“Hasn’t been seen in two
days?” Frank said. “What happened?”
“That’s what we’re trying
to figure out,” the voice on the other end said. “Who are you, first of all?”
Frank quickly introduced
himself, and the speaker on the other end did the same. It was Officer Porter of the Blackwell Police
Department—he’d been by the McPherson home to update them on the case. So far, the Blackwell Police hadn’t made much
progress either.
“No trace of the girl, no
ransom calls, nothing,” Porter said.
“Seems like she just disappeared into thin air.”
“What does she look
like?” Frank asked.
“Oh, well, she was
seventeen. Shoulder-length brown hair,
freckled face—”
“That’s the one!” Frank
exclaimed.
“Come again?”
Frank quickly explained
to the officer about the letter that Stephanie had received the other day, and
about the license plate at the card shop.
Porter listened intently, very interested in the information. As Frank finished his story, the cop asked—
“What time was that?”
“Time?” Frank thought a moment. “You know, I don’t think the guy said. It was Johnny’s Sports Cards and Collectibles
in Oklahoma City, though. You can check
with the owner. He might remember.”
“We’ll do that,” Porter
said. “Brittany was last seen in
Blackwell that day around one o’clock, by a customer at the gas station she
worked at. Two hours later, another
customer came by. He said the building
was locked, and her car—hold on a second.”
Frank heard muffled
voices on the other end—one Porter’s, the other too far from the phone to make
out. Then—
“Yes, her car wasn’t in
the parking lot. If the girl at the card
shop was there about two hours later, it probably was her.”
“I’ll bet it was,” said
Frank, “but what might have prompted her to come to Oklahoma City?”
“That’s what we’re
wondering,” Porter said. “She didn’t
even have her regular car with her that day.
The one she normally drove was stolen a couple weeks before—”
“Stolen?” Frank said.
“Yeah, we’ve been having
a slew of auto robberies around here lately.
The one she usually drives is a light blue Toyota Camry—don’t remember
the year, but it’s from the days when they had those flat, narrow
headlights. That one was stolen. The one she was driving when she disappeared
was a brown Chrysler Three Hundred. Both
cars had Oklahoma plates—781 JQX for the Camry and 482 DDO for the Chrysler.”
“Hm,” said Frank. “What about the car belonging to Ernest
Wright?”
“That one was stolen two
days ago—”
“Yes, I know that,” said
Frank. “What did it look like, though?”
“Oh, that?” Porter asked. “White Chevrolet Impala. Five years old. Body had a lot of scratches, and the car was
well overdue for a wash.”
“Do you think whoever
stole that one was responsible for stealing Brittany’s car?” Frank asked. “The Toyota, I mean.”
“It’s possible,” said
Officer Porter. “So far, we’re checking
any lead that comes our way.”
“I see,” said Frank. Translation,
he thought to himself. They haven’t made any progress yet. “Interesting.
Well, I hope the card shop clue helps you all out. If I find out anything more about her
disappearance, I’ll be sure to let you know.”
He quickly gave Porter his contact information. Goodbyes were exchanged, and then both
parties hung up.
Stifling a yawn, Porter
wandered across the McPherson’s living room, in the direction of the front
door. His shift was almost over, and he
was looking forward to a nap. Suddenly,
he straightened as a thought struck him.
I
should have told that kid about the other missing girl!
he thought to himself. Oh, well.
It’s not like he’s a detective or anything.
If only Porter had heard
of the Andersons…Frank might have picked up a valuable clue.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Nothing eventful happened
the rest of the day, as far as the case went.
The excitement of the morning melted into a boring afternoon for the
Andersons—Frank included, even though he didn’t stop working on the case. He spent the rest of the afternoon thinking
about all that the Andersons had learned, but by the time evening rolled
around, he felt no closer to the case than Rhode Island is to Mexico. After dinner, Frank was totally happy to head
downstairs and watch a baseball game with his sister, Nancy. The Cubs had the day off, so the two had the
Rangers-Twins game on. Both teams were
facing off at Globe Life Park, home of the Rangers.
“Here’s the 3-2 pitch to
Beltre,” the announcer said. “Fouled
back, high out of play.”
“It’s always a foul on
3-2,” groaned Nancy. “Why doesn’t he
just take a walk?”
“I wouldn’t mess with
Beltre’s style,” Frank defended the hitter.
“It’s gotten him 3,000 hits so far.
I just wish I could see what was going on as well as he sees the ball.”
“See what’s going on?”
Nancy was confused by Frank’s not-so-clear analogy. “Going on with what?”
“The case,” said
Frank. “We made so much progress today,
and yet, we’re still so far away. The
way I see it, there are four different possibilities, though I may be missing
some.”
“The 3-2 pitch to
Beltre. Low, ball four, for a leadoff
walk.”
“Possibility number
one. Brittany and Stephanie disappeared
independently of each other. There is
absolutely no connection between the disappearances.”
“I doubt that,” Nancy
said. “Why would those men have held us
up when we went in the card store that day?”
“Could be it was because
they knew a package had been left for Stephanie,” Frank said. “They knew if anyone other than her tried to
pick it up, someone else would be working on the case.”
“Jonathan Lucroy steps
up. He’s batting .253 this year, but his
power numbers are down…”
“Uh-uh,” Nancy wasn’t
convinced. “Brittany was worried about
something in that letter we got today.
It wasn’t even finished—it was obviously written right after she dropped
off the plate. While it’s technically
possible that the disappearances were unrelated, it seems like too much of a
coincidence. I think we’d be wasting our
time pursuing that lead.”
“Lucroy swings and
misses. Strike two. [Kyle] Gibson working quickly for the Twins.”
“Yes, I suppose you’re
right,” said Frank. “Then, the
disappearances were probably related. That
leaves us three possibilities. Brittany
disappeared around Oklahoma City, and Stephanie—goodness, we don’t have any
idea where she disappeared!”
“We don’t even know that
Brittany did disappear in Oklahoma City,” Nancy said. “We just know that was where she was last
seen.”
“Swung on and missed,
Lucroy goes down on strikes.”
“Right,” said Frank, “but
they were both last seen fairly close to each other. Norman, Oklahoma City—easily close enough for
them to be related.”
“Napoli now the
hitter. He leans in for the pitch—Gibson
digs in. He throws—ooh, that caught
Napoli square on the shoulder! He’s
tossed the bat away and is jogging for first base—doesn’t seem to be in any pain…”
“So, it looks like it
comes down to what happened to Brittany,” Frank went on. “Maybe she saw the car get stolen in
Blackwell, followed it, took the plate, ran from the thieves, and went all the
way to Oklahoma City to hide it.”
“Gibson makes a throw
over to first base—Napoli back standing.
I don’t know why he’s worried about the runner—Napoli runs like a
hamstrung steer.”
“Why would she go so far,
though?” Nancy wondered.
“To make sure it was
safe?” Frank said. “In that case, she
might be hiding out with someone she knows in Oklahoma City. She can’t show herself for fear that she’ll
be caught, and Stephanie was kidnapped because the crooks thought she could
give them a lead—or, she was intercepted when she was going to meet Brittany.”
“Drew Robinson’s at the
plate. Robinson’s scuffled lately—going
to need to work to get that batting average up…”
“Why was the letter cut
off, though?” Nancy said.
“Because she was being
chased,” Frank said. “She may have
outwitted her pursuers—”
“Or, she might not have,”
Nancy said. “Either way, Stephanie
didn’t know where to go.”
“She knew to go
somewhere, though,” Frank said. “She was
driving somewhere when she disappeared.
If only we knew where it was.”
“Then we’d have the case
solved,” said Nancy. “I’d say it’s more
likely, though, that Brittany followed the car to Oklahoma City. It’s a bit more central of a location than
Blackwell.”
“Why would the thieves
bring it here, though?” Frank asked.
“3-0 to Robinson—let’s
see if he has the green light here.
Gibson sets, then pitches—called for a strike. He wasn’t swinging.”
“Maybe they’re connected
with the ones in Oklahoma City—you know, the case Dad’s been working on. Blackwell’s two hours away, but that’s not
terribly far. It could be the same
gang.”
“Pretty big one, if it
is,” Frank said.
“3-1 to Robinson—swung on
and missed that time, strike two. Gibson will be in pretty big trouble here, if
he walks Drew.”
“Supposing it was,
though,” Nancy said. “They took the car
here, Brittany followed it, and she dropped the license plate off in Oklahoma
City because she didn’t get a hold of it until Oklahoma City. It doesn’t seem likely that she’d drive two
hours south, just to hide a license plate belonging to someone she barely knew.”
“Gibson sets—the
pitch. Outside, ball four, and they’re
loaded! Robinson showed good patience
that at bat—had to lay off some tough pitches.”
“Yeah, that seems more
likely,” Frank said. “Or, there’s
another one. They disappeared because
the thieves wanted to steal their cars.
Brittany may have stumbled across the crooks, but Stephanie might have
gone missing because her car was hijacked.
If multiple people were involved, they could have overpowered her and
stolen the car that way.”
“And we’ll see if Gallo
can put some muscle on one,” the announcer said. “It’s all or nothing for Joey, who has more
home runs than singles this year.”
“Maybe,” said Nancy. “Only…only, it looks like Stephanie was
working on the case. Remember, we think
there was a letter missing from Brittany’s stack. Presumably, Stephanie had it with her when
she went missing.”
“First pitch to
Gallo—outside, ball one. No place to put
him, with the bases loaded.”
“That’s right,” said
Frank. “Or, Brittany could have eluded
her pursuers and escaped capture, but Stephanie could have been caught looking
for her. Or, Stephanie could have
deliberately dropped out of sight, and they might both be free. Or, both girls could—oh, I don’t know. It’s too confusing.”
“The pitch by Gibson—ball
two to Gallo, and Gibson looks confused.
Those last two pitches were nowhere near the strike zone. If Joey Gallo’s not swinging at them, then
you know they’re bad!”
“I think they were both
kidnapped,” Nancy said. “Brittany went
missing, Stephanie went looking for her—came too close—went missing
herself. Both were on to the Blackwell
car thefts somehow. Whether those tie in
to the ones Dad investigated or not, we know there’s an Oklahoma City
connection.”
“Pitch thrown by
Gibson—swung on and missed by Gallo! He
threw a curveball on a hitter’s count, and it fooled Joey completely. If he can repeat that pitch, he can get out
of this inning unscathed.
“There’s not much proof,”
Frank said.
“We don’t need to prove
anything yet,” Nancy reminded her brother.
“We just need to know which leads to follow up. Once we find Brittany or Stephanie, we’ll
have all the proof we need.”
“Gallo takes ball
three. Full count now.”
“You’re right,” said
Frank. “I don’t know what the next step
is, but hopefully, we’ll come up with something. Maybe there’ll be another break in the case.”
“The 3-2 on the
way—fouled out of play, left side.”
“I remember seeing Gallo
in Oklahoma City,” commented Nancy, focusing now on the game. “He’s got more power than Stanton,
practically! Boy, I wish I could go to
another 89er game.”
“Dad and I are going
tomorrow,” Frank said.
“You are?” Nancy
said. “I thought he was working late?”
“Hit foul again, right
side this time.”
“He is—at the game,”
Frank grinned. “Mom’ll drop me off—I’ll
say hi to him, then watch the game.
Afterwards, we’re going out to eat.”
“Lucky,” Nancy said. “I wish I could come too.”
“Kurt Suzuki’s out to
talk to Gibson. Suzuki and Gibson work
great together. They’re always hanging
out in between innings, discussing strategy.
I can’t think of a better pitcher-catcher tandem on the Twins than those
two.”
Frank pulled a ticket out
of his pocket. “That was the general
idea,” he said, passing it to his sister.
She looked at him in
surprise. “You mean—”
“We’ve been planning to
bring you all week,” Frank said. “Dad
just said to wait until tonight to tell you.
He wanted it to be a surprise!”
“Awesome!” Nancy
exclaimed. “I’ll go find my glove after
this half inning.”
“The payoff pitch from
Gibson—swung on, hit in the air, deep to left—there’s no doubt about this one
folks! That ball is gone! Touch ‘em all, Joey Gallo! He clears the bases with a grand slam, and
the Rangers now lead, 7-4!”
This is not going to be your average baseball game...
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