ROCK HARBOR
LOST
& FOUND
OTHER BOOKS IN THE ROCK HARBOR SEARCH AND RESCUE SERIES
Rock Harbor Search and Rescue
Lost and Found
© 2013 by Colleen Coble
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Coble, Colleen.
Rock Harbor lost and found / by Colleen Coble ; with Robin Caroll.
pages cm—(Rock Harbor Search and Rescue series)
Summary: When fourteen-year-old Emily O’Reilly learns that her best friend, Olivia Webster, was adopted, the two seek Olivia’s birth parents, but meanwhile, Emily’s mother Marika is released on parole and will stop at nothing to contact her daughter.
ISBN 978-1-4003-2163-6 (pbk.)
[1. Adoption—Fiction. 2. Mothers and daughters—Fiction. 3. Missing persons—Fiction. 4. Search dogs—Fiction. 5. Rescue dogs—Fiction. 6. Dogs—Fiction. 7. Christian life—Fiction. 8. Mystery and detective stories.] I. Coble, Colleen. II. Title.
PZ7.C6355Rnl 2013
[Fic]—dc23
2013014704
Printed in the United States of America
13 14 15 16 17 RRD 6 5 4 3 2 1
For Alexa Coble,
who brightens her Mimi’s life every day
CONTENTS
ONE
TWO
THREE
FOUR
FIVE
SIX
SEVEN
EIGHT
NINE
TEN
ELEVEN
TWELVE
THIRTEEN
FOURTEEN
FIFTEEN
SIXTEEN
SEVENTEEN
EIGHTEEN
NINETEEN
TWENTY
TWENTY-ONE
TWENTY-TWO
TWENTY-THREE
TWENTY-FOUR
TWENTY-FIVE
EPILOGUE
ONE
Something wasn’t quite right.
Wrinkling her nose, Emily O’Reilly took a step back and stared at the centerpiece she’d just finished putting together. The big blue-and-gray crepe paper C looked lopsided somehow.
“What did you do to that?” Olivia Webster, Emily’s best friend, asked with a giggle.
“I followed the instructions . . . at least most of them.” At fourteen, Emily thought she could manage a centerpiece without directions, but maybe she should have read them after all.
Olivia giggled again and reached for Emily’s pathetic attempt at decorating. “You’re hopeless, Em.” Within seconds, she had the centerpiece level and looking like the others sitting on tables across the Rock Harbor Community Center. Olivia was a genius when it came to that sort of thing.
Emily? Not so much.
“Why are we decorating so early anyway? The celebration isn’t until the weekend.” Emily shoved the decoration’s wrapping into the bag of trash she’d carried from table to table. “It’s only Monday.”
“Because we want everything to be perfect.” Olivia pushed in a chair, straightened the glitter-littered tablecloth, and lifted the bag of trash. “It’s too much to do all at once, and we don’t want anything to get forgotten.”
Emily sighed and followed her best friend. How, again, had she let Olivia talk her into serving on the homecoming celebration committee?
“It’s going to be beautiful.” Olivia tossed the bag into the trash can. “I can’t wait.”
Emily had to admit that everything did look really nice. And the night of the celebration would be epic—lots of food, lots of music, and lots of dancing. Dad and Naomi, Emily’s stepmom, would probably slow dance. That would be embarrassing.
“Come on, let’s head to my house. Mom and Dad should still be at the movies.” Olivia led the way out of the front door.
The community center was one of the most beautiful buildings in town, built by Rock Harbor’s early residents during the Copper Queen mining hype. Emily loved the building’s really cool high ceilings and fun corners to explore.
Emily followed as the other volunteers spilled out onto Houghton Street. “I hope they don’t get home sooner than you think.” She jumped onto her bicycle and pedaled after her best friend.
A late-fall breeze tugged at Emily’s hair, pushing a hint of the distinct scent of Lake Superior across the parking lot.
“Me too. But the movie isn’t supposed to be over for”—Olivia checked her watch, her bike wobbling—“another forty minutes. It’ll take them at least thirty to drive back home.” She bumped over the curb and onto the sidewalk.
They biked down Houghton Street and passed the familiar sights of town. Rock Harbor might be smaller than some towns in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, but it more than made up for it with the quaintness of the town with its Victorian buildings and community activities. Soon the residents would own the town alone again. The summer and early fall tourist season was almost over now that winter was on its way in.
The girls coasted up Olivia’s driveway and propped their bikes against the carport. Olivia unlocked the side door with the key she wore on a chain around her neck, hidden safely under her shirt.
Emily shut the door behind them. “I’m so glad Naomi thought of using your parents’ wedding picture as the design for the anniversary cake. The baker said she needed a copy right away though. Do you have any idea where to look?”
“They used to have it out when I was a little girl. I’m not sure where Mom put it when we moved to this house.” Olivia pulled out the top drawer in the desk by the door to the hall.
Emily moved to the bookcase and looked. “Did you know the first marriage license was issued in the mid-eighteen hundreds?”
“No, I didn’t, and I don’t understand why you even know that.” Olivia shook her head, grinning, then turned back to the drawer. “You and your random facts.”
Emily loved history—the more random, the better. Maybe that’s why she loved being on the History Smackdown team so much.
“Do they have an office?” Emily asked. She should know because she’d spent the night there lots of times, but they usually hung out in Olivia’s room. She’d been in the living room, the kitchen, and Olivia’s room, but nowhere else.
“No. We have this computer desk, but that’s about it.” Olivia opened the next drawer. “But I’m not seeing any pictures.”
“What about an attic?”
Olivia grinned. “The way you love attics is a little weird. But we only have a nasty one that you get to with a pull-down ladder, and it’s full of insulation. Dad doesn’t store anything up there. Mom says it’s a death trap.”
“Then where do they store stuff like your Christmas tree?”
“Oh! There’s some attic space over the garage. We’ll check if nothing’s in the drawers.”
Emily glanced through the books in the bookcase but found no photo albums. “Nothing here.”
“Nothing here either.” Ol
ivia slammed the last desk drawer. “Let’s check the garage.”
Emily followed her to the garage, and together they managed to get the ladder pulled down. The exertion left Emily huffing. “How much time do we have left?”
Olivia disappeared up the ladder. “About a half hour.” Her voice was muffled.
“We’d better hurry then. We’ll need to get out of here so they don’t know we came by.” The girls were supposed to go to Emily’s after helping out at the community center, but Naomi knew they were coming by to get the picture.
Olivia’s face appeared in the hole above her. “There’s nothing here but the Christmas tree and some boxes of ornaments.”
“They have to keep things like this somewhere.”
Olivia came back down the ladder, and the girls shoved it back into place. Olivia had a smudge of dirt on her cheek, and Emily brushed it off.
“Now what?” Emily asked.
“I didn’t want to go into Mom and Dad’s room. They keep it shut. But I think we have to. We don’t have any other option, I guess.”
Emily raised her brows. “You never go in there? Not even to crawl in bed with your mom and watch a movie or something?”
Olivia shook her head. “They don’t have a TV in their bedroom.”
“Haven’t you even taken your parents breakfast in bed or something?”
Olivia just shook her head and led the way back inside the house.
Emily scrunched up her nose. There was something fishy about that. Emily and her two brothers loved piling on the bed whenever Dad didn’t have to work. And sometimes even just with Naomi. Emily and Timmy always made Dad and Naomi breakfast in bed on their birthdays and for Mother’s Day and Father’s Day. But, Olivia was an only child. Maybe that changed things. Olivia’s parents were crazy about Olivia though. And every family was different.
Standing outside the closed door to the bedroom, Emily’s pulse sped up. “What if your mom catches us in here? Will we get in trouble?”
Olivia turned the doorknob. “No, she’ll just tell me bedrooms are meant to be private places and should only be entered by invitation.”
“Weird,” Emily muttered. If she disobeyed a standing house rule, Dad would ground her. At least take away her phone for a week.
Olivia shoved the door open. “She says it’s because she wants to teach me about boundaries.”
“That makes sense I guess.” Emily peered past the doorway into the bedroom. It was way neater than Dad and Naomi’s. The bed didn’t have a wrinkle, and the tables and dressers were cleared and held only a vase with fake flowers and a statuette. “No pictures here.”
“There’s one place I want to check. Mom’s trunk.” Olivia pointed to the foot of the bed where a cedar chest stood. There was a lacy coverlet draped over the shiny wood.
Emily could see Olivia’s hesitation, so she stepped past her and lifted the cover to reveal the top. The lid rose easily, and the aroma of cedar wafted to her nose. She inhaled. “I love that smell.”
Olivia knelt beside her. “Me too. And I think we’ve found the right place. There are all kinds of pictures and documents in here. Look, here’s their marriage license.”
It was nicely framed in black. “We can use it if we can’t find their wedding photo.” Emily laid it aside. “Here it is!” She pulled out the wedding photo showing a younger version of Olivia’s parents posing together. “Your mom is so pretty.” With Mrs. Webster’s bright blue eyes and natural blond hair, she could’ve been a model.
“Yes, she is. I always wished I looked like her. I don’t know who I look like though.”
There was a picture under the wedding photo of a baby with a man and a woman. The woman was holding the little girl and smiling down at her. Emily picked it up. “Aw, too cute. How old were you here?”
She turned over the photo and froze when she read the words on the back: At Tarver’s office the day of Olivia’s adoption. July 13. She was three months old. Happy day!
Adopted? Liv was adopted? Emily’s gaze flashed to Olivia, but words wouldn’t come.
Olivia reached for the photo. “What’s it say?”
Too late, Emily tried to pull it away, but Olivia’s fingers held it in place while she read it. Emily was almost afraid to see her friend’s expression, but she couldn’t look away.
Olivia’s eyes widened, and the color drained from her cheeks. “A-adopted?” Her voice was thick, then her fingers went slack, and the picture fell from her hand.
Emily touched her shoulder. “Liv? You okay?”
“I—I knew there was something . . .” Her words choked off. “I thought I was just imagining things, you know? I don’t look like either one of them.”
Emily wished she knew what to say. She could only imagine how she would feel to find out she was adopted. Marika was a horrible mother, but at least Emily knew who she was. “What are you going to do?”
The tears were rolling down Olivia’s face now. “I don’t know. I can’t admit to them that I found it without telling them I was in the chest. And they’ll want to know why I was in there. I don’t want to spoil the surprise.”
Just like Olivia to think of everyone else’s feelings before her own. “Maybe you can start asking questions about seeing baby pictures and stuff. I bet they’ve wanted to tell you but weren’t sure how,” Emily suggested.
“Maybe.” Olivia got up and put the picture away. “We have to get out of here before Mom comes back. Just pray for me, Em.” She straightened the coverlet back over the top of the cedar chest.
Her voice was choked. “You know I will, Liv. I’m sorry.”
“Me too, Em. Me too. But you know what this means, don’t you?”
Emily nodded. “You need to know who your real parents are. And I’ll help you.”
Olivia . . . adopted.
Emily couldn’t wrap her mind around it, and she ached for her friend. She didn’t even know how she’d feel if she found out she was adopted. She stared up at the picture in the Phantom of the Opera frame sitting on the shelf over her computer. Taken last year, it was Naomi and Dad and Timmy and Matthew and her with Charley at their feet. The whole family hugged one another and smiled for the camera.
Sherlock growled.
Emily giggled at her puppy as he growled again, then pounced on the chew toy that had fallen off the edge of his bed by her desk. She hadn’t even had him a month, and already she loved her puppy so much. She couldn’t imagine giving him up now . . . it would break her heart.
Who were Olivia’s real parents, and why had they given her up? Why hadn’t Mr. and Mrs. Webster told Olivia she was adopted? Lots of kids were adopted, so it wasn’t like it was something to keep secret.
The back of the picture had said, At Tarver’s office. Who was Tarver? Maybe the person at the adoption agency?
Emily quickly opened the browser on her computer, then ran a search for adoption agencies in the Upper Peninsula. Over forty-five results loaded. Forty-five? Sheesh, they’d never get through that many. She then ran a search for “adoptions in the Upper Peninsula” and “Tarver.” Only two results loaded: Les Tarver and Charlotte Tarver, both listed as attorneys specializing in private adoptions. Les Tarver had an office in Ishpeming, which was about an hour and a half to two hours away, while Charlotte’s office was in Marquette, one of the closest towns to Rock Harbor. Emily jotted down the information.
She opened two new tabs and began searches on both Les and Charlotte Tarver. She waited for both pages to load. The results on Les Tarver returned first. Emily read a few of the posts only to find Les Tarver had retired from the legal profession four years ago. If he was the attorney who handled Olivia’s adoption, finding information might be difficult.
There were many more results on Charlotte Tarver. Pictures of her winning various legal awards, news articles about her work, and her website. Emily clicked on the website. She scanned the information, then found the Contact Us form. Should she fill it out? Olivia might not want her to. She hesita
ted for a moment, then typed a message stating she had some questions regarding adoptions approximately fourteen years ago.
“Timmy! Emily! Matthew! Dinner,” Naomi called.
Emily clicked Send on the message, then closed the browser windows. It’d be nice if she got a response tomorrow. Maybe she and Olivia could ask Inetta Harris to help them with the research. She’d done so before, helping Emily clear her name when she’d been accused of stealing a valuable necklace. Yeah, she’d ask Inetta for help.
The phone rang, and she answered it before looking at the caller ID. “Liv, you won’t believe this.” Too late she realized it was the house phone, not her cell phone. It wouldn’t be Olivia. “Uh, sorry. This is the O’Reilly residence.”
“Just who I wanted to talk to.”
Emily froze at the familiar throaty voice. It was Marika. “You’re not supposed to call here,” Emily stammered. Her pulse raced, and she knew she should hang up, but wasn’t that rude?
Six years ago, her mother Marika had been accused of attempted murder. She’d testified against her partner and had gotten a lighter sentence, and just last month had been released from prison. Emily could still remember all the horrors that had happened to her and Timmy because of their mother. No, in Emily’s heart, Naomi was her real mother.
“I miss you, honey. You and Timmy. I’ve changed. Let me prove it to you.”
She went hot then cold at the thought. “I have to go.” She clicked off the phone, then hugged herself and held her breath when it rang again. Let Dad or Naomi get it this time. It stopped after three rings. She sat in front of the computer and fought tears. Not now. Marika couldn’t be back in her life now.
Rapid footsteps sounded in the hall, then her father’s familiar hard rap came on her door. “Emily.”
She leaped up and threw open the door. One look in her dad’s face, and she knew he’d talked to Marika.
“The next time she calls, just hang up. She’s not allowed to have contact with you.”
Relief flooded her. “Yes, sir. She caught me off guard.”