So Long at the Park: A Foxglove Corners Mystery, #32
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About this ebook
The search for a collie stolen during a collie event challenges Jennet to solve a baffling mystery and ultimately to stay alive.
A happy summer collie event in Woodsboro Park turns deadly when Ellalyn Zoller's beloved tricolor collie is snatched from her ex-pen and a bewildered 'changeling' collie is left in her place.
Jennet volunteers to search for Rainbow, but she seems to have disappeared like the child, Celia Loring, who had vanished from the same park twenty years earlier.
Can Jennet return Rainbow to her owner without falling into a trap set by the kidnapper?
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So Long at the Park - Dorothy Bodoin
One
An errant breeze stole out of the woods and slipped through the curtain of heat suspended over Woodsboro Park. A refreshing moment in a sweltering spring afternoon, I grabbed it and held on tightly as I sipped my lemonade.
Misty, my white collie, licked her chops. The dogs had their own bottled water, but they knew whatever I was drinking was better. Naturally. Halley and Misty, panting in the meager shade of the lawn chairs, glanced from the cooler to me and back to the cooler.
Sue Appleton, president of the Lakeville Collie League, had unwittingly chosen the hottest day of the year for the first Collie Walkabout in Woodsboro Park. Poor timing, but who could predict the vagaries of a Michigan spring? Still, a little hot spell couldn’t keep proud owners from showing off their dogs and exchanging breed, show, and pet talk with like-minded people.
I had enjoyed the camaraderie and happy carnival atmosphere, but after tramping the length of the park twice, I was ready to go home to my green Victorian farmhouse on Jonquil Lane and the air-conditioning.
On the other hand, my friends and I had come to the park as a group, caravanning thirty miles north from Foxglove Corners. Among the party were Annica, a part-time waitress and college student who served as my sometime partner-in-detection, and Brent Fowler, illustrious entrepreneur, fox hunter, and renowned bachelor.
Tagalongs were Molly and Jennifer, teenagers from Sagramore Lake Road, who were helping me with my four collies. Finally, Sue Appleton had brought two young rescues she hoped to place in forever homes.
As I drained my glass of lemonade, Molly and Jennifer emerged from a nearby stand of pine trees. Like most of the young people in the park, they wore short jeans and low-cut tops. Even with their long hair in ponytails, they looked as if they were melting.
Yikes! It’s hot!
Molly turned Velvet’s and Gemmy’s leashes over to me while Jennifer, holding onto the girls’ collie, Ginger, pushed the water bowl closer to Misty’s nose.
I’m glad I’m not wearing a fur coat like you young ladies,
she said.
Misty lapped water obligingly, and Halley wagged her tail. Gemmy and Velvet lost no time in stretching out in the shade.
We just saw the most gorgeous tricolor,
Molly announced. "She’s so beautiful. Her name is Black Rainbow."
All collies are beautiful.
I reached down to give Halley and Velvet a few pats on their heads. They both had gleaming sleek black coats with tan and white markings. Although I had a sable, a blue merle, and a rare bi-black, I had a fondness for the tricolor.
The first collie I remembered seeing as a child was a tri.
You have to meet this one, Jennet,
Jennifer said. You’ll fall in love with her.
Okay,
I said. Where is she?
With her human, Ms. Zoller, by the hot dog stand. Oh, forgive me, pooches. I meant to say by the franks.
I smiled. They each had a hot dog. We didn’t call it by its name.
Molly said, If you don’t catch up to Rainbow, we took her picture.
We’re trying to take pictures of everyone’s dog for Sue’s album,
Jennifer added, but it’s hard. People keep moving around.
I should move, too, before the heat dulled my senses. Eventually, Annica would find me, or Brent, or Sue would. In the meantime, I’d have another glass of lemonade and watch the passing parade.
THE FEELING STOLE OVER me like the breeze from the woods, unbidden and far from welcoming or refreshing. Since moving to Foxglove Corners, I had learned to respect feelings, or forebodings, as I referred to them.
The woods are silent, dark, and deep.
Half of Woodsboro Park, known as the ‘old section,’ had been in existence for decades with its original slides and swings. The other half consisted of recently donated acreage which included a small lake and a hiking trail through the woods.
It was from the woods behind me that this premonition had drifted.
Something is going to happen soon. Something bad.
What utter nonsense! It didn’t take much for me to slide into Melodrama Territory. Sometimes, merely a shift in the collies and people who strolled back and forth in my view. Or a sliver of silence. Or a fleeting impression of a shadow where no shadow should be.
I ignored it.
Hey, Jennet. Why so serious? This is the most fun I’ve had in ages.
Annica sank into the spare lawn chair, and her collie, Angel, sat at her feet.
It’s just the heat,
I said, admiring the way Annica could wear a white dress and not acquire a single wrinkle or smudge or probably even a dog hair in the course of the day. Her red-gold hair shimmered in the sunlight, and her earrings were tiny ceramic collies with Angel’s caramel and white colors.
She poured bottled water into a collapsible bowl for Angel.
Have you seen Brent?
she asked.
Not for a while.
I lost track of him.
That would never do. Annica and Brent had recently reached an understanding of sorts. Any day, I expected to see a diamond engagement ring on her finger.
He’s around somewhere,
I said.
Annica settled back in the lawn chair and poured lemonade into a plastic tumbler. This is collie heaven. Who knew we had so many collies in Foxglove Corners?
I’m sure most of them are from other towns,
I said.
Sue had advertised the walk widely throughout the southeastern part of the state, hoping to make it an annual event. From what I’d seen so far, it had been a success.
I wish you could have brought all of your dogs,
Annica said.
So do I. If Crane had been able to come, we would have, but he’s on duty.
Which was usually the case. As a deputy sheriff in Foxglove Corners, my husband was more often patrolling the roads and by-roads than at my side for an event or a holiday.
How did you decide which dogs to bring?
she asked.
Sky would be miserable in a crowd. Raven never really recovered her stamina after her accident, and Star is elderly. As for Candy, only Crane can control her if she takes it in her head to bolt.
Although they were better off in a cool house, I wished they could all have joined us at the park.
It’s so peaceful here,
Annica said. No customers clamoring for attention, no long reading assignments. Just shade and quiet and collies. Don’t you wish you could stay here forever?
Good heavens, no!
I wanted my own home and my collies all together, Crane grilling chicken for dinner, and visits from my neighbor and aunt by marriage, Camille, who considered herself too old for outdoor activities. I imagined her crossing the lane with a fresh baked peach pie, which I’d serve with vanilla ice cream.
But it’s nice for an afternoon,
I added. And I’d come just to see the collies.
Misty tilted her head, then gave a sharp yelp moments before a voice broke the silence with a panicked shout. Help! Somebody! Help me!
Uh-oh. Trouble in paradise. I wonder if someone’s dog got loose?
It came from over there.
I pointed to the woods and rose. I’ll go see, if you’ll watch the dogs.
Go. I’ll hold down the fort.
Automatically, I reached for Misty’s leash. As Annica was my partner-in-detection, the pretty tri-headed white collie was my canine sidekick. Based on past experiences, I believed she had a subtle psychic streak.
Not that anything out of the ordinary was going on. Someone’s dog had slipped out of his leash and was running free in the park. It happened.
Still, there was that warning carried on the breeze.
I led Misty into the group that had quickly formed to answer the cry for help.
What’s up, Jennet?
Brent Fowler stepped out of the rushing crowd. Hearing a well-loved voice, Misty circled around his feet, almost entangling him in her leash. Picturing him sprawled on the ground, an accidental victim of the Collie Walkabout, I held out a hand to steady him.
Thanks,
he said. What do you think happened?
Nothing good.
Most of the activity in the park centered around the cleared space at the entrance, currently crowded with crates, lawn chairs, tents, and temporary stands. Alongside a pen stood a young woman with long auburn hair and a tricolor collie. Not an unusual sight at the Collie Walkabout, but she looked as though she were on the verge of hysterics.
I’d seen her somewhere, but she’d looked different. Then I remembered a serene young lady in a short, beaded dress with a flapper’s saucy bob. She worked at the Green House of Antiques. I couldn’t remember her name.
Rainbow!
she wailed. Where are you?
The collie dog sat at her side, ears flattened against her head, a study in dejection. She looked more upset than her owner.
Always ready to help a damsel in distress, Brent went up to her. What’s the matter, miss? Can we help?
Someone stole my dog,
she cried.
Two
Imoved closer to Brent and the distraught young woman. The collie’s ears seemed to vanish in sleek black fur. I held my hand under her nose and, when she trained her dark soulful eyes on me, stroked her head. I couldn’t remember when I’d seen such a display of canine misery.
I don’t understand,
I said. You’re saying this isn’t your dog?
She let the leash fall to the ground. I never saw this animal before, but it’s wearing Rainbow’s collar and tags. It was in Rainbow’s crate.
It? The tri was a female, on the small side, pretty, and obviously traumatized.
I was just talking to my friends,
the woman said. "Just for a minute. I wasn’t watching Rainbow. I thought it was safe. It should have been safe."
The situation she described was difficult to comprehend. How could one dog be substituted for another with hundreds of people milling around to bear witness to any nefarious doings? It didn’t make sense.
The door to the crate was open. A large green ball had rolled to a stop in a corner, waiting for its owner. Beside it, a stainless steel water bowl was almost empty. The sight tugged at my heart.
I surveyed the crowd, intending to ask if anyone had been seen lurking around Rainbow’s pen, but most of the onlookers had melted into the background. Sobered by the mystifying apparent dognapping, all were keeping eagles’ eyes on their own collies and strong hands on their leashes. I imagined their thoughts were similar: I’m glad it didn’t happen to me.
One who remained, a chunky woman whose green polka dot sundress struggled to cover her body, pushed her sunglasses high into her upswept blonde hair.
You’d better call the cops,
she said. That’s what I’d be doing if my dog went missing.
The police, yes, I will.
Rainbow’s owner pulled her phone out of her purse, but instead frowned at me. Don’t I know you?
From the Green House of Antiques,
I said. I’m one of your best customers.
Now I remember. You’re always looking for those old mystery books. I’m Ellalyn Zoller.
She stooped to retrieve the leash of the collie who had remained steadfastly by her side. Now what am I going to do with this one?
The dog who wasn’t Rainbow.
Put her in the crate for now,
I suggested. Noticing a six pack of bottled water on top of the pen, I added, And get her a fresh drink. She’s panting.
Hold off on calling the police,
Brent said. Maybe we can find your dog. I see a couple of black collies over there.
So do I, but they’re not mine.
Would Rainbow have gone with a stranger?
I asked, thinking of my own collies. Candy, for one, would never let herself be taken away from me.
She might have,
Ellalyn said. She loves people.
Leading a pair of bouncy young sables, Sue Appleton broke through what remained of the crowd that had gathered around Ellalyn. What happened? Jennet?
Someone snatched my collie,
Ellalyn said. She was resting in her crate. I looked away just for a minute.
She added details, mostly variations on the theme. In the retelling, the story sounded like a grim fairy tale enacted in a twenty-first century park. A malevolent fairy steals a collie and leaves a changeling in her place.
But we were dealing with real life, with an invisible thief who was somehow able to carry out his bold plan in a densely populated park without being observed.
How much time would it have taken him to remove Rainbow’s collar, put it on the other dog, and get away? And did the thief think Rainbow’s owner wouldn’t notice?
The scenario seemed impossible, but I resisted going back to the fairy theory.
Not yet ready to accept what had happened on her watch, Sue said, Your dog may not be gone, Ms. Zoller, only misplaced.
Sue glanced at me for help. I shrugged.
This could be someone’s idea of a sick joke,
she said. Do you have any enemies?
She hesitated. I don’t think so. No. Of course not.
Sue said, I’ll post a guard on the parking lot. No one will leave unless they can prove they’re taking their own dog. I know many of the people here. Meanwhile, we’ll get a search party together.
Brent took my arm. Jennet and I will follow the hiking trail to the lake.
Out of the heat, cooled by a thick canopy of leaves over our heads, a shadowy, secretive route. Misty insisted on investigating every new enticing scent that came her way. I let her stop but kept a tight hold on her lead.
As soon as we were out of earshot, Brent said, It doesn’t look good.
No, it doesn’t.
Dogs don’t vanish from closed crates.
Not unless they have help.
But this was a mere thirty miles from Foxglove Corners, Home of the Strange and the Vanished.
As we hurried down the trail, I glanced on either side. No one had cleared the donated property. Possibly they’d leave it in its current wild state and perhaps widen the path.
The woods were silent, dark, and deep. They would make a good hiding place. Was Rainbow there hiding with her abductor in the dark beneath the trees?
I don’t see how that could have happened,
Brent said. I wonder if the Zoller girl is making it up.
I don’t think so. She seemed genuinely distressed and baffled. Besides, what would be the point?
By now, of course, I had dismissed the idea of rapacious fairy folk and a changeling. Well, maybe not the changeling. This was the work of a person who knew exactly how to strike at the heart of their victim.
Through her dog.
And what of the collie who had taken Rainbow’s place? Where was her owner? Where was her home?
What if somebody had taken one of my precious collies?
I became conscious of an overwhelming desire to walk in the sun.
I am half sick of shadows,
I said.
HEY, GUYS. WAIT UP.
Molly and Jennifer had followed us, ever eager to be part of an adventure, even one with tragic undertones. They looked as fresh and energetic as if they’d just entered the park.
Ah, to be young again!
Where’s Ginger?
I asked.
Annica’s watching everyone,
Jennifer said. We want to help find Rainbow for Ms. Zoller.
Jennifer and I can search the woods,
Molly added.
That’s a bad idea. We don’t want to start looking for two lost girls.
Really, Jennet,
Jennifer said. We can take care of ourselves, and Rainbow knows us.
But they agreed to stay with us on the hiking trail.
It ended in a stretch of beach and a sky-blue lake awash in light. Because of the heat, I expected to find the area crowded, but only a single man walked his collie on the sand. It was a mahogany sable whose coat had an ethereal shine in the sunlight. Jennifer ran ahead to ask him if he’d seen a black collie. I could tell by their body language that he hadn’t.
What now?
she asked.
We’d better head back,
Brent said. Maybe Rainbow came home.
She didn’t let herself out of her crate,
I pointed out.
Then maybe someone brought her back.
At the park entrance, Lieutenant Mac Dalby of the Foxglove Corners Police Department had taken charge. He was a tall, handsome officer with cornflower blue eyes and a condescending streak that often targeted me for some imaginary infraction.
Not today, though. I recalled that Mac loved dogs. As a boy, he’d had a collie.
I have two men scouring the woods,
he announced, but it looks like whoever took the dog made a clean getaway.
Don’t say that,
Ellalyn said.
She hadn’t held up well. Her eye makeup was smudged, and her hair tangled. She fussed with it constantly, pushing wayward strands back from her face and twisting them around her fingers.
I came here with my dog, and I’m not leaving without her,
she said, as if that bold statement could negate reality.
You can’t stay in the park,
Sue said. It won’t be safe when everybody leaves.
How safe was it with everybody here?
she countered.
No one had an answer for her.
We would all