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“So someone might have passed Piper on the trail.”

“Yes. I imagine if the news stations picked up the story, you might find someone. I think most people would remember a girl like that if they passed her by.”

I had to agree with Finch. Six-foot tall model types may not stand out on the sidewalks of New York, but they would on a hiking trail in Marin County. “Piper was a tourist on her first visit to Muir Woods. Seems a little fishy that she somehow found herself in this spot.”

“You think someone forced her to this location?”

“It’s possible, but they’d first have to make their way along the busy main trail. I don’t see how you can force someone through that crowd.”

Finch nodded.

Piper most likely came to the park with someone she had met in San Francisco. I knew she had left the hostel alone but it was apparent that she had hiked with someone. I didn’t believe Piper was the victim of a random crime. She went to the park with someone else that day, and that person was opportunistic.

Chapter 9

A couple of days had passed since the Carlsons had read the riddle. Jerry was eager to get on with their next task, but for that to happen, he needed to figure out what the message meant. Vicki wasn’t as good as Jerry when it came to deciphering the clues, and he suspected part of her lack of ability had to do with the fact that she didn’t want to rush things and leave the city.

Jerry sat quietly in the hotel room while drinking coffee. He and his wife had spent the day shopping and were back for an afternoon nap. She was the only one occupying the bed. Jerry chose, instead, to take advantage of the quiet time and the fresh pot of brew he had ordered from room service to think through the riddle.

Good fortune comes in many forms. Find the right one for your next clue. Jerry repeated that thought while he sipped the hot and black. Every riddle they had received thus far had something to do with San Francisco, particularly the city’s Chinatown neighborhood. No other instructions were included; figuring stuff out was part of the process. They knew each riddle would lead them to a specific location where they would receive the answer to unlock their next task.

Fortune… fortune…

His body jerked and his eyes widened. It’s so obvious: fortune cookies. Every Chinese restaurant serves them after a meal, but which one?

Jerry moved over to the desk and searched for popular Chinese restaurants on his laptop. He scanned the results, hoping something from the name or location would jump out at him, but nothing did. There has to be a better way of narrowing it down.

He revised his search for restaurants only in the Chinatown area but it didn’t help much. Most of the same restaurants appeared. He tried adding “delivery” to his search, but nothing about the results told him anything useful still. Frustrated, Jerry looked at his wife; his sleeping beauty lay calmly under the covers, unaware of his irritation at not having a sounding board to help.

Maybe I’m coming at this wrong, he continued with his thoughts. Many forms… Flavors? There are different flavors. I’ve seen chocolate-covered ones. Still, the problem was who and where. And that’s when he realized it wasn’t about all the places that served fortune cookies.

On a hunch, he typed “manufacturing fortune cookies in San Francisco” into the search field. Bingo! The Golden Gate Fortune Cookie Factory popped up, and it was in Chinatown. That’s it! It’s gotta be. Jerry mentally patted himself on the back for his cleverness before draining the last of the coffee from his cup. It was time to wake his lovely up.

* * *

As soon as he had figured out their destination, Jerry had dragged Vicki out of bed and into Chinatown. This time, he also wore his disguise: a pair of glasses and a mustache. It was important to Jerry that he and Vicki conceal their identities when meeting with their contact. She said he was being paranoid, that it didn’t matter, but he insisted. As they walked north on Grant Street, she monitored the map on her phone. “We need to make a left on Jackson, and then it’s the next left after that.”

They continued to the intersection, turned left and walked half a block uphill where they found themselves looking at an alley. “Is it on a street? I would think a place of business would have their front door facing the street.”

Vicki frowned at the phone. “Well, it says it’s the very next left. It doesn’t say if it’s a road or alley.”

Jerry ignored the alleyway and told her to follow him as he continued up the hill to Stockton Avenue. He made a left and started looking for the Golden Gate Fortune Cookie Factory.

“We passed it,” she blurted. “According to the map, it’s back where we were, in that alley.”

“Let me see that phone,” he ordered. But to his surprise, the map clearly showed they had passed it.

“I told you so.”

“Yeah, well, sometimes these maps have the wrong information and—”

Vicki didn’t wait for her husband to finish his sentence. She turned around and marched back down the street. By then, Jerry had caught up. In the alley they passed a florist and a small fruit market, even a print shop.

“See? There are businesses here.” They kept on walking until they reached the other end on Washington Street.

“Well, I didn’t see any giant factory,” he said smugly. “Think about it; how could a factory fit in such a small area?”

Again, Vicki ignored her husband and retraced her steps. This time, he didn’t follow. As far as he was concerned, she was wasting time. He pulled out his own phone with a plan to call the factory for directions, but before he could dial, he heard a big laugh coming from the alley.

He looked up and saw his wife waving her hands over her head. “It’s right here. We walked right past it.”

Can’t be. Jerry headed to where his wife stood, and sure enough, above a single glass door where one wouldn’t think to look, there hung a red and yellow sign that read “Golden Gate Fortune Cookie Factory.” The glass door was dirty and covered with smudges, which helped camouflage what was behind it. The nondescript entrance looked more like the backdoor to someone’s apartment than what Jerry had pictured in his head.

Vicki pushed open the door, and the smell of baked vanilla and caramel flooded her nostrils. “Mmmm, it smells delicious.”

The space was tiny, no larger than a long narrow apartment. Bags of fortune cookies for sale overflowed from the shelving near the entrance. Down the middle of the factory were three women sitting behind tables with metal contraptions that resembled waffle irons. They were busy making fortune cookies.

Jerry leaned in toward his wife. “You mean to tell me these three women make all the fortune cookies?”

“I guess,” she responded.

A rope prevented the Carlsons from venturing any farther inside. Nearby, an old man sat in a chair and smiled at them. Next to him, in shaky handwriting, was a sign that asked visitors to pay fifty cents to take a picture. Vicki immediately opened her purse, fished out two quarters and turned them over to the old man. She then stood next to the closest woman making cookies and smiled. Jerry snapped a picture on his phone and on Vicki’s camera, for which the old man asked for another fee.