Fear The Worst - Fear the Worst Part 16
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Fear the Worst Part 16

Sure.

Drop me off there and that'll be it, I said.

Tough about your daughter, he said.

I hadn't discussed Syd with him, but given that we were hitting all the shelters for runaways, and I had a stack of flyers in my hand, you didn't have to be Jim Rockford to figure out the nature of my mission.

Thanks, I said.

Sometimes, he said, poking Jesus with a finger and making him shake, you just have to let them do what they want to do, and wait until they realize they need your help, and they come home on their own.

What if they're in trouble? I countered. And they're waiting for you to find them?

The driver thought about that for a moment. Well, I guess that's different, he said.

THE SEATTLE POLICE HEADQUARTERS WAS ON FIFTH AVENUE. I went into the lobby and up to the counter and told the woman there I needed to speak to someone about a missing teenage girl.

An officer named Richard Buttram came out to see me and led me to an interview room. I told him about Sydney, when she'd gone missing, how I'd been led to Seattle. That I'd lost touch with Yolanda Mills since I'd gotten here, and that I'd had no luck finding my daughter.

I gave him one of my flyers, told him about the website.

He listened patiently, nodded, stopped me to ask the occasional question.

So you don't really know, he said, whether your daughter's here in Seattle, or whether she ever was here in Seattle.

Slowly, not wanting to admit it, I said, I suppose that's true. Then, trying to sound more confident, I continued, But this woman told me she was here. That she had seen her. She even sent me a picture that I'm as sure as can be was of my daughter.

What was the number she gave you?

I opened my cell phone, found it, read it off to Buttram, who scribbled it down on a notepad. Let me try it, he said, dialing the number from his desk phone. He let it ring a good thirty seconds, then hung up.

Give me three minutes, Buttram said and left the room.

I sat there for nearly fifteen, staring at the empty tabletop, the unadorned walls. I looked at the clock, watched the second hand make sweep after sweep.

When Buttram returned he looked dour. I went to see one of our detectives who knows a lot about cell phones and various exchanges and all that kind of thing.

Okay, I said.

It's his guess that this is a throwaway phone. He did a quick check of the number, made a call, told me it's one of those ones you can buy at a 7-Eleven or whatever, use for a short period of time, then ditch it.

I felt like I was slowly slipping underwater.

None of this makes any sense, I said.

Buttram said, I'll hang on to this flyer, put the word out, but I don't want to raise your expectations that we're going to find your daughter.

Sure, I said.

This woman who called you, she wasn't sniffing about for a reward?

No, I said.

Buttram shook his head as he stood up and walked me to the lobby. Then I don't know what to make of it.

I don't know what to do, I said. I'm starting to think Sydney's not here in Seattle, that she never was, but I'm afraid to fly home. I keep thinking, if I walk around that neighborhood, where the shelter is, just one more time, I'll spot her.

You've put the word out, he said. Morgan, at Second Chance, I know her, and she's the real deal. If she says she's going to keep her eye out for your girl, that's exactly what she'll do.

He shook my hand and wished me good luck. I stood on the sidewalk out front of the police headquarters for five minutes before walking back to my hotel and checking out.

I booked myself on a Jet Blue flight that didn't leave Seattle until shortly before ten, and would arrive, considering the time change, at LaGuardia at six in the morning. That gave me time to go back into the Second Chance neighborhood and keep looking for Syd.

I managed to grab the same table in the same diner where I'd eaten the night before and stared across the street at the door to the shelter for the better part of four hours. I ordered food, then a coffee about every half hour.

I never saw her, or anyone else who looked remotely like her.

From there I cabbed it to the airport and sat around in the departure lounge like some sort of shock trauma victim, staring straight ahead, hardly moving at all, while waiting for my flight to be called. My cell rang twice. The first call was from Susanne, hoping for good news, but knowing there'd be none since I had not gotten in touch.

And then the phone rang again.

Yeah, I said.

I'm really sorry.

Hey, Kate, I said.

I kind of flipped out the other night.

I didn't say anything.

You went, right? To Seattle? I noticed you weren't back yet.

So she'd been driving by my house.

Kate, I really can't talk now.

I know I said some things, and I just wanted to apologize.

Maybe, if I hadn't been so tired and discouraged, I might have found a way to be more diplomatic.

I might not have said, Kate, this isn't working out. We're done. It's over. And I certainly wouldn't have finished with Life's too short.

But that was what I said.

Kate waited a few seconds before coming back with You're a total asshole, you know that? You're a goddamn fucking asshole. I knew it the first time I met you. And you know something else? There's something not right with you, you know that? Something just not I ended the call, turned the phone off, and slipped it into my pocket.

I'M NOT NORMALLY ABLE TO NOD OFF ON A PLANE, but this overnight flight was an exception. Exhaustion overwhelmed me and I spent almost the entire trip asleep. I was more than bone weary. I was depressed, crushed, burdened by despair. I'd traveled clear across the country thinking I was going to bring my daughter home with me.

And I was coming home alone.

We landed on time, but the pilot had to wait for a gate to clear, so it was nearly seven before I got off the plane, and what with several traffic jams, a couple of pit stops and everything else, it was shortly before noon before I pulled into my driveway on Hill Street back in Milford.

A defeated soldier coming home from war, I trudged up to the door, bag slung over my shoulder. I put my key into the lock and swung open the door.

The house had been trashed.

Chapter FOURTEEN.

SO RUN THROUGH IT AGAIN FOR ME, Kip Jennings said.

I got home, I opened the door, it's like somebody tossed a grenade in here, I said.

When was this?

I glanced at the clock hanging on the kitchen wall, one of the few things still in its place. About an hour and a half ago.

Have you touched anything since then?

I put that clock back on the mantel, I said. It was my father's. The gesture was akin to straightening your cap after you've been run over by an eighteen-wheeler.

There were a couple of uniformed cops wandering around the house, taking pictures, muttering among themselves. They'd found a basement window that had been kicked in.

You'd been gone how long?

About forty-eight hours. I left here early two days ago. After nine. So two days and four hours, give or take.

Seattle, Jennings said.

That's right, I said.

And your daughter?

I didn't find her, I said.

Jennings's eyes softened for a moment. So you got home, you opened the door, she said. Did you see anyone? Was anyone running away from the house when you pulled into the driveway?

No, I said.

I told her what I'd found. In the living room, cushions tossed from the furniture, then cut open, the foam scattered about in chunks. Every shelf cleared, every cabinet emptied. Books thrown about, CDs all over the place. Audio equipment pulled from the shelves, some components still hanging from them by their wires, hanging precariously like a truck on a cliff in an Indiana Jones movie.

In the kitchen, every cupboard emptied. And then, the boxes that were in the cupboard, emptied. Cornflakes all over the floor. Things pulled out of the fridge, the door hanging open.

It was the same story everywhere. All the drawers in my bedroom dresser pulled out and turned over. So many clothes on the floor you couldn't see the carpet. Socks, underwear, shirts. Items ripped off hangers in the closet, thrown here and there.

Syd's room was no different, although she didn't have quite as much stuff to trash as I did, since most of her clothes were still at her mother's house. The dresser had been emptied. Unlike my bed, which didn't appear to have been touched, Syd's mattress had been cut open. The contents of the closet were on the bedroom floor.

In my computer room, all the desk drawers had been opened, the shelves cleared off.

The basement damage was minimal. The washer and dryer had been opened, and a box of Tide detergent had been emptied onto the floor. The toolbox on my workbench had been dumped out.

Our boxes of stuff those things you accumulate through life that you don't know what to do with but haven't the nerve to pitch, like your children's kindergarten drawings, photos, books you'll never read again, old files and business papers from your parents' house had been opened and rummaged through, but only a couple had been dumped out.

Standing amid the wreckage in the living room, I asked Jennings, What kind of little bastards would do this?

You think it was kids? Jennings asked.

You don't?

We went through the house slowly, our shoes crunching on cornflakes as we went through the kitchen. She walked and talked. Have you noticed whether anything was stolen?

How could you tell? I said, surveying the wreckage. I really haven't had a chance to go through the place and check.

Your computer missing?

No, it's still up there.

Your daughter's laptop?

I recalled seeing it, nodded.

Laptop's pretty easy to walk off with, Jennings said.

Yes.

How about silverware?

I had noticed it earlier, dumped from a buffet drawer onto the living room carpet. It's here. Would kids even steal silverware?

How about iPods, little things like that that are easy to pocket?

I don't know. I don't have one. Syd does, but it's in my car. But they didn't take the small TV here. I pointed to the set hanging from the kitchen cabinet. Someone would have needed a screwdriver to free it from its bracket.

They didn't break it, either, Kip Jennings said. You keep any cash in the house?

Not a lot, I said. Some, in this drawer over here. Just a few bills, fives and tens, for things like pizza, charities, stuff like that.

Have a look, she said.

I opened it. The cash was normally tucked between the edge of the cutlery tray and the side of the drawer.