"The Case of the Mysterious
Man" Part 3 - by Ha
The man walked on,
unaware that a few feet behind him, Shirley and her
friends were following him.
Shirley noticed he was deep in thought, as
if thinking.
Suddenly, the man stopped.
Bo saw this. "Uh, Shirl, I think he knows
he's being followed."
"Come on." Shirley
darted into a nearby alley. Just as Bo and Blake
followed her lead, the man
turned around. He saw that no one was
following him. Relieved,
he continued walking.
Shirley peeked out
and saw that the man was still moving. "We'd
better hurry if we're going
to catch him," she told Bo and Blake. She
was the first to leave the
alley, followed by Bo and Blake.
The man was still in
their sights despite the number of people behind
him. Shirley, Bo, and
Blake weaved through the other pedestrians,
often saying "Excuse me"
after bumping into them.
"You know, Shirley,"
Bo said as he brushed past someone. "What are we
going to do when we catch
up to this guy? Ask him if he helped steal
the Mona Lisa?"
"Exactly," Shirley
answered, her focus still on the man.
"And suppose he has
a gun?" Bo asked.
"Don't worry," Blake
said. "I've got a black belt in karate. I'm a
little rusty though."
"Great." Bo shook
his head.
The man looked back
briefly, then quickened his walking pace. "I
believe he knows he's being
followed," Shirley stated. "We can't lose
him."
"Is she always like
this?" Blake asked Bo.
"Unfortunately," Bo
said.
As Shirley and her
friends cut the distance between them and their
target, the man walked faster.
Soon he was running, as if his life
depended on it. His
pursuers matched his speed, racing past people and
often knocking them down.
The man quickly turned
around a corner. Shirley, a few feet behind
him, was the first to reach
it and stopped. Bo and Blake caught up to
her and caught their breath.
"Well, that was fun,"
Bo said while panting.
Shirley looked around
and saw a taxi speed away. She thought she saw
her quarry in the back of
the taxi.
Bo and Blake saw the
taxi. "Guess we'll never know, huh?" Blake
asked.
Shirley tried not to
show her disappointment. "I guess not."
"Alms for the poor!"
Shirley saw a man in ragged clothes walking
towards them with a large
mug in his hand. His black hair was a
tangled mess and his beard
was not trimmed. "Pardon me, youngsters,"
he said, revealing his yellow-stained
teeth. "Can you spare a little
to help your fellow man?"
Shirley wrinkled her
nose, then covered it with her hand. The stench
was so unbearable.
Noticing this, the man chuckled. "Sorry, Miss, but
I haven't bathed for quite
a while now."
Bo also noticed the
smell and quickly reached into his pocket. He put
a few coins into the cup.
"Anything to get you out of here," he
muttered to himself.
Shirley produced a dollar bill and put it in the
mug.
Blake reached into
his pants pocket and pulled out his wallet. He
took out three dollar bills
and placed them in the mug. Bo was
surprised. So was the
ragged man, who stared at the contents for a
while. He looked at
Blake. "Bless you, my son," he said with a wink.
He looked at Shirley and
Bo. "Bless you all." He walked past them,
crying out "Alms for the
poor!" and taking his unbearable smell with
him. Shirley watched
as he left and thought for a moment.
"Thanks, Blake.
I think that did it," Bo said appreciatively. "I
work in a fish market and
compared to that guy, working there is
paradise."
"No problem."
Blake put his wallet back into his pocket. "My mom and
dad always told me to be
generous to the unfortunate."
"Say, whatever happened
to your dad, Blake?" Bo asked.
Blake seemed disturbed
for a moment, then he smiled nervously. "Say,
aren't we going to the mall?"
"Definitely reminds
me of home," Blake commented as he walked with
Shirley through the Redington
Mall. Bo was behind them, trying his
best not to lose his temper.
"Were you a constant
visitor to the mall in California?" Shirley
asked.
"Actually, I didn't
go there much," Blake admitted. "Even on those
rare occasions I went, I
just went to the bookstore for mystery
novels."
Shirley, Blake, and
Bo continued walking through the mall and soon
were on the second floor.
"Too bad we didn't
catch that guy," Blake told Shirley. "If we did,
he..." Blake stopped
for a moment.
"Blake?" Shirley
was concerned. "Blake, are you okay?"
Blake did not answer.
He was staring at a man talking to a boy who
looked around six years old.
The boy apparently was in trouble, for a
security guard was present
and the man was using a disciplinary tone of
voice. "You're very
lucky security found you. You shouldn't wander
around like that. You
could've been hurt," the man told his son.
"But, Dad," the boy
said defiantly, "I know how to take care of
myself. Besides, I
just wanted to see the new toys."
"I know, son, I know."
The man looked at his son, who was clearly
upset at being lectured.
"But there are a lot of bad people in the
world, and some of them could
be in here. I was just worried about
you." The man looked
at the security guard and thanked him for finding
his son. "He's my pride
and joy, sir. If something happened to him, I
don't know what I would've
done."
The son heard this
and hugged his father. The father hugged his son
back. This touching
scene was too much for Blake. He turned around
and started walking away
from the reunited father and son. Shirley,
concerned, followed him.
Bo, curious, was behind Shirley.
"Blake?" Shirley asked.
Blake did not answer. He continued walking.
Sick of Blake's evasiveness,
Bo stepped out from behind Shirley and
placed himself in Blake's
way. "You're not going anywhere until you
explain yourself," Bo said
harshly. "What was that all about?"
Blake was silent.
Shirley decided to try to do something about the
situation. "Blake,
we're your friends. If something's bothering you,
you can tell us."
Blake looked at Bo,
then at Shirley. He sighed, then walked over to a
nearby bench and sat down.
Shirley and Bo joined him, with Shirley
sitting on Blake's right.
"Does it have to do with your dad?" Shirley
asked.
Blake smiled weakly
at Shirley. "You're a good detective, Shirley.
You know that?"
"So what happened to
him?" Bo asked Blake.
"He's dead," Shirley
stated. She looked at Blake. "Your reaction to
that man and his son.
You didn't look envious, so your parents aren't
divorced or separated.
You looked depressed, as if you missed having a
father."
"What can I say, Shirley?
You're a good detective." Seeing he could
confide in her, Blake cleared
his throat, then started to explain. "My
dad was an inspector with
the L.A. division of Interpol. He was good
at his job, so good that
other police agencies around the world
requested his assistance
in very difficult cases; as a result, he was
always busy and usually out
of town or even the country. Whenever he
wasn't on some case in some
other place, he would spend time with my
mom and me. I was a
handful for them when I was young. One time, when
I was five, I wandered off
from them while we were at the mall. They
called security, and I was
found in the bookstore. My dad was mad at
me, but while we were heading
home, he explained to me that he didn't
want me to get hurt, that
he loved me and cared about me too much.
When dealing with criminals,
my dad was a tough guy. But when he came
home, he was a caring husband
and loving father."
"How did your father
die?" Shirley asked Blake.
Blake hesitated, then
continued his story. "It was my sixth birthday.
My mom threw a party
for me with all my friends. Dad had to go on
assignment to England, but
he promised that he would try to be home in
time for my party.
Time passed, and Dad hadn't shown up yet. He
wasn't there when I blew
out my candles, wishing that he would show up
at any minute. He wasn't
there when I opened my presents. I was so
angry at Dad for missing
most of my party. While my friends tried to
cheer me up, the phone rang.
Mom got it, and I watched as her face
turned pale as she listened
to the person on the other line. She was
almost in tears. She
thanked the other person, hung up, and told Rosa,
our maid, to watch the children.
She went upstairs and into her and
Dad's bedroom. I wondered
what was going on and followed her. Rosa
was behind me, trying to
stop me. I opened Mom's door and saw her
crying. At that point,
I knew Dad wasn't coming home, ever. I went up
to Mom, hugged her, and cried
on her shoulder."
Shirley and Bo looked
at Blake and felt sorry for him. He said more.
"I later learned later when
I was older that Dad was killed by a car
bomb. After the funeral,
a typed letter came from a man named
Frederickson. He was
assigned with my dad while he was in England, and
he witnessed the explosion
that killed him. My dad had helped solved
the case in England, and
to celebrate, he and some of his colleagues
went to a local tavern one
night. Frederickson, who was an old friend
of Dad's, drove him there.
He said that Dad enjoyed himself, although
even a tiny sip of alcohol
didn't pass through his lips. Dad
eventually decided to leave
since he was going home the next day so
that he can make it in time
for my birthday. He decided to drive since
Frederickson was a little
drunk. Dad was first in the car while
Frederickson tried to keep
himself up. The last thing Frederickson
could remember was an explosion
and getting thrown back down to the
ground. When he got
up, the car was a flaming wreck. My dad didn't
stand a chance." Blake
shook his head. "I saw a shrink for a while,
but it didn't help much.
I still don't understand why my dad died and
I still don't know who killed
him. There was an investigation, but it
turned up nothing."
Finished, Blake bowed
his head. Shirley reached out for his hand and
held it between both her
hands. She looked at Blake with sympathy, and
he finally looked up and
met her gaze.
Bo turned away from
them. He felt sorry for Blake's loss, but he
could not take the sight
of him and Shirley together. He got up and
stood near the railing, looking
down at the other shoppers. He then
spotted something interesting.
"Shirley, Blake!" Bo
cried out. Both got up and went to Bo. "What is
it?" Shirley asked.
Bo pointed to someone
in the crowd below. Shirley dug through her
backpack and took out her
small binoculars. She looked through them at
where Bo was pointing.
She gasped.
"What is it?" Blake
asked.
Shirley handed Blake
the binoculars. "It's him."
Through the binoculars,
Blake saw the man that they have been
following earlier.
He was sitting on a bench looking at the sheet of
paper. He seemed puzzled.
"It is definitely him," Blake said as he
handed the binoculars back
to Shirley.
"Let's go," Shirley
said. Soon, she, Blake, and Bo were heading
toward the nearest down escalator.
They rushed down it, often bumping
into people and apologizing.
Shirley, Blake, and
Bo were soon on the bottom floor, looking for the
mysterious man. "There
he is," Bo said, pointing to someone in the
crowd leaving the mall.
They watched as he exited the mall. Shirley
ran past the other shoppers,
with Blake and Bo behind her. She was
determined not to lose her
quarry again.
When they finally reached
the exit, Shirley looked left, then right.
She saw the man walking along
the sidewalk to her right. She followed
the man from a distance.
Blake and Bo followed her lead. They
quickened their pace and
narrowed the gap between them and the
mysterious man. The
man kept a normal pace, seemingly suspecting
nothing.
The chase continued
for a while. Eventually the man turned right
around a corner. Shirley
and her friends reached it, then stopped.
They looked to their left,
then ahead, then to their right. The man
was nowhere in sight.
"Well, looks like we've
lost him...again," Bo observed.
Shirley was about to
agree when she spotted a nearby alley. She
pointed it out to her friends.
"He probably went through here." She
walked into it. Bo
and Blake looked at Shirley, then at each other,
shrugged, and followed her.
They looked in the
alley. It was a dead end and there was no sign of
the man. Trash and
old cardboard boxes littered the area.
"I don't understand."
Shirley walked deeper into the alley for a
closer look. "He couldn't
have just disappeared."
Bo looked around.
"He's definitely good at that."
Blake was about to
offer what was on his mind when all three heard a
gruff voice from behind.
"Don't look behind you."
Shirley and her friends
complied. Shirley looked from the corner of
her eye and caught a glimpse
of the mysterious man, then quickly looked
forward again. She
could not believe that she ignored the possibility
of the man hiding in a building
to avoid his pursuers. Blake tried to
keep his cool, as did Bo.
"Now, why have you
three been following me, eh?" the man asked.
"We're just curious..."
Blake began.
"Shut your mouth!"
the man shouted. "I know why you've been following
me. Don't think I know
who you've been working for. Your youth
doesn't matter; they'll use
anyone these days."
"Who's 'they?'" Bo
asked, keeping his gaze on the dead end.
"You really don't know?"
The man sounded surprised. "A likely
story!" He paused.
"Listen, you three, even though you might be just
some snoopy kids and not
who I think you are, I'm involved in some
serious business, and if
I catch you three tailing me again, you'll
regret it." Shirley
heard footsteps as the man ran off.
All three turned around
and saw that the man was indeed gone. "That
was a close one," Bo commented,
wiping his brow. "I thought we were
goners."
"You said it," Blake
agreed. "I'm amazed he didn't shoot us."
"He wasn't armed,"
Shirley said. "I didn't hear a gun click.
Besides, it wouldn't be a
good idea to shoot anyone at this time of
day."
"Great. What
a day." Bo was not exactly thrilled at being so close
to death. "We follow
a guy, lose him, go to the mall, find him there,
follow him again, he finds
out, and he threatens us." He looked at
Shirley. "Can't we
just call the police?"
"On what grounds?"
Shirley countered. "He would probably accuse us of
harassment."
Blake turned to Shirley.
"So, what's our next move?"
"Our next move is to
go home." Shirley looked at her watch. "We
don't want to be late for
dinner and upset our families now, do we?"
Later at home, Shirley,
Mr. Holmes, and Gran were having dinner.
Shirley had come just in
time to eat, and both Mr. Holmes and Gran
accepted her story of her
being with friends at the mall.
Midway through the
meal, the phone rang. Mr. Holmes got up and
answered it. "Hello?"
After talking with the person for a while, he
called Shirley. "It's
for you, Shirley. Someone by the name of Blake
Hewitt."
Shirley quickly got
out from her seat and snatched the phone out of
her father's hand.
"Hello?"
"Hi, Shirley."
It was indeed Blake's voice. Shirley was surprised.
Blake was calling her?
"I was wondering. Do you have any plans
tomorrow night around 7:00?"
At first, Shirley was
having difficulty forming words, but eventually
she spoke. "Uh, no.
Why?"
"Well, my mom wants
to meet you and Bo and have you over for dinner,"
Blake explained. "I
told her that you two were the first real friends
I made in Redington."
"She wants to meet
us just for that?" Shirley asked.
"Ever since my dad
died, I've kept to myself." Blake paused. "My
mom's so happy that I've
made some friends. So, can you come?"
Shirley searched for
the right words to say. "Oh, sure. Okay. I'll
be there."
"Great!" Blake
sounded excited. "I hope to see you there, Shirley.
I'll call Bo. Maybe
we can talk about that problem that's been
bothering us."
"Oh. Oh, sure.
Okay, Blake," Shirley said, trying to control
herself.
"Bye, Shirley."
Blake hung up.
Shirley hung up and
went back to her seat to eat her dinner, Mr.
Holmes asked, "Who is Blake
Hewitt, Shirley?"
"Oh, he's a new kid
at school," Shirley replied. "He and his mom
moved here from California."
"Would his mother be
Dr. Lauren Hewitt?" Gran asked. "She's the
archeologist who took a position
at the museum."
"I guess so."
Shirley took a bite out of her meal. "Blake never
mentioned her name, but he
did say she was an archeologist."
"What did he want?"
Gran asked.
"He invited me and
Bo over for dinner to meet his mom," Shirley
answered.
"So, what is your relationship
with Blake?" Mr. Holmes asked his
daughter.
"Uh, I think I'll go
to bed right now." Shirley quickly got up and
went upstairs to her room.
Mr. Holmes sighed and
shook his head. "Looks like my little girl has
grown up."
Gran simply smiled.
END OF PART THREE
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