The Mystery of the Stolen Wallet
1
Sam was thrilled when his father gave him an old wallet that had belonged to his grandfather, and he was even happier when he found a crisp $20 bill tucked inside the wallet’s sleek folds. Sam’s dad raised an eyebrow and said, “How about that: I guess your grandfather left you a present.”
2
The next day, Sam anticipated a hectic schedule but also hoped that his best friend, Amir, would join him for pizza after school. After an algebra test, a biology lab, and his weekly clarinet lesson, Sam shuffled out of the front door of the school and found Amir waiting at the bottom of the steps. “Hey buddy,” he shouted, “want to escape this heat and grab some pizza? I’ve got a twenty dollar bill that’s burning a hole in my pocket!”
3
Amir looked puzzled, so Sam explained, “That just means that I received some cash for my birthday, and now I can’t wait to spend it.” As Sam reached into his back pocket, his smile quickly evolved into a frown: his pocket was empty.
4
Sam knelt on the sidewalk and tore through the compartments of his backpack, but his wallet was not in it. “I can’t believe that someone stole my wallet,” he growled.
5
“Are you absolutely sure that you carried this wallet with you today?” Amir asked timidly as he helped Sam stuff his gym clothes back into his backpack.
6
“Of course I’m sure,” Sam snapped. “Do you think I’m an idiot?”
7
“No, you are not an idiot and neither am I,” Amir replied defensively. “We'll solve this mystery of the stolen wallet so we can eat pizza where the air is cool.” Despite being amused by Amir’s words, Sam thought his friend unrealistic and knew that his wallet and his twenty dollars were gone forever.
8
Back in school, the boys headed to the cafeteria where the cafeteria supervisor told them that no wallet had been found. “Are you sure it was in your pocket?” she asked Sam as she stacked the clean plastic trays.
9
“I am one hundred percent sure,” Sam answered coldly, “but thanks anyway.”
10
Next, they walked to the principal’s office where the secretary explained that no wallet had been turned in. In the biology lab, Ms. Miller listened sympathetically but said that she hadn’t found a wallet anywhere. In the hallway, they spotted Mr. Wendell, the janitor, gnawing on a toothpick while he swept the floor. When Sam described his wallet, Mr. Wendell shook his head and murmured, “Sorry, son.” By the time the boys left school again, Sam was fuming, imagining that someone had literally picked his pocket.
11
Amir ventured, “Are you certain beyond a doubt that your wallet was in your pocket when you left your house this morning?”
12
Sam glared at his friend. “Amir, I said I was sure a million times.” When Sam kicked a plastic water bottle lying on the sidewalk, the rattle it made sounded like he felt: empty and victimized.
13
When the boys reached Sam’s house, Sam stomped up the steps to his porch without saying good-bye. “Hey,” Amir called behind him, “maybe your wallet fell out of the hole that your money burned in your pocket!” Sam’s only reply was the slam of the screen door.
14
Inside, Sam flung his backpack on the stairs, stormed into the kitchen, yanked the refrigerator door open, and stared inside. He really wanted a pepperoni pizza, but instead he grabbed an apple. As he bit into the crunchy fruit, something black and shiny on the counter caught his eye.
15
Sam felt his cheeks redden when he realized his “stolen” wallet had been in the kitchen where he left it that morning. When he looked inside, Andrew Jackson’s face stared at him with an accusatory smirk.
16
Sam grabbed the phone, dialed Amir’s number, and left a joyful message: “Amir, I found it, and I’ll be there in two minutes, so don’t eat anything!” Sam stuffed his wallet into his pocket and ran down the porch steps two at a time.
In the story, Sam is asked if he remembered to bring his wallet to school. Give two reasons why the reader realizes he has left his wallet at home before Sam realizes it. Use details from the text to support your response.
Answers
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13
"I opened it up to see if there was any identification," he said. "I saw a picture of an old man. There were pictures of kids, too."
And so started a hunt for someone related to the man, Kenneth Couch, so the wallet could be returned to his family.
Kaplan, an employee of Portland's Turner Construction Co. , took the wallet to the hospital security office.
"I get sentimental over things," he said. "The man who owned this wallet was old enough to have passed on. I figured his kids would like to get this wallet back."
Frank Mazzola, the hospital's lead safety and security officer, checked with admissions to see whether Couch had been a patient. No luck. Next, he spent an hour calling numbers found in the wallet. All had been disconnected. So he logged the wallet into lost-and-found.
A few weeks later, Mazzola and Chris Silva,Legacy Health System 's manager of safety and security, were retrieving something else when Silva spotted the black leather trifold.
"I started pulling stuff out and saw an honorable discharge card and a Navy ID card from 1940," he said. "I'm a vet myself, and I thought, 'I have to find this guy.'"
ven back in the 1980s, Kenneth Couch -- Kenny to all who knew him -- never left home without at least $200 in his wallet. He didn't believe in credit cards. Plus, seeing hard-earned bills let the dental-supply salesman know he'd made something of his life.
His father died when he was 5, and Couch came of age during the Great Depression. He was a hard worker and served Portland-area dentists so long he became a legend. Dentists were happy to carve time out of their busy day for Kenny.
And so started a hunt for someone related to the man, Kenneth Couch, so the wallet could be returned to his family.
Kaplan, an employee of Portland's Turner Construction Co. , took the wallet to the hospital security office.
"I get sentimental over things," he said. "The man who owned this wallet was old enough to have passed on. I figured his kids would like to get this wallet back."
Frank Mazzola, the hospital's lead safety and security officer, checked with admissions to see whether Couch had been a patient. No luck. Next, he spent an hour calling numbers found in the wallet. All had been disconnected. So he logged the wallet into lost-and-found.
A few weeks later, Mazzola and Chris Silva,Legacy Health System 's manager of safety and security, were retrieving something else when Silva spotted the black leather trifold.
"I started pulling stuff out and saw an honorable discharge card and a Navy ID card from 1940," he said. "I'm a vet myself, and I thought, 'I have to find this guy.'"
ven back in the 1980s, Kenneth Couch -- Kenny to all who knew him -- never left home without at least $200 in his wallet. He didn't believe in credit cards. Plus, seeing hard-earned bills let the dental-supply salesman know he'd made something of his life.
His father died when he was 5, and Couch came of age during the Great Depression. He was a hard worker and served Portland-area dentists so long he became a legend. Dentists were happy to carve time out of their busy day for Kenny.
aasyafarhan:
good but you didn't answer the question I asked
Answered by
6
ye kya he yar question he ya .........
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