Zach radioed Frank a
minute later to let the Andersons know he’d pulled up to the curb. The boys came out with their new friend, whom
they quickly introduced. Minutes later,
the police showed up. Auburn hid in the
car while the police were around, and by the time Zach and company left, no one
else had spotted her.
“Whew, that was close,”
said Auburn. “Thanks for helping me—I
really appreciate it!”
“No problem!” said
Nancy. “Frank told me about what you did
in Blackwell. It’s an honor to meet you
at last.”
“You find out anything else
about the case?” Dick asked.
“Oh, a few things,” said
Auburn. “For instance, Hill’s not
actually in charge of the gang.”
“I thought so,” said
Dick. “That thing he said about the
boss—”
“I’ve heard them talk
about him before,” Auburn said. “Never
seen him, though. Apparently, he spends
all his time at the base, along with a bunch of other thugs. They alter the cars there—paint them
different colors, switch the upholstery—sometimes even rebrand them. Then, they send them off to the different
dealerships.”
“We found Stephanie’s car
at that one,” Frank said.
“I guess they don’t take
anything older than twenty years,” Nancy commented. Auburn quickly nodded.
“Too rare. More recent models blend in better. Plus, there’s always a demand for their
parts. Apparently, there’s a couple used
parts stores that don’t do legitimate business.”
“That’s not surprising,”
said Frank. “You know, I get the
impression that the Subway we’re looking for isn’t in Oklahoma City at
all. Remember what Hill said? The Oklahoma
City Police will have trouble finding it?”
“Them specifically,”
noted Dick. “Well, they would have
trouble if it’s outside their jurisdiction.”
“Exactly,” said Frank,
“so it’s probably not in Oklahoma City.”
“Where do you suppose it
is, then?” Nancy asked. “Norman, Moore?”
Frank shook his
head. “Too close. Probably somewhere further out of town. I think we can rule out the north, though,”
he observed. “If those men were storing
the cars in Guthrie or Perry, they wouldn’t have needed to come all the way to
Oklahoma City from Blackwell.”
“Probably means it’s not
east or west of Blackwell,” Auburn added.
“Otherwise, why would they have gone straight south?”
“Which would imply that
it’s somewhere southeast or southwest—or due south—of Oklahoma City. Which reminds me, that moving van was headed
towards Chickasha and Lawton. Maybe the
Subway was located along I-44 somewhere.”
“Which one, though?” Zach
asked. “There are a lot of towns in
between those places, as well. Searching
all the Subways would take a while.”
“There are only so many
Subways in each town, though,” noted Frank.
“Let’s keep that in mind for tomorrow.
I’ll give you a call around nine.”
“There’s something else I
don’t get,” Nancy said. “How do those
stolen library books fit in?”
“What library books—oh,
Stephanie’s? I almost forgot about
them.” Frank thought a second. “They don’t seem to have anything to do with
the case.”
“I don’t think we can
rule them out, though” Nancy said.
“Stephanie wasn’t kidnapped at home—the crooks had no need to visit her
house. They wouldn’t have done so unless
they had a specific reason. There must
be a clue in one of them.”
“What could that be,
though?” Frank asked. “One’s about an
inventor—the other’s about vehicles.
It’s not like they have the location of the Subway written in them.”
Nancy shrugged. “I don’t know,” she said, “but I think we’ll
need to find out if we’re going to solve this case.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It took a little
convincing, but Frank managed to get his father to accept the house arrest
idea—as far as Auburn was concerned. She
wasn’t allowed to leave unless one of the Andersons was with her. That, however, meant any of the
Andersons—Susan included. For that
evening, Auburn roomed with Nancy, who had a spare bed set up in her room specifically
for visitors. The girls talked late into
the night before finally drifting off to sleep.
Nancy was still sleeping early the next morning when the phone rang.
“You think it’s for her?”
Frank asked Auburn, as he got up from the breakfast table.
“I can go get her, if it
is,” Auburn offered.
Frank shook his
head. “No, I’ve got a response picked
out. Nancy? Oh, I’m sorry, but she can’t come to the
phone right now. She was trying to fix a
cut on her lip with superglue, and now her mouth won’t open. If you’ll call back next week…”
Auburn laughed as Frank
picked up the phone. “Anderson
residence. Frank speaking!”
“Hi, Frank!”
“Dad! You got to work fast!”
“I must have missed every
single red light—except that one for Berry, but I was turning right,
anyway. Just thought you’d like to know
that Detwiler, the guy who’s supposed to own that house you went to, isn’t
mixed up with the gang at all. He’s got
a good alibi.”
“How good?” Frank asked.
“He’s been dead for five
years.”
Frank nodded. “That’ll hold up in court. How did Hill get there, then?”
“As near as we can
figure, he’s been living there off and on since Detwiler’s death. There were a bunch of legal complications
with his will, and the place would’ve been abandoned if it weren’t for
Hill. Now, we know why his hideouts were
so hard to find.”
“I see,” said Frank. “Any sign of him, or any clues on who the big
boss is?”
“Negative.” Mr. Anderson
said. “Let me know if you all find out
before I do.”
“We will,” said Frank,
“as soon as we get a chance. Love you,
bye!”
Hanging up, he quickly
explained to Auburn what the alibi was.
She nodded. “Those crooks are
pretty tough, that’s for sure. What’s
our next move?”
Frank glanced towards the
door. “Well, I wanted to go by Ashley’s
house this morning and update her on our progress. She didn’t answer the phone earlier when I
tried to call. However, Nancy will
probably want to go along, and she’s still in bed…”
“Any idea when she’s
getting up?” Auburn asked, wondering why a grin was coming over Frank’s face.
“Sure,” Frank said. “Soon.
Real soon.” He wandered over to
the kitchen sink, opened the cabinet underneath, and pulled out—
Auburn’s eyes
widened. “You’re going to use a Super
Soaker?”
“Sure,” Frank said,
speaking over the rush of water as he loaded the gun. “I’ve done it before.”
“Does she like it when
you do that?”
Frank shut off the
water. “She’ll like getting to see her
friend, and that’ll make up for any inconvenience she might experience. Be back in a flash.”
He raced from the room,
weapon dripping.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
“For goodness’ sake,
Nancy! Say something! You’ve been quiet this whole walk!”
As they wandered up the
Dales’ street, Nancy gave her brother a wry grin. “Huh?
Oh, sorry. I guess I was too busy
thinking of how to get back at you for your little performance this morning.”
“At least your brother
only shoots you with a water gun,” Auburn said.
“Now, mine…”
Nancy stared at her new
friend in horror. “What does he shoot
you with?”
“Nothing.” Auburn laughed. “I’m an only child.”
“Well, the girl you’re
about to meet has siblings,” Frank told her.
“Two brothers and four sisters.
There are seven kids, altogether.”
Auburn smiled
wistfully. “Sounds nice,” she said. “Even one sibling would be great. It gets lonely at home, all by yourself—”
Nancy interrupted,
pointing at the house. “What’s that
police car doing in the driveway?”
“Police car—” Frank’s
eyes widened as he saw the squad car.
Quickly, he broke into a run, followed by Nancy and Auburn. The three charged up in a run to the front
door, just as it opened and—
“Officer Hanson!” Nancy
exclaimed. “What’s going on?”
Hanson (who’d just been
leaving) jumped. “Oh, it’s you all,” he
said. “Don’t worry, nothing happened
here. I just had some information for
the Dales.”
“Oh?” Frank’s curiosity
was at its peak. “What was it?”
Ashley appeared beside
the officer at the door, her face glowing with excitement. “He saw Stephanie!”
“Really?” exclaimed
Nancy. “When?”
“Well, just before she
disappeared, I guess,” said Hanson.
“It’s nothing too dramatic—in fact, I’d forgotten about it, until
today. At 7:30 five nights ago, I was watching
for speeders on Classen when I saw a maroon Mercury Grand Marquis run a red
light—”
“Maroon Mercury Grand
Marquis!” Frank exclaimed. “Stephanie’s
car!”
“She was driving.” Hanson shifted nervously to his other
foot. “She seemed a little upset about
something, but I figured that was because she’d run a red light. She seemed like a nice kid, so I let her off
with a warning. She thanked me, got back on the highway, and took the exit ramp
for Route 9—”
“Route 9?” said
Frank. “Tecumseh or Chickasha?”
“Well, let me think,”
said the officer. “It was the second one
headed south—Chickasha. I’m sure of
it. That’s the last I saw of her. When I remembered this morning, I figured I
ought to let the Dales know.”
“Thanks for telling us
too,” Nancy said.
Officer Hanson nodded at
the group, then wandered back to his car.
As he got in, Nancy glanced at Frank.
“Are you thinking what I’m thinking?”
“A Subway in Chickasha!”
Frank said. “Call Zach—tell him to meet
us at our house. You can come too, if
you’d like, Ashley. We’re going to visit
every Subway in Chickasha…until we find the right one.”
I bet Nancy has a better prank planned...
ReplyDelete