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She rose and hurried to the stairway. Seeing no one, she descended quickly, with Bess and George following. Nobody was in sight on the second floor.
“Bess, run down the front stairway and find out if anyone is around,” George ordered. “I’ll take the back stairs. Nancy, you’d better take it easy.”
Nancy needed no second urging. She was feeling very dizzy and went to lie down on her bed. Bess and George returned in a few minutes to report that no one seemed to be in the house.
“Old houses are sometimes squeaky,” George remarked. “Maybe no one was on the stairs after all.”
At this moment she looked at Nancy, who was very white. Worried, George recommended that they call a doctor. Nancy tried to protest, but was overruled.
“Where’s the phone?” George asked Bess.
“I don’t know,” Bess said. “Anyway, I think I should go and get Mr. and Mrs. Spencer.”
She hurried off and in a few minutes returned with the couple. Margo Spencer, about forty years old, blond, and attractive, was extremely concerned about what had happened. She agreed that the Drews’ family physician should be called.
“Our phone is on a table in the lower hall,” she said. “I guess you didn’t notice it because I always keep a large bouquet of flowers there.”
George put in the call, then returned to the second floor. As she started down the hall, a man came up the rear stairway. He was tall, broad-shouldered, and had thick, curly, graying hair. His eyes were deep-set and penetrating.
As he walked past Nancy’s bedroom, Mr. Spencer called, “Hi, Cally old boy!” He turned to the three girls. “I’d like you to meet my friend Emmet Calhoun. Cally old boy is a Shakespearean actor. Right now he’s looking for another show. Meanwhile, he’s helping us coach.” He gave Mr. Calhoun the details of Nancy’s accident.
“Most unfortunate!” the actor said dramatically. “Those beautiful eyes—they might have been closed forever!” Striking a dramatic pose, Cally old boy began to quote a Shakespearean verse:“ ‘From women’s eyes this doctrine I derive:
They sparkle still the right Promethean fire;
They are the books, the arts, the academes, That show, contain, and nourish all the world.’”
“Thank you,” said Nancy, smiling.
Bess’s eyes sparkled. “That’s from Love’s Labour’s Lost, isn’t it?” she asked.
Mr. Calhoun beamed. “Yes, it is, my dear. It is regrettable that most young people cannot quote from the Bard. We can learn so much from Shakespeare.”
Mrs. Spencer took the actor by the arm and went with him to the door. “Come, Cally,” she said. “Let’s leave the girls alone. Nancy should rest.”
The girls were a bit amused at her diplomacy. They saw at once that Cally old boy might easily become a bore!
“Here comes the doctor,” Bess said presently. She was glancing out the window at the parking lot.
Doctor Black examined Nancy’s head thoroughly, then said she would be all right in a few hours. “You are to eat nothing but broth and crackers, and rest for five or six hours,” the doctor said sternly.
Bess went to the kitchen, found some concentrated bouillon, and arranged Nancy’s prescribed diet on a small tray. Soon after eating the soup, Nancy fell asleep.
About ten o’clock that evening she awakened completely refreshed. Finding Bess and George in their room, she announced she would like to go over to the playhouse to see the rest of the show.
Bess and George agreed, but paused to comb their hair first. Nancy waited a moment for them, then started ahead down the front stairway. As she reached the first floor, the phone rang.
“I’m the dancing puppet! Go away!” the caller
cackled in a witchlike tone
“I’ll answer it,” she thought, and went over to the hall table.
“Hello?” she said, just as Bess and George walked up to her.
A woman’s shrill voice asked, “Is Nancy Drew there?”
“This is Nancy Drew speaking. Who is this?”
The voice at the other end, obviously disguised, cried out loudly in a cackling, witchlike tone, “I’m the dancing puppet. If you know what’s good for you, Nancy Drew, you’ll leave me alone. Get out! Go away!” The speaker hung up.
Nancy’s expression had become one of complete amazement. When she relayed the message to Bess and George, they, too, looked stunned and worried. But in a moment all three girls regained their composure.
“Who was it, do you suppose?” Bess asked. “Some girl who plays the part of the puppet?”
Nancy shook her head. “Mr. Spencer assured me that the puppet is not alive.”
“It was probably the puppeteer,” George guessed.
“Perhaps,” Nancy conceded. “Or it might just be someone playing a joke.”
“This is no joke, Nancy,” Bess declared. “I think it is all part of a plot against either the Spencers or the Footlighters. Now that you’re in the group, that unidentified woman is your enemy too!”
“That might be,” Nancy agreed. “And it is just possible that the doll trunk with the cannon ball in it didn’t just fall off the beam above my head.”
Bess looked aghast. “You mean that someone sneaked up to the attic and deliberately knocked you out?”
“I’m inclined to think so,” Nancy said. “And I intend to find out who it was!”
She asked the other girls if they knew whether or not there was a phone extension in the house which the “puppet” might have used.
“Mr. Spencer didn’t say,” George answered.
The girls searched but found none. Nancy suggested that perhaps there was an extension out in the theater, but she found that the phone in the theater was in a booth and had a different number from the one in the house. “There’s no telling where that mysterious call was dialed from,” she said. “The speaker might have been nearby, or at a distance.”
By this time Bess was thoroughly alarmed. Grabbing Nancy’s arm, she looked at her and said, “We haven’t been here one night yet, and awful things are happening! Nancy, the case isn’t worth it. Let’s do as that caller said. Let’s leave!”
CHAPTER III
An Enlightening Scene
ALTHOUGH Bess pleaded, Nancy would not consent either to leave the Van Pelt estate or to give up trying to solve the mystery of the dancing puppet.
Bess shrugged. “I suppose it’s no use, but I admit I’m worried.” She gave Nancy a searching look. “Probably you already have a hunch about this whole case.”
Nancy laughed. “A hunch, Bess, but not one good clue.”
Bess and George demanded to know what the hunch was.
“It’s possible there is hidden jealousy between the pros and certain of the amateurs,” Nancy told them. In a whisper she added, “I think we should watch everybody. The Spencers seem like fine people, but there may be some angle not noticeable on the surface. One of the amateurs may be trying to drive the pros out of here. On the other hand, the pros may be trying to get control and turn the theater into an entirely professional one.” Nancy suggested that the girls separate and each do some sleuthing. “Bess, suppose you keep an eye on Tammi. George, will you watch the comings and goings to the house? I’ll wander around the theater.”
The girls agreed. As Nancy walked toward the big red barn, she told herself she would phone her father and have him look up the record of each of the pros. “Maybe I’d better ask him to do the same with the amateurs,” she thought.
When she entered the theater Nancy was amazed to see how well equipped it was. On the paneled walls hung lovely paintings by local amateur artists. The stage was spacious and the scenery attractive. The audience half filled the place. Nancy slid into a vacant seat in the last row and in a few moments became fascinated with the Civil War play in progress. Some time had passed before she reminded herself she had come to do some sleuthing. The acting had been so excellent and the play so interesting that she had completely forgotten her work.
&
nbsp; But suddenly Nancy felt too weary to do anything but sit still. “Anyway,” she told herself, “the first logical bit of detective work might be just to watch the amateur performance closely.”
Presently the leading man, young Bob Simpson, walked on stage. He was about twenty years of age, very tall and dark, with darting, flirtatious eyes. After a short time, he was joined by Tammi Whitlock, who looked very attractive in her neat, trim bodice, long skirt, and ruffled silk bonnet.
As Nancy watched the stage, something suddenly dawned on her. The characters were doing a love scene, which Bob Simpson was playing convincingly, yet still only as an actor. Tammi, on the other hand, was putting almost too much into the lines, and it became evident to Nancy that the leading lady was very much interested in the leading man.
“I’m sure the feeling isn’t mutual,” Nancy decided, as the scene changed.
The play ended soon afterward, and the amateur performers took many curtain calls before the extremely enthusiastic audience.
Nancy made her way backstage. She was just in time to meet Bess, who whispered, “Wasn’t Tammi something in that love scene? She certainly overplayed it. I’m glad Bob didn’t fall for it. I just don’t care for that girl—and I don’t think Mr. Spencer does, either.”
“What makes you say that?” Nancy asked eagerly.
Bess reported that when the show was over, Tammi had waylaid Bob and impishly repeated some of the lines from the love scene. Bob had reddened, but before he could reply, Mr. Spencer had marched up to Tammi.
“Wow! Did he bawl her out!” Bess said. “He told Tammi she was making the performance seem like a grade school skit!”
Nancy smiled as she and Bess walked back to the house. One by one the actors and actresses, having changed clothes and removed their make-up, appeared in the hall. Most of them went directly to the parking lot and left. Others remained to talk. Bob Simpson had been among the first to leave, possibly avoiding Tammi.
Within half an hour everyone had left. Nancy and her friends got bottles of soda from the refrigerator and went up to Nancy’s room.
“Well, George,” said Nancy, “what’s your report?”
“Nothing to do with the dancing puppet,” George replied. “But I have a couple of other interesting items to tell you. There was a regular battle between Tammi and Mr. Spencer just before you girls came into the house. He said to her, ‘Young woman, keep your personal feelings out of this theater!’ ”
“And what did Tammi say?” Bess asked quickly.
Her cousin grinned. “For a second I thought she was going to hit him, but all she said to Mr. Spencer was, ‘And suppose you stay out of my personal affairs!’ ”
Bess was thoughtful a moment, then said, “Nancy, it just might be that Tammi is a jealous person. I’m certain she has heard enough about you to be afraid you’d give her some competition with Bob Simpson, and that’s why she didn’t vote to have you join the Footlighters.”
George laughed. “Bess, don’t ever tell that to Ned Nickerson,” she said, referring to Nancy’s special date.
Nancy blushed a bit, then asked George what else had happened.
“I don’t know if this has any significance,” George answered, “but during the performance, two of the actresses came out and went into a dressing room. Pretty soon I heard one of them crying.”
“Oh, what a shame!” Bess said sympathetically. “Did you find out why?”
George said the one who was crying was a girl named Kathy Cromwell.
“She’s Tammi’s understudy,” Bess told the others.
“But she has a part in this play,” said Nancy. “And she’s very good, too.”
“Yes, she is,” Bess agreed. “But only in her own part. Every time she rehearses the lines of Tammi’s part, she freezes or gets them mixed up. Poor Kathy! She’s a sweet girl—not a bit like Tammi. In fact, quite shy, except on the stage.”
Nancy reminded George that she had not yet told them why Kathy was crying. “Did it have anything to do with Tammi?” she asked.
“I don’t know. It could have,” George answered. “The only thing I heard her say was, ‘I can’t stand it another minute!’ The girl who was with her said, ‘Oh, Kathy, please—don’t let her get you down!’ ”
Bess’s eyes flashed. “I’ll bet anything they were talking about Tammi. Well, I’ll keep my eyes and ears open next time I’m backstage.”
Nancy had already started to undress, since she had had a long and exciting day. Bess and George said good night and left her. She slept soundly and did not waken until eight o’clock the following morning. When she left her room to take a shower, Nancy discovered that the door to Bess and George’s room was open.
“They must be downstairs,” she told herself. “I’ll hurry.”
Nancy bathed and dressed quickly. She found her friends in the kitchen getting breakfast. Three good-mornings were said at once, and George added, “Ham and eggs?”
“Umm—sounds perfect!” Nancy admitted.
The three girls sat down at a large, round table in a bay window of the kitchen. They ate heartily, enjoying a few leisure minutes, then washed the dishes and put them away.
“What’s first on the agenda?” George asked Nancy.
“I’d like to investigate the theater when no one’s in it,” Nancy answered.
Bess offered to straighten up their rooms. “You girls go on ahead. I’ll join you later,” she said.
George laughed. “You won’t have to make that offer twice,” she exclaimed. “I’ll take sleuthing with Nancy any time to bedmaking!”
The two girls stepped out to the kitchen stoop and walked underneath the covered arbor which led to a side door of the theater. The arbor was used by the actors to get back and forth to their dressing rooms. Grapevines climbed lazily over the trellis, giving the walk an artistic appearance.
The barn door opened into one side of the stage, where scenery stood piled against the rear wall. The opening set of the current play was already in place. Curious, Nancy and George gazed about but saw nothing unusual.
“Let’s try the small barn,” Nancy suggested.
They went outside and walked over to a sliding door that opened into the attached building. Inside was a small floor area with stables to the right. On the left, where the building adjoined the stage was a loft filled with hay.
Nancy’s eyes fell on a ladder leading to the hayloft. “Maybe this place holds a clue to the mystery,” she said hopefully. “Let’s go up and see.”
George followed her, and together the girls began to probe the hay. Presently George cried out, “Nancy—I’ve hit something!”
CHAPTER IV
Stage Gossip
STUMBLING across the hay, Nancy wondered what George had located.
“It’s hard and heavy,” George told her.
Nancy helped her friend pull the hay aside. “If this thing had been hidden much deeper, it would have fallen between the mow poles to the floor below,” George said.
Finally the object was revealed. It proved to be a heavy wooden chest.
“This is like lead!” George remarked. She tried to lift the lid of the box but failed.
Nancy took a turn. She frowned. “There’s no lock on this, but the box simply won’t open.”
For several minutes the girls took turns trying to pry open the mysterious little chest, without success. Suddenly Nancy said, “This reminds me of a box I once saw in the River Heights Museum. The attendant there showed me how to open the secret lock.”
Deftly she felt along the back, pressing hard with one thumb. To her delight, she struck the right spot. The lid of the chest flew up!
The two girls gazed within, then looked at each other completely astonished. The box contained two small cannon balls!
“There is just space in here for a third one!” George exclaimed. “That third one must have been the very ball that hit you yesterday.”
“Which would seem to prove,” Nancy added, “that som
ebody sneaked up with it to the attic when no one was in sight, and hurled it at me.”
The statement alarmed George. She began to look around fearfully and whispered, “Do you suppose anyone is hiding under the hay?”
“We’ll soon find out,” said Nancy, getting up from her kneeling position. “Let’s take a look.”
Once more the girls began kicking the hay that covered the entire loft. They found no one in hiding.
“I suppose we should remove this chest before someone else can do any damage with its contents,” suggested Nancy. But the two girls found the chest too heavy and awkward to carry. “Maybe it would be better if we get that cannon ball out of the attic and bring it here to see if it matches these,” the young detective decided.
“And if it does,” George said, “we’ll have one clue.”
She and Nancy hurried down the ladder and back to the house. Bess was amazed to hear what the girls had found and went with them to the attic.
“Do you think the person who threw the cannon ball is also connected with the puppet mystery?” she asked Nancy.
“I can’t say,” Nancy answered. “Not enough evidence to go on yet. By the way, let’s not all face in the same direction in case another attacker is up here.”
George stood guard at the head of the stairway, while Bess kept a sharp lookout for anyone who might be lurking in the attic. Nancy searched for the cannon ball.
“Why, it’s gone!” she cried out.
“Gone!” the others echoed. George added, “I guess the person who threw it is clever enough to remove any evidence against him.”
“You’re right,” Nancy agreed. “We’ll really have to be on our toes to catch this culprit!”
As the girls gathered at the top of the stairway, she added in a whisper, “I suggest we don’t go back to the haymow now, but watch it tonight. We may learn more then.”
Nancy further suggested that the girls not tell the Spencers or anyone else what they had discovered so far. “I’d like to pick up more clues first,” she said.

The Purple Fingerprint
The Picture of Guilt
Riverboat Roulette
The Singing Suspects
The Halloween Hoax
089 Designs in Crime
The Hidden Treasures
April Fool's Day
The Black Widow
Final Notes
The Haunting on Heliotrope Lane
The Runaway Bride
The Ghost of Grey Fox Inn
The Hidden Staircase
Mystery of the Winged Lion
Over the Edge
The Circus Scare
The Mystery of the Brass-Bound Trunk
Ski School Sneak
Designed for Disaster
The Clue in the Glue
Cold as Ice
The Ringmaster's Secret
013 Wings of Fear
The Secret of Shadow Ranch
Not Nice on Ice
Earth Day Escapade
Mystery of Crocodile Island
The Bungalow Mystery
Power of Suggestion
The Lemonade Raid
Model Crime
The Lucky Horseshoes
The Secret of the Old Clock
The Clue at Black Creek Farm
Pure Poison
Nobody's Business
Wrong Track
Chick-Napped!
Captive Witness
If Looks Could Kill
The Mysterious Mannequin
White Water Terror
Mystery of the Midnight Rider
Space Case
World Record Mystery
Hotline to Danger
The Red Slippers
A Crime for Christmas
A Musical Mess
The Dollhouse Mystery
Portrait in Crime
The Message in the Haunted Mansion
Playing With Fire
Mystery of the Tolling Bell
Cutting Edge
The Gumdrop Ghost
The Message in the Hollow Oak
Trial by Fire
Mystery at Moorsea Manor
Princess on Parade
The Flying Saucer Mystery
035 Bad Medicine
055 Don't Look Twice
The Haunted Showboat
Out of Bounds
Choosing Sides
031 Trouble in Tahiti
The Suspect Next Door
The Clue of the Black Keys
The Secret Santa
Race Against Time
027 Most Likely to Die
The Cheating Heart
Dangerous Relations
It's No Joke!
The Mystery of the Mother Wolf
097 Squeeze Play
Secret at Mystic Lake
The Double Jinx Mystery
The Walkie Talkie Mystery
The Case of the Vanishing Veil
The Mystery of the 99 Steps
The Stolen Bones
The Clue of the Dancing Puppet
The Sand Castle Mystery
A Model Crime
The Witch Tree Symbol
The Case of the Artful Crime
Mall Madness
Swiss Secrets
The Magician's Secret
Tall, Dark and Deadly
The Silver Cobweb
The Clue of the Gold Doubloons
False Impressions
Model Suspect
Stay Tuned for Danger
Secrets Can Kill
The Bunny-Hop Hoax
The Cinderella Ballet Mystery
The Secret at Solaire
Trash or Treasure?
The Missing Horse Mystery
The Lost Locket
The Secret of the Wooden Lady
Password to Larkspur Lane
Movie Madness
A Secret in Time
The Twin Dilemma
Candy Is Dandy
Murder on Ice
Dude Ranch Detective
The Slumber Party Secret
The Clue in the Old Stagecoach
Danger on Parade
Big Top Flop
Strangers on a Train
087 Moving Target
The Scarytales Sleepover
The Mystery of the Fire Dragon
The Carousel Mystery
The Eskimo's Secret
Thrill on the Hill
032 High Marks for Malice
Enemy Match
Poison Pen
Lights, Camera . . . Cats!
Lost in the Everglades
Strike-Out Scare
Third-Grade Reporter
Sea of Suspicion
Wedding Day Disaster
The Make-A-Pet Mystery
The Ski Slope Mystery
Pony Problems
Candy Kingdom Chaos
The Sign in the Smoke
The Wrong Chemistry
Circus Act
Sinister Paradise
This Side of Evil
Deadly Doubles
The Mystery of the Masked Rider
The Secret in the Old Lace
The Pen Pal Puzzle
Without a Trace
Whose Pet Is Best?
Dance Till You Die
Trail of Lies
Mystery of the Glowing Eye
The Clue of the Leaning Chimney
The Crook Who Took the Book
Danger for Hire
Thanksgiving Thief
Intruder!
The Hidden Window Mystery
Win, Place or Die
Danger in Disguise
The Best Detective
The Thanksgiving Surprise
Stage Fright
The Kitten Caper
Stolen Affections
The Phantom of Nantucket
Date With Deception
Cooking Camp Disaster
The Mystery at Lilac Inn
Springtime Crime
Action!
Into Thin Air
The Chocolate-Covered Contest
025 Rich and Dangerous
Bad Times, Big Crimes
078 The Phantom Of Venice
The Stolen Kiss
Running Scared
The Wedding Gift Goof
Time Thief
The Phantom of Pine Hill
The Secret of the Forgotten City
The Emerald-Eyed Cat Mystery
004 Smile and Say Murder
Curse of the Arctic Star
Dinosaur Alert!
The Case of the Photo Finish
Kiss and Tell
Sisters in Crime
The Clue in the Diary
084 Choosing Sides
Haunting of Horse Island
Vanishing Act
The Big Island Burglary
Danger at the Iron Dragon
Pets on Parade
Something to Hide
The Strange Message in the Parchment
On the Trail of Trouble
Heart of Danger
The Snowman Surprise
Model Menace
Flower Power
The Great Goat Gaffe
081 Making Waves
Famous Mistakes
The Fashion Disaster
The Clue in the Jewel Box
The Clue of the Whistling Bagpipes
Make No Mistake
Greek Odyssey
Flirting With Danger
Double Take
Trouble Takes the Cake
Turkey Trouble
The Day Camp Disaster
The Secret in the Old Attic
The Baby-Sitter Burglaries
Recipe for Murder
The Secret of the Scarecrow
Cat Burglar Caper
Turkey Trot Plot
Scent of Danger
The Clue in the Crossword Cipher
010 Buried Secrets
A Talent for Murder
The Triple Hoax
The Clue of the Velvet Mask
Last Lemonade Standing
The Ghost of Blackwood Hall
The Black Velvet Mystery
Double Crossing
Hidden Meanings
Trouble at Camp Treehouse
An Instinct for Trouble
037 Last Dance
038 The Final Scene
Duck Derby Debacle
The Pumpkin Patch Puzzle
Hidden Pictures
Buggy Breakout
California Schemin'
Clue in the Ancient Disguise
Case of the Sneaky Snowman
034 Vanishing Act
A Script for Danger
The Flower Show Fiasco
Shadow of a Doubt
Easy Marks
Alien in the Classroom
Ghost Stories, #2 (Nancy Drew)
The Bike Race Mystery
False Pretenses
The Kachina Doll Mystery
Designs in Crime
False Notes
The Haunted Carousel
Bad Day for Ballet
Very Deadly Yours
The Fine-Feathered Mystery
Circle of Evil
The Crooked Banister
005 Hit and Run Holiday
The Spider Sapphire Mystery
The Swami's Ring
The Secret of the Golden Pavilion
Recipe for Trouble
Betrayed by Love
The Bluebeard Room
Sweet Revenge
Illusions of Evil
006 White Water Terror
High Risk
Sleepover Sleuths
The Clue on the Crystal Dove
The Stolen Unicorn
The Professor and the Puzzle
The Elusive Heiress
Stalk, Don't Run
The Mystery at the Moss-Covered Mansion
The Tortoise and the Scare
028 The Black Widow
Big Worry in Wonderland
Crosscurrents
The Dashing Dog Mystery
Fatal Attraction
The Clue of the Broken Locket
The Stinky Cheese Surprise
Mystery of the Ivory Charm
A Race Against Time
Cape Mermaid Mystery
085 Sea of Suspicion
058 Hot Pursuit
The Secret in the Spooky Woods
The Mysterious Image
Fatal Ransom
The Stolen Show
The Sinister Omen
The Secret of Mirror Bay
Rendezvous in Rome
The Perfect Plot
The Mystery of Misty Canyon
Nancy's Mysterious Letter
The Snow Queen's Surprise
The Clue in the Crumbling Wall
Dare at the Fair
Scream for Ice Cream
A Star Witness
002 Deadly Intent
Museum Mayhem
The Moonstone Castle Mystery
The Whispering Statue
The Scarlet Slipper Mystery
Mystery at the Ski Jump
Hot Pursuit
My Deadly Valentine
The Silent Suspect
Deep Secrets
False Moves
The Zoo Crew
Diamond Deceit
The Sky Phantom
015 Trial by Fire
The Quest of the Missing Map
Babysitting Bandit
Don't Look Twice
Never Say Die
The Soccer Shoe Clue
Pool Party Puzzler
The Case of the Lost Song
The Apple Bandit
No Laughing Matter
The Thirteenth Pearl
Sabotage at Willow Woods
Butterfly Blues
Model Crime 1
The Nancy Drew Sleuth Book
Mystery by Moonlight
Club Dread
The Clue in the Camera
118 Betrayed By Love
The E-Mail Mystery (Nancy Drew Book 144)
Stay Tuned for Danger: Circle of Evil
Model Menace 2
California Schemin': Book One in the Malibu Mayhem Trilogy
Zoo Clue (Nancy Drew Notebooks)
False Pretences
151 The Chocolate-Covered Contest
Close Encounters
The Emeral-Eyed Cat Mystery
Boo Crew
The Message in the Haunted Mansion (Nancy Drew Book 122)
A Nancy Drew Christmas
149 The Clue Of The Gold Doubloons
A Date with Deception
101 The Picture of Guilt
The Secret in the Spooky Woods (Nancy Drew Notebooks Book 62)
The Wrong Track
Lights! Camera! Clues!
The Vanishing Act
Lights, Camera . . .
Model Suspect 3
160 The Clue On The Crystal Dove
163 The Clues Challenge
Ghost Stories (Nancy Drew)
Space Case (Nancy Drew Notebooks Book 61)
164 The Mystery Of The Mother Wolf
148 On The Trail Of Trouble
The Walkie-Talkie Mystery
The E-Mail Mystery
Intruder (Nancy Drew (All New) Girl Detective)
The Stolen Relic [Nancy Drew Girl Detective 007]
105 Stolen Affections
An Instict for Trouble
161 Lost In The Everglades
The Old-Fashioned Mystery
Perfect Plot