Monday, March 5, 2018

Chapter 10: Who Is ADR?


It took a while for the Andersons to get back to the police station.  First, the exit off of I-240 had to be closed off.  Four more cars hit the slick before Anderson and Rivera made it back to the main road with flashlights, to warn drivers not to take the exit.  Of those four, two actually did go off the road.  Ambulances were required, but they couldn’t go right up to the accident.  Special work trucks had to be brought in to clean up the mess before the tow trucks could even reach the crashed cars.   All told, it was about an hour by the time the group finally reached the police station.  Five officers were in the main room when the Andersons walked in, and Mr. Anderson could tell by their faces that the news wasn’t good.
“They lost the truck?” he asked Rogers, a former Texan who worked the night shift.
The officer nodded.  “Yalp.  It’s a durned shame our roadblocks didn’t work. We had I-44 blocked, all them exits stopped up, and he still gets by!  Ain’t a trace of an Atlas truck all night.”
“Not a one?”
“Walp, the closest we came was an Allied truck.  You know’s well as I do that it couldn’t have been the same one.  Atlas is Rangers colors—Allied is—uh—it’s, uh—
“Orange,” finished Frank.  “Clemson Tigers.”
“Yeah, that’s what I was going for.  Other than that, nothing.  The road’s emptier than downtown Normangee[1] on a Tuesday evenin’—except at the roadblock, where we’ve got them cars all bottled up.  ‘Course, maybe he’s just takin’ it slowly—”
“No, that wouldn’t be it,” sighed Mr. Anderson.  “He must have slipped through our fingers somehow.”  Sitting down in his chair, he pounded his desk disgustedly.  “If only it weren’t for that oil!”
“At least we know where he’s going!” Nancy said.  “Somewhere southwest of the city.”
“Did you get a look at him at all?” Mr. Anderson asked, glancing up at his son.
Frank shook his head.  “I was too busy ducking, but I’ll remember that voice again if I ever hear it.  Pretty deep-sounding—”
“Any voice would sound deep compared with that car dealer,” a fair-haired officer spoke up.  His nameplate identified him as Evans.
“What happened to him?” Frank asked.
“Banged up, but he’ll live,” Evans said.  “We’ll interview him as soon as he comes to, which hopefully won’t be long.  Apparently, he knew something about the gang—”
“I think he knew where their hideout was!” Frank said excitedly.  “He said something about, ‘They’ll be taking you off to that Subway they hide—,’ and then the other fellow came in.  I ducked, and—hey, who turned out the lights?”
The others stared at him questioningly.  “Uh, no one, Frank,” his sister replied.  “It’s perfectly bright in here—”
“No, I mean at the car dealership,” Frank said.  “When I hit the floor, the lights went out just before the shots were fired.”
“Shooter, mebbe?” Rogers said.  “Keep yuh from seein’ him?”
“No, he would’ve needed the light to be able to hit Bob,” Frank said.  “The way he wanted to, I mean.  Plus, there was someone else in the room!”
“Someone else?” exclaimed Evans.  “Who?”
“I don’t know,” said Frank, “but after the shots were fired, the door to the showroom slammed, and I heard running footsteps.  A few seconds passed before I started to get up.  Then, the door to the lot popped open, and someone else went running out—”
Nancy gasped.  “We saw that!”
“Did you get a look at the figure?” Frank asked.  To his surprise, his father shook his head.
“All we saw was the door open,” Mr. Anderson explained.  “When Nancy and I reached it, I looked around, but there wasn’t anyone in sight.  Whoever came out must have hidden among the parked cars while we went inside.”
“Unless it’s that dude in the truck,” Rogers suggested.
“No, that couldn’t be it,” said Frank.  “Whoever took the door to the lot couldn’t have gotten to the truck that fast.  There must have been two people besides Bob and myself.  Oh, if only we’d thought to look for the second one!”
“They’re probably miles away by now,” Mr. Anderson said.  “Were they there together, I wonder, or had the second one come for a different reason?  They didn’t leave with each other, obviously.”
“I think we need to go back to the dealership and have a look around,” Frank said.  “Maybe there’s something we missed.”

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Four policemen were already searching the office when the Andersons returned.  One of them was a little more familiar than the rest.  A look of surprise came over Mr. Anderson’s face as he saw who it was.
“Sellers?” he said.  “I thought you had the night off!”
His friend groaned.  “I thought I did too.  Between the Harcourt case and this, Jennings is calling out every man he can get his hands on.  Fortunately, I get to go back to bed as soon as we finish searching the place.”  He pointed around the room.  “Give it a look.  Maybe some less tired eyes will spot something I didn’t.”
Mr. Anderson nodded.  “Anything interesting, Bottomley?” he asked the officer in charge, a tall man with an unusually long mustache that bobbed up and down as he talked.[2]
“A few items,” the officer said in a very serious tone.  “First, we managed to identify one of the cars in the parking lot.  See that blue Kia Optima, parked under the streetlight out there?”
The others followed his pointed finger.  Nancy nodded her head.  “Paint looks nice and sparkly.”
“It is,” said the officer.  “That’s because it’s new.  Same with the Kia brand and the Sorento letters.  Henderson and Williams both examined it and figured out it was actually a Mitsubishi Mirage, rebuilt to look like a Kia.  There aren’t a whole lot of Mitsubishis in Oklahoma, so it was pretty easy for us to find out where it came from.”
He pulled a piece of paper out of his pocket, then cleared his throat.  “The car’s registered in Wisconsin, but it was stolen in Oklahoma.  Its owner’s a Marine vet.  When he retired, he moved to Blackwell—”
“Blackwell!” repeated Frank.  “Another connection!”
“Exactly,” Bottomley stated.  “It seems that the Blackwell car thieves are disposing of their merchandise down here—”
“Bigger market for it,” Mr. Anderson agreed.  “Anything else?”
Sellers wandered over and picked up a book.  “Record of all the stolen cars Bob got.  They were half of his inventory.”
“I’m surprised they weren’t all of it,” Mr. Anderson said.  “No, I’m not surprised.  All would be suspicious.”
“It’d be a lot more suspicious if we knew what we were looking for,” Bottomley said.  “All the cars got heavily reworked.  New paint jobs, new upholstery—part replacement to cover up any habitual squeaks or perpetually misfiring warning lights.  Henderson and Williams also spotted two Fords that were really just Chevrolets with different body work put on!”
“All from Blackwell?” Mr. Anderson asked.
Bottomley shook his head, in ignorance.  “The book didn’t say, but we’re checking on it.”
“What about Subway?” Frank asked.  “Any mention of it?”
“Funny you should ask,” Sellers said.  “There was a wrapper from a foot-long in the trash can.”
“An analysis of the food particles would seem to indicate it was a spicy Italian sub on multigrain bread, with Italian dressing as the topping,” spoke up Officer Jacobs, the forensics man on the team.
“That doesn’t say which location it came from, does it?” Sellers asked, somewhat sarcastically.  “No?  Just wondering.”
“I’d be surprised if it was the same location,” Nancy remarked, “considering Bob wasn’t supposed to know about it.”
Frank wasn’t listening.  He’d been staring around at the walls of the room.  Now, suddenly, he darted over to the showroom door and flicked the lightswitch.
Nothing happened!
The officers stared at him curiously.  “What did you do that for?” Bottomley asked.
“Just a hunch,” said Frank.  There were two switches on the panel, and he tried the other one.  Also, no change.  The lights stayed the same.
Darting back across to the lightswitch by the door to the lot, he then tried that one.  The lights went out—then quickly came back on as the switch was released.
“The switch by the showroom door doesn’t work,” Frank said.  “That means that the person who fired the shots didn’t turn the lights out.  Whoever did was standing right by this door.”
“How could they, though?” Nancy asked.  “Wouldn’t you have seen them?”
“Not necessarily,” said Frank, glancing around.  “There’s a little room between the filing cabinets and the wall.”
“Not much, though,” noted Bottomley.  “I doubt I’d fit back there…”
His voice trailed off as he watched Frank squeeze in.  “Oof!  It’s tight, but doable,” he called, his muffled voice wafting out from behind the cabinets.  “I guess whoever was back here—hello, what’s this?”
“What’s what?” Nancy asked.
Frank didn’t answer, and when he reemerged a moment later, he wasn’t holding anything.  However, he promptly hit the ground, then reached back into the space behind the cabinets.  After groping around for a few seconds, his hand reemerged, holding—
“A keychain,” Mr. Anderson said, staring at his son’s find.  “A monogrammed keychain.”
“ARD,” read Nancy.  “An abbreviation for Ardmore?”
Frank shook his head.  “No, silly.  These monograms always have the first initial on the left, the middle on the right, and the surname one capitalized in the center.  Whoever dropped this has the initials ADR, and it’s not Bob.”
“Where was it exactly?” Bottomley asked.
Frank pointed back behind the cabinet.  “Over behind that second one.  You’ll notice it’s made of rubber, and the little loop that’s supposed to go around a keychain is broken.  My guess is that it got caught on something while whoever was back here was struggling out, and it fell off without their noticing.”
“ADR was back here, then,” said Nancy, looking at the keychain.  “Colors are green and yellow.  Wonder who he is?”
“Or she,” said Frank.  “Like I said, I didn’t have much time to see them.  It was impossible to tell for sure.  I do know this, though.”  He stared at the keychain.  “If we could find ADR, they’d be a big help in solving this case.”

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The Andersons finally made it home around three o’clock in the morning.  If they thought the rest of their family would be waiting for them, they were mistaken.  Mrs. Anderson, Louis, and Susan were all sound asleep—they didn’t find out a thing about the previous night’s adventures until breakfast the next morning, when Frank filled them in on the details.
Mr. Anderson and Nancy slept late, but Oklahoma City’s best police officer (at least, that’s how his family referred to him) didn’t get the day off.  After a hearty meal that would be labelled breakfast if it was eaten a few hours earlier, Mr. Anderson left for work.  He arrived shortly after noon, then called Frank to give him some updates.
“Bob came to at four o’clock this morning.  The officers that interviewed him said he seemed pretty cooperative, but he wasn’t that helpful.  He’d overheard a couple of the gang members talk about storing cars at ‘the Subway,’ but he didn’t know which one they were referring to.  Besides that, he didn’t seem to know anything else—names, other dealerships, anything.  Not quite as promising as we’d hoped.”
“I see,” said Frank.  “Still, the Subway clue seems promising.  Has any work been done on that?”
“Been going on all day,” Mr. Anderson said.  “Police across the city have searched of all the Subways in Oklahoma City—starting around the I-44 corridor, then spreading to surrounding locations.  We even had the police in Moore, Edmond, and the other towns nearby check there’s out.  Nothing so far, but there are a few locations we haven’t checked yet.”
“Well, hopefully something will pan out,” said Frank.  “How about the other stolen cars?  Have you traced them?”
“Those cars are from all over the state!” Mr. Anderson said excitedly.  “Five or so were from Oklahoma City, but the others came from places like Enid, Ardmore, Lawton, Tulsa—we even found one from Altus.  They’re all ending up here!”
“All over the state?” exclaimed Frank.  “Did they go missing in Oklahoma City?”
“No, they went missing in their towns,” Mr. Anderson said.  “We even have camera footage of one of the ones from Lawton being stolen in that city.  These thieves are just transporting them here to sell.”
“Well, what do you know?” said Frank.  “Funny how ones from Tulsa are popping up here.  That’s a big enough place to sell a car.”
“The thieves must be headquartered around here,” Mr. Anderson explained.   “Otherwise, they wouldn’t need to bring their vehicles from Tulsa.”
“I see,” said Frank.  “Well, keep us posted.”  Hanging up, he told Nancy the news—she’d come to the living room to see what the conversation was about.
“They’re coming from all over,” Frank said.  “This means the thefts must be related.  Boy, are we making progress on this case!”
“Yes, but we still haven’t found Stephanie or Brittany,” said Nancy.  “Not a trace, and finding them’s our most important job!  I hope they’re alright!”


[1] Small town in the part of Texas Rogers was from.
[2] As Bottomley talked, not as Anderson talked. Just to be clear.

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