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Don't Look Twice

Page 3

by Carolyn Keene


  “Hello,” she practically yelled into the receiver. “I’m looking for some friends who were at your restaurant. My name is Nancy Drew.”

  “Oh, Miss Drew, hello, this is Mario. Did you enjoy your ride?”

  My ride? An alarm went off in Nancy’s head. So it was Mario she had seen as she was being dragged out of Puccini’s. Could he have been involved in her kidnapping? If so, why would he be crazy enough to admit it? The best idea, she decided, was to play it safe.

  “I, uh—I got a chance to see a few spots in Chicago I’ve never seen before,” she replied, trying not to give anything away.

  “That’s nice,” said Mario. “I thought it was a crazy idea, but you kids today, you’re all crazy.” He laughed, then added something else.

  “What’s that, Mario?” Nancy couldn’t hear him over the combined noise of Puccini’s and the kitchen of the French restaurant. She had covered her left ear with her hand and had the receiver clamped to her right ear.

  “Your friends, they just left.”

  “They left?” Nancy couldn’t believe her ears. “Did they say where they were going?”

  “Okay, fine, I gotta be going, too. Ciao.” Mario hung up. Nancy listened to the dead line for a moment before she placed the receiver back on the hook.

  Where could her friends have gone? More to the point, how could they have left Puccini’s without her? Didn’t they wonder where she was?

  She turned around to find the hostess hovering behind her. This time the woman looked less shocked and more concerned.

  “Are you all right?” she asked. “You look a little shaken up.”

  “I’m okay,” Nancy said, managing a small smile. “I’ve just misplaced my boyfriend.”

  “Oh, it was that kind of accident,” said the hostess, smiling. “Well, if you need to make any more phone calls, you can use the restaurant phone. It’s up by the maître d’s station. Oh, and the rest rooms are right around that corner, if you want to dust yourself off.”

  Nancy thanked her and hurried into the ladies’ room. She didn’t look nearly so bad as she had imagined. Mostly she was sandy. She brushed the sand off as well as she could and gave her hair a good shake. Then she splashed her face with cold water and washed her hands.

  She did need to make more phone calls. The first person she thought to call was Pat Burnett, Ned’s basketball coach. Maybe he’d know where to find his players.

  The coach was staying at the Chicago University dorm, and the switchboard was already closed.

  Where could her friends have gone? To the police? If they were that concerned, wouldn’t they have said something to Mario? On the other hand, if Mario was one of the kidnap gang, he probably wouldn’t have told Nancy anyone was worried about her.

  Nancy’s head was swimming. This was getting her nowhere. She was tired and hungry, and she needed to get home. She dialed the Sampsons’ number.

  Nella Sampson answered the phone on the second ring. “Nancy!” her husky voice said into the receiver. “We were wondering when you’d turn up. Your friends are already here.”

  “They’re there?” Nancy cried.

  “Sure. There was some talk of your disappearing from the restaurant—one of the girls said it was a practical joke. At any rate they figured this was the best place to wait for you to show up. Ned drove your car here.”

  “A practical joke?” Nancy repeated, feeling stupid. Was someone playing tricks on her?

  “Wait—” Nella’s voice suddenly got fainter. “George is grabbing the phone. You’re coming right over, aren’t you, Nancy?”

  “Yes,” Nancy said, but she doubted Nella had heard. George was already talking.

  “Nan! Where are you?” George demanded. “You didn’t tell me you had a disappearing act planned for the evening.”

  “George, something crazy happened, but I’d rather tell you in person.” Nancy’s tone changed slightly. “Is Ned there?”

  “Of course. We’re all here.” George paused. “Nan,” she said in a much quieter voice. “Are you okay?”

  “Yes. I’ll see you in ten minutes.” Nancy dug into her back pocket and found a couple of bills. So far so good. “I’m taking a taxi over.”

  Nancy hung up the phone and breathed a sigh of relief. She had found her friends, and they knew she was all right. Now all she had to do was stop a kidnapping from happening.

  Nancy thanked the hostess sincerely. Smiling, she handed Nancy one of the restaurant’s business cards. “Come back and have dinner at Le Coq d’Or when you find your boyfriend,” she offered.

  On the street there were plenty of cabs, and Nancy hailed one easily. She got in and gave the Sampsons’ address to the driver. It was still Friday night in the big city, and Nancy watched as couples and groups hurried to warm restaurants and cozy apartments.

  She shivered. She had left the blankets on the beach, and all she had on was a thin mohair sweater over her cotton blouse. She had left her coat and purse at the restaurant.

  As she thought about that, Nancy felt a twinge of anger. George and Ned should have known something was wrong. Why would she have left her coat and purse behind if she had planned on disappearing? Especially the coat. It was freezing, for goodness’ sake!

  The cab came to a stop outside a fancy three-story town house. Nancy handed over the last few dollars that were in her pockets.

  The door to the townhouse opened, and Nella Sampson ushered her in out of the cold.

  “Nancy, you look frozen,” she said, hugging her. “I think you could use some hot chocolate. Come on in—your friends are all in the living room.”

  When Nancy walked into the living room, everybody immediately began yelling at once. “Where were you?” “What’s the big idea?” “Who’d you plan this with?”

  Nancy just sank down on the nearest comfortable chair and smiled weakly. “I can’t tell you anything until I’ve had some hot chocolate,” she protested.

  “Nancy” —George hugged her friend— “I was beginning to get worried.”

  “Step aside, Fayne,” Ned interrupted. “I need a hug, too.”

  Nancy smiled and put her arms around his neck. She needed to hear that. Ned sat on the arm of the easy chair, put one of her cold hands between his two warm ones, and rubbed gently.

  “Whenever you’re ready, we’re dying to know where you’ve been all this time,” he said.

  “I don’t think she wants to tell,” said Denise. “I think she’s enjoying the suspense too much.”

  Nancy supposed Denise was trying to make a joke, but it fell heavily in the room. Looking up, she caught the cheerleader’s annoyed expression. Denise’s big green eyes showed disappointment.

  Hmmm, Nancy thought, suddenly alert. There’s one person in this room who isn’t so glad to see me. I wonder why, exactly.

  Was it possible that Denise Mason had been behind Nancy’s “kidnapping”?

  Chapter

  Five

  IN THE NEXT INSTANT Nancy discarded that theory. The kidnapping, joke or not, had to have been planned in advance. It was too well orchestrated to have been put together at a moment’s notice. There was no way Denise could have known Nancy was coming to Chicago until that very evening. After they’d met, the only time Denise had been alone was the ten minutes or so while she was showering and changing after the game. Surely she’d have needed more time to plan.

  Besides, Nancy was forgetting about how the one kidnapper had said she was “the wrong girl.” If Denise had somehow managed to plan it, Nancy would have been the target. There would have been no mistake.

  Nella Sampson bustled in at that moment with a tray filled with mugs. She set it down on the coffee table in front of the sofa, then took a seat herself. “Okay, where have you been?” she demanded. “I was beginning to think I would have to call your father and tell him we’d lost his only daughter on her first night in Chicago.”

  Nancy smiled. “That’s not quite as ridiculous an idea as it sounds,” she admitted. “As
a matter of fact, it seems I was kidnapped.”

  Leaning back in her chair, Nancy slowly told them the details of her kidnapping. She felt much better with her left hand clasped in Ned’s and her right hand wrapped around a steaming cup of hot chocolate. Nella had made her a thick turkey sandwich, which sat untouched on the coffee table.

  Everyone sat listening to her story in astonished silence. There was a fire in the fireplace, and an occasional pop or snap was the only other sound in the room besides Nancy’s voice. Ned put his arms around her and held her tightly when she told the part about waking up alone on the beach. Denise sat wide-eyed, barely moving.

  “Then I called Mario from the French restaurant, and he said that he thought it was some big joke,” Nancy concluded. “And after that I managed to track you guys down here.”

  Nella Sampson shook her head. “It’s unbelievable!” she murmured.

  “After you had been gone for fifteen minutes, I started to get worried,” said George. “I thought maybe you had decided to make a few more phone calls, but then you still hadn’t come back. So I went to check the phones and rest rooms, just to see if you might be there.”

  Ned interrupted. “George came back to the table and said you weren’t there, so we both went outside to see if you had gone out for some air or something. George went one way, I went the other. After about ten minutes we came back inside. Then I talked to Mario. He said he had seen you leaving in a car and that someone had told him it was some kind of practical joke.”

  Nancy looked at him. “I would never play that kind of game.”

  “I know, but Denise . . .” Ned trailed off.

  George finished his sentence for him. “Denise thought that you had agreed to be part of a practical joke staged by the Eagles.”

  Nancy felt herself getting angry. “First of all, why would I want to help the other team play a practical joke on the Wildcats? And second, that kidnapping was no joke. I was there, remember? It was very scary!”

  Suddenly Nancy felt as if she was about to cry. She took a deep breath to calm down, then sipped her chocolate. It had gotten lukewarm, and there was a filmy layer of milk on top. She put the cup down.

  “The important thing, though, is not what you guys thought happened,” she said, leaning forward in her chair. “The important thing is what actually did happen—and what will happen again, if we don’t figure out who the kidnappers are and who they really want.”

  “Shouldn’t we call the police?” asked Dave.

  “I think we should make sure it wasn’t a practical joke first,” said Denise. “I mean, I’m sure it seemed very serious to you,” she said to Nancy as if she were talking to a small child. “I just wonder if it seemed scarier to you than they meant it to be.”

  “If their idea of a joke is to slap chloroform over Nancy’s mouth and leave her to freeze on the beach, I sure wouldn’t want to find out what they do when they’re serious,” George interjected hotly.

  “Hold it,” Ned said, his voice sharp. “I think we need to think this through logically.”

  “I think we can assume that the kidnappers aren’t going to strike twice in one night,” Nancy said, tiredly running a hand through her hair. “They need time to come up with another plan.”

  “So we need to figure out who the intended victim is and get to her first,” George added.

  After a short silence Nancy cleared her throat.

  “They probably wanted someone else who was at the restaurant,” she said, starting them off.

  “Maybe someone with a lot of money,” suggested George.

  “Well, I did notice that Martha Dodge was there last night,” offered Denise. “She’s a major snob—I went to high school with her. Anyway, she was sitting at the table behind ours. Her family is incredibly rich.”

  “Okay, so her family is rich,” Dave said, leaning back on a pillow on the rug. “But why choose to kidnap somebody’s rich daughter from a busy restaurant, when anybody could have caught them in the act?”

  “Maybe they wanted to get caught,” offered Denise. “Someone told Mario it was a practical joke. It probably was.”

  Nancy bit back a sharp retort. She knew her story sounded pretty weird. Why did Denise have to keep insisting that the ordeal Nancy had just gone through had been a practical joke, though?

  “But why?” George was asking. “Who is the joke on? Certainly not on Nancy.”

  “Let’s say it was a real kidnapping attempt—and not a practical joke. Could it have something to do with the basketball tournament?” Dave said. He sat up from his relaxed position on the floor, his blue eyes intense. “Someone could have followed us from the basketball game, thinking Nancy was an Emerson student.”

  “And?” Nancy prompted.

  “Well, let’s say they wanted to distract us from the tournament by kidnapping one of our students,” he went on excitedly. “Then they find out they messed up and didn’t get a student.”

  “That seems like a pretty drastic thing for the Eagles to do. Besides, if they were caught, they’d get disqualified not only from the tournament but also from all league play,” Ned objected.

  “If they were caught,” said Dave. “They make it look like a professional job, and we’re off their trail.”

  Nancy had already thought of this possibility in the car on the way to wherever the kidnappers had taken her. It did seem pretty drastic, she had to agree with Ned. But she could think of no other explanation.

  “Mario said someone told him it was a practical joke,” she put in. “That would make someone on the Eagles team an obvious choice.”

  “It would have to be more than one person,” said George. “You said there were two people in the elevator and one leader at the house.”

  “The person to talk to is Mario. He could probably tell us who told him it was a joke,” said Nancy, getting to her feet.

  “Nancy, where do you think you’re going?” Ned said, pulling her gently back to the chair.

  “The first thing we have to do—” Nancy began, but Ned cut her off.

  “The first thing we have to do, Drew, is make sure you get a good night’s sleep,” he said protectively. “You had a rough time tonight.” He gave her a quick kiss and then stood up. “Dave and I will be at the guest team’s dorms at Chicago University. I’ll call you in the morning, and we can make a plan of action.”

  “I’ll drive you there,” offered Denise. “It’s on my way home.”

  “Good luck with your case, Nancy,” she added as she slid into her leather jacket. “I guess you’ve got something to keep you busy while we get ready for Monday’s game. Let me know if you need any help catching the bad guys. Anyway, I’m sure I’ll see you around.”

  Nella Sampson saw them to the front door. As soon as everyone left the room, George turned to Nancy. “I’m sorry, Nan,” she said contritely. “I should never have listened to Denise. She’s a convincing talker, though. She practically had me thinking you had disappeared just to get attention. Now I think she understands she was wrong about you.”

  Nancy shrugged. She wasn’t convinced that Denise believed her story even now. “Well, the important thing is to get to the bottom of this,” she said aloud. “I’m going to do it, even if it means wrapping myself up like a mummy and lying by the lake for a half hour.”

  George giggled. “Sorry,” she said. “It’s just kind of funny to think about, you know.”

  “Yeah, I guess.” Nancy grinned. They both started giggling. And soon they were rolling on the floor with laughter.

  Nella Sampson poked her head through the doorway. “I’m glad you’re having fun, but don’t you think you should wrap things up?”

  “Wrap things up!” George repeated. It sent the girls into another fit of laughter. Nella just shook her head.

  “See you two in the morning. Sleep well.”

  • • •

  That night Nancy had a dream. She was having a picnic with Ned in a park that they often went to in River Hei
ghts. She was wearing an old pair of shorts and a T-shirt. She had forgotten to brush her hair. Looking into the picnic basket, all she saw was cold pizza wrapped in oily napkins. On top of the pizza was a business card from Puccini’s.

  Then she saw Denise in the distance. Denise was walking slowly through the grass, barefoot and wearing a beautiful, flowing, lacy dress.

  Suddenly Ned saw Denise, too. He stood up to go to her. Nancy called to him, but he ignored her and broke into a run to meet Denise. Nancy watched as the two of them were greeted by Nancy’s friend Bess. “Hi, Ned! Hi, Nancy!” Bess cried.

  Nancy tried to call out to Bess, but the words stuck in her throat. “That’s not me. That’s Denise!” she kept trying to say, but it came out as a whisper.

  Nancy awoke with a start. The image of Ned and Denise was still sharp and vivid. They had looked so good together, so happy. Denise had a sketchbook, and Ned was carrying an art book.

  Why had Bess thought that Denise was Nancy? They didn’t look that much alike, except for the color of their hair. . . .

  Nancy sat straight up in bed. That was it!

  “That’s who the kidnappers wanted,” she said out loud. “Denise!”

  Chapter

  Six

  OF COURSE! Why hadn’t she thought of it before? She and Denise had been sitting at the same table, and they had the same color hair.

  The question was, why would anyone want to kidnap Denise? One idea struck Nancy right away—and it didn’t make her at all happy.

  It had probably looked to anyone watching as if Denise were Ned’s girlfriend. After all, Denise was the one who had received his victory hug and kiss after the game. Denise was the one sharing his menu at the restaurant—and they had looked so comfortable with each other.

  Nancy had already considered that if someone wanted to have a hold over the Wildcats’ star player, they might try to kidnap his girlfriend. Only the people had confused Nancy with Denise.

 

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