AN HOUR LATER,ย I am freshly showered, changed into jeans and a sweater, and feeling like an entirely new person. I feel so good, I hate the idea of getting into the car and taking a long road trip. But it wonโt be so bad. Seth will be driving, and I have to get to the bottom of this. Somebody from that motel was calling me over and over. I need to know why.
Seth stands up when I come down to the living room. โReady to go?โ โYes. Definitely.โ
โYou feeling okay?โ
I rub my eyes. โJust a little tired. Iโll be fine.โ
โMaybe you should take a few Collahealth capsules?โ Then we both laugh.
We get back on the road, but I still havenโt eaten much since the awful breakfast they served me in jail. We stop off at a fast-food drive-through, and I order food I would never ordinarily indulge in. But Iโmย starving. All I want is a big, greasy fast-food burger.
Seth laughs when I demolish about half the burger in three bites. I remember when we were hooking up last year, we ended up eating a lot of fast food in the car. After all, we could hardly go to a restaurant. Sitting here in the car with Seth, stuffing fast-food fries in my mouth, gives me a sense of dรฉjร vu.
โHow are things going with Melinda?โ I ask.
โAwful. This may come as a shock, but getting divorced sucks.โ โIโm sorry.โ
โDonโt be.โ
I squirm in the leather seat. โI feel responsible.โ
โYouโre not,โ he says flatly. Yeah, right. โLook, Iโm not going to say that what happened between you and me didnโt make the whole thing a lot more contentious. But it was going to happen either way. We didnโt evenย likeย each other anymore. You know Melinda and I havenโt had sex in over threeย years?โ
He said something like that when we were together, but I always thought he was exaggerating. I donโt think so anymore.
โItโs not your fault,โ he says. โOr if it was, it was only because you reminded me that I was actually capable of being happy.โ
I donโt know if heโs saying that to let me off the hook or if he means it. But right now, Iโll take it. I already feel bad enough about myself. I donโt need to add homewrecker to the list of horrible things Iโve done in my life.
Seth turns on the radio while we drive. Heโs really into classic rock, which is not my favorite, but I donโt care much right now. I remember when I told Caleb my favorite singer was Celine Dion. His face lit up.ย Celine Dion is my favorite too!ย Now I wonder if he was making that up, as another way to get close to me. What manโs favorite singer isย Celine Dion?
Itโs an almost ninety-minute drive to get to the motel. Itโs a large place
โtwo stories sprawled out over a large lotโwith dozens of rooms that open directly to the outside. And itโs in the middle of nowhere. Itโs a perfect place to hide out.
A neon sign denotes the main office for the motel. Seth parks right outside, and we sit in the car for a moment. โYou ready?โ he asks.
I nod wordlessly. There are butterflies in my stomachโIโm terrified of what Caleb doesnโt want me to know about this place. What has he done? Is my boyfriend a cold-blooded killer? Is Dawn lying dead in one of these motel rooms, sprawled out on a plastic-covered mattress?
We march to the front door, which is hanging on its hinges. This motel is a dive. A man is sitting behind the counter, his eyelids sagging shut, his brown hair long and scraggly. This entire lobby looks like it hasnโt been cleaned in a decade. If I sat on the sofa in the room, a big puff of dust would come out of it.
โHelp you?โ the clerk asks lazily.
โYes, thank you.โ I dig my phone out of my purse and bring up a picture Iโve got of Caleb. Well, itโs Caleb and me. Itโs a selfie I took of the two of
us, back when I thought he might be the one. I hold it up for the man. โHave you seen this man?โ
The clerk barely glances at the photo. โI donโt know. We get a lot of people coming in and out.โ
Seth digs out his wallet from his back pocket. He pulls out a couple of bills and slides them across the table. โDo you think you could look again for us?โ
The man looks down at the cash on the table. He scoops up the bills and tucks them into his front pocket. Then he leans in to take a better look at my phone.
โOh yeah,โ he says. โNow I recognize him. He was here. On Saturday.โ
My heart sinks. That doesnโt help me at all. Caleb already told me he drove here on Saturday. So this only proves that he was telling the truth.
โDid you talk to him?โ Seth asks the guy. He nods. โYeah, he was checking out.โ
I suck in a breath. โChecking out?โ
โThatโs right. He got a room, I think on Monday night, and he came in here to check out.โ
Seth and I exchange looks. There it is. Solid evidence that Caleb is full of it. My boyfriend has been lying to me all week. Exceptโฆ why?
โWas he with anyone?โ Seth asks.
The clerk hesitates. โIโm pretty sure he had a woman staying with him in the room. But Iโm not absolutely sure. I try not to pay too much attention. You know? Unless I hear screaming or gunshots, I look the other way.โ
A woman?
On a whim, I type the name Dawn Schiff into my search engine. It brings up that awful ID photo of Dawn. I hold up the image. โWas this the woman who was staying with him?โ
โItโs possible. She had more hair than that, but it couldโve been a wig.
And no glasses. She was skinny as a rail like this woman though.โ Holy crap.
Is it possible Dawn is still alive?
โDid she look like she was being held hostage?โ I ask.
The clerk lifts a shoulder. โDidnโt seem like it. She wasnโt tied up or anything. But like I said, I try not to pay too much attention.โ
We thank the clerk and get out of the motel. Caleb was definitely here, but itโs obvious heโs long gone. But it doesnโt matter. Caleb isnโt planning
to disappear like Dawn did. Heโll show up at work sometime this week, pretending everything is fine. Thatโs when Iโll confront him with what I know.
โThat asshole,โ Seth mutters as we get back into the car. โWhat the hell is he up to?โ
โI have no idea.โ
โLook what heโs putting you through.โ He hits the steering wheel with his palm. โAnd for what? Why is he doing this?โ
I wish I knew.
โIโm sorry I didnโt believe you at first.โ The sun has dropped in the sky, and his eyes look shiny in the shadows. โI should never have doubted you. I know you wouldnโt steal.โ
โI donโt blame you.โ
โWhen I get my hands on Caleb, Iโm going to punch him in the nose.โ For some reason, his words make me laugh, and he grins back at me.
Itโs the first time Iโve laughed in what feels like forever. But itโs beginning to feel like thereโs a small chance this could all work out. Caleb is the key to everything. And he has no idea what I know.
We start on the drive back to Dorchester. As buzzed as I am from the events of the day, the motion of the car eventually lulls me to sleep. Seth gets how tired I am, and he shuts off the music and drives in silence. He doesnโt even hit his horn, which is unusual behavior for him because heโs a typical Boston driver who loves to lean on his horn. Sitting in the passenger seat of his car, this is somehow the best sleep Iโve gotten in a week. Itโs only interrupted by Sethโs hand on my arm, shaking me awake.
โNatalie,โ he says.
There is an urgency in his voice that makes my eyes shoot open. โWhat?โ
โLook.โ
I blink a few times and rub my eyes. The sun has gone down completely now, but I can tell weโre back in my neighborhood. On my block. In fact, my house is only a stoneโs throw away from the car. Seth is pointing at the house.
Itโs very dark out, so I have to squint to see what heโs talking about. Thatโs when I notice thereโs a man in front of my house. Sitting on the front steps. And when he sees our car, he rises to his feet.
Oh my God.
Itโs Caleb.