Rolf finally strikes one October day in Titusville, Washington, where Cheryl lives with her mother and stepfather. While Cheryl talks with her friend, Annie, outside their middle school, one of Rolfs minions grabs her and tosses her into the car. Terrified, Cheryl puts up what resistance she can, but shes no match for her captors, who take her to a remote mountain camp.
Rolf leads law enforcement on a knotty chase as he slips through every trap they try to set, picks up the ransom, and then disappears; he thinks he cant be caught. But Cheryl is not a willing victim. She fearlessly scorns Rolf and, in a moment of confusion, Cheryl escapes, fleeing to a cabin a few miles away.
Injured and alone, Cheryl wonders if she will ever be able to go home. Unaware of Cheryls location but refusing to give up on his meticulous plan, Rolf is determined to find his daughter and teach her a lesson she wont soon forget.
Roger I. Lewis was born in 1928 in Holly, Washington. He completed law school at the University of Washington in 1954 and established his private practice in 1959. Lewis became a full-time judge in the 1980s and formally retired in 1996. He and his wife, Louise, live in Renton, Washington.