W
in didn’t come with them to the hospital.
For now, he felt that it would be best to keep his distance from anything involving law enforcement. They considered having Myron stay away too—the cops had been less than thrilled with Myron’s explanation for the violence at AdventureLand—but in the end, they decided that he should be nearby in case he was somehow needed.
Brooke stayed busy on her phone during the taxi ride. She called her husband, Chick, and told him to meet her at the hospital. She made more calls and grew more agitated.
“What’s wrong?” Myron asked.
“They are saying we can’t see Patrick yet.”
“Who?”
“The police.”
Myron thought about that. “Is it their decision?”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean, who decides that you can’t see him? Is it up to the police? Can’t the parents overrule them?”
“I still don’t know if Nancy and Hunter have legal standing.”
“I assume you have their numbers?”
“Only Nancy’s.”
“Try it.”
She did. No answer. She sent a text. No reply.
When they pulled up to the front of the hospital, Chick was smoking and pacing. Chick threw the cigarette down hard on the pavement and made a production out of stamping it out. He opened the taxi door with a scowl on his face. Brooke got out. Myron followed.
Chick’s scowl grew when he saw Myron.
“You’re Win’s friend. The basketball player. What are you doing here?”
Win didn’t like Chick, which told Myron all he needed to know about him.
Chick looked at Brooke. “What’s he doing here?”
“He was the one who rescued Patrick.”
Chick turned the scowl back toward Myron. “You were there?”
“Yes.”
“So how come you didn’t save my kid?”
My kid, Myron noted. Not ours.
“He tried, Chick,” Brooke said.
“What, he can’t answer for himself?”
“I tried, Chick.”
Chick stepped toward him. The scowl was still there. Myron
started to wonder whether it was indeed a scowl or just his default expression. “You being a wiseass with me? Huh?”
Myron didn’t step back. He didn’t make a fist, but man, he wanted to. Despite the rushed call from his wife, Chick wore a shiny silk suit with a tie so perfectly knotted it looked fake. His shoes had an almost supernatural shine, like they were somehow more than new, and his hair was black with just the right amount of gray, slicked back and a little too long. His skin had the waxy glow of a recent facial or some sort of high-end cosmetics, and the word “manscaped” was encompassed in every move Chick made.
Brooke said, “We don’t have time for this.”
Chick did that thing where you look the person in one eye, then the other, then back to the first. Myron just stood there and let him. You don’t judge a guy by his appearance. Win was the walking, talking embodiment of that. The guy was also hurting. You could see that too. He might be a vainglorious asshat, but his son had been snatched away from him ten years ago. You could see that in Chick’s face somehow, despite all he tried to do to cover it up.
So part of Myron felt sorry for the man.
And part of Myron remembered that Win didn’t like him.
“I tried my best,” Myron said to him. “He got away. I’m sorry about that.”
Chick hesitated and then nodded. “I’m sorry too. This has been . . .”
“Don’t worry about it.”
Brooke’s voice was gentle. “Chick?”
Chick gave Myron’s arm an apologetic squeeze as he turned toward his wife.
Brooke said, “Let’s go inside, okay?”
Chick nodded and joined her.
Brooke shaded her eyes with her right hand. “Myron?”
He glanced around and spotted a Costa coffee shop across the street. “I’ll wait there. Text if you need me.”
Chick and Brooke entered the hospital. Myron crossed the street and headed to the right for the Costa coffee shop. Costa was a chain coffee shop and resembled, more than anything else, a chain coffee shop. Swap the dark red décor for green and you could be in a Starbucks. Myron was sure that passionate defenders of either company would be offended by this observation, but Myron decided that he wouldn’t lose sleep over it.
He ordered a coffee from the barista, and then, realizing his stomach was growling, he checked out the food options. On that front—food variety—Costa seemed to have a leg up on its American competitor. He ordered a British Ham and Cheese Toastie. Toastie. “Toastie” was a cute word. Myron hadn’t heard it before, but he deduced, correctly as it turned out, that a “toastie” was probably a toasted sandwich.
Some stand in awe of Myron Bolitar’s power of deduction.
A text came in from Brooke:
Not letting us see him. Told to wait.
Myron replied:
Want me to come over?
Brooke:
Not yet. Will keep you posted.
Myron sat at a table and ate the toastie. Not bad. He downed it too quickly and debated getting another. When had he last eaten? He sat back, drank his coffee, read articles that he’d saved on his smartphone. Time passed. The place was a little too quiet. Myron looked around at the drawn faces. Perhaps it was his imagination, but he could almost feel the misery hanging in the air. He was, of course, across the street from a hospital, so maybe that was why he was seeing suffering or anxiety, faces waiting for news, faces
dreading news, faces that had come here to try to escape into the comforting sameness and normalcy of a chain coffee shop.
His phone vibrated. Another text message, this time from Terese:
Got a job interview in Jackson Hole. For prime time anchor slot.
This was great news. Myron wrote back:
Wow, that’s terrific.
Terese:
Heading to owner’s ranch on his private plane tomorrow.
Myron:
Great. I’m thrilled for you.
Terese:
I don’t have the job.
Myron:
You’ll kill the interview.
Terese:
He can be a little handsy.
Myron:
And I can kill him.
Terese:
Love you, you know.
Myron:
Love you too. But I mean it about killing him if he gets handsy.
Terese:
You always know just what to say.
Myron was smiling. He was about to text a comeback when something caught his eye.
Or someone.
Nancy Moore, Patrick’s mother, had just entered the coffee shop. He typed a quick “Have to run” and hit send.
Where Brooke Baldwin was all strength and resolve, Nancy Moore looked small and drained. Her blond hair was pulled back into a rushed ponytail, the grays poking free. She wore a baggy sweatshirt with the word
LONDON
across the front, the
L
being formed by an old phone box and a double-decker bus. She had probably rush-packed and bought it at some tourist shop when she arrived.
Nancy Moore said something low to the barista, who gestured that he couldn’t hear her by putting his hand to his ear. She
repeated her order and then started fumbling in her purse for some money.
Myron stood. “Mrs. Moore?”
His voice startled her. The coins fell from her hand and landed on the floor. Myron bent down to pick them up. Nancy started to follow, but it was as though the effort was too much for her. Myron stood up and dropped the coins into her hand.
“Thank you.”
Nancy Moore stared at him for a moment. An odd look crossed her face. Was it recognition? Surprise? Both?
“You’re Myron Bolitar,” she said.
“Yes.”
“We’ve met before, haven’t we?”
“Once,” Myron said.
“At . . .” She stopped. It had been at the Baldwin home, the site of the awful event, maybe a month after the kidnapping. Win and Myron had been called in too late. “You’re Win’s friend.”
“Yes.”
“And you . . . you’re the one who . . .” She blinked, looked down. “How do I even begin to thank you for saving my boy?”
Myron blew past that. “How’s Patrick doing?”
“Physically, he’ll be fine.”
The barista came back over with two coffees in to-go cups. He placed them down in front of her.
“You saved his life,” she said. There was awe in her voice. “You saved my son’s life.”
“I’m glad he’ll be okay,” Myron replied. “I hear he’s awake?”
Nancy Moore didn’t reply right away. When she did, she said, “Can I ask you something?”
“Sure.”
“How much do you remember of your life before you turned six?”
He knew where this was going, but he went there anyway. “Not much.”
“And how about between the ages of six and sixteen?”
This time Myron stayed silent.
“It was everything, right? Elementary school, middle school, most of high school. That’s what shapes us. That’s what makes us everything we are.”
The barista gave her the total. Nancy Moore handed him the coins. He handed some back to her, along with a to-go bag.
“I don’t mean to push you,” Myron said. “But has Patrick said anything about what happened to him or where Rhys might be?”
Nancy Moore put the money back into her purse with a little too much care. “Nothing that would help,” she said.
“What does that mean?”
She just shook her head.
“What has he said?” Myron asked. “Patrick, I mean. Who took them? Where have they been all this time?”
“You want answers,” she said. “I just want my son.”
“I want answers,” Myron said, “because there is still a boy missing.”
Her gaze had steel behind it now. “You don’t think I care about Rhys?”
“No, not at all. I’m sure you care a lot.”
“You don’t think I know what Brooke and Chick are going through?”
“To the contrary,” Myron said, “I don’t think anyone knows as well as you do.”
She closed her eyes. “I’m sorry. It’s just . . .”
Myron waited.
“Patrick can barely talk right now. He’s . . . not well. Mentally I mean. He hasn’t really spoken yet.”
“I don’t mean to sound insensitive,” Myron said, “but are you sure it’s Patrick?”
“Yes.”
No hesitation. No doubt.
“Have you done a DNA test?”
“No, but we will, if that’s required. He recognizes us, I think. Me anyway. But it’s Patrick. It’s my son. I know it sounds like an awful cliché, but a mother knows.”
Might be a cliché. Might not. Then again, to coin another cliché, we see what we want to see, especially when we are a desperate mother hoping to end a decade of pain.
Tears started flooding her eyes. “Some maniac stabbed him. My boy. You found him. You saved him. Do you get that? He would have bled out. That’s what the doctors said. You . . .”
“Nancy?”
The voice came from behind him. Myron turned and spotted Hunter Moore, Nancy’s ex-husband and Patrick’s father.
“Come on,” the man said. “We have to go.”
He let go of the door and disappeared to the left.
If Hunter Moore had recognized Myron, he didn’t show it. Then again, there was little reason he would have. They had never met before—he hadn’t been at the Baldwin house that day—and he seemed in a rush to hurry along his ex-wife.
Nancy scooped up the bag and coffee. She turned to Myron.
“It feels so inept to say thank you again. The idea that after all these years, that after finding Patrick alive, he would have been killed if it wasn’t for you . . .”
“It’s okay.”
“I’ll always be in your debt.”
She hurried away then, out the door and turning left to follow her ex’s path. For a moment Myron didn’t move. The barista said, “Would you like a refill?”
“No, thanks.”
Myron still didn’t move.
“You okay, mate?” the barista asked.
“Fine.”
He stared at the door some more. And then a curious thought hit him. The hospital was to the right. But both Hunter and Nancy Moore had turned left.
Did that mean anything?
Nope. At least, not on its own. They could be picking up something at a pharmacy or getting some fresh air or . . .
Myron moved to the door. He stepped outside onto the street and looked to his left. Nancy Moore was stepping into a black van.
“Wait,” Myron said.
But she was too far away and the street was noisy. The van door slid closed as Myron started to run.
“Hold up a second,” he shouted.
But the van was already on its way. Myron watched it head down the street and disappear around a corner. He stopped and took out his smartphone. It was probably nothing. Maybe the police were taking them someplace for questioning. Maybe after round-the-clock sitting beside their son they needed a few hours of rest.
Both of them?
Uh-uh, no way. Did Nancy Moore strike him as the type who
would need a break from the child who had been missing for ten years? No chance. More likely that she would never leave his side, that she would be afraid to take her eyes off him for more than a moment.
Myron took out his phone and hit what was still speed dial 1 on his phone. He didn’t worry about a trace. The number would bounce to and fro and end up on some untraceable burner.
“Articulate,” Win said.
“I think there’s a problem.”
“Do tell.”
He told him about Nancy and Hunter Moore and the black van. He crossed the street and headed toward the hospital entrance. He finished telling Win what he knew and hung up. Then he called Brooke’s phone. No answer.
A hospital sign—several signs, now that Myron looked around—read
NO MOBILE PHONE USE
. People were staring. Myron put his away with an apologetic shrug and headed for the check-in desk.
“I’m here to see a patient.”
“Name of the patient?”
“Patrick Moore.”
“And your name?”
“Myron Bolitar.”
“Please wait one moment.”
Myron’s eyes scanned the room. He spotted Brooke and Chick sitting by a window in the corner of the waiting area. Brooke lifted her eyes, met his, and stood. He hurried toward her.
“What’s wrong?” Brooke asked.
“What did the police tell you?”
“Nothing. We haven’t been allowed up to see him.”