phone.
âAnd . . . ?â Tyler asked.
I held the phone low so he couldnât tell what I was doing. âAnd what?â I stalled.
âAnd what did you find? Jeez, are we speaking the same language? Maybe I should try Pig Latin. Atwhay idday ouyay indfay?â
âI found . . .â I tried another search engine. Juniper Vandegrift didnât appear anywhere. âI found . . . I found nothing.â I sat back against the seat and looked into Jaxâs eyes. âItâs really weird but absolutely nothing comes up. Not a birth date, not an address, not a Facebook page. Itâs almost as if she doesnât exist.â
Jax frowned. âBut she does exist. She sent me a package.â
âWiden the search,â Tyler said. âBirth records, college alumni associations, phone book recordsâsheâs there.â
âSheâs not here,â I insisted.
âThen sheâs living under an alias, or sheâs paid someone to remove her records,â Tyler said. âIf she doesnât want to be found then itâs possible the return address is fake.â
âFake?â Jax said. âBut it canât be fake. I have to find that box.â
Tyler followed my directions off the interstate. The scenery changed quickly. No more fast-food restaurants or strip malls. Everything was green and lush and in full bloom.
âWow, the people around here must be rich,â Jax said as we passed sprawling estates with manicured lawns and huge winding driveways. âDo you think Juniper is rich? She must be if she lives out here. Really rich.â I could tell that Jax was building a huge story in her head about our great-aunt, just like the stories sheâd built about her father. Hopefully, reality wouldnât be too disappointing.
We passed old stone buildings and smaller houses from the early colonial period. You see a lot of those around here. A few turns in the road and we passed a Welcome to Historic New Hope sign. Tyler pointed out that my estimated time of arrival was off by sixteen minutes.
New Hope was a weird place. Every other shop looked like an art gallery of some sort. There was a tie-dyed T-shirt shop, a bunch of craft stores, and a store that sold healing stones. A bunch of Harley Davidson motorcycles were parked in front of a stand selling roasted turkey legs. âHey,â I said, pointing. âThatâs a medieval gallery.â A full-sized coat of armor hung in the window.
âCool,â Tyler said. He slammed his foot, stopping right in the middle of the road. I was thrust forward against my seat belt. The car behind us honked, its brakes screeching.
âWhoa,â Jax complained, bracing herself against the dashboard. âWhatâd you do that for?â
âSee any swords?â Tyler asked.
Tyler had a sword collection that wasnât allowed to leave his bedroom. Mom said someone might get hurt, even though the blades were dull because they were replica productions from some of his favorite movies. He had Glamdring, Gandalfâs sword, and Excalibur, King Arthurâs sword, and Luke Skywalkerâs lightsaber, to name a few. Actually, I think Mom was more worried about people making judgments. She wasnât trying to protect Tylerâeveryone already knew he was a geek. I think she was protecting her own reputation. Her job was to make sure toys were safe, so she was totally opposed to toy weapons.
âNo,â I lied, rubbing the back of my neck. âI donât see any swords.â The car behind honked again.
We drove a bit farther, until we reached West Ferry Street. âThereâs a spot,â Jax announced, pointing. It was a perfect spot, plenty of room, between a Chevy truck and a Volvo station wagon. Tyler slowed, eyed the space for a moment, then passed by.
âNot enough room,â he said.
Jax scowled. âBut there was plenty
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