The Lost Macaw is the fourth novella in the Lost and Found
Pets series. Alexandra Prescott is a licensed private investigator specializing
in finding missing animals. Reuniting pet and owner is more than just a job.
A
former client hires Alex to find her lost parrot. The bright colored bird has
flown away before, but this time there is evidence that Molly was kidnapped.
The demand is simple—the bird for the pictures.
When her client suffers a stroke, Alex is left with a ransom
note, a missing bird, and some very incriminating photos. She is in a race
against time to solve the mystery of the lost Macaw.
Excerpt:
“Your little old
lady is quite interesting, Alex,” Halie said.
“What do you
mean?”
“She didn’t
exist until about thirty years ago.”
“What?!”
“I did a
preliminary background search on her. In general, she is clean. No debt. The
house is paid off as is her car. The one thing that jumped out at me was the
fact that she had a safe deposit box at four different banks.”
Luke raised one
eyebrow. I got a sinking feeling. I had noted the bank accounts but hadn’t
really given them much thought.
“Yeah,” I said,
“I saw those.”
“So why does an
eighty-year-old woman need four safe deposit boxes?”
“Why does she
need more than one?” Luke muttered.
“Exactly,” Halie
said. “So I dug a little deeper.”
“What did you
find?”
“About thirty
years ago, Joseph and Trudy Kearns purchased the house on Carriage. Back then,
it was a new neighborhood, and the prices were cheap. They paid cash. They also
opened a bank account, and Joe got a job working for the city. Those are the
first records I can find for either one of them.”
“Trudy would have
been fifty at that time. Her husband probably a few years older. What about
birth certificates? Social security cards?”
“They had them,
but conveniently, they were issued from a small county in Virginia where a
massive flood destroyed all their records. The county office was in the process
of moving the old paper records to electronic when the flood hit.”
“Let me guess.
The Kearns’s records did not survive the flood.”
“Nope.”
“So the only
records for them are the ones they had in their possession.” I paused a moment.
“Do they look real?”
“Yes,” Halie
replied.
“So they could be
authentic.”
“Or really good forgeries.
In some ways, it was easier back then.”
“Anything else?”
I asked.
“Not really.
Lives on a fixed income of social security and a small pension from her
husband’s job. It isn’t much because he only worked for the city for twelve
years before he had to retire.”
“Okay, thanks
Halie.”
After ending the
call, I looked at Luke. He had a perplexed look on his face that I had a
feeling mirrored mine.
“Who the hell is
Trudy Kearns?”
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