Read The Nutcracker Ballet Mystery Online
Authors: Carolyn Keene
Nancy’s heart quickened. If Shana had dropped the
bracelet, then one of these sets of prints was hers. And
if Nancy’s hunch was right, they were the ones that
zigzagged. That probably meant that Shana wasn’t
traveling under her own free will.
Following the tracks, Nancy reached the road
behind the dance school. There, she found new tire
marks on the side where someone had pulled over.
Then she saw the pointy-toed prints mingling with the
other two. Obviously, Gertrude Wolaski had a partner.
But who?
Nancy tried to imagine what happened. Mrs.
Wolaski had gotten Shana out to the parking lot on
some pretense. Then, once outside, she’d somehow
forced the dancer behind the building, where Mrs.
Wolaski’s accomplice had been waiting. Nancy took a
deep breath. In other words, Shana had been
kidnapped.
“It’s time to call your friend Chief McGinnis,”
Lawrence said, after Nancy had returned to the others
and told them what she’d found.
“I know just what he’ll say,” Nancy replied. She
deepened her voice. “ ‘Until someone’s been gone for
forty-eight hours, or unless we discover a ransom note,
there’s nothing we can do.’ ” Nancy sighed. “Actually,
we don’t even have definite proof that Shana was
kidnapped. It’s just my gut feeling.”
“And your gut feelings are usually right,” George
added.
“So what are we going to do?” Bess asked anxiously.
Nancy headed for the school’s front door. “First, we
tell Madame. Then we pay a visit to Gertrude Wolaski’s
house.”
“But why would Gertrude kidnap Shana?” Madame
Dugrand asked when she’d gotten over the initial
shock. Darci had gone back to studio A to gather the
rest of her things.
“What better way to hurt you, Madame, than to
kidnap the star of your show?” Nancy replied.
The directress put her head in her hands. “This is all
so terrible,” she said in a shaky voice.
“We’re heading to Gertrude’s house right now,”
Nancy told her.
“I’m coming with you,” Madame insisted, slipping
on her coat. “We’ll take the van. It will hold all of us
easily.”
“Maybe you should stay here, Bess,” Nancy
suggested. “We’ll check back as soon as we find out
something. If you don’t hear from us in an hour, call
Chief McGinnis and tell him everything.”
Bess’s face fell. “But what if Mrs. Wolaski comes
back here, and I’m all alone?”
“I doubt she’ll show her face here ever again,”
Nancy reassured her friend. “Get Darci to stay with
you. She’ll want to keep her parents posted, too.”
“Okay.” Bess tried to grin bravely.
A few minutes later, as Madame drove down
Galworthy Road, the sky began to darken. Nancy
pointed to a gray clapboard house with a front porch.
“There it is. Pull up on the other side, Madame.”
“Unless they’re sitting in there in the dark, no one’s
home,” George commented as Madame parked across
the street. “What do we do now?”
Nancy pulled her collar up over her neck. “I guess
we knock first, and if no one answers—”
“We bust the door down,” Lawrence growled as he
threw open the van door. “Whoever kidnapped Shana
is going to pay.”
“Well, that’s not exactly what I had in mind,” Nancy
said as she followed him out of the van. Her heart was
pounding as the four of them approached the house.
The street lights hadn’t clicked on yet, so everything
seemed dark and shadowy. Quietly, Nancy walked up
the porch steps, tightly gripping her flashlight. To
make sure they weren’t caught in the act, they wouldn’t
turn the lights on once they were inside.
When she reached the front door, Lawrence
stepped next to her. He held a tire iron in his hand. “I
brought it just in case,” he said in a low voice.
Nancy nodded. “We may need it,” she told him.
“Gertrude’s accomplice, whoever he is, is probably
here, too.” Then she leaned forward and rang the bell.
There was no answer.
George walked over to one of the windows and
peeked in. “The curtains are drawn tight. I can’t see a
thing.”
“We’re going in,” Nancy said grimly. She tried the
knob, then opened her shoulder bag and took out her
lock-picking kit. A few moments later, the door swung
open.
As soon as Nancy stepped inside, it was obvious that
this wasn’t just the home of Gertrude Wolaski. It was
also a shrine to the former ballerina Grace Turner.
Nancy shined her flashlight on the hallway walls, which
were papered with photos and newspaper articles.
Pictures of Grace in different costumes were placed all
around the living room. Ballet memorabilia were
strewn on every table and shelf, and a pair of faded
pink toe shoes hung over the mantel.
“How sad,” Madame Dugrand murmured as she
looked around her. “I wish Gertrude had told me who
she was. Grace Turner was her stage name. I never
knew her as Gertrude. Maybe I could have helped her
work out her anger.”
“I don’t think so,” Nancy said, pointing to a picture
on the living room wall. It was the stolen photo of
Alicia Dugrand in her Sugar Plum Fairy costume. The
glass over the photo was broken, and a large red X was
marked across the young dancer’s face.
Madame Dugrand shook her head sadly. “Poor
Grace,” she said.
“Hey, look at this,” Lawrence called from the other
side of the room. He had opened a large wooden box
he’d found in a corner. “Mrs. Farnsworth’s antique
ornaments.”
George and Nancy rushed over. When Nancy saw
that the valuable decorations—made of delicate glass
in all shapes and colors—were in perfect condition, she
gave a sigh of relief. “Now, if we can just find Shana.
Let’s split into pairs and search the house. Look for
anything that might give us a clue to Mrs. Wolaski’s
accomplice or another address.”
Lawrence and George nodded, then headed for the
kitchen. Nancy and Madame crept silently up the
steps. Two rooms and a bath opened into the narrow
hall. Nancy peered into the first room. It was
Gertrude’s bedroom. Drawers were flung open and
clothes were strewn on the bed, as if someone had
been in a hurry. Something fuzzy was sticking out from
under the bed. When Madame caught sight of it, she
grabbed Nancy’s arm, startled.
Nancy bent down to pick up the fuzzy object. It was
Mrs. Wolaski’s wispy-haired wig. “I guess she doesn’t
need this anymore,” Nancy said grimly. She motioned
for Madame to follow her. “Let’s check the other
room.”
It was a small, sparsely furnished office. Nancy
walked over and opened the front of an oak desk,
shining the flashlight beam on a stack of envelopes.
“Here’s a bank envelope with canceled checks,” she
said. “Maybe they’ll tell us something. Why don’t you
look through them?” she added, handing the envelope
to Madame. Then Nancy began to examine the other
envelopes. Letters, bills . . .
A tap on her arm made Nancy look over at Madame.
The directress was staring at a handful of checks.
“Nancy, look at these.”
Nancy shined the flashlight on the canceled checks.
Then she took them from Madame and looked closely
at each one. There were ten checks in the amount of
five hundred dollars, and every one of them was made
out to Roger L. Wolaski.
They’d found Gertrude Wolaski’s accomplice!
“Roger L. Wolaski,” Nancy murmured. “Do you think
the L could stand for Lutz?” she asked Madame.
“Lutz must be his middle name,” Madame replied.
Then she gasped. “You mean Roger is Gertrude’s son?”
“He may be her son or some other kind of relative,”
Nancy said. “It makes sense, I guess. It would be hard
to recruit a total stranger to help carry out a loony plan
like Gertrude’s.”
When Nancy and Madame made their way back to
the living room, Lawrence and George reported that
the rest of the house was deserted. Nancy explained
Roger’s role in the scheme, and that he was somehow
related to Gertrude.
“Roger Lutz is working with Mrs. Wolaski?”
Lawrence said after Nancy had told him and George
the news. “But he’s such a mousy little guy”
“Roger has to be Gertrude’s accomplice,” Nancy
replied. “He had access to the building. And since he
was always way in the background, no one suspected
him.” She showed Lawrence and George the canceled
checks.
“I never suspected they were related,” George
commented. “Mrs. Wolaski acted as if she didn’t even
know Roger.”
With a dejected expression, Madame slumped down
on the sofa. “How could I have been so blind? I even
saw Roger sneaking around on the day of the fire and
never paid any attention. Those two were sabotaging
my school right under my nose.”
“Now we have to figure out where they took Shana,”
Nancy said. “Madame, when you hired Roger, did you
get an address?”
“Oh, my, I didn’t!” Madame’s shoulders slumped
even more. “I was just so glad to have someone play
the piano for free. He seemed like such a nice man.”
Nancy began pacing back and forth. “Okay,
everybody think. Did Roger ever mention where he
lived? Or mention anything at all about where he lived?
Like he lived with his parents, or in an apartment? And
how about a license plate number, or even what his car
looked like?” Nancy stopped and looked at the others,
but their expressions were blank. “How about what
college he went to?” she tried again.
Lawrence shook his head. “The guy never said ‘boo’
to anyone.”
“I’ll call Bess and Darci to tell them what we found
out.” George started toward the kitchen. “Maybe one
of them knows something.”
While she waited for George to return, Nancy
continued to pace, trying to figure out what to do next.
They could call the police. But what would they tell
them? That the four of them had broken into a house?
That would go over well with the River Heights police.
Suddenly, George rushed back into the room. “I
think I’ve got a clue!” she said excitedly. “Darci
remembers Roger talking about his brand-new
apartment.”
Lawrence snorted. “Well, that narrows it down to
about a hundred or so, just in River Heights.”
Brand-new apartment, Nancy thought, and then
something clicked in her mind. “That’s it!” she cried.
“Come on, everyone. I know where Roger lives!”
When they were back in the van, Nancy gave
directions to Madame and explained how she’d figured
out that Roger lived in the new garden complex for
singles. “That’s where the van was heading on the night
Bess and I followed it. Roger must have been taking
my ornaments back to his apartment. When he spotted
us, he turned the tables and started to chase us.”
“But how are we going to figure out which is his
apartment?” Lawrence asked doubtfully. He was in the
passenger seat, holding tight to the door. Madame was
driving as quickly as she could without breaking any
laws.
Nancy told her to take a sharp right, and they turned
into the main street of the complex. As the van slowed,
she studied all the entrances carefully. “If I’m
remembering correctly, the van pulled out of this drive
and began to tail us.” She pointed to the second
entrance on the left.
Just then, Madame hit the steering wheel with the
palm of her hand. “A blue foreign thing!” she declared.
“Huh?” Lawrence swung around. “You mean, that’s
what Roger drove?”
Madame nodded emphatically.
“All right!” From the backseat, George gave the
directress a pat on the shoulder.
Madame turned the car into the complex and began
to cruise alongside the line of parked vehicles. The
road curved in a semicircle in front of the four
apartment buildings. Nancy counted four small blue
cars.
“Now what?” George asked in a gloomy voice. “We
can’t knock on every door.”
“Pointy-toed shoes,” Nancy reminded her friend as
she swung the car into a parking spot.
“Would you mind speaking English?” Lawrence
said.
Nancy opened the van door. “We need to look for