Two Little Girls in Blue

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Two Little Girls in Blue Page 2

by Mary Higgins Clark


  The screeching of brakes on the road in front of the house told Ridgefield Police Captain Robert “Marty” Martinson that the parents of the missing twins had arrived home.

  They had phoned the police station only minutes after the 911 call came in. “I’m Margaret Frawley,” the woman had said, her voice shaking with fear. “We live at 10 Old Woods Road. We can’t reach our babysitter. She doesn’t answer the house phone or her cell phone. She’s minding our three-year-old twins. Something may be wrong. We’re on our way home from the city.”

  “We’ll get right over there and check,” Marty had promised. Because the parents were on the highway and no doubt already upset, he’d seen little use in telling them that he already knew something was terribly wrong. The babysitter’s father had just phoned from 10 Old Woods Road: “My daughter is tied up and gagged. The twins she was minding are gone. There’s a ransom note in their bedroom.”

  Now, an hour later, the property around the house and the driveway had already been taped off, awaiting the arrival of the forensic team. Marty would have liked to keep the media from getting wind of the kidnapping, but he knew that was hopeless. He had already learned that the babysitter’s parents had told everyone in the hospital emergency room where Trish Logan was being treated that the twins were missing. Reporters would be showing up anytime. The FBI had been notified, and agents were on the way.

  Marty braced himself as the kitchen door opened and the parents rushed in. Beginning with his first day as a twenty-one-year-old rookie cop, he had trained himself to retain his first impression of people connected with a crime, whether they were victims, perpetrators, or witnesses. Later he would jot those impressions down. In police circles he was known as “The Observer.”

  In their early thirties, he thought as Margaret and Steve Frawley moved hurriedly toward him. A handsome couple, both in evening clothes. The mother’s brown hair hung loose around her shoulders. She was slender, but her clenched hands looked strong. Her fingernails were short, the polish colorless. Probably a good athlete, Marty thought. Her intense eyes were a shade of dark blue that seemed almost black as they stared at him.

  Steve Frawley, the father, was tall, about six foot three, with dark blond hair and light blue eyes. His broad shoulders and powerful arms caused his too-small tuxedo jacket to strain at the seams. He could use a new one, Marty thought.

  “Has anything happened to our daughters?” Frawley demanded.

  Marty watched as Frawley put his hands on his wife’s arms as though to brace her against possibly devastating news.

  There was no gentle way to tell parents that their children had been kidnapped and a ransom note demanding eight million dollars left on their bed. The absolute incredulity on the faces of the young couple looked to be genuine, Marty thought, a reaction he would note in his case book, but appended with a question mark.

  “Eight million dollars! Eight million dollars! Why not eighty million?” Steve Frawley demanded, his face ashen. “We brought every dime we had to the closing on this house. We’ve got about fifteen hundred dollars in the checking account right now, and that’s it.”

  “Are there any wealthy relatives in either of your families?” Marty asked.

  The Frawleys began to laugh, the high-pitched laugh of hysteria. Then as Marty watched, Steve spun his wife around. They hugged each other as the laughter broke and the harsh sound of his dry sobs mingled with her wail. “I want my babies. I want my babies.”

  3

  At eleven o’clock the special cell phone rang. Clint picked it up. “Hello, sir,” he said.

  “The Pied Piper here.”

  This guy, whoever he is, is trying to disguise his voice, Clint thought as he moved across the small living room to get as far away as possible from the sound of Angie crooning songs to the twins. For God’s sake, the kids are asleep, he thought irritably. Shut up.

  “What’s the noise in the background?” the Pied Piper asked sharply.

  “My girlfriend’s singing to the kids she’s babysitting.” Clint knew he was furnishing the information the Pied Piper wanted. He and Lucas had been successful.

  “I can’t reach Bert.”

  “He told me to tell you he has a five A.M. pickup to go to Kennedy Airport. He went home to sleep, so he turned off his phone. I hope that . . .”

  “Harry, turn on the television,” the Pied Piper interrupted. “There’s a breaking story about a kidnapping. I’ll get back to you in the morning.”

  Clint grabbed the remote button and snapped on the TV, then watched as the house on Old Woods Road came into view. Even though the night was overcast, the porch light revealed the house’s peeling paint and sagging shutters. The yellow crime-scene tape used to keep the press and onlookers back extended to the road.

  “The new owners, Stephen and Margaret Frawley, moved to this address only a few months ago,” the reporter was saying. “Neighbors say they expected the house to be torn down but instead learned that the Frawleys intend to gradually renovate the existing structure. This afternoon some of the neighbors’ children attended a third-birthday party for the missing twins. We have a picture that was taken at the party only hours ago.”

  The television screen was suddenly filled with the faces of the identical twins, their eyes wide in excitement as they looked at their birthday cake. Three candles were on each side of the festive confection. In the center was one larger candle. “The neighbor tells us that the center candle is the one to grow on. The twins are so identical in every way that their mother joked it would be a waste to put a second candle to grow on there.”

  Clint switched channels. A different picture of the twins in their blue velvet party dresses was being shown. They were holding hands.

  “Clint, look how sweet they are. They’re just beautiful,” Angie said, startling him. “Even asleep they’re still holding hands. Isn’t that precious?”

  He had not heard her come up behind him. Now she put her arms around his neck. “I always wanted to have a baby, but I was told I couldn’t,” she said, as she nuzzled his cheek.

  “I know, Angie, honey,” he said patiently. This was a story he had heard before.

  “Then for a long time I wasn’t with you.”

  “You had to be in that special hospital, honey. You hurt someone real bad.”

  “But now we’re going to have a lot of money and we’ll live on a boat in the Caribbean.”

  “We’ve always talked about that. Very soon we’ll be able to do it.”

  “I’ve got a good idea. Let’s bring the little girls with us.”

  Clint snapped off the television and jumped up. He turned and grabbed her wrists. “Angie, why do we have those children?”

  She looked at him and swallowed nervously. “We kidnapped them.”

  “Why?”

  “So we’d have lots of money and could live on a boat.”

  “Instead of living like damn gypsies, and getting kicked out of this place every summer while the golf pro lives here. What happens to us if the police catch us?”

  “We go to prison for a long, long time.”

  “What did you promise to do?”

  “Take care of the kids, play with them, feed them, dress them.”

  “And isn’t that what you’re going to do?”

  “Yes. Yes. I’m sorry, Clint. I love you. You can call me Mona. I don’t like that name, but it’s all right if you want me to use it.”

  “We must never use our real names in front of the twins. In a couple of days we’ll give them back and get our money.”

  “Clint, maybe we could . . .” Angie stopped. She knew he would be angry if she suggested they keep one of the twins. But we will, she promised herself slyly. I know how to make it happen. Lucas thinks he’s so smart. But he’s not as smart as I am.

  4

  Margaret Frawley folded her hands around the steaming cup of tea. She was so cold. Steve had pulled an afghan from the couch in the living room and wrapped it around her, but it d
id nothing to stop the trembling that shook her entire body.

  The twins were missing. Kathy and Kelly were missing. Someone had taken them and left a ransom note. It didn’t make sense. Like a litany, the words beat a cadence in her head: The twins are missing. Kathy and Kelly are missing.

  The police had not allowed them to go into the girls’ bedroom. “Our job is to get them back,” Captain Martinson told them. “We can’t risk losing any fingerprints or DNA samples by contaminating the area.”

  The restricted area also included the hall upstairs where someone had attacked the babysitter. Trish was going to be all right. She was in the hospital and had told the police everything she remembered. She said she’d been on her cell phone talking to her boyfriend when she thought she heard one of the twins crying. She’d gone up the stairs and knew instantly something was wrong because she couldn’t see the light in the twins’ room, and that was when she realized someone was behind her. She remembered nothing after that.

  Had there been someone else, Margaret wondered, someone in the room with the girls? Kelly’s the lighter sleeper, but Kathy might have been restless. She may be getting a cold.

  If one of the girls started to cry, did someone make her stop?

  Margaret dropped the cup she was holding and winced as hot tea splattered over the blouse and skirt she had bought at a discount house for tonight’s black-tie company dinner at the Waldorf.

  Even though the price was one-third of what it would have been on Fifth Avenue, it had been too pricey for their budget.

  Steve urged me to buy it, she thought dully. It was an important company dinner. Anyhow, I wanted to get dressed up tonight. We haven’t gone to a black-tie affair in at least a year.

  Steve was trying to dry her clothes with a towel. “Marg, are you okay? Did the tea burn you?”

  I have to go upstairs, Margaret thought. Maybe the twins are hiding in the closet. I remember they did that once. I pretended to keep looking for them. I could hear them giggling when I called their names.

  “Kathy . . . Kelly . . . Kathy . . . Kelly . . . where are you? . . .”

  Steve came home just then. I called down to him. “Steve . . . Steve . . . our twins are missing.”

  More giggles from the closet.

  Steve could tell I was joking. He came up to their room. I pointed to the closet. He walked over to it and yelled, “Maybe Kathy and Kelly ran away. Maybe they don’t like us anymore. Well, there’s no use looking for them. Let’s turn out the lights and go out for dinner.”

  An instant later the closet door flew open. “We like you, we like you,” they’d wailed in unison.

  Margaret remembered how scared they’d looked. They must have been terrified when somebody grabbed them, she thought. Somebody is hiding them now.

  This isn’t happening. It’s a nightmare and I’m going to wake up. I want my babies. Why does my arm hurt? Why is Steve putting something cold on it?

  Margaret closed her eyes. She was vaguely aware that Captain Martinson was talking to someone.

  “Mrs. Frawley.”

  She looked up. Another man had come into the room.

  “Mrs. Frawley, I’m FBI Agent Walter Carlson. I have three kids of my own and I know how you must be feeling. I’m here to help you get your children back, but we need your help. Can you answer some questions?”

  Walter Carlson’s eyes were kind. He didn’t look to be more than his mid-forties, so his children were probably not much older than teenagers. “Why would someone take my babies?” Margaret asked him.

  “That’s what we’re going to find out, Mrs. Frawley.”

  Carlson moved swiftly to catch Margaret as she began to slide from the chair.

  5

  Franklin Bailey, the chief financial officer of a family-owned grocery chain, was Lucas’s five A.M. pickup. A frequent overnight traveler up and down the East Coast, he was a regular customer. Some days, like today, Lucas would drive him into Manhattan for a meeting, and then wait for him and drive him home.

  It never even occurred to Lucas to say he wasn’t available this morning. He knew that one of the first things the cops would check out would be any workmen who had been anywhere around the Frawleys’ house. Chances were he’d made their list because Bailey lived on High Ridge, which was only two blocks from Old Woods.

  Of course the cops have no reason to give me a second look, he assured himself. I’ve been picking up people in and around this town for twenty years, and I’ve always kept below the radar screen. He knew that his neighbors in nearby Danbury, where he lived, looked at him as a quiet, solitary guy whose hobby was to fly a small plane out of Danbury Airport. It also amused him to tell people how much he liked to hike, an explanation he used to cover the occasional times when he’d have a backup driver cover a job for him. The place where he was hiking, of course, was usually a house he had chosen to burglarize.

  On the way to pick up Bailey this morning, he resisted the temptation to drive past the Frawley home. That would have been crazy. He could picture the activity inside now. He wondered if the FBI was in on it yet. What were they figuring out? he asked himself with some amusement. That the backdoor lock could be slipped with a credit card? That, hidden by the overgrown foundation shrubs, it would have been easy to see the babysitter sprawled on the couch yakking on her phone? That it was obvious from looking in the kitchen window that the back stairs would get an intruder to the second floor without the babysitter having a clue? That there had to be at least two people in on the job, one to get rid of the babysitter, one to keep the kids quiet?

  He pulled into Franklin Bailey’s driveway at five minutes of five, kept the car idling to be sure it stayed nice and warm for the big-shot accountant, and contented himself with envisioning the money he would get as his share of the ransom payment.

  The front door of the handsome Tudor-style home opened. Lucas sprang out of the car and opened the rear door for his client. It was one of his little courtesies that the front passenger seat was always pulled up as far as possible to allow maximum leg room in the back.

  Bailey, a silver-haired man in his late sixties, murmured a greeting, his tone distracted. But when the car began to move, he said, “Lucas, turn onto Old Woods Road. I want to see if the cops are still there.”

  Lucas felt his throat tighten. What would make Bailey decide to go by there? he wondered. He wasn’t a gawker. He had to have a reason. Of course, Bailey was a big shot in town, Lucas reminded himself. He’d been mayor at one time. The fact that he showed up there wouldn’t draw attention to the limo he was in. On the other hand, Lucas always trusted the cold prickly feeling he experienced when he felt himself nearing the law-enforcement radar range, and he was feeling it now.

  “Anything you say, Mr. Bailey. But why would there be cops on Old Woods Road?”

  “Obviously you haven’t been watching the news, Lucas. The three-year-old twins of the couple who recently moved into the old Cunningham house were kidnapped last night.”

  “Kidnapped! You’ve got to be kidding, sir.”

  “I wish I were,” Franklin Bailey said grimly. “Nothing like this has ever happened in Ridgefield. I’ve met the Frawleys a number of times and am very fond of them.”

  Lucas drove two blocks, then turned the car onto Old Woods Road. Police barricades were in front of the house where eight hours ago he had broken in and grabbed the kids. In spite of his unease and his sense that it would be a lot safer not to be there now, he couldn’t help thinking smugly, If you dopes only knew.

  There were media trucks parked across the street from the Frawley home. Two policemen were standing in front of the barricades to prevent anyone from turning into the driveway. Lucas could see that they were carrying notebooks.

  Franklin Bailey opened the back window and was recognized immediately by the sergeant in charge, who began to apologize that he could not allow him to park.

  Bailey cut him short. “Ned, I don’t intend to park. But maybe I can be of service. I’ve go
t a seven o’clock breakfast meeting in New York and will be back by eleven o’clock. Who’s inside, Marty Martinson?”

  “Yes, sir. And the FBI.”

  “I know how these things work. Give Marty my card. I’ve been listening to the reports half the night. The Frawleys are new in town and don’t seem to have close relatives to rely on. Tell Marty that if I can be any help as contact person for the kidnappers, I’m available. Tell him I remember that during the Lindbergh kidnapping, a professor who offered to be a contact person was the one who heard from the kidnappers.”

  “I’ll tell him, sir.” Sergeant Ned Barker took the card and made a note in his book. Then with a somewhat apologetic tone, he said, “I have to identify anyone who drives past, sir. I’m sure you understand.”

  “Of course.”

  Barker looked at Lucas. “May I see your license, sir?”

  Lucas smiled, his eager, anxious-to-please smile. “Of course, officer, of course.”

  “I can vouch for Lucas,” Franklin Bailey said. “He’s been my driver for years.”

  “Strictly following orders, Mr. Bailey. I’m sure you understand.”

  The sergeant examined the driver’s license. His eyes flickered over Lucas. Without comment he returned it and wrote something in his notebook.

  Franklin Bailey closed the window and leaned back. “All right, Lucas. Let’s step on it. That was probably a wasted gesture, but somehow I felt I had to do it.”

  “I think it was a wonderful gesture, sir. I never had kids, but it doesn’t take a lot of imagination to figure out what those poor parents are feeling now.” I just hope they’re feeling bad enough to come up with eight million dollars, he thought with an inner smile.

  6

  Clint was pulled from a heavy Chivas Regal–assisted sleep by the persistent voices of two children calling “Mommy.” When there was no response, they had begun to try to climb over the high sides of the crib in which they had been sleeping.

 

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