and marines around. Up here on the second and third floors, though, it's usually just the family and our guests and maybe housekeepers cleaning. Even so, it's big and fancy, and you never get away from the history.
Like now when I walked out our bedroom door? There was a window to my right at the end of the hall. It looks out over the North Porticoâthe front doorâand it's where Abraham Lincoln stood to make his last speech.
The Treaty Room, where we were meeting Mr. Morgan and Mr. Webb, is across the Center Hall from our bedroom. Like a lot of presidents, my mom uses it as an office sometimes. There are some famous paintings in it, besides a big desk President Ulysses S. Grant used for cabinet meetings.
Now when I walked in carrying my notebook and Tessa's shoes, Mr. Webb and Mr. Morgan were sitting on a sofa holding coffee mugs, Tessa was sitting across from them in a chair and Granny and Charlotte were
standing beside her. Nate wasn't there yetâno surprise. He is not a morning person.
I gave Tessa her shoes. “Granny said I can have coffee,” she told me as she buckled them, “because this is a business meeting.”
Coffee tastes terrible, but no way would I let my little sister out-grown-up me. “Can I, too?” I asked.
Granny said, “Yes you
may
,” and rang for Mr. Patel, the cutest White House butler. Meanwhile, Nate came in, looking sleepy.
When we were settled, Mr. Morgan thanked us for agreeing to meet so early.
“No problemo!”
said Tessa. Then she took a sip and made a face. “Is this what coffee's supposed to taste like?”
Granny got her some sugar.
Mr. Morgan continued, “Mr. Webb and I started our investigation into the missing egg at the museum yesterday. But we've run into some roadblocks, and we're hoping you can help.”
“Actually, Mr. Morgan,” Tessa interrupted, “we have already solved the case.”
Mr. Morgan looked surprised, but not half as surprised as me, Nate and Granny. “What are you talking about?” I asked.
Tessa waved her arms the way she does. “What Mom and Dad said last nightâ
duh!
President Manfred Alfredo-Chin stole the dinosaur egg!”
This was not the first time Tessa had changed her mind overnight. But Nate, Granny and Charlotte hadn't
been there when Mom and Dad told us about the legend, so I filled them in.
“Thank you, Cameron,” Mr. Morgan said. “Mr. Webb and I are also aware of the issues in a certain nearby nation. However, our initial investigation indicates they are irrelevant.”
“What's âir-rel-eâ'?” Tessa started to ask.
“Doesn't matter,” Nate said.
“It matters to
me
!” Tessa said.
“I mean the word âirrelevant' means it doesn't matter,” Nate said. “So Mr. Morgan's saying President Alfredo-Chin didn't steal the dinosaur egg.”
“That is our opinion at this time,” said Mr. Morgan.
“Well,
that's
a relief,” said Tessa. “But then who did?”
Sometimes I can't believe my sister. “Tessaâif they knew that, they wouldn't be asking us to help, would they?”
Tessa was ready to admit I was rightâexcept before she could, Mr. Morgan proved I was wrong. “We are confident we know who stole the egg,” he said. “Professor Cordell Bohn.”
If I were dramatic like my sister, I would have jumped out of my chair, waved my arms and probably stomped my feet.
I liked Professor Bohn! He knew interesting stuff about dinosaurs, and besides, he was smiley and funny and not like the other so-serious grown-ups. I didn't want him to be an egg thief, and I didn't believe he was one, either.
But I am not dramatic like my sister. So what I did instead was ask very, very calmly, “How do you know?”
Mr. Morgan explained.
It turned out he and Mr. Webb had spent Saturday afternoon and evening interviewing Professor Bohn, Professor Rexington and a few other people. What they learned was that Professor Rexington had been waiting for the dinosaur egg to arrive from a certain nearby nation all week. Then, at lunchtime Friday, a wooden crate showed up on her desk.
“It was the right kind of crate with the right kind of
label,” Mr. Morgan said. “Naturally, she assumed it was the dinosaur egg.”
“Wait a second,” said Tessa. “What do you mean it âshowed up'? Didn't someone bring it to her?”
“Someone must have, but she was at lunch, and we don't know who,” Mr. Morgan said.
“Write that down, Cammie,” Tessa said.
I held up my notebook so Tessa could see I already had. Tessa nodded. “Good work. So then what happened?”
Mr. Morgan explained that inside the crate, Professor Rexington found the gleaming, cream-colored ostrich egg, wrapped in crumpled newspaper and brown straw.
“She knew right away it belonged to an ostrich,” said Mr. Morgan, “and she immediately notified Professor Bohn. Rather than being upset, he was amused. He told her he fully expected the egg fossil to show up later in the day.”
“But it didn't,” Nate said.
Mr. Morgan nodded. “And when it didn't, he decided to use the ostrich egg as a prop for his talk and see what happened. Meanwhile, they reported the missing egg to security.”