A cold front arrived in
Blackwell the next day, bringing with it a steady drizzle that doused the whole
town. It was one of those days where the
sun seemed to have given up on rising all the way; thick clouds made it
abnormally dark outside. All over town,
folks left their radios and TVs on in case of tornado warnings.
It was the perfect
weather for brooding, and in the little house on 8th Street, that
was exactly what Auburn Reynolds was doing.
She’d tossed and turned all night, battling her imagination when she was
awake and her nightmares when she wasn’t.
That morning, she’d feigned slumber until her parents left for work,
just so she wouldn’t have to talk to them.
Auburn didn’t much feel like talking to anybody, after what she’d found
out the night before.
She stared out at the
droplets, forming little rivers in ditches on both sides of the road. For whatever reason, she suddenly felt
thirsty, but this didn’t prompt her to do anything, other than sigh. I
really don’t want to see Brittany today, she thought to herself.
Why would she? The first time she’d met Brittany, she’d been
curious about this club that no one liked but everyone (except her) was
in. The second time she’d met Brittany,
she’d figured out that Brittany was in the club against her will, and that the
club’s mission wasn’t all it was cracked up to be. At that time, Auburn had entertained visions
of being able to get Brittany out of the club, to tell the whole town exactly
what Richards was up to, to put an end to the fear that gripped everyone from
the ages of ten through eighteen.
Now, though, she knew the
reason for the hold.
It’s
terrible, she brooded to herself. The
police aren’t going to break up the club; they’ve got no idea that kids are
committing these crimes. The kids don’t
want to do them, but they can’t stop because Richards’ll kill someone special
to them. Richards knows…ha! He won’t do anything about it.
Glumly, Auburn stood up
and wandered over to her computer, deciding that maybe a radio show would get
her mind off last night. She mentally
mulled over her list of favorites, then settled on The Green Hornet…which, as she soon remembered, was not the best
choice for forgetting a problem like this.
“The Green Hornet!” an
announcer declared. Buzzing followed,
then the theme came on—Rimsky-Korsakov’s “Flight of the Bumblebee,” aptly
chosen for a show such as this one.
Nothing incensed Auburn
nearly so much as when she mentioned the show to somebody, and they said, “Oh,
the superhero?” “No! The Green HORNET, not the Green LANTERN!” Though the name had that superhero ring to it,
it actually referred to a master criminal that terrorized—whatever city the
show was set in. The metropolis may have
been based off New York, though it was never named.
The criminal, however,
was none other than Britt Reid, editor of The
Daily Sentinel, one of the city’s largest newspapers. He’d assumed the secret Green Hornet identity
to stop crime, not to commit it. In
fact, if you listened to a lot of the episodes (which Auburn did), you’d notice
that the only illegal things he ever did were knocking people out with a gas
gun, breaking and entering buildings, and occasionally accepting money from
crooks for crimes he never went on to commit (these funds always wound up
anonymously in some charity). The
Hornet, as he was called, was never recognized because he always wore a mask
(presumably green, though this was radio, so that was just speculation), yet
his trademark seals always showed when he was “involved” in some crime. His “Black
Beauty,” a specially engineered automobile that could travel over two hundred
miles an hour, helped get him from Point A to Point B in a flash. Of course, this car was only used while Reid
was the Hornet. To get to work, he used
more standard equipment (never named).
Though the Sentinel often
got the scoop on the Hornet’s latest caper, few suspected Reid’s role in the
adventures. This was partly because Reid
was very good at covering his tracks.
Only one man knew he was the Hornet; this was his “faithful valet Kato,”
whose life Reid had once saved, as the story goes. Unlike some sidekicks, Kato was quite
capable, and no one was going to find out who the Hornet was from him. Reid had also spurred the Sentinel to issue a reward for the
Hornet’s capture, a move of sheer genius.
What criminal would offer a reward for his own capture? Reid’s standing in the city helped keep him
out of suspicion too; everyone knew Britt Reid was a hundred percent against
rackets of any sort, and he’d do anything in his power to stop them. They just didn’t realize that anything
included taking on a criminal identity in order to smash the Underworld from
the inside-out.
“He hunts the biggest of
all game—public enemies that even the G-men cannot reach!” That line always brought back good memories
for Auburn. Back when she lived in
Kansas City, she and her dad had been driving back from a baseball game. It was ten o’clock at night, and the team
wasn’t that close to the town they lived in, so Mr. Reynolds and his daughter
weren’t likely to get home until eleven.
To help pass the time, Mr. Reynolds shoved a cassette (the library
system at the time still had them) of an early Green Hornet episode into the
tape deck of his 2001 Chevy Silverado.
The tape hadn’t been playing for more than fifteen seconds when Auburn
said, “Daddy? What does that line mean?”
Mr. Reynolds, who also
enjoyed the show, hit pause before responding.
“It’s like this, kiddo. A lot of
the ‘criminals’ in this show couldn’t just be arrested. Some of them did bad stuff without violating
a specific law, and you’ve got to break a law to go to jail. Others made threats to the only people that
could tell the police about them. By
pretending to be a criminal, the Hornet could trick other crooks into actually
doing something illegal, or he could threaten people that weren’t talking and
get information from him that way. That’s
what made him so effective.”
“Oh,” was all Auburn had
had to say at the time, but she’d never forgotten that moment. Usually, hearing that line made her happy, as
she thought of the home run ball her dad had run down and given her at the
game. Right now, it made her think of
Richards.
Just
like a Green Hornet criminal, she thought to
herself. He hasn’t actually broken the law…the kids are the ones doing all the
work, and he hasn’t acted on any of his threats. Plus, the police aren’t going to investigate
him…they’d probably get fired if they did.
He’s done the opposite of the Hornet…he’s built up a good reputation to
get away with evil! Oh, if only the
Green Hornet were real!
Auburn listened glumly to
the start of the show, in which the Hornet had to rescue the daughter of a man
who was investigating a graft ring.
(Graft, for those of you who don’t know, is just a good, old-fashioned
word for corruption.) The story was
exciting, but it did nothing to cheer up Auburn…until, ten minutes in, a
thought popped into her mind.
Why
don’t you pretend to be the Green Hornet?
That’s
ridiculous, Auburn told herself.
I’m the last person in the world
who could take on Richards and his club…
Then, she realized with a
start that she was the only person.
Richards’s kids weren’t going to turn him in. The police weren’t going to investigate him. Richards wasn’t going to incriminate
himself. Auburn was the only person that
could actually go after him without putting her loved ones at risk.
But
what could I do? Auburn thought to herself. Threaten
the club members? If Richards were
threatening their lives, I could get them to talk, but they’re not going to breathe
a word as long as their loved ones are in danger…
The solution hit Auburn
like a Freightliner going sixty-five miles an hour down I-35. It was one of the most absurd ideas she’d
ever had, yet at the same time, one of the simplest and most brilliant. The more Auburn thought about it, the more
she realized how brilliant it was.
Richards
can’t get at the relatives if someone else gets them first.
Initially, Auburn
shuddered. That wouldn’t help anything, if they’re all dead…but it would help a
lot if they all disappeared. If Richards
didn’t know where they were, he’d have no way of getting at them. But the club members can’t just send them
away…Richards will suspect them if something happens. The only way the relatives can safely
disappear is if someone kidnaps them…
Auburn shook her head. No. There’s too many things that can go
wrong. For one thing, where would I hide
a bunch of kids? Not here, that’s for
sure. They’d take up too much space.
Immediately, she thought
of the article about the abandoned hotel in downtown Blackwell. That place should have more than enough space
for “guests,” and no one would be probing around to discover them.
But
if all Richards’s holds are younger siblings, thought Auburn, then they’ll all be nine years old or
younger. I won’t be there all the time
to keep them entertained, and they’ll probably wander outside once they get
bored…
Then, Auburn remembered
what else she’d read in the article. The
building had once served as a toy warehouse, and much of the inventory was
rumored to still be there…
That
would make it easy, if it’s true, thought Auburn. But I’m
no criminal! How am I going to make a
ton of kids disappear and get away with it?
The
same way Richards gets away with all his crimes,
another thought answered. The police will be looking for a seasoned
criminal, not a girl that spends most of her time indoors. You’d be their last suspect.
Maybe
it CAN work, Auburn told herself, but I don’t have a chance unless I know
who’s on Richards’s list AND unless I know a little more about the hotel. If that place isn’t a toy warehouse, and if I
can’t get a hold of the list, my plans are sunk.
Well,
why don’t you go find out?
Auburn didn’t have a good
answer to that one, so she paused the episode, went to the coat closet, grabbed
an umbrella, and headed out…on a mission to become the most effective kidnapper
in the state of Oklahoma.
Let's hope the hotel has a surplus of Legos...
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