The inside of the car was messy but he was so neatly dressed.
Suddenly the car came to a halt because he had driven up a freeway offramp. At tyhis time she grabbed her baby and jumped out of the car, ran across the road, and hid in an irrigation ditch in a cluster of tall grass in a field.
The man came looking for her with a flashlight but couldn't find her. She was very lucky. Very, very lucky.
A tractor trailer came by and stopped--stopped on a dime. The driver jumped out and the kidnapper jumped in his car and roared off. The driver of the truck came over to Kathleen and she panicked.
A lady came by and she rode with her. They came to a small town and she let Kathleen out by a police station. There was a sergeant on duty and she told him of her escapade and he turned white. As she was talking her eyes saw a composite drawing of the murderer of Paul Stein. She let out a scream.
When she went back to her '57 Chevy she found it was all burned out. If she had actually been with the Zodiac, then she was one who escaped and lived to tell about it.
Note: Associate Ricardo G. and I were talking a while ago and we both agreed that this type of sleuthing appeals to a certain psychological type of person. Perhaps one who might have an addictive-compulsive type of personality. We agreed that many people, from all walks of life, have this tendency. Many of these are in law enforcement and, at the risk of sounding like I'm bragging, have a high I.Q. Ricardo does along with John Linn and Dave Oranchak. As for myself, I just like to talk a lot. Those three fellows are very bright and have worked very hard on the Zodiac case. As a reminder, this has a side effect of increasing a person's motivation. Motivation towards almost everything in our daily lives. There are many more sleuths out there but we just don't hear about them.
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