Often, you get in trouble
for bringing the fire department to your house on nonexistent emergencies. In the Andersons’ case, though, it was an
emergency—though not a fire-related one.
The firefighters more than understood when they heard the Andersons’
story—as did the police, who Frank had expected would come along. Officers Kurtz and Muller showed up, as
usual.
“Slick Jackson,” Kurtz instantly
identified the Oklahoma City crook.
“Mugs Barnette was with him, I’ll bet.”
“We saw him earlier, but
he escaped,” Frank said. “There’s
another one in the living room over here.”
Wandering in to examine
the still-unconscious crook, Muller whistled.
“Colin Koenig!”
“Koenig?” exclaimed
Kurtz. “He’s in on this too?”
“I don’t know his name,
I’m afraid,” Nancy said. “We weren’t
asking questions when he clambered through the window.”
Kurtz came in and took a
look. “Yep, that’s Koenig alright. This is serious. It means Hill’s in on the deal!”
“Hill?” said Frank. “Who’s that?”
“You don’t want to know,”
Muller said, sarcastically.
“Vince Hill. One of the toughest racketeers this side of
Oklahoma City. He’s got a record as long
as your arm. Just got out of McAlester a
few months ago, which means he’s way overdue to go back in. Sentences will fix some birds—they won’t fix
Hill. He’s a bad egg, all around—and a
toughie. You kids better watch your step
around him!”
“Vince!” said Frank. “The guy who shot Bob!”
“Huh?”
Frank quickly explained
about the incident at the car dealership, much to Kurtz’s interest. “What does he look like?” Frank continued.
“Hang on—I’ll show
you.” Pushing a few buttons on his
phone, Kurtz pulled up a photo of a man a long face, buzz cut, square jaw, and
a jagged scar running down his left cheek.
“Scary looking!” said
Nancy. “I’ll watch out for the scar.”
“You won’t see it, if
he’s up to no good,” Kurtz said. “He
usually has makeup on when we pick him up.
This was just his mug shot.”
“Do you know where he
lives?” Louis asked.
Kurtz shook his
head. “He shows up for parole for about
a week, then beats it. If he just stayed
in hiding, we might never catch up with him, but he always has to come out and
get involved in another crime. Once that
starts, he’s not as good at covering up his tracks. We’ll get him eventually.”
“As long as he doesn’t
get us first,” Nancy said, giving the photo one last look. Hill’s eyes glared back at her like those of
a man who’s out of his mind—and maybe Hill was.
Many crooks are.
That didn’t make tussling
with him any more pleasant, however.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Around nine o’clock the
next morning, a shiny, red hot rod drove up and parked itself on the curb
outside Boyd Street. It was Zach Green,
and his presence was no surprise to the Andersons, who instantly popped out the
front door and raced across the yard to the vehicle. Frank and Nancy hopped in front—Louis and
Susan clambered into the back. Reaching
into his pocket, Frank pulled out a piece of paper.
“Drive us to 2450
Normandy Terrace in Oklahoma City,” Frank said.
“I traced the warning call we got last night, and it wasn’t a payphone. Not unless they’ve got one in the middle of a
neighborhood.”
Zach whistled as they
drove off. “Normandy Terrace is no
payphone,” he said. “I’ve heard of that
area. You think the homes in Brookhaven are
big—wait’ll you see the ones there!”
“Well-to-do?” Nancy
asked.
“Kevin Durant lived there
when he was with the Thunder,” explained Zach.
“Well, Ronald Detwiler
lives there now,” Frank said. “I don’t
think he was the one who made the call, unless his voice was really high. It must have been made on his phone, though.”
“A friend of his,
perhaps?” Zach asked. “Or a family
member?”
“The thing I can’t figure
out is who could have made that call,” continued Frank. “It wouldn’t have been the kidnappers
themselves, so presumably it was someone trying to help us. Why didn’t they identify themselves, though?”
“There probably just
wasn’t time,” said Nancy. “They only
gave us three minutes’ warning. There’s
only so much you can say in a minute.”
“If they weren’t related
to the gang, though, then how did they know what the gang was up to?” said
Frank. “Was it a kid, or just an adult
with a high voice—or, someone disguising their—” He shook his head. “Hopefully, this visit will clear up all our
questions.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
True to Zach’s word, the
houses were huge. So huge, in fact,
there was a large fence surrounding the development, clearly designed to keep
people out. All roads leading in had
gates, and Zach worried as he drove up he might not be able to access the
area. Fortunately, a Fed Ex truck was
pulling out just as the Bel Air drove up, and Zach went on through like he’d
been expected.
“That’s the nice thing
about this car,” he said, patting the steering wheel. “It looks fancy enough to belong in a
neighborhood like this.”
“Look at the size of
those buildings!” Louis marveled. “I
wonder how many bathrooms that one has.”
“Six, possibly!” Nancy
commented. “Maybe seven!”
“I think that’s the one
we want,” Zach said, pulling up to the curb.
“The one with the turrets on front!”
Susan stared up at the
cavernous structure. “I’d love a house
like that!”
What greeted their eyes
was a gigantic, tan-brick structure. It
was only two stories tall, but they were pretty long stories. Just the front part of the house was as wide
as most one-story houses in Norman, but there were two huge wings wrapping
around to the back. Turrets rose up at
the corners, with quaint, old-fashioned gables topping them off. It was the picture of luxury—except for the
area over on the left wing where a temporary fence, scaffolding, and a trash
pipe indicated that renovation was going on.
Still, temporarily incomplete, the mansion was a gem.
“Who wouldn’t?” said
Frank, hopping out. “Nancy, you come
with me. The rest of you, wait
here. I don’t think anything will happen
to us, but if something does, get help at once.”
Zach made an OK symbol
(OK the expression, not OK the state).
“Will do! Good luck!”
As she walked up the
sidewalk with her brother, Nancy glanced at the driveway and laughed. “They may have a lot of money, but that doesn’t
stop them from owning an old clunker,” she said, pointing to a car with a sheet
over it.
Frank shook his
head. “Sometimes the rich become rich
just by adopting better spending habits than the rest of us—in other words, not
spending so much. Each dollar you save
is a dollar you’ll have later on. Once
those add up—well, let’s just say there are a lot of millionaires who shop at
Walmart, too. It’s the secret to their
success,” he said, ringing the doorbell.
“Trees are pretty thin,”
Nancy said, glancing around. “This house
can’t be very old. Oh, look! There’s a wren!”
The little bird fluttered
over to a branch, landed, and let out a “Peep!”
It repeated itself, then hopped along the branch until it came to a bird
feeder, which it quickly peeked into.
Almost immediately, it flapped its wings and flew away.
“Aw, poor birdie,” said
Nancy. “There’s no food in it—”
“Yes, what is it?”
The door had been opened
by a short, blond-haired man with a black-and-white striped jacket and khaki
pants on. It wasn’t the traditional
butler outfit, but Frank and Nancy didn’t really care whether they were dealing
with a butler or not. If the man was
surprised by his guests, he didn’t show it.
“Hi,” said Frank. “Are you Mr. Detwiler?”
“No, I’m afraid he’s not
available at the moment,” replied the man, who made no move to introduce
himself. “What do you want?”
“I’m Frank Anderson, and
this is my sister, Nancy,” Frank said.
“We—it’s very strange—we got an odd phone call last night, and the number
to this house came up on the caller ID.
I was wondering if someone here had been trying to get in touch with
us!”
“Last night?” asked the
man. “What time?”
“9:27,” replied Nancy.
“Afraid I can’t help
you,” the man replied. “Detwiler was out
late—so were the rest of us. No one was
around until 10:30. If someone made a
call at 9:27, we didn’t know about it.”
“I see,” said Frank. “Figures.
Well, thanks for the help.”
Nodding, the man shut the
door. Nancy frowned. “Friendly fellow, isn’t he?”
“I wonder,” said Frank,
wandering back towards Zach’s car. Even
as he did so, he snuck a glance over to the driveway again. “Do you see what I see?”
“What, the car?” Nancy
asked. “The one with the tarp over it?”
“What kind do you think
it is?”
Nancy shrugged. “You’re the car expert, not me. Is it important?”
“I’ll say!” Opening the car door, Frank started to ask
Zach a question. “Is that a 1970—”
“Chrysler Three Hundred?”
Zach finished. “Sure looks like it from
here!”
Nancy gasped. “The same kind Brittany was driving?”
“Not necessarily the same kind,” said Frank. “Perhaps the same one. The same, specific one!”
His eyes narrowed. “I think this
bears further investigation.”
What is in the bird feeder???
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