big black backpackâ my old backpack. With Dadâs compass still attached to the loop.
The fabric looked cleaner. âWhat did you do to it?â
âCheck this out.â He reached inside the pack and pulled out a device that looked like a phone, along with a small, black plastic box. He pushed the red button on the side of the device, and it lit up. âThis is a tracking device.â The screen showed a map, with a bunch of red dots clustered together. Henry handed it to me.
âWhat am I supposed to do with this?â I asked, looking at the red dots. They werenât moving.
âJust wait,â Henry said with a glint in his eye. He opened the small plastic box and took out a stack ofâ
âStickers?â They had little Eiffel Towers on them and said: Jâaime Paris. I guessed that means I Love Paris .
âNot just any stickers.â Henry took one, and ran across the penthouse hotel room. âIs it moving?â he called from another room.
I looked at the red dots. âNot really.â But then one of the dots slid away from the others. âWait, is that you?â
âYup.â Henry walked back, grinning big. âCool, right? Thereâs a tracking mechanism in there, so thin, I was able to work it into a sticker.â He took the other stickers and put them back in the box. âI only had time to make three, so donât go crazy out there.â
âI promise to control my sticker frenzy.â
Henry took the tracking device, turned it off, and slid it into the backpack, along with the plastic box of stickers. I wasnât sure who I was supposed to track with those, but then it couldnât hurt, right? Henry pulled out another device, which looked suspiciously like a simple voice recorder Iâd seen Mom use for schoolwork. âSay something,â he said, pointing the thing in my face.
âUhm, hello?â I pulled away and heard the recorder spit out in a fancy ladyâs voice, â Bonjour ?â
âItâs a translator,â Henry said, all excited. âIt translates stuff from English to French.â
I took the recorder, which was pretty light. âYou made this?â
Henry waved dismissively. âNo need, you can buy these things off the internet. It comes with earbuds, in case you donât want everyone else to hear what it translates.â He handed me a cheap set of buds, like the kind that came with my MP3 player. âOh, one more thing: the battery life on this thing is terrible. So donât keep it running unless you really need it.â
âIâll remember that.â
Henry turned off the translator and tucked it into my backpack. âMost people in Paris speak English, so you probably wonât need it a lot.â
Next, Henry pulled a container that looked like a tube of lip balm out of the front pocket. âNow this is really cool. I call it the Tickstick.â He put the container, which looked very ordinary, between his thumb and index finger. âSee that seal?â He carefully moved the Tickstick until it was just inches away from my face. There was a sticker taped over the cap, to seal it, like when you bought one new at a store.
âYeah, I see it.â
âWhen you twist the cap and break the seal,â he whispered, looking right into my eyes, pausing dramatically, âBOOM!â
I jumped.
Henry relaxed and put the Tickstick back into the little front zipper pocket. âWell, not until ten seconds later anyway. So you have to run once you twist the cap.â
I wiped my sweaty palms on my pants. This junior agent gear was beginning to worry me a little.
âThatâs why I call it the Tickstick, see? It ticks like a bomb but looks like a lip balm.â Henry looked proud.
âVery smart.â
âJust donât go blowing up the Eiffel Tower, all right?â
âIâll try not to. I mean, itâs not like Iâll actually need
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