Eric Pederssen rubs his eyes, glancing up at the clock on the police station wall. It reads 2:33 a.m. On the desk he’s sitting at, a grainy photo of Penny Marshall smiles up at him. He sips his cold tea before returning to the task at hand. Penny Marshall from Moose Creek, Saskatchewan was fourteen years old when she went camping with her younger brother and her parents, about two miles south of the Mavis & Jim Dew Drop Inn at a well-known campground. According to the report, she went for a walk by herself one evening, telling her parents she just wanted to go to a nearby shop to get some gum. Her mother later said she had wondered why Penny was all dolled up, wearing her best shorts and lipstick. She had questioned her daughter before she set out, but Penny had just given her mother a st

