The Read Online Free
  • Latest Novel
  • Hot Novel
  • Completed Novel
  • Popular Novel
  • Author List
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Young Adult
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    The Thirteenth Pearl

    Previous Page Next Page

      called up the directory. “Oh, my goodness,” Nancy

      said, shocked. “These are all Blaine Warner's files.”

      “She must be the one who attacked you!” Bess cried.

      13. Late-Night Stakeout

      Nancy stared at the screen. “It's certainly a possibility

      that Blaine was the attacker,” Nancy said. “I'm sure

      she'd be strong enough, and she's a bit taller than I am,

      too. But what's worse is these files are all about that

      new Harris case that Blaine and my dad are working

      on. Why was she carrying around a disk like that?”

      “Maybe she was taking it home to work on. Do you

      think we should we give it back to her?” Bess asked,

      suddenly concerned. “What if Henry or Byron stole the

      disk from Blaine, and it fell out when one of them

      attacked you? Maybe Byron borrowed it and dropped

      it on his way to the Cyber Space. What if Blaine needs

      this disk to work on your father's case?”

      “I'm sure she has the information stored on her hard

      drive as well,” Nancy said. “Let's not tell anyone and

      see what happens.”

      “Okay, Nan,” Bess said, exiting the directory and

      removing the disk, which Nancy slipped into her

      portfolio.

      “Listen,” Nancy continued softly, “I have an idea.

      Why don't you go ask Ms. Hanson if there's anything

      else you can do to help out around the office?”

      “Sure,” Bess said. “That way I can pop in and out of

      a few offices and snoop around a little.” Bess stood up

      and walked out to the reception area, leaving the door

      to the library open. Nancy could hear Bess and Ms.

      Hanson's conversation.

      “Hi, Ms. Hanson,” Bess said. “Nancy suggested I ask

      if I can help out with anything else around the office—

      run errands, make phone calls, whatever you need.”

      Ms. Hanson smiled at her. “Why not?” she replied.

      “Here are some memos you can distribute to all the

      offices. And then maybe you can do a coffee run. I'd

      like a cheese Danish and a coffee with two sugars.”

      Nancy kept working in the library until Bess

      reappeared a few minutes later with a copy of the

      memo.

      “Nancy, you'll never believe what happened,” Bess

      said. “I walked into Blaine's office to give her a copy of

      the memo, and she was whispering into the phone,

      something about erasing a file. I'll bet she tried to wipe

      out that E-mail log. And when she realized I was in

      there, she yelled at me to get out.”

      Before Nancy could ask her any questions, the girls

      heard a phone slam down across the hall, and Blaine

      burst in through the door to the law library. Ignoring

      Nancy and Bess, she started searching through the

      papers and disks on the table and shelves. She bent

      over to peer in the disk drives at each computer

      station.

      “I just got back from court, and I discovered I'm

      missing a very important disk,” Blaine stormed. She

      looked closely at Nancy and then at Bess. “Are you sure

      you didn't get it mixed up with those disks you've been

      copying?”

      “No, Blaine,” Nancy said carefully. “I'm sure I didn't

      get it mixed up with any of my disks.”

      “I was working late in the library last night, and I'm

      sure I left it in here. Unless Byron or Henry picked it

      up. Henry's always sticking his nose where it doesn't

      belong. And Byron's always snatching up disks and

      papers and stuffing them in his law books or his

      pockets. I'll bet one of them has it!” she huffed.

      “Neither of them has been in here this morning.

      Didn't you say you were working late last night?”

      Nancy asked Blaine. “When would Byron or Henry

      have picked up your disk, if you were the last one in

      here?”

      Blaine shot Nancy a hostile glance, then said,

      “Maybe they took it during the day, and I didn't notice.

      They might even have taken it out of my office. No one

      ever knocks around here,” she concluded, glaring at

      Bess as she stamped out of the library.

      “Whew!” Bess exhaled. “And I thought she was

      upset before when I barged into her office.”

      “Well,” Nancy said, her mind racing, “we know

      Byron couldn't have taken the disk last night, because

      he was at Art-Dot-Café—and the Cyber Space—at the

      same times we were.”

      “But it could have been Henry,” Bess said. “Or

      maybe it was Byron, and he'd already passed the disk

      on to his partner in crime at Williams and Brown—and

      the accomplice is the one who attacked you and

      dropped the disk Byron had given him.”

      “I guess that's a possibility, too,” Nancy replied. “But

      what's most likely is that Blaine was taking the disk

      home, and that she lied about working late last night.

      She probably realized that she must have dropped the

      disk when she attacked me. . . .”

      “And now she's trying to cover it up, by trying to

      blame Byron or Henry,” Bess concluded excitedly.

      The girls quickly dropped their discussion as the

      library door opened, and Nancy's father walked in. “Hi,

      Bess; hi, Nancy,” he said. “Sorry I missed you this

      morning. You two doing okay with that file copying?”

      “Fine,” Nancy said. “Bess has been helping Ms.

      Hanson distribute memos.” Suddenly Nancy's com-

      puter made a ping sound, and she glanced at the

      screen. “Who's sending me E-mail?” she wondered

      aloud, and pressed a button to retrieve her mail.

      There was a new message: “I'm in. Come hear me

      read—live and in person—tomorrow night at the

      Cyber Space. Please invite Bess.—Byron Thomas”

      “Wow, I guess they liked his stuff,” Bess said,

      reading over Nancy's shoulder.

      “What's that?” Mr. Drew asked.

      “Oh, we ran into Byron last night at a computer

      coffee bar in the warehouse district,” Nancy explained

      to her father. “He wanted to arrange a poetry reading

      there, and I told him to E-mail me an invitation if he

      got the gig.”

      “I wonder where he's E-mailing you from,” Bess

      said.

      “He's probably on-line on the computers at the

      courthouse,” Nancy's father answered her. “Blaine has

      him working down there today.”

      “So, what's up, Dad?” Nancy asked. “The last few

      days you've been too busy to stop in and say hello.”

      “I've got some more papers that have to go over to

      Williams and Brown,” he replied. “I hate to pull you off

      your computer work again, but I figure with Bess

      helping out . . .”

      “I'll go, Mr. Drew,” Bess offered. “I was going on a

      coffee run anyway. I'll go to Williams and Brown first,

      and then pick up the food on my way back.”

      “Thanks, Bess,” he said as he left the library. “And

      by the way, I take my coffee black, and I'd love a

      croissant.”

      Once he was gone, Nancy turned to her friend.


      “Listen, Bess, let's hide out in the office tonight and

      see if we can catch Blaine—or one of the others—

      stealing computer disks or sending out E-mail.”

      Bess grimaced. “Hey, I missed my on-line group last

      night, Nance. You want me to miss it again?”

      “I really need you here,” Nancy said. “The solution is

      right around the corner.”

      “No,” Henry said, appearing in the doorway to the

      library. “I'm right around the corner. What are you two

      up to?” he asked.

      “Nothing, Henry,” Bess replied. “I was just going to

      deliver some papers for Mr. Drew and go on a coffee

      run for the office. Can I bring you something?”

      “Hot tea and a scone, if you please, madame,” he

      replied with his broad grin.

      When Bess returned from Williams & Brown, she

      walked back into the library and gave Nancy her cup of

      tea and bagel. “I didn't turn up any new clues,” Bess

      said. “How about you?” Nancy shook her head, and the

      two girls spent the rest of the day working quietly in

      the library.

      A little after six o'clock, they gathered up their

      things, shut off the computers, and walked out to the

      reception area.

      “Good night, Ms. Hanson,” Bess said.

      “Good night, Bess, Nancy,” Ms. Hanson said. “I'll be

      leaving in a few minutes. You girls aren't working late

      tonight?”

      “No, we had enough for one day,” Nancy said,

      laughing.

      “Me, too,” Ms. Hanson said. “I'll see you tomorrow.”

      Instead of getting on the elevator, the two girls went

      to the ladies' room at the end of the public hall. They

      saw Ms. Hanson turn out the lights in the reception

      area, set the automatic locks by the double glass doors,

      and get into the elevator. Once the doors had slid shut

      behind Ms. Hanson, Nancy entered the door-lock

      code, and the two girls sneaked quietly back into the

      office.

      “Shh . . . I think I hear someone in the hallway,”

      Nancy whispered. “Get in here.” She pulled Bess into a

      small closet off the reception area.

      “What is this?” Bess whispered.

      “It's a utility closet,” Nancy replied. “The fuse box,

      electrical panel, phone switches, and computer cables

      are all in here. I didn't want to go in the coat closet,”

      she explained, “in case someone was leaving and

      wanted to get a coat.”

      Through the crack at the edge of the door, Nancy

      could see her father press a button next to the doors

      and wait a few seconds while the automatic lock

      disengaged. Then he exited the reception area doors to

      the elevator lobby.

      “That was too close,” Nancy said. “Let's take off our

      shoes, so when we go out we'll be really quiet.”

      Once Mr. Drew was gone, the two girls emerged

      from their hiding place and tiptoed up the hall toward

      the library in their stocking feet. They could see Blaine

      working at her desk by the light of a small desk lamp.

      The girls slipped into the dark silence of the law

      library. They hid underneath the long oak table

      housing the computer stations, concealed at the far end

      by the metal filing cabinets.

      “Now what?” Bess whispered.

      “Now we wait,” Nancy whispered back.

      They had a long wait. After nearly two hours, they

      heard the metallic click of the outer door.

      “That must be Blaine leaving,” Bess whispered. “I

      guess she's not doing anything tonight. Can we go

      now?”

      “Shh,” Nancy said. “That wasn't Blaine leaving. That

      was someone coming in!”

      The door to the library opened softly, and a figure

      slipped into the darkened room. The girls saw Byron

      click on a small desk lamp, and power up one of the

      computers. He looked around nervously, slipped a disk

      out of his pocket and into the disk drive, and tapped

      away at the keyboard. The girls heard the telltale whine

      of a computer modem dialing out.

      Then the overhead fluorescent lights came on.

      Byron jumped out of his chair and turned off the

      computer.

      “Byron,” the two girls heard Blaine angrily say.

      “When did you come in? I've told you not to sneak

      around here at night and use our Internet link. What

      are you up to, anyway?”

      “N-nothing, Ms. Warner,” Byron said. “I just came

      back to enter these, um, notes. I didn't mean to startle

      you. I'm s-sorry.”

      “I'm leaving for the night,” she said brusquely. “Did

      you check to make sure you didn't pick up my disk last

      night?”

      “I left before you last night,” Byron replied simply,

      “and I've been at the courthouse all day.” He turned

      off the desk lamp and started for the door.

      “I'm going to the ladies' room, and then I'm

      leaving,” Blaine called out as she turned off the light

      and moved up the hallway. “I'll lock up when I'm

      done.” The girls stayed hidden until they heard the

      outer door lock click shut.

      “Great,” Bess said. She wriggled out of her hiding

      place. “Everyone's gone home for the night. Our

      stakeout's a bust, and I can get home in time for my

      chat group.”

      “Wait a minute,” Nancy whispered urgently. She

      reached out to grab Bess by the arm. “What about

      Henry?”

      “Exactly.” A deep male voice came from the

      darkened hallway. “What about Henry?”

      Bess gave a little cry of surprise as the lights came

      on once again to reveal Henry standing in the doorway

      to the library.

      “Henry!” Bess cried. “What are you doing here?”

      “I might ask the same of you, but I already know the

      answer,” he replied smugly. “You're here to help Nancy

      catch whoever sent that E-mail on those settled cases.

      But you're too late. I, Henry the Great, have figured it

      out,” he whispered. “The E-mail mystery is solved, and

      the culprit is . . . Ms. Marian Hanson!”

      14. The E-mail Trail

      “What?” Nancy cried. “Ms. Hanson would never do

      anything to hurt my father, or help another firm—

      especially not Williams and Brown.”

      “Well, look at this,” Henry said, waving a piece of

      paper at them. It was a printout of the E-mail log file

      that Nancy had discovered. “Her log-on is all over this

      E-mail that was sent to Williams and Brown on the

      same day the cases came into our office,” Henry said

      triumphantly.

      “Hold on just a minute, smart guy,” Bess said.

      “That's the first thing I noticed, too. But you can

      pretend to be anyone you want in cyberspace,

      remember? You could have sent that, and just used

      Ms. Hanson's log-on name and password to cover your

      tracks.”

      “And you know everybody's password, Henry,”

      Nancy said. “Remember when I forgot mine, and you

      told me what it was?”


      “That's true,” Henry admitted. “Your father insisted

      that we all have each other's passwords in case we need

      to access material in each other's files.”

      “You stick to the law, Mr. Hotshot Paralegal,” Bess

      said, “and leave the investigating to us.”

      “I still think—” Henry began.

      Nancy cut him off. “I think we should look at the

      disk that Byron forgot when Blaine surprised him here

      a few minutes ago to see if he's really the poet he

      claims to be—or if he's something else, altogether.”

      “Good idea, Nan,” Bess said.

      “I saw them both head out of the office,” Henry

      said.

      “You don't think they're working together?” Bess

      asked.

      “No way,” Henry replied. “Those two are like oil and

      water. They do not mix.”

      The three turned on the computer where Byron had

      been sitting and waited for it to boot up.

      “Shh,” Nancy whispered. “I think I hear something.”

      “Naw,” Henry said. “That's just the computer

      warming up. So, what happened? Byron was sneaking

      in here to go on-line, and Blaine caught him?”

      Nancy nodded, and once the computer screen

      showed it was ready, called up the first file on Byron's

      disk. Its contents scrolled down the screen.

      I dream in bits

      and bytes

      Of you

      My shining light

      My dream of day

      My unknown cyber love . . .

      “Enough!” Henry said, rolling his eyes. “I've seen

      enough.”

      “I think it's beautiful,” Bess said, glaring at Henry.

      “I've never seen a computer love poem before.”

      Nancy continued to scan the files, just to be sure,

      but it was all poetry or notes on Web-page design and

      memos to Internet writers' groups. It appeared that

      Byron was just what he claimed to be.

      “Bess and I were pretty sure already,” Nancy said

      thoughtfully. “But this confirms it. If your interest in

      these settled cases is for real, and if Byron's activities

      on-line are truly about his poetry, then Blaine's our

      main suspect.”

      “And she might be dangerous,” Bess warned.

      “Nancy was attacked last night, outside the Cyber

      Space Café—and we found Blaine's missing disk right

      there, where she was attacked.”

      “Blaine's missing disk?” Henry exclaimed. “She's

      been screaming about that all day. Let's take a look at

     
    Previous Page Next Page
© The Read Online Free 2022~2025