Then there were a few that confused her. Most of the files were labeled on their front tabs with names or subjects-not much guessing was required to figure out what was in them. But she found a handful of files-fewer than a dozen-that had no labels or names on them, and no indication of what was inside.
One, for instance, had the mysterious nomenclature BAK1946 printed in Sapphire’s childish letters on the inside front cover. It contained only a few e-mails, which Sapphire had printed out.
“We must come to an agreement about this, or else,” read one of the e-mails, one that had been sent by Sapphire. A rather threatening comment, Candy thought. Underneath that line, and indented a few spaces, was the message Sapphire had replied to. It read, “I’ve asked you not to contact me about this again. I cannot help you.”
Candy’s brow furrowed in thought. Whatever message from Sapphire this mysterious person had replied to had been deleted.
She flipped back through the other pages in the file. There were a few copies of printed e-mails with messages similar to the first one. Sapphire’s notes and tone grew increasingly threatening, and the unnamed person who replied grew increasingly reticent to do whatever it was she was asking. But there was no indication of the name of the person Sapphire had been exchanging e-mails with, or even the person’s gender.
There wasn’t much more in the file. A photocopy of an aged black-and-white photograph, showing a mother with a young child sitting on her lap. A yellowed newspaper clipping in German, which Candy couldn’t read. A few notes that made no sense.
German?
Candy looked back at the inside front cover.
BAK1946.
BAK? Could that stand for Baker? Herr Georg? What year had he been born? she wondered. He was in his early to mid sixties, she guessed. Counting back, she realized it was entirely possible he could have been born in 1946. But it didn’t make any sense. Why was Sapphire e-mailing Herr Georg? And what was it that she wanted him to do?
The thought crossed Candy’s mind that it might have something to do with the pageant. Maybe she was trying to bribe him.
Or maybe she was blackmailing him.
That could open up a whole new bucket of worms.
Candy set that file aside and picked up another. This one was just as intriguing as the first. It had information in it about all five judges of the Blueberry Queen Pageant, including phone numbers and e-mail addresses. Sapphire had placed checks beside the names of all five judges and circled two of the checks-those beside the names of Herr Georg and Sebastian J. Quinn.
That might fit, she thought, if she was blackmailing both of them. But if Herr Georg’s file was here, where was Sebastian’s? She double-checked. There was no file with his name on it, nor any that looked as if it contained any information about him.
Curious.
She opened a third mysterious file. This one intrigued her the most. On the inside front cover were the initials C. Z. It didn’t take Candy long to figure out who that might be-Cameron Zimmerman.
Amanda’s boyfriend.
Unlike the others, this was a thick file, with clippings, photographs, and photocopies of old papers going back nearly twenty years. Sapphire had obviously done a lot of research on Cameron. There were numerous newspaper clippings of his educational and athletic achievements-making the honor roll in seventh grade, scoring a goal in junior varsity soccer, that sort of thing. A number of fuzzy candid snapshots of him that looked like spy photos, taken from behind bushes or at great distances, apparently without his knowledge. Candy even found a few pages that had been ripped from high school yearbooks, on which his images appeared.
Candy was surprised by the detail of the information she found. Sapphire’s been stalking him for years, she realized. But why?
There were also pages and pages of notes that traced Cameron’s history over a period of nearly fifteen years. Addresses and phone numbers. Detailed information about his parents, Moe and Debbie Zimmerman. Moe was a trucker; Debbie worked at a hair salon. Cam was their only child.
Candy read through the papers with growing interest. But it was a notation scribbled at the bottom of one of the last pages that caught her attention and made her sit up straight in her chair.
He’s the one, it read.
“The one?” Candy said out loud. “The one what?”
“What?” Doc called from the living room.
“Nothing!” Candy called back.
“Hey, you should see this,” Doc said. “Ellen’s giving away iPods to her studio audience again. And you should see what else they’re getting.”
“Just a minute, Dad.”
Candy started going back through the files again, searching for other notations, but there was nothing unusual that jumped out at her.
Except, she realized with a start, for the fact that despite all she had found in Sapphire’s office, there was a lot of information that seemed to be missing-information that Sapphire, as thorough as she seemed to have been, should have collected.
In other words, there were huge gaps in Sapphire’s research.
For instance, there was a file on Cameron but practically nothing about any other student, or any teachers or school administrators. Practically nothing on the local police force or town council or county commissioners. Nothing about local businesspeople. Nothing on Mrs. Pruitt. Nothing on Maggie or Amanda.
And nothing on any of the other beauty pageant judges. Or any of the other beauty pageant contestants, for that matter.
In fact, nothing at all about the pageant.
Now that’s odd, Candy thought, scratching her head. Ben had told her Sapphire was going to write her next column on the pageant, and that she had done some research on it. But there was nothing here about the pageant. Nada.
That doesn’t make any sense, Candy thought, especially when she was a contestant herself. There should be reams of information.
But there was nothing.
Maybe the police took those files, she thought, or maybe Ben has them.
Or maybe Sapphire kept those files somewhere else-someplace private, where no one else could get a look at them…
Candy was still sifting through the files, mulling them over, when Doc walked back out into the kitchen. Candy barely noticed him.
“That was a pretty good show,” he said in a conversational tone. “Too bad you missed it.”
“Huh?” Candy looked up.
“Ellen.”
“Oh. That’s great, Dad.”
“Hey, I’m gonna take a walk up through the fields before dinner. Want to join me?”
“No thanks. I’m going to work here awhile longer, then I’ll start dinner.”
“Okay.”
He was almost out the door when he stopped and turned back. “Oh, by the way, I almost forgot to tell you. I got some new information from Finn today. He talked to his source at the police department this morning. That guy we met, Officer Safford, was right about Ray’s lawyer. Seems he’s some superexpensive guy who works for a big firm up in Bangor. And guess who’s picking up the tab for his services?”
That caught Candy’s attention. She looked up. “Who?”
“You won’t believe it if I told you.”
“Daaad…”
“Okay, okay. It’s Mrs. Pruitt.”
Candy scrunched up her face. “Mrs. Pruitt is paying for Ray’s lawyer?”
“That’s what I said. In fact, this guy she’s hired is associated with the firm that handles all her estate and business affairs. Strange, huh?”
“Very.”
“Something else. They’ve been interrogating Ray-”
“Interrogating him?”
Doc nodded. “-and apparently he just keeps repeating the same thing over and over. Says he didn’t do it and says it’s up at the fort. The police have no idea what he’s talking about, and he’s not telling them. You know what he might mean by that?”
Candy had to think about that one. Finally she shook her head. “I don’t think so. The only fort I can think of is Fort O’Brien, that old Revolution-era fort up by Machias. But it’s just a ruin now, isn’t it? Just the foundations or something like that? I don’t know what that would have to do with anything.”