THE MISSING PERSON’S REPORT, from a decade earlier, read that Mandy Baker was last seen leaving the Little Falls High School on Friday, February 6, 2004, in Little Falls, Minnesota. It was assumed she returned home after school, as there was a postmarked letter lying open on her bed. The picture stapled carelessly to the report showed Mandy with straight light blonde hair, light-blue eyes, and a rounded face with distinctive dimples. She was a slender five feet, eight inches tall. The then-sixteen-year-old had moved with her mother and her mother’s boyfriend from Fresno, California, to Minnesota at the beginning of the 2003-2004 school year. They lived near the railroad tracks on the west side of Little Falls, in a low-income neighborhood. A light-colored compact car pulled up to the home the day she went missing, at approximately 8:00 p.m. It was reported that a neighbor witnessed someone of Mandy’s shape and size leave the home and get into the car. It was dark, and the neighbor had no view of the car’s driver. Mandy Baker had not been seen or heard from since. Mandy enjoyed charcoal drawing, painting, and other creative activities. She did not own a vehicle. She did not own a cell phone. Mandy was last seen wearing a white tank top and blue jeans.
Mandy Baker was the biggest mistake of my life. Ten years ago, I was the seventeen-year-old boy who wrote the “Dear John” letter investigators found on Mandy’s bed. This made me the prime suspect in her disappearance. It’s always the ex-boyfriend, right? But there was no evidence, beyond the letter, connecting me to her disappearance. The problem was, there was no evidence connecting anyone else to her disappearance, either. Little Falls is a rural Minnesota town of around twelve thousand people, about a ninety-minute drive north of Minneapolis. The disappearance of a young person in a small town never stops haunting its residents. People lived there because they thought it was safe. Unlike the anonymity of large cities, small-town crimes are committed by people residents typically know and interact with. When the case went cold, people simply assumed I had gotten away with it, so I didn’t stick around. I became determined to become an investigator myself. In college, I managed to secure an internship with the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA). After agreeing to help out on every undesirable shift that needed an extra set of hands, I was eventually offered employment. Today, I had been promoted to investigator status. My business card would read JON FREDERICK, BCA INVESTIGATOR. This promotion was significant, as it had finally given me access to the cold case room.
My shift had ended, and I stood in the unfinished basement of our office, where the cold case files were stored. The room was a large, cement space, filled with rows of floor-to-ceiling metal shelves housing boxes of evidence. The term “cold case room” applied well. The winter of 2014 had been one of the three coldest in the history of Minnesota, and we were slowly coming out of it. It was a balmy thirty-five degrees, and we had received six and a half inches of snow in the last two days. Throughout the winter, we had more than fifty days where the temperature dipped below zero, and numerous days where the windchill was a painful thirty to forty below. To put it in perspective, this is about seventy degrees colder than one’s freezer. At this temperature, even a heavy winter jacket feels like a plastic windbreaker. The cold case room was unheated, and felt about fifty degrees. I held Mandy Baker’s missing person’s report in my hand, carefully going through the “murder book.” The murder book is a twenty-first century term for the box holding all the evidence of a case. While Mandy’s “murder” was never confirmed, there was no evidence she ever contacted anyone after that night. The BCA handles all of the homicide and abduction cases in Minnesota, similar to the manner in which the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) handles investigations which cross state lines.
I cannot honestly say that being accused of murdering Mandy when I was in high school made me the obsessive person I am. I think the door to that room opened years earlier, and Mandy’s disappearance settled in to occupy the space. At the very least, it exacerbated my obsessiveness, leaving the contents of the room difficult to contain. My thoughts tormented me at times, but overall, I did pretty well at keeping them in check. In my work for the BCA, I’d been in a hundred homes owned by obsessive people, which were filled with trash. That would never be my scenario. My hyper-awareness of my obsessiveness prevented me from going down that road. People who don’t keep their obsessiveness in check start collecting items they feel are essential, and soon they’re weaving through piles in their homes. I keep things simple to compensate for my craziness, so my home is clean and uncluttered.
I’m a little lanky at six feet, one inch, but clean-cut, lean, and in good shape. No crew cut, though—that’s a little too militant for me. I work out three days a week and, for the most part, eat healthy. At times, I feel like working out more frequently, but I don’t allow myself to, as I gravitate toward overdoing everything. But I do work my body hard on those three days. I’ve been told since I was young that my bright-blue eyes are inviting and friendly, which is a little embarrassing, because it basically means that it’s the rest of my personality that keeps people at a distance. In my twenty-eight years, I’ve kept my body clean of tattoos and jewelry. I don’t particularly care if others choose to paint or hang ornaments on their bodies like a Christmas tree, but it’s not for me. If I started, it would never end. Perhaps having everybody assume I was a killer since I was seventeen extinguished my need for attention.
I reached into the cold case box and picked up the list of items discovered in Mandy’s room. As an investigator, I began to think of her clothing differently than I had when I dated her. Her Forever 21 brand clothing wasn’t surprising, but Victoria’s Secret underwear was expensive for an unemployed teenager with alcoholic parents. I remember sitting on her bed when her parents weren’t home talking about our lives. It was memorable, because I was never allowed in the bedroom of the small-town girls I dated. It’s funny when you consider what parents worry about and what teens actually do. We never had sex in her bed! When I told Mandy I picked rocks in the hot sun during the summer, for five dollars an hour, she laughed and pulled a pair of lace underwear out of the drawer and threw them on the bed. Being a naïve country boy, I was too embarrassed to even look at them for long. She told me she had bras that would have cost me more than five hours of hard labor to buy, and all she had to do was flirt with Ray’s friends—Ray was her mom’s boyfriend—and they’d buy them for her. I wanted to tell her that they weren’t buying lingerie for her, it was for them, but I didn’t want to make her feel bad. Maybe I should have.
I set aside the list of Mandy’s clothing. Reaching into this box was like stepping into a time machine. I found a picture of Mandy at a 2003 New Year’s Eve party. I smiled for a moment. Mandy confidently posed, hands on her hips, revealing long legs below her short, black skirt, showcasing the rose tattoo on her ankle. There was something dangerously mesmerizing about Mandy’s ice-blue eyes. As a teenager, I had never noticed the dark roots showing beneath her blonde hair. Her pale orange tank top melded to the curves of her breasts. She reminded me of an arrow just shot free from the bow—enjoying the flight, without considering that the odds of a pleasant landing were slim. Ten years ago, Mandy exuded sexuality in the midst of rural Catholic girls, who were painfully repressed. Like every other post-pubescent boy, I was drawn to her. I blew out a long exhale and asked, “What the hell happened to you, Mandy?”
I was at that New Year’s Eve party with Mandy. The party was in the small, Catholic farming community of Pierz, Minnesota, just east of Little Falls (also in Morrison County), my hometown. It was a place where people still went out of their way to help each other with a physical task. The idea of seeking emotional help was still pretty foreign, however, as it was assumed that hard work would basically solve everything. It was an area where people worked with dangerous farm equipment, but if someone got hurt, it was just an accident, not a lawsuit. People were expected to reap the rewards, and suffer the consequences, of their choices. Men often wore baseball hats, although I didn’t, unless I was playing baseball. The “good old boys,” with their curved visors and the “wannabes,” with their flat visors, both wore hats for no logical reason. Comfort was always the fashion in Pierz. People wore jeans, t-shirts or hooded sweatshirts, and sensible shoes without heels. Contrary to movies about Minnesota, people didn’t typically wear vests unless they were hunting. There simply weren’t times where one’s torso was cold and one’s arms were hot. Pierz folk did say “Yep” a lot, so I made it a point to always say “Yes.” The old Germans in town also started a lot of words with the letter “D.” For example, every Sunday, the church lector would end the reading with, “Dis is da word of da Lord.” This man wasn’t ignorant; he was bilingual. He spoke primarily German as a child, and there is no “th” sound in the German language. Much of life is not as it appears. Hell, “Germany” doesn’t even exist, in Germany. The country we call Germany, Germans refer to as Deutschland. I apologize for that obsessive tangent. It’s how I’m wired. You’ll need to bear with me.
As midnight approached that New Year’s Eve, Mandy slid onto my lap in worn, warm jeans, and whispered, “Let’s get out of here.” I was just seventeen years old at the time, and the heat coming off her body was beyond anything I had ever experienced.
In the dark of midnight, I drove us through a light snowfall to a secluded dirt road, until I found a remote place to park. The surrounding woods were thick with pine trees, branches tiredly swaying with snow. Mandy dreaded the darkness of the rural Minnesota nights, so she clung tight. Once parked, Mandy quickly shed her jacket, and with hormones cascading through me, I clumsily followed suit. Neither the cool air nor the cloying floral smell of her perfume was going to dissuade me. Her not-so-subtle hints had promised that tonight was going to be my “first time.” My urgent desire made her touch feel like a warm blanket on a bone-chilling night. Still, I fought my eagerness, to make certain she was okay with each step, while she graciously led me along. Mandy suggested we move into the backseat, to avoid the steering column, and I said something like, “Of course,” pretending I’d been in this predicament before. We simultaneously peeled out the front doors and into the back. She insisted I lock the doors, so I complied. With a smile, Mandy then felt safe enough to proceed. I wasn’t convinced a locked door would dissuade a psychopathic killer standing outside my car in the dark, secluded wilderness, miles away from where anyone could hear a scream, but if it eased her mind, so be it.
Mandy helped me pull off my shirt, and I returned the favor. She started undoing my belt, and when I took over, she shed her jeans and underwear with one quick swoop. It was at this point our behavior stopped feeling natural and quickly became awkward. With my length of six-one, and Mandy at five-eight, our long limbs weren’t ideally suited for getting horizontal in a sedan. Mandy battled the stickiness of the vinyl seats against her bare skin as she squeaked into position beneath me. I was propped with my head pressed against one door, and my pants tangled around my feet. Still, the warmth of her bare skin on mine, now lubricated with tiny whispers of sweat, made immediate body contact crucial, so we wrestled into the missionary position. Mandy assured me I wouldn’t need a condom, because she was using a foam form of birth control. I remember thinking, They land planes on foam when they can’t get the landing gear to drop. Probably not the same stuff, but this would explain its lubricating qualities. Unfortunately, my burning passion was followed by a torrential deluge that felt amazing for a moment, and then quickly put the fire out. Well, so much for that. I apologized and slowly sat up.
I leaned against the door, pants still down, and after a ragged breath considered that the experience wasn’t exactly like I imagined it would be. I sort of expected her to be mad at me, and wouldn’t have been surprised if she would have slapped me. Mandy wasn’t one to hide her frustration.
Instead, Mandy gave me an understanding smile. Still naked, she snuggled against me, kissed me on the cheek, and seductively comforted me, whispering, “That’s how it’s supposed to be the first time.”
With her forgiveness, I decided there was no point in pretending I knew what I was doing anymore. It wasn’t a relaxing embrace. Imagine someone you don’t know, hugging you—naked. I found myself counting in my head as I considered the appropriate length of time a person should wait after sex before suggesting it was time to go home. Mandy seemed to be enjoying the warm security of lying against me, and I felt I owed her this comfort. So I silently counted on. Two hundred thirteen, two hundred fourteen, two hundred fifteen . . .
Mandy’s smile turned devilish as she finally looked up and said, “Let me show you something.”
Before I could respond, she dropped her head into my lap and started doing something sinfully pleasurable. I pondered whether that foam was safe to consume orally. When it became apparent there wasn’t going to be an immediate, tragic effect, I wondered, Is this a sin? Probably not a mortal sin. Maybe a venial sin. The type of sin you might get slapped for, but they’d probably still let you into heaven, anyway. No doubt worth it.
Once Mandy achieved the desired result, she lay back and guided me back on top of her. This time I was able to relax and enjoy sex with her. She positioned me by guiding my buttocks with her hands, until she finally breathed, “There.”
For a moment, I felt like the luckiest guy on earth.
I TOSSED THE PICTURE BACK into the cold case box. Looking back through the eyes of a twenty-eight-year-old, her behavior was disturbing. She was only sixteen. My decision to be involved with Mandy placed me at center stage in an unfolding tragedy. My life probably would have played out better if my first experience would have been with someone just as naïve as I was, if indeed that person existed.
THE REALITY OF MANDY’S LIFE became obvious when I pulled up to her home to drop her off. Her mother was screaming in a jealous rage inside, followed by the sound of glass breaking. I envisioned glasses shattering and cascading down a wall. Mandy had no reaction to it, suggesting this was a relatively common occurrence. She caught me flinching and asked if she would ever see me again. I wanted to get the hell out of there and never come back, and I admonished myself for thinking this.
I was starting to seriously question if she had used birth control, so I blurted, “Do you still have the box for the spermicide?”
Mandy warily responded, “No. I made sure it was tucked away in the garbage before we left.” Defensively, she asked, “Do you think I lied about that?”
I didn’t want to say “Yes,” so I responded with, “I just wanted to know how effective it is.”
Mandy was keenly aware that this wasn’t a loving conversation. It was the kind of conversation we should have had before having sex. Dejected, she said, “You don’t need to worry. It works. I did read about it. I think it said seventy-nine percent of the time, which means a pretty low chance of getting pregnant.”
My interpretation of “seventy-nine percent effective” was different. The odds of getting pregnant, using it once, weren’t very good, but the reality was if you had sex three times, the odds were against you. And we’d had sex twice. I hastily explained that I had no free time until Saturday. I hated myself for the sadness in her eyes as the words left my mouth.
Crestfallen, Mandy nodded. She was about to exit my car when I reached out, grabbed her wrist and asked, “So, would you be interested in eating at Charlie’s Pizza next Saturday?”
Her eyes immediately glistened with renewed life. She smiled and kissed me, gently placing her hand on my cheek as she breathed, “You’re everything Serena said you’d be.”
MY DRIVE HOME THAT NIGHT took me to a depth of despair I hadn’t known existed. As an adolescent, I couldn’t comprehend that even terrible situations are finite, and life eventually goes on. It had stopped snowing, and had become dark and bitterly cold. My contact with Mandy left my clothing and skin with an unpleasant, residual smell of a bathroom deodorizer. My mom might give me the “You’re headed to hell” lecture if she got a whiff of it. More likely, I’d spend some time in purgatory with all those guys who ate meat on Fridays before the rules changed. Regardless, this was the least of my worries. I had released sixteen million sperm into a girl I now realized I didn’t want to date, and I wasn’t prepared to take care of one of them. I prayed to God she wasn’t pregnant, and swore I’d never put myself in that predicament again. My older sister, Theresa, referred to this as “The Prayer of the Teen Catholic.”
The parting comment Mandy made about my best friend, Serena, had shaken me. Serena Bell was more than just a classmate. She was the one person who honestly knew me in high school. We had spent hours walking and talking about every issue we could think of. But every time I’d express interest in formally dating, she would always put me off. Serena wasn’t at the New Year’s party, so when Mandy pursued me, I decided it was time for me to consider someone who wasn’t afraid to acknowledge publically that we were together. I didn’t want to be alone when high school ended. Isn’t it funny how we have a way of making what we fear most come true? That night, I thought if Serena found out I had sex with Mandy, the feud we’d have would be the worst thing imaginable. When I became the prime suspect in Mandy’s disappearance, I realized the absolute silence between us was much worse.
The problem with the Mandy Baker case was that, while everyone in my hometown remembered her, Mandy’s disappearance had faded from the memory of the agency responsible for investigating it. The BCA always had new cases to work on, and Mandy didn’t have any family in the state pushing to keep the case alive. But I would never forget her.
My quiet reflection in the cold case room was interrupted when my supervisor, Maurice Strock, entered the room. Maurice was a white-haired man in his early sixties, closing in on retirement. He always wore a gray suit with a white dress shirt and a solid-colored tie as his “work uniform.” Today, the only spot of color on him was his royal blue tie. Maurice was a small man with aardvark-like features—a pointed nose and small, marble-like eyes. Maurice did a double-take when he scoped his nose down the long row of shelves and spotted me. In a nasally voice, he asked, “Shouldn’t you be out celebrating your promotion?’
“Yes. I just have to check on something before I go.” Not wanting to call attention to my supervisor that I was once a suspect in a girl’s disappearance, I tried to find something useful in the evidence box before closing it. Numbers were the easiest for me to remember, as I configure stories out of them. I can’t really say my ability to memorize numbers is a blessing, since the numbers continue to run through my head on lonely nights, wearing grooves in my brain as I miserably pray to be rescued by sleep. I quickly found three social security numbers and memorized them. “Biological Father: Cade Freeman 639-92-6484. Biological Mother: Carrie Baker 54679-8832. Mother’s live-in significant other: Ray Benson 652-712937.” I’ll try to explain how my system works with Ray’s number: 6 is the shape of a pregnant woman; 5 is giving birth; 2 indicates the baby is gone (so 652 in my brain is the birth process); 71 is a sharp and straight man; 2 is a woman, so 29 is a woman holding the baby instead of carrying it in her uterus (as 9 is the upside down of 6); 3 means that, as a result of her pregnancy, she now has larger breasts, and she’s still with her sharp, 7, husband. This story occurred in my brain in two seconds, and I would remember it as 652-71-2937. It was an odd system and, admittedly, not necessarily politically correct from a gender-sensitivity standpoint.
I closed the box, placed it back on the shelf, and went to Maurice. Shaking his hand, I told him, “Thanks for giving me the opportunity to work as an investigator. I won’t let you down.”
Maurice smiled at my exuberance.
I HEADED BACK TO MY OFFICE on the first floor, determined to celebrate my promotion, at least for part of the evening. I’ve been told it’s important to mark positive events in your life. The negative events seem to mark themselves.
My immediate problem was that I didn’t have anyone to celebrate with. I hadn’t been on a date for four months, and I deliberately avoided friendships with coworkers. My obsessiveness was an asset on the job, but hyper-aware it had to be irritating to others, I didn’t socialize with peers outside of work. Ninety percent of promotions at work were based on social interactions with coworkers, and I wasn’t going to let my annoying personality cost me a promotion to investigator. I was polite, professional, and respectful to everyone, and avoided the office gossip. Sucking up to the person in power made one look pathetic when the power structure shifted, and supervisors worked harder to please assiduous workers who didn’t blindly follow. At least that was the theory I operated under.
I decided to call Clay Roberts, an old friend from high school. Clay and I played high school football and basketball together. When all else failed, we would look each other up, typically after months of no contact.
Clay had been raised rough and rugged by his father and liked to pretend to be a tough guy, which I always felt was a veneer covering a salvageable soul. He had been abandoned by his mother in his early teens, when she left the family for a man she’d met online. Clay was the one friend who had stood by me without reservation when Mandy disappeared. He now had his own construction crew, which worked in the suburbs around Minneapolis. We had little in common. Clay loved four-wheel-drive trucks and hunting, and bedded a lot of different women. I didn’t. If we hadn’t grown up together, it’s unlikely our paths would have crossed. I liked the fact that, in small towns, you’re forced to befriend whoever’s around, rather than having the option of seeking out like-minded people. I think it prepares us better for the variety of personalities we encounter at work.
Clay answered the phone with a clipped, “Yep,” and after our usual banter, congratulated me on my promotion. “That was fast work.”
“If you call one thousand, four hundred, eleven days of work fast.”
“You and those damn numbers,” he groused. “Have you ever noticed you talk more about numbers when you’re single? The only number that matters right now is the number of women lining up to celebrate with you.”
I considered this and said, “I don’t know that the number of women a man dates is an effective way to measure happiness. It could be argued that the correlation is negative—as one increases, the other decreases.”
In his gravelly voice, Clay chided me. “The number’s significant when it’s zero. So, no dates since your fallout with Jada?”
“I’ve been busy at work.” Jada Anderson was an attractive and assertive African American woman I had dated for four years.
Clay continued. “I get why you wanted to be with her. She had that Mandy Baker body type. Same height, same—”
It wasn’t rude to interrupt Clay. I considered it to be a moral obligation, as he tended to become progressively more inappropriate if you let him ramble on, particularly about intelligent women. “I know you weren’t wild about Jada, but she was good for me. Deep down, she has a good heart.”
Clay laughed. “So deep down that it’s not visible.”
“I don’t think either of us should judge her moral character.”
Clay casually responded, “I beat up a guy for picking on a retard once, so I think I’m good with God.”
The best chance Clay and I have of getting into heaven is through an unlocked window.
“You need to find someone and settle down,” Clay continued. “You’re going to end up wandering around alone at night like your crazy brother does.”
Ready for a subject change, I said, “I’m looking into Mandy Baker’s disappearance. I’ve been thinking about calling Serena Bell. I know it sounds desperate, calling her ten years later and asking, ‘Remember me from high school?’ But I want to find out how she met Mandy. Serena was the one who first invited Mandy to our parties.”
Clay was uncharacteristically speechless for a moment. “That’s worse than desperate. That’s pitiful.”
“I know. But I need to start somewhere.”
I was quickly lost in the memory of her for a moment. Serena Bell was a true beauty—pretty and petite, with long, dark hair. She was often mistaken for Hispanic, but was actually of Polish descent. She had large, tear drop—shaped green eyes that scintillated when she smiled—and her smile was contagious.
Clay went into a sermon about how Serena was “a wolf in sheep’s clothing.” This lecture was triggered every time I brought Serena’s name up. Not every “kind” woman is a wolf in sheep’s clothing. After all, what do sheep wear? I, in turn, responded with a conversation he didn’t want to hear. I reminded Clay he needed to get over his mom’s departure. It was a dozen years ago. Now frustrated with each other, we decided not to go out for a drink. It sounds harsh, but it was how we communicated. The next time we spoke, this conversation would be ancient history, which was both good and bad. It was nice to always be able to start over, but it also meant nothing ever got resolved. It’s what men do.
I decided to call my parents to tell them about my first day of work as an investigator. My dad always answered the phone, and then would immediately hand it to my mother, without saying anything in transition. I once mentioned to Dad that this felt like a control issue, but he pointed out that not all calls to our home had been pleasant since Mandy disappeared. Once my mother, Camille, was on the phone, she gave me the usual who’s-ill-among-old-people report. I learned a long time ago that it didn’t pay to tell her I didn’t even know those people, because this would only lead to a twenty-minute explanation of how I should know them, still followed by the report. I did manage to find out that Serena’s family had moved to the St. Paul area.
I had a legitimate reason to talk to Serena. She had information on Mandy Baker, and I finally had the ability to investigate Mandy’s disappearance. But in all honesty, Clay was right. Part of me had a desire to chase the ghost of “what could have been” with Serena, and that was pathetic. I didn’t try to access her phone number through work, as I didn’t want anyone suggesting I used my new employment status to look up an old girlfriend. I decided to take on the challenge of calling Serena’s parents to ask for her phone number. Serena’s mother refused, and I understood—I was once accused of being a murderer in their community. I did manage to get her to agree reluctantly to give Serena my phone number. Nothing ventured, nothing gained.
BACK AT MY APARTMENT, I untucked my white shirttails and, with restless energy, bounced on my toes like a boxer in my black work slacks and stocking feet. I threw some punches in the air as if I was sparring Manny Pacquiao on the beige carpet in my living room. Like a boxer, I’d had an extended period of abstinence. I abandoned my contrived fight and played “All Along the Watchtower,” by Jimi Hendrix, on an old record player I kept in my living room. My dad was always in a good mood when he played music on the record player, so I kept it when they were ready to discard it. It’s possible I still hung onto that memory because it wasn’t always pleasant at home.
My apartment on the fifteenth floor gave me a great view of Minneapolis at night. Going out to eat alone felt a little depressing, so I decided to make myself an extravagant meal as a reward for my accomplishment. As I searched recipes off of the Food Network, my mind returned to thoughts of Serena. I wondered what she was like today. I wanted her to be content, as opposed to suffering through the restlessness I struggled with, because she was truly the nicest person I had ever met. I printed the recipe for pan-seared salmon with a citrus glaze and chilled mango salsa.
After I picked up my groceries, I found myself in Robbinsdale, driving by Travail, Jada Anderson’s favorite restaurant. Why? I’m not sure. I didn’t even want to talk to her. I think I wanted to see someone I cared for happy. Not necessarily with me. Just happy. No matter how I spun it, I couldn’t ignore that I was now more alone than ever. After a moment of anguish, I reached a conclusion. I would give myself one year from today to solve Mandy Baker’s disappearance, then I would start my own family. The remedy was obvious. The first step would be to stop putting off dates for work. The second would be to start dating women who actually wanted children.
I SPENT THE NIGHT on the couch with my laptop, gathering what I could on Carrie Baker, Ray Benson, and Cade Freeman. Cade Freeman, Mandy Baker’s biological father, committed suicide with a handgun in 2001 in Fresno, California. Mandy claimed she was afraid of the rural darkness because she was a “city girl,” but Fresno wasn’t exactly New York or LA. She lived with her biological parents at the entry point for Yosemite National Park. If Mandy had early sexual victimization, as I now suspected, I’d bet it started in the darkness of the park. It would help explain both her fears and her father’s suicide. But Cade’s suicide happened three years before Mandy moved to Little Falls, so Cade had nothing to do with Mandy’s disappearance. Strike one.
Carrie Baker, Mandy’s mother, had been involved in court-ordered chemical dependency treatment in 2002 and 2004, after she was charged with writing bad checks. She died in 2006, from a series of strokes, renal and liver failure. Her autopsy showed the presence of methamphetamine and opiates. Carrie’s abuse of alcohol and drugs apparently became a death wish after Mandy disappeared. Carrie was in detox when Mandy went missing, so she was not involved in Mandy’s disappearance, either. Strike two.
Ray Benson, Carrie’s live-in boyfriend at the time of Mandy’s disappearance, was now serving time in Florida after being charged with lewd or lascivious battery (statutory rape) in 2013. The victim was the fourteen-year-old daughter of Ray’s lover at the time. Odds were, Ray Benson had also sexually victimized Mandy. He looked like a promising suspect. Ray never had a reported income, but had performed tree-trimming work for cash. Tree trimming was big money in rural Minnesota, but many of the crews burned up the cash on alcohol and meth as fast as it came in. They drove nice cars but lived in crappy houses, because you can’t get a home loan without an identified income. But Ray Benson was incarcerated on the night of February 6, 2004, the night Mandy disappeared, for driving while intoxicated. Carrie went to detox and Ray went to jail when they were pulled over earlier that afternoon; Mandy was still at school at the time. Strike three.
In most cases, you could use Facebook for information and direction. That wasn’t a possibility with the three names I had, as two were dead and one was in prison. I thought about the information I had hastily scanned from the cold case box. My name had been written down and circled. My paranoid schizophrenic brother’s name, Victor, was also on the list. There were two names written down and crossed out: Clay Roberts and Randall Davis. I was familiar with Randall’s name, as I had researched sex offenders living in Morrison County over the past decade. Randall was accused of raping a fifteen-year-old girl the year before Mandy disappeared but pled it down to a statutory offense. Randall apparently had an alibi, Anna Hutchins, for the night of Mandy’s disappearance. I wanted to talk to her.