Read The Bloodwater Mysteries: Doppelganger Online

Authors: Pete Hautman,Mary Logue

The Bloodwater Mysteries: Doppelganger

THE
BLOODWATER
MYSTERIES
doppelganger
PETE HAUTMAN

WINNER OF THE NATIONAL BOOK AWARD

AND
MARY LOGUE

G. P. Putnam’s Sons

G. P. PUTNAM’S SONS

A division of Penguin Young Readers Group.

Published by The Penguin Group.

Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10014, U.S.A.

Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700, Toronto, Ontario M4P 2Y3, Canada

(a division of Pearson Penguin Canada Inc.).

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(a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty Ltd).

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Penguin Books (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd, 24 Sturdee Avenue, Rosebank, Johannesburg 2196, South Africa.

Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England.

Copyright © 2008 by Pete Hautman and Mary Logue.

All rights reserved. This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher, G. P. Putnam’s Sons, a division of Penguin Young Readers Group, 345 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10014. G. P. Putnam’s Sons, Reg. U.S. Pat. & Tm. Off.

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Design by Gina DiMassi. Text set in Granjon.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Hautman, Pete, 1952–

Doppelganger / by Pete Hautman and Mary Logue.   p. cm. — (The Bloodwater mysteries)

Summary: High school newspaper reporter Roni finds an age-progressed photograph on a missing children’s website of a boy that looks just like her sidekick Brian, throwing the pair into an investigation of Brian’s past and family heritage.

[1. Identity—Fiction. 2. Missing children—Fiction. 3. Adoption—Fiction. 4. Korean Americans—Fiction. 5. Mystery and detective stories.] I. Logue, Mary. II. Title.

PZ7.H2887Do 2008  [Fic]—dc22    2007020421

ISBN: 978-1-101-65228-2

1  3  5  7  9  10  8  6  4  2

For Luke and Mary Brindle

contents

1.
an article of interest

2.
among the missing

3.
a real scar

4.
the rhododendron incident

5.
a family matter

6.
the lost emperor

7.
darwin dipstick

8.
ms. perhaps

9.
suds science

10.
albert e.

11.
cross-eyed baby

12.
kimchi chick

13.
go back lane

14.
squirrel skulls

15.
pop

16.
upended

17.
darwin, again

18.
the foundling

19.
the art of the whine

20.
pebbles

21.
ojinx-o teegim

22.
an old friend

23.
mrs. kay

24.
strong boy

25.
pizza soup

26.
louella

27.
crazy mirror

28.
dak-ho

29.
rope-a-dope

30.
kyung-soon

31.
blood and tea

32.
ki-nam

33.
two families

1

an article of interest

Brian Bain heard a familiar thump on the side of the house, the sound he had been waiting for. He abandoned his computer in mid-keystroke, ran down the steps and through the living room, and opened the front door. He looked around. The paperboy was already out of sight.

It took him a few seconds to find the source of the thump. Then he saw the newspaper stuck deep in the rosebush next to the steps. Too excited to care about a few small scratches, Brian reached in through the thorny stems and sweet-smelling blossoms and extracted the morning edition of the
Bloodwater Clarion.

He sat down on the steps and immediately began paging through the paper. A few seconds later, on page twenty-three, he found it.

The photograph took up almost half the page: his own face, almost life-size, smiling and holding up a paper airplane. The caption beneath the photo read, “Brian Bain, 13, displays his winning design in the Zeb Bloodwater Paper-Airplane Contest.”

More than half a century ago, Zeb Bloodwater, the
grandson of Bloodwater’s founder, had fashioned a pair of wings made from brown paper bags and balsa struts, then launched himself off the two-hundred-foot-high Barn Bluff. The
Clarion
’s annual paper-airplane contest was in memory of Zeb’s first—and final—attempt at flight.

This summer, Brian had won the contest, which required that the airplane be folded from the front page of the
Bloodwater Clarion.
He named his airplane the SS-XLR8. First prize was a framed certificate and—most important—his picture in the paper.

Famous again, Brian thought as he admired the photograph. He had been in the paper twice before, but both times it had been with Roni Delicata. First, there had been the article about the Alicia Camden kidnapping a few months ago. He had been in the paper again when he and Roni had uncovered the secret behind the vicious attack on a local archaeologist. But those pictures had been much smaller, and Roni had been standing in front, hogging the camera.

This time Brian was alone on the page, and the picture was huge. Best of all, it had nothing to do with crime solving or Roni Delicata. It was all about him and his accomplishments.

Brian imagined Roni flipping through the paper and then coming upon his face staring out at her. He grinned.

She would be excruciatingly jealous.

Fifty miles away, a woman reading the online edition of the
Bloodwater Clarion
came across Brian’s picture. Her heart
began to pound. She reached out and ran her fingers across the image of his face.

Softly, so quietly no one else could hear her, she said, “Oh, no. He must not find you. I will try to keep you safe.”

Another woman also paused upon seeing Brian Bain’s picture. She stared at the photo in disbelief. Her lips stretched across her face in an unfamiliar way. It felt so peculiar she was afraid she had somehow injured her face. Then she realized that she was smiling for the first time in many years.

She picked up her phone and dialed.

Thirty miles southeast of Bloodwater, in a dilapidated mobile home tucked into a wooded coulee, a telephone rang. The man sprawled on the bed opened one bloodshot eye and glared at it. The ringing continued. The man reached over the side of the bed, picked up a muddy boot, and hurled it at the telephone. He missed, but the ringing stopped. Grumbling, the man pulled a blanket over his head and tried to go back to sleep.

A few seconds later, the phone began to ring again. The man cursed and rolled out of bed, dragging the blanket with him, stepped over the sleeping dog, and picked up the receiver.

“What,” he said.

“Good news, baby,” said the woman on the phone. “I found him.”

2

among the missing

Roni Delicata took the fruit bar from its box and closed the freezer door. She tore the paper wrapper at the top, stripping it down as if peeling a banana. Admiring the bright color of the frozen fruit bar—so pink it almost hurt her eyes to look at it—she removed the last of the wrapper and threw it in the trash can beneath the kitchen sink.

“How many of those are you planning to eat?” Nick Delicata’s voice stopped Roni’s tongue in mid-lick.

Roni looked at the frozen fruit bar in her hand, then at her mother.

“It’s made with real strawberries,” she said.

“Yes, and real sugar, too,” Nick said.

“It’s only my second one.”

“It’s your third one this afternoon. I thought you were on a diet. Last night you hardly ate a bite of my lasagna.”

Roni shrugged and took a big bite out of the fruit bar so she wouldn’t have to explain why she hadn’t been able to eat the gummy, sticky disaster that her mother called lasagna. As for her diet, well…that hadn’t been going so well. She
blamed it on sheer boredom. But she had another six weeks until school started—plenty of time to starve herself.

“You shouldn’t eat just because you’re bored,” Nick said, performing that irritating mind-reading trick that mothers do so well.

“Who says I’m bored?” Roni said.

“I know you. You’ve got the midsummer blahs. If you’re not in the middle of investigating for some article—or solving one of your mysteries—you do nothing but sleep, stare at your computer, and eat junk food.”

“I read, too,” Roni said.

“Then maybe you’d like to help me with these letters.” Roni’s mom was the secretary to the mayor of Bloodwater. She often brought work home with her, and that afternoon she had come home with two boxes of letters to the mayor, most of them having to do with Mayor Buddy Berglund’s recent proposal to make Bloodwater House his official residence—at the taxpayers’ expense. The citizens of Bloodwater were somewhat perturbed. Nick was dividing the letters into three piles: “opposed,” “vehemently opposed,” and “threatening.”

“No, thanks,” said Roni, heading for the stairs. “I have to get back to my room. I’m reading the dictionary.”

Nick laughed and shook her head.

Roni settled into her desk chair, woke up her computer, and looked upon the face of a girl who had been abducted in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, several weeks earlier. Vanessa Angel Charleston, age six, believed to be in the company of her mother, Angelina Charleston. Roni studied the girl’s face, then read the specifics: height, weight, hair color, eye color, birthmarks, etc. She stared fiercely at the picture until she was sure that if she ever saw Vanessa Charleston, she would immediately recognize her.

She licked her fruit bar just in time to keep it from dripping onto her keyboard, and clicked the next name on the missing-children website. Sooner or later, she would run into one of these lost, abducted, or runaway kids. What a story it would make if one of these kids were found in Bloodwater! Roni dreamed of becoming an investigative reporter. Finding a missing child could be her big break. She imagined her byline, P. Q. Delicata, on the front page of
The
New York Times.
At the very least, she could write about it in her column for the
Bloodwater Pump,
the high school newspaper.

Most of the younger missing kids had been snatched by one of their own parents—probably after a nasty divorce. The older ones, including a lot of girls her age—sixteen—were probably runaways. Only a few were victims of stranger abductions.

Roni clicked on the next name. Bryce Doblemun. A cute-looking Asian kid. She licked her fruit bar and scrolled down, reading. Abducted by his adoptive mother at age three years and eleven months—almost ten years ago. She scrolled down to a second image: an “age-progressed” photo of the same kid—an artist had taken the photo of the young
Bryce Doblemun and “aged” it to what he might look like ten years later.

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