Close Encounters (Nancy Drew (All New) Girl Detective Book 21) (8 page)

With a cheery wave Bess began making her way around the margin of the field just outside the police tape. The meadow dipped, putting Bess out of my sight line. I set off, not sure what I was looking for.

After walking a few yards, I spotted a distinctly charred area of flattened grass and cornstalks. It extended about two feet from just inside the cordon.

I tried to picture what could have caused the mark. A spaceship blasting off was what my mind was telling me, but another voice inside still said “nonsense.”

I knelt and tried to touch the singed stalks, but I
couldn’t reach far enough under the police tape. My fingers, however, brushed the nearby grass. When I drew back my hand, my fingertips were coated with a smelly, powdery dust. The pungent unpleasant odor reminded me of something I’d smelled before. But what?

I knew I’d remember eventually. I wiped my fingers on a tissue and stuffed it into my pocket, then continued around the rim of the field. Soon I reached the stand of tall pines and slender birches that marked the start of the forest, possibly the same forest that bordered Aldwin’s land. The smell of burned foliage was even stronger there.

I noticed the highest branches of the trees were angled sharply away from the meadow—again, as if a wind had pushed them aside.

How had someone managed to wreak all this havoc on the field and forest?

I was flummoxed. If this was a part of a hoax, it had been brilliantly executed.

And if it wasn’t a hoax, then what was it?

A chill went up my spine as I was forced to admit the truth: Maybe the UFOs were for real.

9
Trashed

N
o sooner did the
thought cross my mind than I felt the hairs at the back of my neck rise up. I sensed I was in danger.

“UFOs only turn up at night!” I uttered the words aloud simply to calm myself.

Just then I heard the snap of a branch breaking behind me.

I whirled around and gasped. “Mayor Brody!”

His face half-shadowed by the pines, the tall man smiled sheepishly. “Sorry, didn’t mean to startle you. The trooper down by the road told me you were up here, scouting out the scene of the crime, so to speak.” He sounded genial enough, but he had scared the daylights out of me.

“You didn’t have to sneak up on me like that.”

“You do seem a bit jumpy” was his response. “Which makes sense, considering what happened on the Nichols farm. So we’ve finally got you convinced that our space visitors are the genuine article.”

“What makes you think that?” While my reservations about the existence of the UFOs were fading, I was far from convinced.

He had the courtesy to look embarrassed as he admitted, “I overheard you just now. Talking to yourself—about UFOs not appearing during the day.”

“Yeah, well, I just thought I was alone” was all I said.

“Being alone up here gives me the jitters too.” He stepped out of the shadows and into the sun. “It’s pretty amazing, all the damage they’ve caused.”

“I was thinking the same thing,” I confessed. “Have there been any strong lightning storms recently that might have burned the grass?”

The mayor frowned. “Seeing all this, you’re still skeptical?”

“Yeah, I guess,” I answered. “For instance there’s this weird smell in the air.”

The mayor sniffed. “Very unpleasant.”

“Very
chemical
, and very familiar,” I pointed out. “Would creatures from outer space have the same chemicals we do?”

“Why not? The whole universe is made of the same elements,” he said. “Though I am a retired high school chemistry teacher, I assume that’s general knowledge.”

Did he think I was ignorant of basic science? I felt my temper rising, but I managed to keep my tone even as I said, “Yes, it is, but would some advanced civilization necessarily combine chemicals in the same way we do?”

“Good question,” he said. “But, truth is, there are only so many—” A loud shout echoed across the field, cutting him off.

“Hey, you! Get out of there,
now
!”

We both spun around. Three troopers, guns drawn, were racing up the embankment. They weren’t rushing toward us, though—they were running in the opposite direction.

“Bess!” I gasped, and darted back up the rise.

I arrived just as Bess was crawling out from under the police tape. “I just wanted to get a closer look,” she said. She spotted the guns and paled.

“Put those guns down!” the mayor ordered.

The troopers instantly obeyed. The one who’d checked us out earlier approached Bess. “I told you to stay outside of the cordoned area.”

Bess visibly gulped. “I know, I know.” She hazarded a smile. “I got carried away. I wanted to get closer to feel the alien vibes.”

Her dimples worked their usual magic. The trooper’s stern expression softened. “Don’t do it again.”

Bess dropped her eyes and looked repentant, but I noticed her surreptitiously slip something into her pocket.

Turning to me, the mayor seconded the trooper. “You were given free run of the crime scene, with some clear rules, Nancy. Mess up again, and we’ll bar you from the site. I don’t care who wants you investigating what,” he added.

Did he and Captain Greene share some negative history? I made a mental note to find out from the innkeeper later.

I made the appropriate apologetic remarks, then steered Bess to the car. As soon as we were inside, I asked, “What was that about ‘alien vibes,’ and what, exactly, did you put in your pocket?”

Bess began to grin. “Sounded good, didn’t it? Actually, I wanted to get a closer look at this.” She pulled a piece of glittery metal out of her pocket.

“What is it?” I asked, instantly curious.

She handed it to me. “I don’t know. When the sun came out, I spotted it in the grass. I just had to check it out.”

While I was driving, I couldn’t really study the metal shard. I gave it back to Bess, then told her, “Bess, you’ve just taken evidence from a crime scene.”

“There’s been no crime, Nancy. The UFOs haven’t hurt anyone.”

“Have you forgotten Aldwin’s dog?”

Bess shook her head. “Of course not, but that just happened today. I bet the troopers haven’t even found out about it yet.”

“They probably know,” I said, without thinking. “The mayor did.”

“How did he find out about it so fast?” Bess asked.

“Chatter over the police radio, probably. No doubt he has a receiver in his car.” I refused to let Bess divert my attention. “The mayor and Sherlock aren’t the point here. You shouldn’t have taken this piece of junk from the meadow. It may be important.”

“If I bring it back,” Bess said, before I got a chance to say she should, “they’ll ban you from your investigation for sure. Besides, there was more of it.”

“Where?”

“All over the place. It just doesn’t show up unless the sun hits it,” she said.

That’s why I’d missed it. The sun had been ducking in and out of the clouds all morning long. Maybe I’d find some closer to the woods but outside the restricted area. As soon as I could, I’d go back to check.

As I headed back to town, the white
Reel TV
van came barreling down the other side of the road,
heading back toward the meadow. I watched it disappear around the curve.

Bess chuckled. “They managed to miss filming a pretty good scene up there.”

“I’m glad,” I said. “Imagine having troopers threatening you, immortalized on video tape.” Then I remembered something. “I thought they didn’t have access back here.”

“Someone changed the rules, I guess,” Bess said, then moaned. “Would you look at this?”

I glanced away from the road. She was holding up her foot. Her new sneakers were covered in some kind of dark goo.

“You must have stepped in something nasty back there in the meadow,” I told her as she rummaged in her bag for a tissue.

She wiped her shoe, then groaned. “I don’t believe this!”

“What’s the matter?” I asked.

“It’s some sort of paint.” She scrubbed at her shoe some more. “And it stains, big-time,” she mumbled. “Maybe Winnie has a stain remover back at the restaurant.”

Bess was still lamenting the state of her new sneakers when we pulled up in front of Winnie’s café.

A small crowd was gathered outside the entrance, and a black-and-white town police patrol car was
parked in front. Winnie stood in the doorway, looking distressed. As I parked, George spotted us and hurried over.

“You won’t believe what happened!” she said as I jumped out. “Someone broke into the restaurant in the middle of the night. They trashed the place.”

Bess and I followed George into the restaurant. Tables were overturned, and baked good were scattered around the floor. Jars of jams and jellies were knocked off the shelf; shards of glass were everywhere. It was a complete mess!

The only things that weren’t broken or overturned seemed to be the display cases, and this surprised me. These vandals were oddly selective.

Winnie had brought the policeman inside. Joel Scarletti stood beside her, looking equally distraught.

“Officer Cargill,” she was saying, “who’d do this?”

“It’s all my fault,” Joel told the officer. “I finished the baking at about three a.m. The front was all locked up, but when I left out the back, I didn’t lock the door. I rarely do, because no one’s ever broken in before.”

Officer Cargill pursed his lips. “Don’t be so hard on yourself. No one locks doors around here—but now with the flood of tourists and such, we’re just going to have to change our ways.”

The officer went off to talk to some workers in the kitchen. I decided to check the back door. It dangled
half off its hinges, and the frame had been partially ripped apart.

“What’s wrong with this picture?” I asked Bess as she and George walked up.

“More like what’s wrong with the door,” she said. “Winnie’s going to need a new one, that’s for sure. In the meantime I could do some temporary repairs on this one.”

“I’m sure Winnie will appreciate all the help she can get, but my question is, why in the world would a thief wreck the door trying to break in, when it wasn’t locked to begin with?”

“Whoever did it probably just wanted to cause Winnie more trouble,” George said. She sounded angry. “Whoever did this was just plain mean. No money was taken. Fortunately, I had locked the computer under the counter, or that would have been vandalized too.”

“It wasn’t vandals,” Officer Cargill declared from inside the restaurant. He was standing in the short passage that led from the kitchen to the back door and the alley. “In fact, it wasn’t even a
who
.” He paused, and I could see him struggling not to laugh. “It was a
what
.”

“You mean the aliens?” Bess gasped.

Officer Cargill caught my eye and began to chuckle.

I cracked up as the pieces of this particular puzzle
snapped into place. Winnie hurried up to us and looked at me in dismay. “Sorry, Winnie,” I gasped when I was able to get my breath. “The place is a disaster area. But this time round, it wasn’t sabotage. Your culprit lacked hands, but sure had claws.”

“Good for you!” The policeman looked at me with respect. “I’m pretty sure I know what happened. Your assistant here was baking. The pies probably smelled good. Bears sometime wander into town. This one wandered right into your kitchen.”

Winnie sagged against the wall, relief evident on her face. “For some reason that makes this mess easier to deal with—though the bear couldn’t have had worse timing. How will I ever get this place together before dinner? I’m booked solid.”

“We’ll all help!” George offered.

“And so will lots of other people,” a young woman spoke up from the doorway. I saw that she wore an apron emblazoned with the logo of the pizza shop next door. “I’ll round up a few guys to do the heavy work. That’ll free up your people to man the kitchen.” Several other shopkeepers chimed in, offering help.

“I’m good in the kitchen too,” George reminded her. “I’m not my mother’s daughter for nothing.”

“No, George,” Winnie said softly as we walked back to the front of the café. “I’d rather have you concentrate on the computer. This might have been
the work of a bear, but my computer woes were caused by humans!”

I was about to offer my services, when with a screech of brakes a battered pickup truck came to an abrupt stop in front of the café. A stout, elderly woman climbed out of the passenger side with a bit of difficulty, but once she was on the sidewalk, she moved with surprising speed.

She marched right up to Officer Cargill. “First the dog,” she exclaimed, her blue eyes furious. “Now Aldwin. He’s gone missing! Can’t imagine what aliens—or anyone else, for that matter—would want with the likes of Aldwin, but there it is: He’s gone!”

10
Close Encounter

A
ddie May Nichols, you’re
making no sense. Slow down. Tell me exactly what happened.” Officer Cargill tried to take the woman’s arm, but she shook him off.

“If I knew
exactly
what happened, I wouldn’t be here, would I?” she replied testily.

“Probably not,” he said. I could see he was trying to humor her. “But start from the beginning. What’s all this about your brother going missing? More to the point, what in the world does this have to do with one of your dogs?”

Upon hearing the officer’s words, I instantly realized two things. This woman was Aldwin’s sister. And while the mayor knew about the dognapping, the officer didn’t.

I found that latter bit decidedly odd. Almost as odd
as seeing who chose that moment to slide out of the driver’s side of the pickup truck.

I recognized him immediately as Nathan Blackman. That’s when I remembered where I’d heard of the Nichols farm. Blackman was renting one of the farm’s chateau cabins.

He leaned back against the cab of the truck. His expression was decidedly amused as he watched Addie May begin her story.

She explained how Aldwin discovered Sherlock had been dognapped. “Then, after the troopers left, Aldwin came into the house. I was in the basement doing laundry. When I came back upstairs, he was gone. At first I thought he’d headed off to look for Sherlock, but then I found his cane on the porch. He couldn’t have gone far without it.”

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