Days before a Tennessee teacher allegedly kidnapped his 15-year-old student, he reportedly showed up at her place of work, according to her sister.
There have been no credible sightings of 50-year-old Tad Cummins and 15-year-old Elizabeth Thomas in the two weeks they've been missing, officials said. Her sister, Sarah Thomas, told ABC News that he showed up at her sister's workplace multiple times, including the Saturday before they disappeared.
Thomas would ask co-workers to tell Cummins that she wasn't there, Sarah Thomas said, "and she would go and hide until he left."
According to Sarah Thomas, her sister hid in the bathroom at work multiple times. Sometimes she couldn't hide because she was at the cash register, Sarah Thomas said.
"She thought it was really weird," Sarah Thomas said. "She felt uncomfortable."
As the manhunt for the two intensifies, "it feels like she just vanished," Sarah Thomas said.
Cummins is wanted on allegations of aggravated kidnapping and sexual contact with a minor. An Amber Alert has been issued for Thomas.
Her father, Anthony Thomas, said, "We just live for that day when we're going to get a phone call that says, 'I'm all right. I need somebody to come and get me.'"
Thomas family attorney Jason Whatley told ABC News last week that Cummins "is a 50-year-old authority-figure predator. That's what he is. He has preyed on her."
"She is under his spell, and she is being controlled by him, and that is what is so scary," Whatley said.
The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation said that Cummins, who was fired one day after the alleged kidnapping, "may have been abusing his role as a teacher to groom [Elizabeth] ... in an effort to lure and potentially sexually exploit her."
Investigators have uncovered email draft messages between Thomas and Cummins, which authorities said show a romantic relationship between the two. According to authorities, after one of them would write a message, he or she would save the message as a draft, and the other person would log on, read the message and delete it.
Authorities also said Cummins researched covert ways to communicate via Instagram and specific encrypted texting apps.
Ex-teacher accused of kidnapping teen believed to have watched TV show about living off the grid: Sources Teacher researched 'teen marriage' before kidnapping 15-year-old: Police Former FBI agent: Few leads in missing student, teacher case troubling Weeks before a student and teacher went missing, another teen reported seeing them kissCummins, a married father and grandfather, researched teen marriage online, specifically the age of consent, according to law enforcement officials.
One of Thomas' schoolmates reported seeing her and Cummins kiss in his classroom on Jan. 23, according to a school district investigative report, but both denied the claim. A school report from January reads that neither one "admitted to behaving inappropriately towards the other."
Sarah Thomas told ABC News her sister was bullied in school by students and teachers after the reported kiss.
"I can't handle this anymore ... All the teachers, all the kids constantly saying mean things, I can't handle it,'" Sarah Thomas recalled her sister saying to her.
TBI spokesman Josh DeVine told ABC News last week that the duo could be "off the grid" in a rural area at this point.
Cummins is believed to have watched a TV show about living off the grid before the pair disappeared, law enforcement sources told ABC News. Three days before the alleged kidnapping, he did online research about his car "to determine if certain features could be tracked by law enforcement," the TBI said. He also researched if his SUV was suitable for camping, according to law enforcement officials.
He is described as 6 feet tall and about 200 pounds. He may be driving a 2015 silver Nissan Rogue with Tennessee license plate number 976-ZPT.
Thomas is described as about 5 feet tall. She was last seen wearing leggings and a flannel shirt.
Authorities are asking that anyone with information call 1-800-TBI-FIND and that anyone who sees a car with Tennessee license plate number 976-ZPT call 911. A $1,000 reward is available for information leading to Cummins' arrest.
ABC News' Eva Pilgrim contributed to this report.