"The Case of the Mysterious Man" Part 2 - by Ha
 
 
"Hmmm."  Blake studied the big hard rock on the desk.  Shirley had
invited him over to see her attic, which was set up like a crime
laboratory.  He picked it up, trying to find out what it was.
 "It's petrified mammoth dung,"  Bo told Blake.  "Very rare."  He
remembered how disgusted he felt when he discovered that fact while
playing with it one time.  The idea that he was juggling ancient animal
excrement was very disturbing to him.
 "Really?"  Blake looked at Shirley.
 "Really," Shirley said.
 Blake held the dung to his face for a closer look, much to Bo's
amazement.  "Fascinating."
 Putting the dung back, Blake noticed the portrait of Sherlock Holmes.
"Is that who I think it is?"
 "It is."  Shirley stood next to the painting.  "He's my great-grand
uncle."
 "I thought he was just a fictional character," Blake stated, taken
aback that there really was a Sherlock Holmes.  "I have all the
Sherlock Holmes mysteries ever written.  Doyle based Holmes on a
surgeon he knew, Joseph Bell."
 "Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's stories about Sherlock Holmes were based on
some of his actual cases," Shirley explained.  "Doyle heard about him
and was reminded of Bell.  Sherlock allowed Doyle to publish the
stories so that criminals won't believe he actually existed."
 Blake was impressed.  "Well, I see where you got your love of
mysteries."  He grinned at Shirley.
 Shirley tried her best not to blush.  "Bo and I have solved quite a
number of them."
 "Oh yeah."  Bo was beginning to feel left out before Shirley mentioned
his name.  "We've pretty much solved every mystery we've come across.
You could say I'm the Dr. Watson of this team."
 "Now, how did you become interested in mysteries?"  Shirley asked
Blake.
 "I guess I got it from my parents," Blake answered.  "My mom's always
trying to solve the mysteries of ancient civilizations.  She has some
plausible theories on stuff that have stumped the experts."
 "What about your dad?" Bo asked.
 Blake hesitated  for a moment.  He looked at Shirley's chemistry set.
"Say, where did you get this?"
 Bo gave Shirley a look, and soon the subject was changed to Shirley's
chemistry set.
 With her backpack slung over her shoulder, Shirley sighed as she
looked over the shopping list Gran had given her,  Gran was preparing
an exotic dish for dinner and had sent Shirley to get the ingredients
at the supermarket.  Unfortunately, of all the items on the list,
Shirley had found only one.
 "Hey, Shirley."  Shirley turned around to see Alicia walking towards
her.  "What're you doing?"
 "Gran's cooking dinner and she sent me to get the ingredients,"
Shirley explained.  "What about you?"
 "Just looking for my favorite health drink," Alicia answered.  "You
need some help?"
 "Sure.  Gran's listed some interesting items," Shirley said as she
showed Alicia the list.
 "Hmmm."  Alicia studied the list.  "I think I know where these are,"
she commented, pointing to some items on the list.  "I'll show you."
 As they walked to the proper section, Alicia decided to ask the
question that was on her mind when she spotted Shirley.  "So, what do
you think of Blake Hewitt?"
 Shirley tried to keep a straight face.  "He's okay, I guess."
 "Okay?"  Alicia could not believe Shirley.  "He is a drop-dead hunk
and all you can say about him is 'Okay?'"
 "What's your point?" Shirley asked as she found one of the items on
her list and placed it in her shopping cart.
 "Well, he talked to you, Shirley," Alicia pointed out.  Shirley found
another item Gran wanted.  "You talked back to him.  You like him,
don't you?" Alicia said with a grin.
 "And you arrived at this conclusion because I talked to Blake?"
Shirley reached for something.  "I talk to Bo, so does that mean I'm
enamored with him?"
 "But when you and Blake talked, I saw you two click."  Alicia grabbed
something and placed it into the shopping cart.
 "Alicia, you know full well that I am not interested in any romance,"
Shirley said matter-of-factly.  She did agree with Alicia on one thing:
 She and Blake did "click," as Alicia so charming put it.
 As the two went off to find Alicia's health drink and the rest of
Gran's ingredients, Alicia continued the conversation.  "You know,
Shirley, you have to get interested in boys sometime in your life."
 Shirley was annoyed with Alicia at that point.  Being a great
detective requires focus, and having a boyfriend would be a
distraction.  Besides, if she ever got interested in someone, it was a
personal matter not fit for public consumption.  Unfortunately for
Shirley, she was interested in boys, but she was not about to reveal
that side of herself to Alicia.
 Finally, both found what they were looking for and were in line at the
cash register.  Shirley looked at the tired-looking man in front of
her, whose purchases were a tabloid magazine and a bottle of
Pepto-Bismol.  He wore a baseball cap on top of his long, blond hair.
His eyes were hidden behind sunglasses.  His clothes looked clean but
messy, as if they had not been ironed for days.  Shirley noticed how he
was looking around the store and how he was muttering about the time as
the cashier tallied up his total.  He paid for the Pepto-Bismol, got
his change, refused a bag and quickly exited the store while looking
through the tabloid and with the Pepto-Bismol in his pants pockets.
 Shirley watched the man closely through the glass door as the cashier
added the cost of her purchases.  The man stood outside the door for a
moment reading something in the tabloid.  He was clearly reacting to
what he was reading because he clinched his fist and shook it
repeatedly.  He seemed to be talking to himself.  The man finally
folded the tabloid and placed it under his arm and walked away,
obviously upset.
 "Miss?"  Shirley focused her attention to the cashier, who was done
with calculating the total cost of her purchases.  "Miss, you can pay
now."
 Shirley turned to Alicia.  "Alicia, can you hand me that tabloid?"
 "Which one?"  Alicia looked puzzled.
 "That one right there."  Shirley pointed to the same magazine the man
had bought.  Alicia grabbed it and passed it to Shirley.  "Add this to
my total," Shirley told the cashier while holding up the tabloid.
After the cashier adjusted the final total, Shirley paid, got her
change, and got her purchases, now in plastic bags, from the bagger.
Before Alicia could ask Shirley why she wanted the tabloid, Shirley was
out the door in a flash.
 The next day, during lunch at Sussex Academy, Shirley showed the
tabloid to Bo and Blake.  "So, Shirl, when did you start reading about
the private lives of celebrities?" Bo asked with a smile.
 Shirley flipped through the tabloid until she found what she was
looking for.  "Read this, Bo," she told her friend, showing him what
she found.
 Bo glanced at the article before him and read the title out loud.
"MONA LISA THEFT COULD HAVE BEEN PREVENTED."  He read what Shirley had
marked in yellow the previous night.  "According to a clerk with the
Paris police who wished to remain anonymous, two days before the theft
of the Mona Lisa, a strange note was sent to the Paris police
department.  The clerk says he was the first one to see the note.  It
simply read, in both English and French, 'We will capture a lady who is
safe, but not at home.'  The note was unsigned.  'The captain thought
it was a joke,' the clerk said.  'We ignored it.'  After the Mona Lisa
was stolen, the clerk came to his own conclusions about the note's
meaning.  'When we were informed of the theft of our beloved Mona Lisa,
I realized that the lady mentioned in the note was the Mona Lisa.  Her
painter was Italian and she was well-protected by a fine security
system.  The Mona Lisa was indeed safe, but not at home.'  The clerk
tried to convince his colleagues of the note's significance to the
case, but they have so far dismissed it as a 'mere joke.'"
 Bo looked up from the tabloid at Shirley.  "You believe this?"
 "Let me see that," Blake requested.  Bo handed him the tabloid and
Blake read the marked part of the article.  After he was done, he
remarked, "So, the police did miss something."
 "A riddle that hinted at the theft," Shirley said.
 "Hold it."  Bo was still in disbelief.  "Why would anyone send a note
to the police with a riddle that tells them what the crime is?"
 "Well, whoever took the Mona Lisa must have been good.  Too good,"
Shirley pointed out.  "I guess the thief wanted to give the police a
chance."
 "A small chance," Blake commented.  "'We will capture a lady who is
safe, but not at home?'  That sounds too vague.  It could have been a
real lady."
 "I guess that's the point of the riddle," Shirley said.  "Give the
police a chance to stop the theft, but baffle them.  When the theft was
committed, it was too late."
 "Adding insult to injury," Blake added.  "The Mona Lisa theft
happened, and the police were given a hint about it, but they didn't
act on it.  Boy, no wonder they're still denying the riddle's part in
the whole thing."
 "Excuse me."  Bo raised his hand.  "Exactly why, Shirley, are you
still obsessed with finding the Mona Lisa?"
 "Yesterday, I saw a man buy a copy of this tabloid while I was
shopping at the supermarket."  Shirley held up the tabloid for
emphasis.
 "So?"  Bo did not understand.
 "His clothes were all wrinkly and he seemed tired," Shirley recalled.
 "Maybe he's a slob," Bo said.  "A slob who stays up late at night."
 Shirley shook her head.  "He had jet lag, Bo.  He was complaining
about the time here.  He's been living out of a suitcase.  Hence the
wrinkled clothes."
 "Meaning he's not a local."  Blake was catching on.
 "He also kept looking around, as if looking for someone," Shirley
said.
 "Like he was being followed."  Blake caught on.  "He's paranoid about
something."
 "While I was watching him read the tabloid, he became upset," Shirley
said.
 "Maybe he got angry at something else," Bo said.  "His favorite
celebrity probably got some bad press."
 Shirley ignored Bo's remark.  "A man with jet lag who becomes upset
about an article on the Mona Lisa theft and is paranoid.  Since the
police don't have any leads, and therefore no suspects, that means..."
 "That means he's involved with the theft," Blake completed Shirley's
thought.  "Which probably means..."
 "Hold on a minute."  Bo looked at Shirley and Blake.  "Are you saying
that the Mona Lisa is in Redington?"
 "Or at least someone who has an insight into the crime," Shirley said.
 "Now if only I could solve the other riddle."
 Bo stared at Shirley.  "What other riddle?"
 "The one that was delivered to the Redington Police Department three
days ago," Shirley answered.  "Its significance was lost to me until I
read the article."
 "So another crime is going to be committed right here in Redington,"
Blake concluded.  "I heard of a strange note being mailed to the
Redington Police Department three days ago, but I can't remember what
it said."
 "'Playing is easy and fun, but the clothing is murder,'" Shirley
recited from the top of her head.
 "You memorized that?"  Blake was impressed.
 "She pays attention to every little detail," Bo remarked to Blake.  He
looked at Shirley.  "So someone who has information about the Mona Lisa
theft is in town and there's going to be another crime committed if we
don't solve a vague riddle."  He shook his head.  "Can't we just have
one day without a mystery to solve?"
 "The Mona Lisa missing, a man who may have been involved, and a riddle
that hints at another crime," Blake summed up the facts.
 "Interesting, isn't it?"  Shirley was pleased.  "A real challenge."
 "We still need to find the guy," Bo pointed out.  "I'd be easier to
find a needle in a haystack."
 "I remember what he looks like," Shirley told Bo.  "If I see him
again, I'll recognize him."
 At that point, Molly Hardy walked up to where Shirley, Bo, and Blake
were sitting.  She stopped near Blake.  "Are you Blake Hewitt?" she
asked him, ignoring Shirley and Bo.
 "I am."  Blake looked at Molly.  "And you are...?"
 "Molly Hardy, class president," Molly said with pride, holding out her
hand to Blake.  Blake shook it.  "I'd like to welcome you to Sussex
Academy.  I would've done so yesterday, but I was out sick."
 "No wonder it was so peaceful," Bo whispered to Shirley, who tried not
to crack a grin.
 Molly shot a look of contempt at Bo and Shirley, then refocused on
Blake.  "If you need to know anyone important in this school, I'm the
one who can make it happen," she said with a smile.
 "I'll keep that in mind, Molly," Blake said.  "Thanks."
 "Excellent."  Molly looked at her watch.  "Well, I must be going.
I'll see you around, Blake."  As she left, she smiled at Blake.
 "I'd be careful when it comes to Molly," Bo warned Blake.  "She's..."
 "Deceitful, cunning, and manipulative?" Blake said with a smile.
"Don't worry about me, Bo.  I don't trust her as far as I can throw
her."
 Bo was surprised.  Shirley was impressed.  "How did you...?" Bo began
to ask Blake.
 "Well, you can tell by the way she walks and the way she talks," Blake
replied.  "I knew someone like her at my school."
 "Molly Hardy is definitely not to be trusted," Shirley observed.  She
knew from experience how Molly could be tricky.
 "You know, Shirl, have you ever wondered if there's someone in our age
group who's worse than Molly?" Bo asked.
 "There's a chance," Shirley answered.  "Personally, I hope that person
doesn't exist."
 Mr. E put down the phone and breathed out a sigh of relief.  Nigel
looked at his employer, curious on how the call went.  "What did he
say, sir?"
 "He's finally agreed to his pilots' demands for a raise."  Mr. E
looked amused.  "Our client is a miser, Nigel, and the pay raise was at
least fifty percent of what the pilots earn.  He definitely wants our
little painting."
 "I'm amazed he didn't hire a new pilot and fire the rest," Nigel
wondered.
 "Too risky, Nigel."  Mr. E opened a new game of Freecell on the
computer.  "Security risk.  The newcomer probably would demand an
outrageous sum to keep him quiet about his new acquisition.  He wants
only his men, his loyal men.  With that pay raise, those men would take
a bullet for him or even donate a liver to him while they're still
alive."
 "When will he arrive at the meeting place?" Nigel inquired.
 Mr. E moved a card with the mouse.  "In a day, at the least."  He
sighed.  "I hate delays."  He moved another card, and then another.
 The phone rang.  Mr. E picked it up.  "Yes?"  He listened for a while.
 "Excellent.  Put him on."  Another man spoke to him.  "Good to hear
from you.  Report."  He heard the other man's report.  "Good, good.
The painting?"  He heard more talk.  "Good.  Keep it that way.  Our
client should be arriving at your location soon.  Stand by.  Over and
out."  He hung up the phone and continued his game of Freecell.
 "Number Four-Four-Zero?" Nigel asked.
 "It was," Mr. E answered as he moved a column of cards.  "He just gave
me his daily report.  He and his confederates have not been caught and
the Mona Lisa is well-hidden."  He moved more cards.
 "I take it that everything is going according to plan?" Nigel asked.
 Mr. E looked at the screen.  One more move and the game was won.  He
did it and watched as the cards flew to the right corner of the screen.
 "Yes, Nigel," he said with a sinister smile.  "Everything is going
according to plan."
 "Playing is easy and fun, but the clothing is murder," Bo said out
loud.  He and Shirley were on their way to the Redington Mall.  "It
doesn't make sense, Shirley."
 "It is rather vague," Shirley agreed.  "It's definitely hinting at a
place."
 "Maybe a clothing store?" Bo guessed.
 "Too obvious."  Shirley shook her head.
 "Well, here's some more weirdness.  Stink gave this to me earlier."
Bo handed Shirley a folded piece of paper.  Shirley opened it and saw
that it was a photocopy of a short newspaper clipping.  It was a brief
public announcement and it read "PLACES CLOSED DUE TO ODOR OF UNKNOWN
ORIGIN:  Sam's Clock Repair, Computer Counseling, Jazz Java Hut,
Quickie Cleaners, Papa Pete's Pizzeria, Redington Community Theater,
Costumes, Inc., Redington Public Library, Arturo's Fine Clothing,
Alternative Clothing, Newt's Video Arcade, and Maxwell Cinemas."
 "Stink found it funny.  He was wondering where he can get the stuff
that caused that so he can shut down school," Bo said.  "Care to solve
that case, Shirl?"
 Shirley was still looking at the paper when she heard someone call her
name.  She turned around and saw Blake heading toward her.
 "Hi, guys," Blake greeted as he joined them.  "Where are you going?"
 "The Redington Mall," Bo said.
 "What a coincidence!" Blake said.  "That's where I'm going, too.
Thought I'd check it out."
 "Some coincidence," Bo muttered.
 "You can come with us, if you like," Shirley said, trying her best not
to show her excitement.
 "Sure.  No problem," Bo said, hiding his discomfort.
 As they walked, Shirley showed the paper to Blake.  "Strange," he
commented.  "A pipe leak maybe?"
 Shirley was about to say something when she spotted a man step out of
a nearby clothing store.  She stopped walking and looked carefully at
the man.
 Bo and Blake stopped also.  "Shirley, why'd you...?" Bo started to
ask.
 "That's him."  Shirley pointed to the man.
 It was the man Shirley had seen at the supermarket.  She recognized
the baseball cap, the long blond hair, and the sunglasses.  His clothes
were different from last time, but they were wrinkled.  He walked in
front of Shirley, Bo, and Blake and joined the crowd of people crossing
the street.
 "Come on."  Shirley started to cross the street, keeping an eye on the
man.
 Blake shrugged and followed Shirley.  Bo shook his head and
reluctantly joined them in the pursuit.
END OF PART TWO
 
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