We walk to the side of the court. Between games, the boys have scattered and sit along the chain-link fence. I approach the one who looked at me.
“You’re very fast,” I say.
“More quick than fast,” he responds, without looking up. Friendly. I’m guessing around twelve years old. He’s shorter than his friends, wearing blue mesh shorts long enough to touch the tops of his high-tops. His Golden State Warriors tank top reveals the underdeveloped shoulders of pre-adolescence.
One of his cohorts shouts in his direction: “If he’s an agent, give him my number.”
“The teacher gave us the afternoon off for Halloween,” he explains. Earnest.
“I used to play. I wasn’t very good,” I say.
“I used to be a teacher,” Grandma says.
We both turn and look at her.
“She plays too,” I say. “She has a wicked jump hook.”
The boy laughs.
“I’m Nathaniel, and this is Lane. My grandmother.”
One of his friends shouts in his direction. “Let’s go, Newton. Rubber match.”
“Hello, Newton,” I offer.
“It’s a nickname,” he says and he stands.
“I’m looking for someone,” I say.
“We’re looking for someone,” Grandma says.
“It’s…” I gamble. “Mr. Pederson.”
Newton’s taken a step away from us, but he keeps his cool. “Never heard of him,” he says.
“What about Ms. Pederson?” I ask. Maybe I’ve gotten the gender wrong on the mystery package sender with the last name starting with P.
“C’mon, Newton!” one of his friends bellows.
“I’m being called to action,” he says.
“May I interject please?” Grandma asks. Without waiting for a response, she continues: “I commend the young man on his word choice. It’s energizing to hear English spoken with precision.”
For some reason, this stops Newton. He turns around. “Are you a real-estate agent?”
Grandma thinks the question is directed to her.
“My father worked in a bakery.”
“I’m a journalist. I got a note from Ms. Pederson asking to meet me here. I think she wanted to contact me about a story.”
“Newton!” A friend screams
He turns to them. “I’ll be there in a moment!”
“Why do they call you Newton?”
“I like science.”
“Me too. Why did you think we were real estate agents?”
“Because you stop living here when you can afford anything else.”
I consider it. “Is Ms. Pederson too rich for these digs?”
“Her first name is Lulu,” he says. “But she hates it. She thinks it makes her sound like an airhead.”
“Lulu Pederson?” I ask. L. P.
He doesn’t respond.
“Have you seen Ms. Pederson around?” I ask with as much nonchalance as I can muster.
“Not for a few days. She tutors me in science on Wednesdays, but she didn’t show up last night.”
“So you think maybe she moved out of the neighborhood?”
“Newton!” a friend shouts.
“I would,” he says in response to my question. “Anyway, I gotta run…”
I interrupt him. “Any idea where can I find her?”
“Nathaniel, you ask a lot of questions,” Grandma inserts.
Newton laughs. “She’s funny.”
“It’s really important that I find her,” I say.
He looks at me cautiously, measuring me now.
“She’s pretty smart — a genius. I assume she’ll find you if she’s interested.”
“Please,” I say. “It’s critically important.”
He’s had enough, and now one of his friends is striding purposefully towards us to retrieve him.
“Try her company. It’s called Biogen,” he says.
“Biogen?” I make sure I heard correctly.
He nods.
The biotech giant.
He’s walking away.
“What does she do at Biogen?”
He shrugs.
“Is she a scientist?” I shout after him. I start to walk around the side of the court, to find an entrance.
Newton’s friend — the one who came to retrieve him — takes a step in my direction. He’s much bigger and less friendly.
“Can we get back to our game?” he asks. It sounds rhetorical. He wants this interview to end.
“Newton, please. This is important. I need you to help me.” I’m using an adult voice I’m surprised to know I’ve got inside of me. I’m asking this child to behave reasonably.
“I’m not supposed to talk to strange adults.” Trump card. Smart kid. “If you see her, tell her Newton says hello,” he adds.
I pull out my business card. I wave it, and stick it in a gym bag left where Newton was sitting.
“This is my phone number, Newton. Call me if you want to talk about Lulu.”
Grandma and I are sitting back in the car. I cup her chilly hands in mine and blow on them, then gently rub, feeling the frail bones beneath.
“Congratulations, partner,” I say.
“Harry doesn’t have trouble hiding his excitement. He always seems calm, even when he’s not.”
“You just played Good Cop,” I say.
“I’ve never had a problem with people in law enforcement.”
We finally have a lead.
“Have you heard of Biogen?”
“What?”
“It’s one of the most respected biotech companies in the world. I think it’s the biggest.”
No response.
I look at the clock. It’s 4:20. Probably too late to get to Biogen, which is located in South San Francisco. But it’s not too late to call.
I call Directory Assistance and get Biogen’s main number. I call the company, suffer through instructions from an automated attendant, and hit zero for a live human. When I get one, I ask for Lulu Pederson. The human operator transfers me. The phone rings three times, then goes to voice mail.
“You’ve reached Adrianna Pederson in Biogen’s Advanced Life Computing department. I’m not available right now; leave a message and I’ll get back to you.”
Did I hear right. Did the voice mail say “Adrianna Pederson”?
Adrianna. That was the name Grandma was muttering.
Maybe I’m imagining things.
I call Biogen a second time and ask for Lulu Pederson. I get her voice mail and realize that, indeed, I hadn’t imagined a thing.
“You’ve reached Adrianna Pederson in Biogen’s Advanced Life Computing department. I’m not available right now; leave a message and I’ll get back to you.”
I leave a message.
“Adrianna, this is Nat Idle. I’m hoping that means something to you. Please call me — day or night. Anytime.”
I leave my phone number and hang up.
“Grandma, who is Adrianna?”
No response.
“Wait here.”
I step out of the car, lock Grandma inside, and walk to the basketball court. I approach the in-progress game.
“Newton!”
The players pause.
“Does Lulu use the name Adrianna?”
He nods. “I told you already: she hates ‘Lulu.’ Adrianna is her middle name.”
I shake my head.
“Leave him alone,” one of the other boys says. “We’ll start screaming if you bother us anymore.”
I nod and put out my hands — surrender.
The boys start playing again. I turn to see Grandma in the car, and let the latest revelations sink in. I try to make sense of the disparate pieces. I received a mysterious computer memory stick from someone with the initials L. P. That person appears to work for Biogen. And she has the middle name Adrianna, which happens to be the same name Grandma has been muttering. How and why is Grandma connected to any of this? Does Grandma know the answer — somewhere in her damaged gray matter?
And what has happened to Adrianna? Why did she miss our meeting?
Inside the car, I stare at Grandma, who stares straight ahead. Then looks at me and cocks her head.
I bite the inside of my lip to keep from conveying my shock and the depth of my curiosity. A woman named Lulu Pederson — who may have written me a mystery note with a mystery attachment and knows I went to the Galapagos — shares the name of a woman who is haunting my demented grandmother. And now Lulu Adrianna Pederson seems to be missing.
I need help.
I dial Chuck. He doesn’t answer. I leave a message telling him I’d like his help following up on a lead in our story.
“Lane smooched a colored boy,” Grandma says.
“Lane, let’s go home, get some rest, and try to avoid any more nasty surprises. On the way, we can make one more stop by that dentist’s office.”
“No thank you.” Emphatic.
I look at her. She blinks twice rapidly, betraying some discomfort.
“What’s wrong with the dentist?”
“I said no.”
“Grandma?”
No response.
Her silence speaks volumes. I have to check out that office.