It wasn’t an exact mirror
image, but it was close. At seven
o’clock the next morning, Drew Lawrence opened his door and glanced down the
hallway to his right. At exactly the
same time, Renee Lawrence opened her door and glanced down the hallway to her
left.
“Renee,” whispered
Drew. “Do you have any idea where Edward
is?”
“No,” said Renee. “I was going to ask you the same thing about
Carol.”
“She’s not around either?”
said Drew. “That’s funny. I wonder where they went.”
Renee shrugged. “I hope they’re alright.”
“Odd,” said Drew. “Maybe they’re already downstairs for
breakfast.”
There was no sign of the two
downstairs, though. Schlegel and Bourdon
were already there, eating and having an argument about cars.
“You can park twice as many
of them on the street as you can a regular car,” said Bourdon. “They save so much space!”
“Sure, they do,” said
Schlegel. “A Fiat also takes less space
in the junkyard after a truck bulldozes it because the driver couldn’t see it.”
“That could happen to any
car,” Bourdon argued.
“True, but with others, you
at least have some chance of survival,” said Schlegel.
“Good morning,” said Mr.
Hallett, wandering into the room. He sat
down and began helping himself to a plate of pancakes on the table. “How is everybody?”
Schlegel dropped his glass
of orange juice. “Drat!” he said, his
voice sounding a little distant. “Better
before I dropped this, John.”
“Here, let me get you some
napkins,” offered Mr. Hallett.
“Thank you, but I can clean
this up myself,” said Schlegel, staring at Mr. Hallett with a queer
expression. “Sleep alright last night?”
“Sure, I slept fine,” said
Mr. Hallett. “What about you?”
“Yes,” said Schlegel,
mopping up the last few drops. He began
chewing a pancake thoughtfully—until he accidentally bit the tip off his fork.
“I’m glad you’re here,” said
Bourdon. “I can’t seem to make Schlegel
here understand the practicality of Fiats.”
Mr. Hallett laughed. “You’re on your own, Jean-Luc,” he said. “I can’t understand it myself. Where are Carol and Edward?” he asked his “children.” “Are they still sleeping?”
“We don’t know,” said
Drew. “Edward wasn’t around when I woke
up.”
“Neither was Carol,” said
Renee.
Schlegel stared at the group
with a look of intense contemplation.
Then, he started, as if an idea had just come to him. As soon as that look had crossed his face, it
was gone, and he was back to his pancakes.
“Not around?” said Mr.
Hallett. “That’s funny. I don’t know where they are, either. Did they leave a note or anything?”
“Carol might have,” admitted
Renee. “I didn’t search the room that carefully.”
“Hopefully they didn’t go
exploring,” said Schlegel. “California
can be a dangerous place at night.”
“Oh, I’m sure they didn’t,”
said Mr. Hallett. “Carol and Edward are
way too responsible for that.” I think, he thought to himself, though I’m really not sure.
“Morning, dear,” said Mrs.
Hallett. “Where are Carol and Edward?”
“I was just going to ask you
that,” said Mr. Hallett. “They’re
missing.”
“Missing?”
“We don’t know that for
sure,” said Drew. He laughed. “Maybe they got up for an early round of
billiards.”
“Peculiar,” said Mr.
Hallett. “Steve, have you seen Carol or
Edward this morning?”
“Good morning, John,” said
Blaine, walking in. “No, I haven’t. Why?”
“Excuse me,” said Schlegel,
pushing past Blaine and heading through the door.
Bourdon poured himself
another cup of coffee. “Ah, cappuccino!”
he said. “You light up my mornings like
none other can!”
“I wouldn’t worry, John,”
said Blaine, sitting down. “This is a
big house. They’ll probably turn up
sooner or later. I think they’re old enough
to take care of themselves.”
Schlegel returned. “Hey!” he said. “Where’s my car?”
“Your car?” said
Blaine. “The BMW? Wasn’t it in the garage?”
“It’s not there now,” said
Schlegel. “I just checked.”
“Don’t look at me!” said
Bourdon. “It was too big for me!”
“I didn’t use it,” said
Hallett. “I haven’t been to town since
yesterday.”
“Did your wife take it?”
Blaine asked.
“No, she’s still sleeping,”
said Schlegel. “I’m going to call the
police! That’s a valuable car. It’s a special edition! If your petty California auto thieves so much
as scratch the door, I’ll hold you responsible, Blaine!” With that, he stomped out of the room.
“Missing kids and stolen
cars,” said Blaine. “What a morning!”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
By ten o’clock, there was
still no sign of Carol, Edward, or the missing car. The police were looking for the car. They were not searching for Carol or
Edward. Mr. and Mrs. Hallett hadn’t told
the police about them, thinking their “children” might be off doing spy work. Schlegel had agreed, when he’d heard they
weren’t planning to tell.
“It’s too early,” he
said. “They have to be missing at least
48 hours for you to file a missing persons report. We all saw them at dinner last night.”
All the police had discovered,
so far, was that whoever had taken the car had made a strangely sharp turn to
get past the front gate. They had no
other leads and had left to investigate other cases.
Drew borrowed the
Quattroporte and headed out for a drive, hoping to find out himself what had
happened to his siblings. Renee,
meanwhile, remained at the Blaine mansion.
She searched her room thoroughly, only to find that Carol had left her
compact. She did remember how Carol had
moved her bed the night before.
“As if she was waiting for
something,” Renee thought to herself, “but what?”
Renee’s fancy gadget was a
stuffed purple unicorn. The heart on its
chest slid open to reveal a computer screen.
She activated it and reported Carol and Edward’s disappearance back to
Washington. She’d just put the unicorn
back in its hiding place when the door opened and a familiar figure came in.
“Carol! Where were you?”
Renee’s older sister looked
tired, disheveled, and worried. Urgently, she put a finger to her lips. She grabbed a notepad and wrote, “Where’s
Schlegel?”
Renee read it and
shrugged. “Probably in his room. Why?” she wrote.
Carol took back the notepad
and wrote two words. “It’s him.”
“Really?” Renee mouthed.
Carol nodded.
“You and Edward—” Renee
mouthed.
Carol nodded again. She walked over to her compact and picked it
up. Flipping it open, she placed her
fingerprint on the scanner. However, the
device wasn’t going to work this time.
Low
Battery flashed the screen before going black.
Carol grimaced and turned to
her sister. “May I borrow your unicorn?”
she mouthed.
Renee nodded and went to get
it. Carol, meanwhile, flopped down on
her bed. She drummed her fingers
nervously against the bedpost, anxious to report to Washington.
Then, the door flew open.
“Schlegel!” exclaimed Carol.
“Did you have a nice ride
last night?” Schlegel asked.
“What ride—”
“Don’t ‘what ride’ me. You know full well what I’m talking
about. Very clever.” Schlegel rubbed his hands. “I was sure it would be your father in that
car last night, not you and your brother.
I never suspected you all until this morning. You had me going for a while. It’s all four of you, right?”
Carol gulped.
“That’s all I need to know,”
said Schlegel. “My boss will be very
happy to know.”
“Germany?” asked Carol.
Schlegel laughed. “Hah!
You think? No, Germany’s my cover scheme. I’m an official ambassador for them, but my
loyalty’s with the Donnerreich.”
“The Donnerreich?”
“You’ll be one of the first
Americans to know. We’re a small but
powerful subset of the German navy.
Originally, we were a special squad, assigned to only the most important
missions. We carried out our job so
well, the government allowed us to work without supervision. That played right into our hands. We longed to make Germany an even greater world
power, and that’s what we’ve set out to do.
Right now, we’re in the building stage.
Once we’re ready, we’ll go out and conquer. By the time we’re done, the Germans will be
happy to hand over full power to us, and we will be totally and completely in
charge.”
“So that’s why those
submarines weren’t accounted for at the Graz Conference,” said Carol.
“You’ve got it,” said
Schlegel. “One of them is docked just
off the coast at this moment, in fact.
The moment your Mr. Blaine finishes his invention, those plans will be
transferred to it. The American government
will never see them.
“Unfortunately,” he
continued, “I can’t have you running around telling everybody about this. You understand, of course. A car accident would have been the perfect
way to get rid of you, but there are other ways. For you, I think we’ll use an overdose on
allergy medi—HUH!”
Schlegel clasped a hand to
his side before collapsing, unconscious.
The vent popped open on the
ceiling, and Renee dropped out of her hiding place, unicorn in hand. “I think you heard all that,” she said to her
gadget. “We’ve got him under control
now. Carol and I will—oops, it looks
like she’s fainted.”
Don’t blame Carol. She’d been through a lot over the past twelve
hours.
I knew it was Schlegel all along!
ReplyDeleteAh yes, purple unicorns...typical spy material...