moni
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Post by moni on Aug 9, 2021 21:52:43 GMT
The Candy Shoppe Caper
The sleet was like needles against my face as I crossed the street to Seagram's Sweet Shoppe. I remembered coming here as a kid, sampling all the goodies they offered, but I never imagined, I'd be here as a detective, investigating a crime I entered the back door and squeezed past bags of sugar that lined the hallway to the owner's office.
"Good morning, Mr. Seagram. I'm Detective Sanders. You reported a theft that happened here last night."
The elderly gentleman nodded. "It's just horrible. Yesterday's cash deposit was ready for the bank" he said. "I always leave it ready, on my desk, with my office door locked. I worked here last night, but when I came back this morning, my door was pried open and the cash was gone."
"Do you have a night crew here?" I asked as he offered me a bonbon.
"Yes, a very small one... only three people: my chocolatier, my sugar artist, and the warehouse manager. But they've been with me for years! I can't imagine any of them stealing."
"We can't rule anyone out" I cautioned. "Are they here now?"
"Yes, as soon as I discovered the theft, I called everyone back to the shop."
He scurried out and within seconds, the sugar artist entered.
I began to speak but my words were cut off. "First off" she interrupted, "I didn't steal anything. And second, I'm an artist. My love is creating, I have no interest in that old man's cash."
"Okay... well, did you hear or see anything out of the ordinary last night?" I asked patiently.
"Only if you call blasting rock-and-roll music all night from the production room out of the ordinary. Maybe you should speak to John-Paul, our stuck-in-the-rock-era chocolate guy."
"Would you please send him in?" I asked, jotting down notes.
"Sure thing" she said, sashaying out of the room. Soon, a ponytailed man appeared, complete with a bandana on his brow and a torn concert tee.
"Sir, I was told you were blasting music while you worked last night..." I began.
"Yeah, I always do. Is that a crime now? Did I wake the neighbors?" He chuckled, but soon stopped after noticing there was no smile on my face.
"No, but playing loud music would drown out someone trying to smash through a door, wouldn't it?" I asked.
"Listen, I was in the production room all night. I play music all the time. Arrest me if you want - otherwise leave me alone."
With that, he slammed through the double-doors. "What a bunch of sour people in such a sweet place!", I thought, checking my notes. Only the warehouse manager remained.
"Sir, would you mind retracing your steps here last night?" I asked.
"Of course not. Follow me into freezer for a moment, and I'll show you what happened."
As we walked into the freezer, my foot squelched in liquid chocolate. He sighed. "I was around midnight when I began to stock the freezer from an earlier delivery." the manager said. "I was just about done, when I tried to place this bucket of molten chocolate on an upper shelf. The lid popped off and it all fell on my head, covering me and - as you can see - the floor. I couldn't work like that, and since I had nothing else pending, I left early. I was surprised when I got the call to come back this morning."
". I have no more questions" I said, dismissing him and going to find the owner once again.
"Good news, sir", I smiled. "I've found our thief!"
Who stole the money, and how the detective figured it out?
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Post by lurkercat on Aug 10, 2021 18:41:38 GMT
Duh, surely somebody here is smart enough to solve this??!
Easy enough to spot an obvious lie, but (for me at least) hard to translate that into proof of theft vs a number of other possible "dalliances".
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moni
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Post by moni on Aug 10, 2021 19:09:59 GMT
Duh, surely somebody here is smart enough to solve this??!
Easy enough to spot an obvious lie, but (for me at least) hard to translate that into proof of theft vs a number of other possible "dalliances". Share your thoughts. Happy Puppy
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Post by Valkara on Aug 10, 2021 19:31:44 GMT
Here's my guess: {Spoiler}I accuse the chocolatier. He's lying.
First off chocolate used for candymaking freezes fast. There is no way there should be any "squelching" the next day. Any chocolate in the freezer would be solid.
Secondly, you don't freeze chocolate to set it. You refrigerate it, which is a whole different thing.
(I know this from experience as I used to make chocolates and we experimented with putting them in the freezer to hurry it along for them to set... big mistake) EDIT: I misread the story. I accuse the {Spoiler}manager , for the same reasons given. (thanks, moni!)
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moni
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Post by moni on Aug 10, 2021 22:28:41 GMT
I have 40 of these detective stories. 10 Beginner, 10 Intermediate, 10 Advanced and 10 Super Sleuth. I've started with the Beginner section. I've meant to post all of them starting with the easiest ones and gradually advance to the more difficult ones.
If you guys find the beginner ones too easy, I can skip them and post from the intermediate. Would you like me to do that?
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Post by lurkercat on Aug 10, 2021 22:46:53 GMT
moni, ummm, depends on how complete the "answer" really is. Too easy to identify the liar. So if that is all there is to the answer, I'd opt for skipping to the next level. But if the answer includes the rationale for how we are supposed to make the leap from liar to thief, then I think this "easy" question is kind of hard 'cause how one makes that leap is not totally obvious yet, at least to me.
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moni
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Post by moni on Aug 10, 2021 22:48:57 GMT
moni , ummm, depends on how complete the "answer" really is. Too easy to identify the liar. So if that is all there is to the answer, I'd opt for skipping to the next level. But if the answer includes the rationale for how we are supposed to make the leap from liar to thief, then I think this "easy" question is kind of hard 'cause how one makes that leap is not totally obvious yet, at least to me. The official answer commences to the obvious liar only.... I'll post one from the next category...
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Post by Valkara on Aug 10, 2021 23:17:48 GMT
moni , ummm, depends on how complete the "answer" really is. Too easy to identify the liar. So if that is all there is to the answer, I'd opt for skipping to the next level. But if the answer includes the rationale for how we are supposed to make the leap from liar to thief, then I think this "easy" question is kind of hard 'cause how one makes that leap is not totally obvious yet, at least to me. The official answer commences to the obvious liar only.... I'll post one from the next category...
I edited my post. Am I right?
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moni
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Post by moni on Aug 10, 2021 23:58:26 GMT
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Post by lurkercat on Aug 11, 2021 1:31:23 GMT
Valkara, so I'm curious - what happens if you freeze chocolate instead of just chill it?
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Post by patches on Aug 11, 2021 4:24:37 GMT
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Post by Valkara on Aug 11, 2021 4:46:31 GMT
Valkara , so I'm curious - what happens if you freeze chocolate instead of just chill it? For one thing, good luck biting into it until it thaws. That bucket of frozen chocolate would have been impossible to work with, if it had really been frozen, which it wasn't (the chocolate that "squelched" wouldn't have done that). There's a reason why you don't put chocolate molds in the freezer; they weren't intended to take temperatures like that. I found out the hard way when my molds cracked and became unusable. Also... once upon a time, 25+ years ago, I was active in the Society for Creative Anachronism (nonprofit educational organization that researches and re-creates the life and knowledge of the Middle Ages - defined as the years between 600-1600 AD, in places that had verified, documented contact with Europe, founded in 1966... it's two months older than Star Trek and there are many science fiction and fantasy authors who were among the founders; I joined in 1986 and left in 1998, though you never really leave; there are some parts of that life that are still with me). One of the things our Shire did twice a year was put on feasts and host tournaments - archery in the spring and heavy fighting (swords) in the fall. This particular year, our spring feast and tournament came just after Shakespeare's birthday, and I'd had an idea for one of the desserts for the feast (a friend was the autocrat - the organizer of the event). I don't cook, unless you call tossing something in the microwave for 2-3 minutes cooking. But by that time I'd learned to make chocolate haystack cookies, and had tried making chocolates. I was good enough at it to satisfy my dad and grandfather, so I figured I'd get ambitious... Everyone's tried chocolate-dipped strawberries, right? Well, I wondered if chocolate-coated grapes would work. A quick taste experiment confirmed that yes, the flavors work together (green seedless grapes and dipping chocolate). But the real problem was in how to produce several dozen of them, nicely dipped, without there being a flat side from laying them on waxed paper (presentation matters). And how would I make sure the chocolate didn't just drip into a huge mess? The solution was in making stands to set each grape individually, on the toothpick I'd stuck into them. I had to work quickly, dipping each grape and immediately getting it into its place on the stands in the fridge, or the still-melted chocolate would have run down the toothpick and made a mess. I made the stands from cardboard egg cartons, poking 12 holes in them with a needle so I wasn't trying to fight with them with a grape coated in still-warm chocolate. It was funny, seeing the stands in the fridge, each holding 12 grapes, all lined up like little chocolate soldiers at an inspection. One thing I learned (through a day of experimenting that left a trail of chocolate from one end of the kitchen to another and all over my apron) was that before you start dipping the grapes, you need to make sure they're perfectly dry. That includes the place where you picked the grape off its stem; any juice at all would mean it would interact with the chocolate and wouldn't set properly. When it was set, if the grape juice hadn't been soaked up with a paper towel before dipping, it would leak, run down the toothpick, and make a sticky mess. That would mean an unpleasant experience for anyone touching the toothpick, as they'd get sticky fingers with no quick and easy way to clean them (our feasts weren't fancy enough to use fingerbowls). Besides, it looked awful, and as mentioned, presentation matters. So this was the experiment, and then came the time for making the actual grapes for the feast. That happened at my then-boyfriend's house, as he had two fridges we could use. Things were chaotic, because while I'd perfected the time needed to microwave the chocolate, and the dip-swirl-stand-fridge sequence, my boyfriend and another friend hadn't. It does take practice and you have to move fast. So there was a huge mess, and time went on... we had 10 dozen of these things to make. Finally we started running out of room in the fridge upstairs, and had to work double-quick to get a dozen ready to pop down to the fridge in the basement. And then my boyfriend got the bright idea to use the freezer. It would be faster, he said. He was tired of all the running up and down the stairs. I hadn't experimented with the freezer, because everything I'd learned up to that time about chocolate-making is that you don't put it in the freezer. It affects the hardness and the chocolate gets a waxy look to it that's very off-putting to look at. The texture is also affected negatively. But... we were desperate, running out of time and temper, and the feast would be by candlelight, so maybe a bit of waxy appearance wouldn't be noticed... The intention was to just leave them in for a few minutes to harden them enough to make it easier to put in the fridge to keep them chilled (this is crucial for this particular dessert - to keep them chilled until the moment they're served, or the chocolate gets melty and the taste/texture gets a bit disgusting; you want them chilled and crunchy, and when you bite into them, there's an explosion of chocolate and grape for your tastebuds to enjoy). But as bad luck would have it, we forgot them. My boyfriend rushed to the freezer, took them out, and saw that the lovely, smooth chocolate surface had cracked and grape juice had leaked out where the toothpick and grape touched. He let out an "AUUGGHHHH! GRAPESICLES!" and we had to discard that batch (we took care of the discards by eating them). So... lesson learned. This dessert, when done right, takes one heckuva lot of finicky twirling to get excess chocolate off before quickly sticking the grape in a stand in the fridge. Repeat 119 more times. It's an all-day thing, at least when you're making enough to feed 40 people. I know, because I did it by myself for the fall feast, after seeing how well it went over at the spring feast. That spring feast was important for another reason. There was a guy in the group who figured he knew everything about everything, and when we were putting on a demo earlier in the day at one of the art galleries in town (the event was Shakespeare's birthday; we were there in costume, explaining various things about life in the early-middle Tudor era), he'd asked me what foods we'd be eating at the feast. So I mentioned chocolate-covered grapes, and he was instantly dubious and told me no, it wouldn't work, it would taste awful, not a good idea at all, etc. and so forth. So I figured I'd show him otherwise, and vindication came a week later at the feast when I saw him pick up a toothpick, pop the chilled, chocolate-covered grape into his mouth, start chewing, and his eyes widened as the flavors of grape and chocolate mixed, the taste and texture of chilled, slightly crunchy fruit and thin chocolate coating mixed... and he said, "This IS good." Those three words made all the effort worthwhile. Vindication. Later on I experimented with yogurt-flavored dipping chocolate, and my grandmother declared that she liked the yogurt kind better than the chocolate. Oh, and I did other experiments with chocolate. I developed my own recipe for peanut butter cups: The filling is one part peanut butter to one part honey, add maraschino cherry syrup to even out the taste and texture so everything was even; you don't want either the peanut butter or honey flavor to dominate, but you want to be able to taste them at the same time. This was a challenging recipe to develop as I got this idea at a time when my allergies and digestive system kicked into high combat with each other and I actually couldn't have chocolate or many other foods. But this recipe requires a taste test to make sure all the flavors are balanced and the texture of the filling is right. So I had to settle for a quick taste on the tongue but not swallowing it. Again, some of the people in the shire were dubious. The idea of putting honey in peanut butter cups seemed just plain weird to them. But once again, I showed them it would work (this was never served at a feast as it's too modern, but I contributed it several times when we had potlucks). Again, you don't want to freeze these. The molds would crack, the chocolate surface coating would be waxy, and you'd be asking people to bite into what would essentially be chocolate-flavored miniature hockey pucks.
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moni
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Post by moni on Aug 11, 2021 16:58:19 GMT
Valkara, This was a very interesting story, thanks. Cheering
I went for a Medieval Fest before, it was quite an experience and tremendous fun. I made my own costume, and I really looked the part.... then there was a pie-eating competition which I signed up for. I thought, it will be...well, eating pies. The pies were hanged on hooks, and the competitors' hands were tied behind. All the participants looked confused and bit scared by the prep. The pies were hanged a bit higher than mouth-level, so we had to jump, to take a bite. Of course, the pies would let go off the hook by the first bite-catch, and would fall onto our faces - My beautifully made hair, dress and perfect make-up was covered in cherry-pie in a matter of seconds. That kinda ruined my mood right there... then for the competitors biggest surprise, a partner stepped to each one of us and started to eat the pies off our faces (hairs, breast ...). A guy from a girl, or a girl from a guy...(this would've been fun for a couples competition, but not like this!) I was a bit lucky, the guy who was eating the pie off of me was clean, well dressed and kinda handsome - but a stranger, nevertheless, and made me very uncomfortable that he was licking my face and biting off pieces of pies from my breast... and all of this while my girlfriends and others were standing around and cheering up...
Later on we discussed the event with my girlfriends, and I went on and on how horrible and disgusting my experience with the pie was, then on of them said: "Oh, shush! You've liked it!" and showed me a picture she took. On the picture, there is me in a renaissance dress, hands tied up, head tilted back, closed eyes, half grin on my face, while there is a man's head buried between my tits. Peek-a-boo
Years later, my husband was going through our photo box... I was doing the dishes in the kitchen, and heard him yelling from the room: "Oh, hon! I didn't know you are into bandage role-playing!" OMG
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Post by Valkara on Sept 6, 2021 8:27:09 GMT
Valkara , This was a very interesting story, thanks. Cheering I went for a Medieval Fest before, it was quite an experience and tremendous fun. I made my own costume, and I really looked the part.... then there was a pie-eating competition which I signed up for. I thought, it will be...well, eating pies. The pies were hanged on hooks, and the competitors' hands were tied behind. All the participants looked confused and bit scared by the prep. The pies were hanged a bit higher than mouth-level, so we had to jump, to take a bite. Of course, the pies would let go off the hook by the first bite-catch, and would fall onto our faces - My beautifully made hair, dress and perfect make-up was covered in cherry-pie in a matter of seconds. That kinda ruined my mood right there... then for the competitors biggest surprise, a partner stepped to each one of us and started to eat the pies off our faces (hairs, breast ...). A guy from a girl, or a girl from a guy...(this would've been fun for a couples competition, but not like this!) I was a bit lucky, the guy who was eating the pie off of me was clean, well dressed and kinda handsome - but a stranger, nevertheless, and made me very uncomfortable that he was licking my face and biting off pieces of pies from my breast... and all of this while my girlfriends and others were standing around and cheering up...
Later on we discussed the event with my girlfriends, and I went on and on how horrible and disgusting my experience with the pie was, then on of them said: "Oh, shush! You've liked it!" and showed me a picture she took. On the picture, there is me in a renaissance dress, hands tied up, head tilted back, closed eyes, half grin on my face, while there is a man's head buried between my tits. Peek-a-boo
Years later, my husband was going through our photo box... I was doing the dishes in the kitchen, and heard him yelling from the room: "Oh, hon! I didn't know you are into bandage role-playing!" OMG
Yikes! That isn't something that we ever did, though I confess I'm not up on customs in other kingdoms. If anyone is curious about the SCA, there's a novel called Murder at the War, by Mary Monica Pulver. It's about a murder that takes place at Pennsic War (this is an actual SCA event), and when Detective Peter Brichter's wife, Kori, is the prime suspect (she was the last to see the victim alive and had had an altercation with him earlier), he must figure out who the real killer is. Brichter's attempts to solve the murder are complicated by the local cops, who are befuddled by all these people running around in costume and answering to names that make no sense (it's not uncommon for SCA-folk to not know people by their mundane (real) names).
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Post by lurkercat on Sept 6, 2021 19:55:09 GMT
moni , Now that you are back, can we please have another mystery to solve?? "Loved" the list of chores hubby left you when he went away (honestly, put in a double driveway??!!). Some sounded like fun, though, and I thought it was a pity not to live closer so we could help you out - would love to learn some of those things...but WAY more fun "practicing" on someone else's house and not my own!
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moni
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Post by moni on Sept 9, 2021 0:05:58 GMT
moni , Now that you are back, can we please have another mystery to solve?? "Loved" the list of chores hubby left you when he went away (honestly, put in a double driveway??!!). Some sounded like fun, though, and I thought it was a pity not to live closer so we could help you out - would love to learn some of those things...but WAY more fun "practicing" on someone else's house and not my own! Hi hi hi.... That's right. It is more fun to practice on someone else house, most of all because you can quit when you get tired and go home to a nice, organized, clean house. Sniffing Flower
Obviously, the double driveway will be done by hired professionals - we live in a community and the association have rules how the outside has to look. Plus, I really wouldn't be able to that on my own. But the hassle to remove the "pain-in-my-tush" tree first gives me a rollercoster of bureaucratic runs. I'm so confused by now about what's what, it is not even upsetting anymore, it's just sad. I'm not sure when - if ever - I will be able to get to the point to actually hire somebody to install the driveway.
Now, I'm at the point that I'm waiting for a giant Home Depot order to be delivered. It has all what I need to lay 1300 sq.feet tiles. That will be done by me, no help just me.
What I'm done with so far is, I ripped up the old carpets, cleaned, scrubbed the subfloor, Filled up cracks, holes with cement, and sanded it. I painted the walls in the whole house. I've changed the mosquito screens on all windows (I thought, that would be an easy and quick, even fun project - it wasn't). I almost went on the ceiling popcorn - to remove it - on my own, too, but fortunately, first I watched a video how to do it, and that I cannot do it on my own, if it has asbestos in it. And it does, of course, I have to hire a professional for that, too, on a later point.
I also, climbed up on the roof - there is a flat part of the roof, that was leaking by the joints where it is erected together with the tent shape roof. I've resealed the joints and painted the whole flat roof with a special paint that reflecting the sun back (so it is not that hot now in the den anymore).
I also trimmed all the bushes and decorative trees around the house. First time I used the chainsaw we have. Before, I was afraid of it, I always found chainsaws a very dangerous tools. Maaannn! Cutting stuff with chainsaw is great for anger management! I actually enjoyed cutting stuff with it!
The Home Depot order supposed to be here on Monday. I was waiting all day, then I got an email that it is actually scheduled on Tuesday. I was waiting all day on Tue. Then I've called in the evening, because the tracking site said, my delivery was delayed. They said, it will be delivered on Wednesday and they apologized for the inconvenience. Wednesday is today, I've got up at 5 am and checked the tracking site if there is any change - the site now said that it was attempted to deliver yesterday (on Tuesday)... Being totally confused on this point I've called Home Depot once again, that there wasn't any attempted delivery, or if it was, it wasn't to this address, I didn't get any calls, emails, texts about the attempt, either, and where is my stuff. They apologized and said the delivery will be here shortly. I just called them again, a little while ago (after waiting all day), and I got informed that the delivery is scheduled for Thursday early morning at 6am. I'm totally offput by now, I hope I can remain civil with the delivery man when it finally gets here.... 3 days wasted by simply waiting for Godot!!! I hate to waste time, time is the most precious currency for me.
Anyways, when the tile gets here, I may will go awol for a few days, again. After mixing mortar and lay the tiles my fingers will be puffy by the evening - I won't be able to type much...lol.
I'm so tired by now, shuffling the furniture around in the house to access the floor was no joke. I should've called some friends to come to help, but one part I'm stubborn (if I can handle something on my own I would), the other part my friends live a bit far from us, and we don't have "new" friends acquired here.
On top of all things, my little old sedan is about to poop out - it coughs when I start it, and it doesn't always want to take the gears. I just wanted to take it to a mechanics after the Home Depot delivery has finally arrived. Well, when it rains it pours.
Every time I fall in despair I think of pennmom troubles... comparing my hardship with hers, mine suddenly appears NOTHING! I frequently draw strength from this. I also have my epic battle music on full blast - when I listen to this type of music I feel I can conquer the whole world with a spoon!
So yeah, I will post the next detective story in a few, but even the harder ones sound a bit on the "duh!"-side. They are still fun. :)
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Post by lurkercat on Sept 9, 2021 1:25:26 GMT
Wow, moni , I'm exhausted just reading all you have accomplished. Great job! Do you rent out?? Wish I had accomplished even a tenth of what you did!
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Post by lurkercat on Oct 2, 2021 23:31:02 GMT
I have 40 of these detective stories. 10 Beginner, 10 Intermediate, 10 Advanced and 10 Super Sleuth. I've started with the Beginner section. I've meant to post all of them starting with the easiest ones and gradually advance to the more difficult ones.
If you guys find the beginner ones too easy, I can skip them and post from the intermediate. Would you like me to do that? moni, If you've finished all your chores ( !!), could we please have another case?
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moni
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Post by moni on Oct 3, 2021 5:09:14 GMT
Robin Hood Case
Sheriff Charles Jones returned from his lunch at the diner to find his former schoolteacher, Angela Potts, sitting in his office. Chewing the last of a donut, he dropped into his chair and said, "What are you staring at?"
"I've just never seen anybody to have a donut for dessert."
"Well, live and learn," he said, licking his fingers. "How can I help you, Mrs. Potts?"
Angela held up the day's newspaper. "This says someone stole twenty thousand dollars in cash from the Homeowners' Association at Robin Hood Estates. Is that true?"
"According to Kevin Alford, it is. Him and his wife are the association's treasurers."
"He and his wife." she corrected.
"That's what I said." The sheriff looked at his notepat. "At Robin Hood, any office held by a married homeowner is held by both husband and wife. So we have four groups of suspects: the Polks - president, the Rolands - vice president, the Johnsons - secretary and the Alfords - treasurer."
"Why are they suspects?"
"Because the allegedly stolen money was locked in a safe only accessible by the people in those four positions."
"So it was embezzlement?"
"looks that way," the sheriff nodded. "The Alfords aren't off the hook, they could've reported the crime to direct attention away from themselves."
"Sure... though twenty thousand dollars sounds like lot for a homeowners' group."
"I thought so, too. But they have that fancy clubhouse and all those expenses."
Angela sighed. "The real Robin Hood would be disappointed. They're stealing from the rich and giving it to the rich."
"Makes you wonder why...they sure don't need money."
"Maybe it's not about the money," Angela said.
"Maybe." The sheriff shuffled through some papers on his desk. "Anyways, we do have a lead. Form - believe it or not - Aaron Gallagher."
"The multimillionaire?"
"Yeah. He is one of the homeowners at Robin Hood."
Angela looked intrigued. "Well, what's the lead?"
"A riddle. I found it taped to the door of my office this morning." He picked up the note and handed it to Angela.
It said in hand-printed letters, "Solve this, and you'll have your thief: When invented, it was called the 'X-Y position indicator for a display system.' -- A. Gallagher."
Angela rubbed her eyes. "Any idea what Gallagher's talking about here?"
"No. But I do have info on the four couples." He held up a second notepad and read from it: "40-year-old Kevin Alfond, elected treasurer, has a wife named Patricia. They're both lawyers -- she does tax work, he does personal-injury. Shirley Johnson, the association's secretary, and her husband, Philip, are both early 60s. She is a teacher, he's a hedge-fund manager. Minnie Roland, VP, is an architect. She's mid 30s, her husband Mickey is 42 and a pediatrician. Jonathan Polk, president, is 50, and so is his wife, Susan. He's an engineer, she's a a stay-at-home mom, two sons in college. None of them have criminal records."
Angela frowned again deep in thoughts.
"A display position indicator," the sheriff repeated, scratching his chin. "Does that mean, like a cursor?"
"A device, more likely. A pointer that'll let you navigate the X--horizontal--, and the Y--vertical--axes on the a screen."
"A pointer? What kind of pointer?"
Suddenly Angela's face lit up. "Let me see that description of the four couples again." Angela studied it awhile, and her smile widened. "I think, I've got it," she said.
"You got what?"
"I know who Gallagher says stole the association's money."
Sheriff Jones blinked. "So? Who was it?"
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Post by dillonamazon on Oct 3, 2021 17:15:16 GMT
Got it. but do not know how to create a click to see.
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