The rest of the morning goes by in a daze. I have three appointments, back-to-back, none of which I remember very clearly. For the first time, Iโm thankful for the little icons on my desktopโI can go back and listen to my recordings later when Iโm less distracted, more engaged. I cringe, imagining the emotionless mumbling Iโm sure to hear coming from my side of the conversation; the distantย mhmmsย I had administered instead of asking genuine questions. The long, drawn-out silences before my eyes refocused and I remembered where I was, what I was doing. My first appointment was in the waiting room when Detective Thomas walked out. I saw the look on her face when I finally pulled myself from my chair and walked into the lobby, the way her eyes darted from me to the door as if she were trying to decide whether or not she wanted to come into my office or just get up and leave.
I rise from my desk at 12:02โI donโt want to seem too eagerโand snatch my duffel bag, powering down my computer before opening up my desk drawer and tapping my fingers across the sea of pills. I look at the Diazepam nestled in the corner and turn away, deciding instead on a bottle of Xanax, just in case, before securing the drawer and rushing past Melissa with hurried instructions to lock the door on her way out.
โYouโll be back Monday, right?โ she says, standing up.
โYes, Monday,โ I say, turning around and trying to flash a smile. โIโm just doing some wedding shopping. Knocking out the last-minute errands.โ
โRight,โ she says, eying me carefully. โIn New Orleans. You said that.โ
โRight.โ I try to think of something else to say, something normal, but the silence stretches between us, awkward and uncomfortable. โWell, if thatโll be allโโ
โChloe,โ she says, picking at her cuticle. Melissa never uses my first name in the office; she always keeps distinct boundaries between personal
and professional. Clearly, what sheโs about to say to me now is personal. โIs everything okay? Whatโs been going on with you?โ
โNothing,โ I say, smiling again. โNothingโs going on, Melissa. I mean, other than my patient being murdered and my wedding coming up in a month.โ
I try to laugh at my pathetic attempt at a joke, but it comes out strangled. Instead, I cough. Melissa doesnโt smile.
โIโve just had a lot of stress lately,โ I say. It feels like the first honest thing Iโve said to her in a while. โI need a break. A mental health break.โ
โOkay,โ she says, hesitating. โAnd that detective?โ
โHe was just asking some follow-up questions about Lacey, thatโs all. I was the last one to see her alive. If Iโm their strongest witness, they obviously donโt have much to go on at the moment.โ
โOkay,โ she says again, this time more confidently. โOkay, well, enjoy your break. I hope you can come back refreshed.โ
I walk out to my car, tossing my duffel bag into the passenger seat like junk mail before getting into the driverโs seat and cranking the engine. Then I pull out my phone, navigate to my Contacts, and start typing a message.
On my way.
The drive to the motel is quick, only forty-five minutes from my office. I reserved the room on Monday, immediately after I told Melissa to block my calendar. I had found the first cheap all-nighter I could find on Google with a rating over three starsโI wanted to pay in cash, and I knew I wouldnโt be spending much time in the room, anyway. I pull into the parking lot and walk into the lobby, avoiding small talk with the clerk while retrieving my key.
โRoom twelve,โ he says, dangling it in front of me. I grab it, shoot him a weak smile, almost like Iโm apologizing for something. โYouโre right next to the ice machine, lucky you.โ
I feel my phone vibrate in my pocket as Iโm unlocking the door. I dig it out, read the messageโIโm hereโand shoot off a text with the room number before tossing my bag onto the single queen bed. Then I glance around the room.
Itโs bleak in that fluorescently lit way only highway motels can be. The efforts at dรฉcor almost make the place sadder, with its mass-produced beach scene hung crookedly over the bed, the chocolate placed delicately on my pillow, warm and slightly squishy between my fingers. I look at the bedside table, open the drawer. Thereโs a Bible inside with the cover ripped off. I walk into the bathroom and splash water on my face before twisting my hair into a topknot. Thereโs a knock at the door, and I exhale slowly, stealing one final glance at myself in the mirror, trying to ignore the bags under my eyes that seem amplified in the harsh light. I force myself to flip the switch and walk back toward the door, a silhouette looming outside the closed curtains. I grasp the knob firmly and swing the door open.
Aaron is standing on the sidewalk, his hands shoved deep into his pockets. He looks uncomfortable, and I donโt blame him. I try to smile in an attempt to lighten the mood, to draw attention away from the fact that weโre meeting each other in a nondescript motel room on the outskirts of Baton Rouge. I havenโt told him why heโs here, what weโre really doing. I havenโt told him why I canโt sleep in my own home tonight when weโre within an hourโs drive of my neighborhood. All I said when I called him on Monday was that I had a lead he wouldnโt want to ignoreโa lead I needed his help to follow.
โHey,โ I say, leaning against the door. It groans under my body weight, so I straighten back up, crossing my arms instead. โThanks for coming. Let me just grab my purse.โ
I motion for him to come inside, and he does, stepping self-consciously across the threshold of the door. He looks around, unimpressed with my new digs. Weโve barely spoken since I asked him to look into Bert Rhodes last weekend, and that seems like a lifetime ago. He has no idea about the confrontation I had with Bert, my trip to the police station, and the subsequent threat from Detective Thomas to stay out of the investigationโthe exact opposite of what I am doing right now. He also has no idea that my suspicions have shifted from Bert Rhodes to my own fiancรฉ, and that I am enlisting his help to prove my theory right.
โHowโs the story coming?โ I ask, genuinely curious if heโs been able to uncover anything more than me.
โMy editor is giving me until the end of next week to dig something up,โ he says, sitting on the edge of the mattress with a creak. โOtherwise itโs time to pack it up and head home.โ
โEmpty-handed?โ โThatโs right.โ
โBut you came all this way. What about your theory? The copycat?โ Aaron shrugs.
โI still believe it,โ he says, his fingernail picking at the seam of the comforter. โBut honestly, Iโm getting nowhere.โ
โWell, I may be able to help.โ
I walk over to the bed and sit down next to him, the slouch of the mattress bringing our bodies closer together.
โAnd how is that? Does it have to do with this mysterious lead of yours?โ
I look down at my hands. I need to word my response carefully, giving away only the information that Aaron needs to know.
โWeโre going to speak with a woman named Dianne,โ I say. โHer daughter went missing around the time of my fatherโs murdersโanother young, attractive teenagerโand just like his victims, her body was never found.โ
โOkay, but your dad never confessed to her murder, right? Only the
six?โ
โNo, he didnโt,โ I say. โAnd there was no jewelry of hers, either. She
doesnโt really fit the pattern โฆ but since her abductor was never found, I think itโs worth looking into. I was thinking that maybeย heย could be the copycat, you know? Whoever he is. That maybe he started mimicking my fatherโs crimes way earlier than we thoughtโmaybe even while they were still happening. He went dark for a while, and maybe now, for the twentieth anniversary, heโs popping back up again.โ
Aaron looks at me, and I half expect him to stand up and walk back outside, insulted that I brought him all the way out here for such a half-assed clue. But instead, he slaps his hands on his legs, exhaling loudly before standing up from the sunken bed.
โWell, okay,โ he says, offering his hand to help me up. I canโt tell if heโs actually sold on my story, if heโs desperate enough for a lead that heโs willing to follow me blindly, or if heโs just going along with it to make me happy. Either way, Iโm grateful. โLetโs go talk to Dianne.โ