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Chapter no 17

The Coworker

WHEN I LEFTย the house this morning, I double and triple-checked to make sure I locked my front door. And sure enough, itโ€™s still locked when I get home.

The first thing I do when I walk in my front door is flick on all the lights. Itโ€™s wicked dark outside. It feels like itโ€™s the middle of the night, when itโ€™s actually only like five-thirty.

I hate having roommates, but this week Iโ€™ve been feeling increasingly uncomfortable about living alone. After all, Dawn lived alone, and look what happened to her. Well, we donโ€™t actually know what happened to her. But nothing good. I found a bunch of blood on her floor and nobody can find her anywhere. Whatever the outcome, it doesnโ€™t look good for Dawn. I still canโ€™t stop thinking about the way she sounded during that phone call.

Help me.

My phone rings inside my purse. I fumble for it, my fingers crossed that itโ€™s Caleb, having changed his mind about dinner. Or maybe itโ€™s Kim. But instead, itโ€™s a blocked number.

Just like when I got home yesterday.

Months ago, I was getting a lot of calls like this. Blocked numbers, hanging up on me or hissing threats in my ears. Except the difference is that back then, I knew who was responsible for the calls, and that person has no reason to bother me anymore. It seems even less likely to be related to Dawnโ€™s disappearanceโ€”itโ€™s probably just another one of those stupid spam calls. I shouldnโ€™t even answer it, but before I can stop myself, I swipe on the screen to take the call.

โ€œHello?โ€

Itโ€™s the same as yesterday. No sales pitch. No strange foreign languages.

Just silence.

My fingertips squeeze the phone. โ€œWho is this?โ€ No response.

After waiting another beat, I press the red button to end the call. I look around my empty house, which is so quiet, I can hear myself breathing. I kick off my red heels and walk over to the coffee table. I grab the remote and flip on the television.

There. Now itโ€™s not so quiet.

Except I have unwittingly tuned into the evening news. The top local story is about the disappearance of Dawn Schiff. The camera is panning in on her little yellow house, then a shot of the four-story building where we work. Then it skips to a shot of Detective Santoro.

โ€œWe have not yet located Dawn Schiff.โ€ His dark eyes flash under the lights of the camera. โ€œBut we have identified a person of interest in her disappearance.โ€

A person of interest? What doesย thatย mean? But he doesnโ€™t elaborate.

โ€œWe feel confident that weโ€™ll be able to find out what happened to Miss Schiff,โ€ Santoro continues.

Am I the person of interest? Would I know if I were a person of interest? Do they tell you stuff like that?

I grab the remote and change the channel. Itโ€™sย Wheel of Fortune.

Somebody is buying a vowel.

I pick up my phone from where I dropped it on the sofa next to me. I stare at the screen, which is black. The truth is, thereโ€™s only one person I want to talk to right now.

But I shouldnโ€™t. I really, really shouldnโ€™t.

Then again, making stupid decisions is my specialty.

Hey. Could you come over?

 

I send the text message before I can overthink it. Itโ€™s a mistake. I know itโ€™s a mistake. Butโ€ฆ well, Iโ€™ve already done it.

Barely thirty seconds later, a text appears on my screen:

When?

 

How about now?

 

I watch the three bubbles hovering on the screen. A few seconds later, the reply pops up:

Iโ€™ll be there in fifteen minutes.

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