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Anna’s car was there, too, beside Julie’s truck.

“Anna’s here? Why aren’t you inside?”

“I just got here. Grandma’s working on her recipe,” Julie said. “I offered to help, but she would rather do it alone. Where have you been?”

“At the police station to give my statement. They got it yesterday, kind of, but I had to sign it today.”

Julie didn’t ask if her name had come up and Chase didn’t mention it.

They headed for the door, chatting about Anna. “She turned in the recipe, right?” Chase said. “What is she working on now?”

“She’s practicing making it, over and over.”

“We’ll have lots of her new bars to sell on Wednesday, I guess, if she’ll let us.”

They both poked their heads into the kitchen to say hi to Anna, inhaled nosefuls of the heavenly blueberry aroma, then ran upstairs for some hot chocolate.

“What was that about the real estate deal?” Chase asked. “What was Ron North talking about?” Should she mention the scarf?

Julie blew on her cocoa. “That’s a bad deal. You know I told you about someone offering Hilda Bjorn way too little for her house? I dropped by this morning to ask her about it. She described the man who came to her door.” Julie shook her head.

“And?”

“Who does this sound like? She said he had a commanding presence and very nice snowy white hair. Like an egret, she said.”

“Principal Snelson? Why would he be trying to make a real estate deal?”

Julie shrugged. “Do you know who that other guy was Saturday night? The short one?”

“Never saw him before. He’s not our age; must be a friend of Snelson’s.”

“Almost forgot.” Julie pulled a small black notebook from her purse as they sat sipping at Chase’s kitchen table. “I have to show you this.”

“What is it?” Chase asked, setting her mug down and taking the notebook from her. The handwriting was small and cramped.

“I found it by the punch bowl Saturday night. Remember? I asked around and no one said it was theirs.”

“Yes, I remember. You waved it around. It was after Ron and some others left.”

They stared at each other, realization dawning.

In unison, they said, “It’s Ron’s!”

SIX

Julie and Chase spent another few minutes going over the happenings at the reunion together. They decided they couldn’t be completely sure it was Ron’s, since so many others were gone when Julie found it. But Chase thought it was very much like the notebook he had whipped out in the Bar None days ago, hoping to interview her. She couldn’t be positive, though. It was nondescript, a small spiral-bound booklet with a black cover.

“Well, we’d better look inside,” Julie said, turning it over and over with her fingertips, like she was reluctant to touch it too much.

“That’s not illegal or anything?”

“How else can we find out who it belongs to?”

Many of the pages were filled with small, barely legible writing. They were, as far as she could tell, notes for stories Ron had been working on. Words that they could read stood out. Amid several references to “school board” were the words “real estate.” Chase found her name with a reminder to the author to get “pix of Bar None” developed. “This has to be Ron’s. This is what he was working on.”

Julie flipped through to the end and was confronted by gibberish.

“Here,” Chase said, turning the book upside down. “He’s started some notes from the back. He’s using the front part for notes on his stories.”

“Ah. Writing from front to back and also from back to front. But what is this?”

Three words were written at the top of the page, one to a line: PRINCE, PHOTO, and BIRD. The first two words were repeated below on many lines, and were accompanied by dates with numbers after them. This went on for two and half pages. The word BIRD wasn’t repeated.

“Is it a code?” Chase asked.

“He was a reporter. Does it have something to do with articles and photographs?”

Chase drummed her fingers on the table. “Dates and numbers. Are those three horses he bet on?”

“He never bet on the BIRD horse, if they are.” Julie thumbed on from the back until she came to some more pages with writing. “Here are some more notations.”

These entries were even more cryptic. Each line had an initial followed by a date.

“Why are these in pink ink?” Chase wondered. “The other stuff before this is all in blue.”

“Boys and girls?”

Chase took a good look at the dates. They went back several years. Most of the earlier initials were J, with D and M occurring both there and more recently. After those first entries, a few more were listed: L, K, and Q. Beside the bottom M was the date Ron North had been in her dessert bar shop. She put her finger on that line.

“Here. Look at this. Ron and Monique were both in my shop this day. She was uncomfortable being around him, too.”

The last entry held both an M and a J and the date of the reunion. The J was in light pencil rather than pink ink.

“He wrote down the dates he saw Monique? That’s weird.”

Chase put her finger on the J. “That’s you, Julie. This is his stalking log.”

Julie shivered. “A ghost just walked up my spinal column. I wonder if you’re right.”

“And Monique. He bothered her that night, too.”

They spent nearly an hour poring over the notebook, but made no headway with the blue entries, except to assume they referred to men and not women.

Julie jumped up. “I gotta go. I need to figure out some things on a case this afternoon. Plus, I have to work tomorrow, unlike some people I know. Unless I get questioned one more time. Detective Olson said they might want to talk to me again.” Her voice tightened on that last sentence.

Chase didn’t like the sound of that either. She gave her friend a long hug.

Julie paused before she walked out the door. “Wait a sec.” She closed her eyes. “I saw our principal hand something to Ron when they were standing together.”

“Did you see what it was?”

“No, but Mr. Snelson wasn’t happy about it.”

“So, if he’s one of these people in blue, did the handoff have something to do with the amounts?”

“Payment for something, maybe. Drugs?”

“Mr. Snelson, our principal? I guess it’s possible. This could be a blackmail scheme.” suggested Chase.

They looked at each other and shrugged.

“Why don’t you make me a copy of that?” Julie said. “I’d like to go over it some more.”

They both traipsed downstairs to use the copy machine.

After Julie left, Chase—disappointed that Anna was gone—did some dusting and some laundry, and worried some more about Julie. She eventually fell asleep on her couch, staring at the last few pages of the notebook. She knew they would have to give it to the police. Julie was in enough trouble without withholding evidence. She would make another copy of the notebook for herself first thing in the morning in the office downstairs.

•   •   •

The shop was closed on Tuesdays, but Chase took the notebook downstairs to make her own copy as soon as she was dressed. Quincy had the run of the shop, something he enjoyed whenever he got a chance.

Chase heard a commotion at the back door and ran to find Anna carrying in a heavy-looking grocery bag.

“More baking today?” Chase asked, taking the burden from her. “We’re going to have tons of your new creation to sell on Wednesday.”

“No, we’re not,” Anna said, handing the heavy bag to Chase and returning to her blue Volvo to fetch a couple more off the rear seat. She was on her way back before Chase could follow her out to help. “I’m only doing parts of the recipe. I’m not finishing anything.”