The phone rings twice before that familiar voice greets me. โAaron Jansen.โ
โYouย asshole,โ I say, not bothering with an introduction. Iโm storming through the parking lot in the direction of my car. I had called into my office voice mail the second I handed over the guest book and replayed Aaronโs last message to me from Friday night.
You can call me back directly on this number.
โChloe Davis,โ he responds, the hint of a smile in his voice. โI thought I might hear from you today.โ
โYou visited myย mother? You had no right.โ
โI told you Iโd be reaching out to your family in my voice mail. I gave you fair warning.โ
โNo,โ I say, shaking my head. โNo, you said my father. I donโt give a fuck about my father, but my mother is off-limits.โ
โLetโs meet. Obviously, Iโm in town. Iโll explain everything.โ
โFuck you,โ I spit. โI am not meeting with you. What you did was unethical.โ
โYou really want to talk to me about ethics?โ I stop, inches from my parked car.
โWhatโs that supposed to mean?โ
โJust meet me today. Iโll make it quick.โ
โIโm busy,โ I lie, unlocking my car and easing inside. โI have appointments.โ
โIโll come to your office, then. Iโll wait in the lobby until you have an opening.โ
โNoโโ I exhale, closing my eyes. I lean my forehead against the steering wheel. This back-and-forth is pointless, I realize. Heโs not going to give up. He flew to Baton Rouge from New York City to meet with me, and if I want this man to stop digging around in my life, Iโm going to have to
speak with him. Face-to-face. โNo, please donโt do that. Iโll meet you, okay? Iโll meet you right now. Where do you want to go?โ
โItโs still early,โ he says. โHow about coffee. My treat.โ
โThereโs a place on the river,โ I say, pinching the skin between my eyes. โBrewHouse. Meet me there in twenty minutes.โ
I hang up on him before slamming my car into reverse and driving in the direction of the Mississippi. Iโm only ten minutes from the cafรฉ, but I want to make it there before him. I want to be sitting at a table of my choosing the moment he walks through the doors. I want to be in the driverโs seat for this conversation, not riding along as a powerless passenger. Not on the defensive, caught off guard the way I was just now.
I pull into a nearby spot and duck into the little cafรฉ, a hidden gem on River Road partially cloaked by live oaks dripping in gray-green foliage. Itโs dim inside, and I order a latte, my eyes landing on a bulletin board of flyers by the cream-and-sugar stand. Wedged between violin lessons being advertised with those little paper flaps and an upcoming concert poster is Lacey Decklerโs face,ย MISSINGย scrawled across the top in Sharpie. Itโs stapled on top of another piece of the paper, the corners peeking out. I reach over and push the picture aside with my finger, revealing Aubreyโs poster behind itโalready, sheโs been replaced, taped over like a broken vending machine.
I slide into a table in the corner, choosing the seat that faces the front door. My fingers tap anxiously against the rim of my mug, and I force myself to hold them still, despite the nervous energy radiating from my every pore. Then I wait.
Fifteen minutes later, my latte is cold. I consider getting up to ask them to reheat it, but before I can move, I see Aaron walk in. I recognize him immediately from his picture onlineโheโs wearing another checkered, button-up shirt, the same stupid blue-blocker glassesโthough heโs not as skinny as he was in his headshot. He fills out his clothes more than I had expected him to, his leather computer bag hanging heavy over one shoulder, pulling the fabric tight against a bicep I was not expecting to see. I wonder how long ago that picture was taken; immediately after college, I suppose. When he was still just a boy. I continue to stare, watching him amble
through the cafรฉ, browsing the pastry cooler and squinting at the menu bolted behind the coffee bar. He orders a cappuccino and pays with cash, lazily licking his fingers before counting out the bills and dropping his change in the tip jar. Then he eyes the artwork on the wall while he waits for his espresso to brew, the scream of the steamer making my skin crawl.
For some reason, his calmness is bothering me. I was expecting him to run inside, eager to beat me the way I was eager to beat him. I wanted him panting, sweaty, playing catchup. Thrown off guard by my waiting. But instead, he shows up late. Heโs acting like he has all the time in the world. Heโs acting likeย heโsย the one calling the shotsโand thatโs when I realize.
He knows Iโm here. He knows Iโm watching.
This calm demeanor, this careless attitude. Itโs a show put on just for me. Heโs trying to unnerve me, to get under my skin. The thought pisses me off more than it should.
โAaron,โ I yell, waving my hand too animatedly. He jerks his head up and looks in my direction. โIโm over here.โ
โChloe, hi,โ he says, smiling. He walks over to the table and puts his bag on the chair. โThank you for meeting me.โ
โItโs Doctor Davis,โ I say. โAnd you didnโt give me much of a choice.โ He grins.
โIโm just waiting on my cappuccino,โ he says. โCan I buy you anything?โ
โNo,โ I say, motioning to the mug in my hands. โIโm good, thanks.โ โYou been here long?โ he asks. โYour drink looks cold.โ
I eye him, wondering how he could possibly know that. I must look confused, because I see him smirk just slightly before motioning to the condensation beading along the inner rim of my glass.
โNo steam.โ
โJust a couple minutes,โ I say.
โHuh,โ he says, eying my drink. โWell, if you want me to have that warmed up for youโโ
โNo. Letโs just get started.โ
He smiles, nods. Then turns back toward the bar to grab his drink.
Well, itโs confirmed,ย I think, bringing my latte to my lips and wincing at the room-temperature liquid, forcing myself to drink.ย Heโs an asshole.ย Aaron slides into the chair opposite me and pulls a notebook from his bag as I set my mug down. I steal a glance at his press card, clipped neatly to the lip of his shirt, theย New York Timesย logo printed large at the top.
โBefore you start taking any notes, I need to be clear,โ I say. โThis is not an interview. This is a very frank conversation of me telling you to stop harassing my family.โ
โI hardly think calling you twice would be considered harassing.โ โYou visited my motherโs assisted-living home.โ
โYeah, about that,โ he says, pushing his sleeves to his elbows. โI was in her room for two, three minutes tops.โ
โIโm sure you got some really great information,โ I say, glaring at him. โSheโs a real talker, isnโt she?โ
Heโs silent for a while, staring at me from across the table.
โHonestly, I didnโt realize her โฆ disability โฆ was as severe as it is.
Iโm sorry.โ
I nod, satisfied with this tiny win.
โBut talking to her isnโt why I went,โ he says. โNot really. I thought I could maybe get a little bit of information, but mostly I went because I knew it would get your attention. I knew it would force you to meet with me.โ
โAnd why is it that youโre so desperate to meet with me? I already told you. I donโt speak with my father. We donโt have a relationship. I canโt give you anything of value. Honestly, youโre wasting your timeโโ
โThe story has changed,โ he says. โThatโs not the angle anymore.โ
โOkay,โ I say, unsure of where this conversation is now headed. โWhatโs the angle, then?โ
โAubrey Gravino,โ he says. โAnd now Lacey Deckler.โ
I feel my heartbeat start to rise in my chest. My eyes dart around the room, though the cafรฉ is practically empty. I lower my voice to a whisper.
โWhy would you think I have anything to say about those girls?โ
โBecause their deaths โฆ I donโt think itโs a coincidence. I think they have something to do with your father. And I think you can help me figure
out what that is.โ
I shake my head, squeezing my hands tightly around my mug to keep them from shaking.
โLook, youโre reaching here. I know you think this makes for a good story, but as Iโm sure you knowโgiven your beat, and everythingโthis kind of thing happens all the time.โ
Aaron smiles, impressed.
โYouโve researched me,โ he says.
โWell, you know everything about me.โ
โThatโs fair,โ he says. โBut look, Chloe. There are similarities.
Similarities you canโt deny.โ
I think back to the conversation with my mother just this morning. The creeping dรฉjร vu I had just admitted to, the unsettling familiarity of it all. But this isnโt the first time Iโve felt this way, the first time Iโve re-created my fatherโs crimes in my mind. This has happened once before, and last time, I was wrong. Very, very wrong.
โYouโre right, there are similarities,โ I say. โA teenage girl got murdered by some creep roaming the streets. Itโs unfortunate, but like I said, it happens all the time.โ
โThe twenty-year anniversary is coming up, Chloe. Abductions happen all the time, but serial killers do not. Thereโs a reason this is happening right here, right now. You know there is.โ
โWhoa, who said anything about a serial killer? You are jumping so far into that conclusion. We have one body.ย One. For all we know, Lacey ran away.โ
Aaron looks at me, a flicker of disappointment in his eyes. Now heโs the one who lowers his voice.
โYou and I both know that Lacey didnโt run away.โ
I sigh, glance over Aaronโs shoulder and through the window outside. The breeze is picking up, the Spanish moss swaying in the wind. I notice the sky is quickly morphing from robinโs-egg blue to a bloated storm gray; even inside, I can feel the heaviness of impending rain. Lacey is staring at me from herย MISSINGย poster; her eyes followed me here, to this very table. I canโt bring myself to meet them.
โSo what is it that you think is going on, exactly?โ I ask, still staring outside at the trees in the distance. โMy father is in prison. Heโs a monster, Iโm not denying that, but heโs not the boogeyman. He canโt hurt anyone anymore.โ
โI know that,โ he says. โI know itโs not him, obviously. But I think itโs someone trying toย beย him.โ
I glance back at Aaron, gnaw at the inside of my lip.
โI think weโre dealing with a copycat here. And Iโm willing to bet that before the week is over, someone else will be dead.โ