my disappearance with some degree of fascination. Though others have written similar stories, your columns have been the most insightful.
Therefore I decided that you were the person to trust.
I would have come forward earlier, but circumstances have prevented me from doing so. I will contact you again soon.
Sincerely,
Isaac Wells
Katieâs heart beat a little faster each time she read the short note. When sheâd opened the hand-scrawled envelope yesterday, sheâd been stunned. Was it a prank, or had Isaac Wells really reached out to her? And why? Why not go to the police or just come home? What âcircumstancesâ had prevented him from returning? If heâd been kidnapped, he surely wouldnât have been allowed to write the missive. Was he running from the law? Or an old enemy? She pulled out a thick file and skimmed its contentsâcopies of police reports, the columns sheâd dedicated to the Isaac Wells mystery, notes from interviews with what little there was of his family and friends.
What had happened to the old guy? Had there been foul play involved? Leaning back in her chair she tapped the eraser end of a pencil to her front teeth as she scanned her own articles for the millionth time.
Wells, who owned the ranch so close to Luke Gatesâs property, had been a loner. Mason Lafferty and his sister, Patti, were his only relatives living in the vicinity.
He had resided in the area for over sixty years, but had kept to himself, wasnât very friendly. Some people in town thought he was a miser, even a cheat. There was talk of him being involved in some kind of crime, but, as far as Katie could learn, it was all just gossip.
Heâd never married, never fathered any children and had lived alone for most of his life. Heâd gotten by meagerly, and had struggled for years to keep his scrap of a ranch afloat. But heâd had a passion for old cars and had owned a collection of classic and antique cars that heâd restored himself. Heâd hunted once in a while, usually deer or elk. He hadnât been a churchgoer, and had been a solitary man who didnât talk muchâa man whom no one, including the few members of his family, really knew. Despite local conjecture, heâd never been in serious trouble with the law.
Why would he take off?
Had be been coerced?
Had he been getting senile and just wandered away?
Or had he left on purpose?
No one, including the police, insurance-company investigators or his family, seemed to have much to go on.
Until now. Katie stared at the note with a jaundiced eye.
The letter certainly could be a hoax. The postmark was from Eureka, California, which was barely a hundred miles south. Anyone could have driven down the coast and sent it. His signatureâthe only part of the missive aside from the address on the envelope that was handwritten in inkâlooked authentic, but it wouldnât be too difficult to forge.
So, now, what to do?
Katie took a long pull from her bottle of soda. A lot of people had been questioned about Isaacâs disappearance. Ray Dean, a local thug who had been in and out of prison several times, was the most current âperson of interestâ in the case. Ray had recently been paroled, but most of the people in Bittersweet believed it was only a matter of time before he was arrested again for some kind of crime. So how could he be involved? She decided it was time for her to find out.
After letting Blue back into the house, she spent the next couple of hours at her desk writing the story about receiving the letter. She polished the text, then reworked an article about the new school-district administrator and another on the making of applesauce using other fruits and berries to change the color and flavor of an old favorite.
âNot exactly Pulitzer material,â she muttered under her breath, because though the community was interested in the warm folksy articles that the Review was
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley