Read The Nutcracker Ballet Mystery Online
Authors: Carolyn Keene
around.”
“That’s for sure,” George agreed. As she walked over
to get her own skis, George asked Nancy, “Who do you
think it was? And why was he or she after us?”
Nancy shrugged. “I don’t know. But I think we’d
better get back and alert the park rangers. If it’s some
psycho, they’ll want to know about it.”
“And if he really was after us?” Bess asked.
“Then we should definitely be somewhere much
safer,” Nancy said in a grim voice.
“I bet that’s the snowmobile the rental shop
reported stolen,” the park ranger said when the girls
made their report. “Someone swiped it from a young
couple who’d left it running while they got something
out of their car. Sometimes it happens. Usually it’s just
kids out for a joyride.”
“This wasn’t someone joyriding,” Nancy said. “The
person was trying to run us down.”
The ranger shook his head as he swung his legs from
behind his desk. His office was in a big log building. In
one corner of the building, a concession stand rented
ski equipment. In another corner was a small cafe.
Several couches were scattered around a roaring fire.
Bess was sitting on the stone hearth, trying to get
warm.
“I don’t know what to tell you,” the ranger said.
“Usually, the only trouble snowmobiles cause is
messed-up trails. We’ve never had someone report a
snowmobiler going after them.”
“Did the couple get a look at the person?” George
asked.
The ranger shrugged. “Not a close one. They did say
that he or she was not very tall and was wearing a ski
mask and a green jacket.”
Nancy and George exchanged glances. Lawrence
was quite tall, so that ruled him out.
“We found it!” a deep voice said behind Nancy. A
younger park ranger wearing a heavy parka strode into
the office. “That snowmobile you described was
abandoned at the edge of the park.”
“Near a road?” Nancy asked.
The ranger nodded. “Either the thief had a car
parked there or someone picked the person up.”
“Oh, great,” George grumbled. “Now we’ll never
know who did it.”
Nancy stood up. “Well, thanks for all your help.”
“And we’re sorry you were inconvenienced,” the
older ranger said. After shaking hands with him, the
girls joined Bess near the fire.
“Well?” Bess looked expectantly at her two friends.
Nancy let out a deep sigh. “The person got clean
away. And we still don’t even know if it was a man or a
woman.”
“Let’s call the Edwardses’ house and find out where
Darci was this morning,” George suggested. Digging
through her coat pocket, she pulled out a quarter.
“Good idea.” Nancy went over to a pay phone near
the concession stand and dialed the Edwardses’
number. Michelle answered on the second ring.
“Darci?” the young girl said, sounding surprised
when Nancy asked for her sister. “Um, I think she’s still
asleep. My dad said we shouldn’t bother her, since she
felt so rotten last night.”
“Could you call her, please?” Nancy asked. “Tell her
Nancy Drew’s on the phone.”
Five minutes later, Michelle came back on the line.
“She wouldn’t open her door. She said to tell you to go
jump in a lake.”
“Mmmm.” Nancy wasn’t surprised. “Well, thanks
anyway, Michelle.”
When Nancy hung up, George and Bess looked at
her expectantly. “Well?” they chorused.
“Darci said I should go jump in a lake,” Nancy
repeated.
“At least that proves she’s home,” George pointed
out.
“Except Michelle said she wouldn’t open the door.
Maybe Darci had just sneaked back into the house.”
“That’s possible,” Bess said. “The Edwards live in a
ranch house, and Darci’s bedroom is in the back. I
remember from when I went to visit Shana years ago.
Lawrence could’ve picked Darci up on the road and
brought her home.”
Nancy nodded. “That’s one possibility. The other is
that we’re still on the track of the wrong person.”
Scooping up her gloves and hat, Nancy started out to
the parking lot. “I think we need to change clothes and
do some more snooping around at the dance academy.
Maybe I’ve overlooked something important.”
The dance school parking lot was deserted except
for Madame’s small foreign car and the school van.
“Oh, good,” Bess said from the passenger seat.
“Maybe Mrs. Wolaski went home. I’m just not in the
mood for pinning and hemming.”
“So what’s our reason for being here?” George asked
Nancy as they got out of the car. “What are we going to
tell Madame?”
Nancy held up two small cans. “We’ll tell her the
truth. We’re going to paint candy cane stripes on the
pillars.”
Bess groaned. “Suddenly, hemming sounds fun.”
George and Nancy laughed as they went up the
steps, through the front entrance, and into the hall.
Madame’s office door was shut. When they stopped in
front of it, the girls could hear someone moving around
the room.
“She must be working,” Bess said, knocking lightly
on the door. “There aren’t any classes till two today,
but she’s probably here already. Madame?” she called.
“It’s Bess. Nancy, George, and I are going to be
working in the prop room.”
Bess knocked again, but there was no answer. The
sounds had stopped. She gave Nancy a worried look.
“Do you think everything’s okay?”
Nancy turned the door knob. It was locked.
“Madame?” she called loudly. “Are you all right?”
“Listen.” George hushed them.
Nancy held her breath. Inside the office, she could
hear a faint scraping sound. “Someone’s opening the
office window,” Nancy whispered.
Spinning around, she dashed down the hall and
pushed open one of the double doors in the back of the
building. It swung open an inch, then clunked to a
stop.
“What’s the matter?” George asked.
Nancy peered through the inch-wide opening. “The
doors won’t budge. Someone stuck a pole in the
handles. Whoever was in Madame’s office is getting
away!”
“What’s going on here?” a voice called from down
the hallway. Madame Dugrand and Mrs. Wolaski were
standing on the top of the basement steps.
“We heard someone in your office,” Bess explained.
“But the door was locked.”
“And whoever it was jumped out the window, then
barricaded the back door,” Nancy added.
“What are you talking about?” Madame strode down
the hallway, a key in her hand. “My door shouldn’t be
locked.” Unable to keep up, Mrs. Wolaski hobbled a
few steps behind the directress.
Inserting the key into the lock, Madame swung the
door open and gasped. Drawers had been pulled out
and dumped. Files and papers were scattered across
the floor.
Stepping into the office, Nancy glanced at the front
window. It was wide open. She dashed to the window
and peered out. She could see footprints leading
through the snow and around to the back of the
building. “I’m going after our culprit,” Nancy said.
“Give me a boost, George.”
Placing a hand under Nancy’s knee, George lifted
her friend onto the window sill. Nancy slid through,
swung her legs around, and plopped into the snow.
Then she raced to the back of the building.
But she was too late. The footprints led to car tracks,
which turned off onto the dry road. Nancy had lost the
culprit again.
Nancy clenched her fists in frustration. Then she
bent down to inspect the footprints. They had the same
pointy toes as the ones from last night.
Turning, Nancy retraced her steps, keeping her eyes
trained on the ground in case the person had left
another clue. Something glinted in the snow, catching
her eye. Nancy immediately picked it up. It was a shard
of glass.
She stuck it carefully in her coat pocket, then went
up to the double doors in the back of the building. As
she had guessed, a broom handle was stuck in the two
door handles. The intruder had obviously been
prepared, Nancy thought, so the break-in had
definitely been planned. But by whom? And why?
When Nancy returned to Madame Dugrand’s office,
the directress, Bess, George, and Mrs. Wolaski were
cleaning up.
“Is anything missing?” Nancy asked quickly.
Madame shook her head. “That’s what’s so strange,”
she said. “So far, nothing seems to have been taken. It
appears that this is just another attempt to mess up the
production.”
“Wait a minute,” Bess said. She was standing next to
the desk, hanging up the framed photos that had been
knocked to the floor. Stepping back, she surveyed the
wall. “Didn’t you have five pictures, Madame? Four on
the outside and one in the middle? I’ve looked
everywhere, but I can only find four.”
“Hmmm.” Madame moved around the desk to stand
next to Bess. “You’re right. But why would someone
take a picture?”
Nancy pulled out the shard of glass from her pocket.
“That’s what this must be from,” she said. “The glass
covering the picture. Look, there are a few more pieces
of glass on the floor below that wall,” she added,
pointing. “Whoever took the picture must have
dropped it, and the glass broke.”
“By why would someone take one of those old
photos?” Mrs. Wolaski asked. The elderly wardrobe
mistress had slumped into the office chair to rest her
feet.
Nancy shook her head. “I don’t know,” she replied in
a puzzled voice. “But the picture must have been
stolen because it contained some kind of clue.”
“What do you mean?” George asked.
Nancy looked up at the group in the office. Four
pairs of eyes were staring expectantly at her.
“I’m not sure,” Nancy said slowly. She swung her
gaze to Madame. “But if you have another copy of that
old photo, we may be able to solve our mystery!”
Everyone turned to Madame Dugrand. “We’re in
luck,” the directress replied. “I’ve saved all of my old
photos, and I do have a duplicate of the picture that
was stolen. It was from a Nutcracker production thirty-
five years ago.”
Stooping with the grace of an ex-dancer, Madame
began sorting through a number of pictures scattered
on the floor. Nancy knelt down beside her. “It looks as
though our thief was hunting for the duplicate, too,”
Nancy said. “Who would know there was another
copy?”
Madame shrugged. “Anyone, I suppose. I love to
show off my photos.”
“Here it is!” Bess announced from the other side of
the desk. “It’s the one of you in your Sugar Plum Fairy
costume.”
Madame stood up and took the picture from Bess.
George and Nancy peered over her shoulder. The
photo was of a group of dancers. A young Alicia
Dugrand—in her late teens—was in the center, poised
on her toes. The other dancers, all about the same age
as Alicia, were dressed in their snowflake costumes and
had their arms gracefully arched toward her.
“Who’s that?” Nancy pointed to a ballerina on the
far right. Instead of facing the photographer, she was
glaring at Madame with a hateful expression.
“Oh, my.” Madame sighed. “That’s poor Grace
Turner. A lovely dancer, but so competitive. She was
furious that I got to dance the part of the Sugar Plum
Fairy. She claimed I stole it from her, but I didn’t. I
had to work hard for that part.”
Hmm, Nancy thought. Madame’s tale sounded a lot
like what was happening between Darci and Shana.
Mrs. Wolaski eased herself out of her chair. “I’m so
glad you found that picture, Alicia,” she said. “But if
you’ll excuse me, I must get back to my costumes.”
“Of course, Gertrude,” Madame replied. She
seemed to be lost in thought.
“Could I see that picture again?” Nancy asked.
The directress nodded and handed the photograph
to Nancy, who studied it closely. Since it was black and
white, she couldn’t even tell what hair color Grace
Turner had.
“Whatever happened to Grace?” George asked.
Madame shrugged. “She eventually left the
company, claiming the directors were against her. I
don’t know if she dropped out of ballet altogether, but
I never heard her name mentioned again.”
“Grace Turner,” Nancy mused aloud. Something