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Chapter no 2

The Locked Door

I drive a dark green Toyota Camry. Itโ€™s a fine, sensible car in a sensible color without a nick or a dent on it. My partner at work, Dr. Philip Corey, purchased a red Tesla last year. When I nicknamed it his โ€œmidlife crisis car,โ€ Philip just winked at me. He loves to take that Tesla on the freeway and let โ€˜er rip. When you get into a car with Philip, youโ€™re taking your life into your hands.

Iโ€™m not having a midlife crisis. I just needed a safe vehicle to get from point A to point B with as little fanfare as possible.

The parking lot of Christopherโ€™s is nearly silent as I slide into the driverโ€™s seat of my Camry. I start the engine and classical music fills the car. Chopinโ€™sย Nocturne in C. I used to play the piano, and I learned this piece for a concert in high school. That feels like an eternity ago. I havenโ€™t touched piano keys in at least a decade.

I get back on the road. Itโ€™s quiet like it always is on weeknights. I ease my foot onto the gas, taking the back roads like I usually do to get home.

After about two minutes of driving, I notice the pair of headlights behind me.

It doesnโ€™t necessarily mean anything. So thereโ€™s a car driving behind me. So what? But at the same time, Iโ€™m usually the only one driving on these back roads at this hour. Usually, itโ€™s just me and the stars. And maybe the moon, depending on the time of the month.

Also, the car is following me very closely. Iโ€™m going at least ten miles above the speed limit for this small road, and the headlights are probably less than two car lengths behind me. If I stopped short, they would almost certainly rear-end me.

I suspect this car might be intentionally following me. But thereโ€™s only one way to know for sure.

I approach a fork in the road. I signal left. As I come to the fork, I start to veer left. But at the last second, I swerve right.

I have my eyes pinned on the rearview mirror the entire time. I watch the headlights behind me as they start to move left, then start to veer to the

left of the fork as I sail to the right. And then, the car skids to a halt. The car backs up, then turns right at the fork.

I inhale sharply, my hands squeezing the steering wheel. The other car is definitely following me. That bastard is following me.

As I contemplate my next move, a thought flits through my head. One that I have not infrequently when Iโ€™m in difficult situations:

What would my father do?

I always have that thought, as much as I try not to. I donโ€™t want to know what my father would do. And I certainly donโ€™t want to do the same thing he would do. After all, heโ€™s the one spending eighteen life sentences in prison right now. Not exactly something I want to strive for.

I have my phone in my pocket, hooked up to my Bluetooth. I could call the police. I could tell them my location and that thereโ€™s a car following me. But I donโ€™t do that either.

At the next corner, I usually turn right to go home. But instead, I turn left. The car behind me turns with me. The headlights flood my car as the other vehicle creeps closer to mine. Theyโ€™re not even trying to hide the fact that theyโ€™re following me. Two car-lengths have now become one car-length. Theyโ€™re riding my rear bumper.

Then I see my destination up ahead. The local police department.

I pull into the parking lot at the police department. I keep my eyes on the rearview mirror, waiting to see if the driver will have the gall to follow me into the police station parking lot. But instead, the headlights disappear from my rearview mirror, just as I suspected they would. As I pull into a parking spot, I see the car that had been following me drive past.

Itโ€™s a blue Dodge with a dent in the rear fender.

I sit in the parking lot of the police department for the next ten minutes, watching the road, making sure the car that had been following me is long gone. This is not my favorite place to be. I remember the first time I ever visited the police department. I was ten years old. My father had just been arrested. The police had so many questions for me.

Nora, how long did your father keep a workshop in the basement? Nora, did your mother ever go down there?

Nora, are there any other secret hiding places in your house?

Another woman might have marched into the police station. Asked for an escort home. Reported Henry Callahan for following me. But it wonโ€™t do

me any good. And the thought of entering a police station makes me physically ill. After what I went through all those years ago, I never want to go into a police station ever again.

After all, a simple background check will reveal exactly who I am. I donโ€™t need that.

After ten minutes, I feel satisfied that Callahan is finally gone. Sure enough, when I get back on the road, itโ€™s as quiet and empty as it usually is. It takes me another fifteen minutes to arrive at my cozy two-story house in Mountain View. The realtor said the house was perfect for a small family, but itโ€™s just me. There was a time when I thought it might not always just be me, but in retrospect, that was misguided.

There are two bedrooms upstairs, and I use the second bedroom for my home office slash guest room. The washer and dryer are in the basement. When Philip came to visit soon after I bought the place, he wrinkled his nose and remarked that I could afford better. Yes, I could, but Iโ€™m happy here. What on earth would I do rattling around a five-bedroom house all by myself? Itโ€™s not like Iโ€™ll ever have children to fill up those rooms.

I come in through the garage entrance. The door echoes as it slams shut, and after the sound dies off, the house becomes deathly silent. I stand there for a moment, clutching my keys in my right hand.

โ€œHoney, Iโ€™m home!โ€ I call out.

Itโ€™s funny because, you know, I live alone.

I stand there for a moment, listening to the echo of my words throughout the room. I worry sometimes about living alone. If somebody came into my house and were waiting for me here, who would know?

But itโ€™s a safe neighborhood. I donโ€™t usually worry about stuff like that.

Iโ€™m starving. If I hadnโ€™t had to deal with Henry Callahan trying to scare me, I wouldโ€™ve swung by In-N-Out Burger on the way homeโ€”part of my campaign to drop dead of a heart attack before Iโ€™m fifty. But I missed my chance, so I go to the kitchen to see whatโ€™s in the freezer. I need some food to soak up the whiskey. And then maybe another whiskey to soak up the food.

No, I really shouldnโ€™t. Itโ€™s getting late and I have to be up at the crack of dawn to operate in the morning. I donโ€™t need much sleep as a rule, but my eyelids are starting to feel heavy.

As I open the cupboard in the kitchen, I hear a thump. Then a second thump.

Somebodyโ€™s trying to get in the back door.

Thump.

I was waiting at the police station for at least ten minutes. Henry Callahan was gone. He didnโ€™t follow me homeโ€”Iโ€™m sure of it. I was watching in my rearview mirror the whole time and I didnโ€™t see any cars behind me. I would have noticed, even if their lights were off. Iโ€™m very observant.

I look out the window, but I see only blackness. Thereโ€™s no one there.

Like I said, I live in a very safe neighborhood. All my neighbors are up-and-coming professionals, most of them with young families. Although I donโ€™t know for certain, because I havenโ€™t taken the opportunity to meet any of them. I canโ€™t name one person living within a one-mile radius of me, although I suppose I would recognize a few of them on sight.

I imagine what they would say if something ever happened to me.ย She seemed nice. Quiet. Always kept to herself.ย Thatโ€™s what they always say.

Thump.

I return to the cupboard over the sink. I yank it open and retrieve the object Iโ€™m looking for before returning to the back door. I take one last look out the window to confirm nobody is there. Then I twist the lock to the back door and throw open the door.

Instantly, the meowing starts up. Thereโ€™s a black cat at my feet, who nuzzles at my pants leg with her little furry head. Then she looks up at me hopefully.

โ€œYeah, yeah, yeah,โ€ I say.

I crack open the can of cat food I got from my cupboard and empty it into the little bowl I put out behind my back door. This cat isย notย my cat. It is a stray cat. I should probably call an animal shelter or something, but instead, I bought a crate of cat food. And now, apparently, Iโ€™m feeding the cat.

I watch the cat lap up sixty cents worth of mashed-up chicken. Sheโ€™s so ridiculously grateful whenever I feed her. Maybe even more grateful than Callahan was for having saved his life.

My father would not have done this. He wouldnโ€™t have fed a stray cat.

He never saved anyoneโ€™s life.

I watch the cat eat for another few seconds, then I shut the back door.

And I lock it.

Ten minutes later, I settle down at my kitchen table with a TV dinner and my laptop. I log into our practiceโ€™s electronic medical records system. I sift through some labs, but then I find myself searching for the medical record of Henry Callahan.

Itโ€™s just as I remember. Cholecystitis. Required removal of the gallbladder. Laparoscopic surgery converted to open cholecystectomy. No post-op complications, routine recovery.

Then I click on the tab for demographics. It lists Callahanโ€™s medical insurance. His primary contact is his brother, which means heโ€™s not married. He probably lives alone. And right below all the phone numbers is his home address.

He lives in San Jose in a sketchy sort of neighborhood. Looks to be a house. Not far from here at all.

I could be there in twenty minutes. Hmm.

I shake my head and close the laptop with a snap. I grab my water and take a long drink. I wish I had another Old Fashioned, but the water will have to do.

The pile of mail I retrieved from the front door is now stacked neatly in the middle of the table. I push my laptop to the side and start sorting through the letters. The first two are billsโ€”I find it baffling that they still come, even though I pay all my bills online. The next one is soliciting a political donation. Yeah right. Then a catalog from a bakery, offering a variety of baked goods.

And the last letter is from my father.

I suck in a breath as I stare at the smooth black lettering on the back of the envelope. He always had very nice handwriting. Tight and compact, every letter the exact same height like he measured it with a ruler, the pen marks digging into the paper so that an indentation would always be left behind on the sheet below. I wonder if the postman noticed the name on the return address. If he did, he probably thought it was a joke. At least the letter is made out to Nora Davis. I havenโ€™t been Nora Nierling in nearly twenty-six years.

Heโ€™s been writing me these letters every week since the day of his arrest. I didnโ€™t know about them for a long time. My grandmother used to throw them out. But then after I left for college, the letters came directly to me.

What does he have to say to me? What could he possibly have to say?

I wonder if he thinks about me. Worries about me. My mother used to worry about me when I was a kid, but sheโ€™s long gone. Nobody thinks about me or worries about me anymore. Not really. Philip might worry a little bit, because if something happened to me, who would cover his patients when he went on vacation? But he doesnโ€™t worry in any sort of real way.

I stare at that letter for a very long time. Like I do every week.

And like I do every week, I rip it in half, and rip it in half again, and toss the pieces in the garbage can.

Happy anniversary, Dad.

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