Every Mystery Begins Somewhere

Maplewood is the kind of town where porch lights stay on a little longer, old newspapers remember more than they should,
and mysteries have a habit of finding Captain Harlene and Bud.

Featured Mysteries

Every case leaves a clue behind

The Ridiculous Rabbit On The Roof

A Rooftop rabbit.
A town full of whispers.
Captain Harlene’s First Case Begins

The Great River Race

A Rooftop rabbit.
A town full of whispers.
Captain Harlene’s First Case Begins

The Magic Lantern

A Rooftop rabbit.
A town full of whispers.
Captain Harlene’s First Case Begins

Case Files & Junior Investigations

Download clues, solve mysteries, and become part of the investigation.

Junior Investigator Kit

Printable Detective Badge
Clue Notebook Page
Investigator Creed
Fingerprint Sheet

Puzzle Files

Mini Mysteries
Logic Puzzles
Hidden Clue Games
Decode The Mystery Activities

Maplewood Gazette Archives

Newspaper Clippings
Rumors
Timelines
Mysterious Sightings

Captain Harlene's Notes

Things I’ve Noticed
Questions Without Answers
Clues Worth Remembering
Notes From Maplewood

From The Desk of Captain Harlene

Mysteries aren’t always about missing things.
Sometimes they’re about noticing what everyone else forgot to see.

Grandfather once told me that the world leaves clues everywhere — in quiet streets, old newspapers, and the way people look at each other when they think nobody notices. He also said something else I never forgot: that most people aren’t really looking for answers. They’re looking for someone who finally sees them. Sometimes I think that’s why he noticed things nobody else did. He could sit quietly longer than anyone I’ve ever known. Like he understood that the world speaks softly on purpose. When I was little, I used to think he already knew how every mystery ended. Now I think he just paid attention to people when everyone else was too busy hurrying past them. I think that’s why I keep my notebook close.

Maplewood is full of strange things: lights that stay on too late, whispers carried through alleyways, newspapers that remember more than they should, and stories waiting for someone brave enough to notice them. If you’ve made it this far… maybe you already understand something Grandfather was trying to teach me. The world moves fast. Faster every year. People hurry past each other. They stop noticing things. They stop listening. Sometimes they even stop wondering.

But mysteries don’t disappear just because the world gets louder. They wait quietly for someone kind enough, and patient enough… to notice them. I think that’s why Grandfather always carried a notebook. Not because he was afraid of forgetting clues. He was guarding against forgetting moments. The way rain sounds against old windows. The way newspapers smell before sunrise. The look on someone’s face when they finally feel seen.

I think that’s why mysteries matter so much to me. Not because they’re about secrets. But because solving them reminds people that the world is still full of wonder…and that someone cared enough to look a little closer. Bud says I still ask too many questions. He’s probably right. But maybe questions are how we remind each other that we care, that we’re paying attention.

Thank you for visiting Maplewood.

Keep your notebook close. And keep the people you love even closer.

Captain Harlene and Bud
Maplewood, Colorado

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