Stores, Inc. Tim was able to determine that Addie had purchased the Thunderbird for Kenneth after he had returned J. A.'s pickup truck with a badly broken windshield. The significance of the windshield meant nothing to Tim at the time. In a few days he would be told about the missing persons' cases of Brenda Thompson and Regenia Moore; his first thoughts were "we are dealing with a serial killer." Tim now fully understood the enormity of his missing person case. In talking with Addie, Tim never detected any body language to indicate that Kenneth was there or nearby. 11
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Bill Miller picked up the phone and called Texas Ranger John Aycock and told him that McDuff's missing person's report was likely connected to the Melissa Northrup disappearance. Now, the Texas Rangers were involved. Aycock alerted officials in Milam County, where two of McDuff's sisters lived, to be on the lookout for McDuff and Melissa's Buick. 12
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Meanwhile, Mike, Parnell and Bill went to the Quik Pak for clues. They searched not only the Quik Pak, but the large fields and pastures surrounding the store and the New Road Inn. Bill came upon a number of abandoned mobile homes, and had the unsettling feeling that Melissa could be in one. The Boys had to contend with a vicious German Shepherd, but they looked inside each trailer and found nothing but trash. The next day they searched the fields on both sides of New Road, from the Quik Pak to the Veterans Hospital, where Bannister said he saw McDuff pushing his car. Then they went to an area behind TSTI and searched every brush, old shack, water well, pump house, gully, drainage ditch, pond, storm sewer, and any other place where a body could possibly be hidden. They even spent some Saturdays roaming the area. The heavily wooded, undeveloped tracts were littered with bones and the carcasses of dead animals, some of which were partially buried. The Boys had a very anxious day. "Where is she? Where is she?" Bill could not get Melissa out of his mind. 13 Shortly, they would find out that they had come very close to one of McDuff's victimsbut it was not Melissa. 14
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On March 8, Tim Steglich received a note from the Bell County Sheriff's Office dispatcher that Addie McDuff had called for him. Tim returned the call, and Addie told him she had received an anonymous call at about 10:00 A.M. that morning from a man who said he was calling from Victoria. According to Addie, the caller told her that McDuff was having trouble with his parole officer and that is why he left the Temple area. The caller told her that Kenneth's vehicle had been recov-
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