best counter
Search
Report & Feedback

Chapter no 13

The Naturals

I overslept the next morning and woke up to the feeling that I was being watched.

โ€œKnock, knock.โ€

Based on the greetingโ€”and the fact that the person speaking had opened my door, knocked on it, and said those words at the exact same timeโ€”I expected Lia. Instead, I opened my eyes to find Agent Locke standing in my doorway, a cup from Starbucks in one hand and car keys in the other.

I glanced over at Sloaneโ€™s bed, but it was empty.

โ€œLate night?โ€ my newly acquired mentor asked, eyebrows arched. I thought of Dean and the pool and decided that was not an area of discussion I wanted to pursue.

โ€œReally?โ€ Agent Locke said, eyeing the look on my face. โ€œI was just kidding, but youโ€™ve got I-was-up-late-with-a-boy-last-night face. Maybe we should have some girl talk.โ€

I didnโ€™t know what was worse, the fact that Locke thought my late night had something to do with a stupid teenage crush or the fact that she sounded suspiciously like my female cousins.

โ€œNo girl talk,โ€ I said. โ€œAs a general rule, ever.โ€

Agent Locke nodded. โ€œSo noted.โ€ She eyed my pajamas, and then jerked her head toward the closet. โ€œGet up. Get dressed.โ€ She tossed me the car keys. โ€œIโ€™ll get Dean. Youโ€™re driving.โ€

โ€” โ€” โ€”

I wasnโ€™t exactly happy when Agent Lockeโ€™s directions ended up taking us right back to the mallโ€”and specifically to Mrs. Fields cookies. After seeing the mocked-up blood spatter on the poolโ€™s edge the night before, profiling shoppers seemed senseless. It seemed silly.

If she makes us guess what kind of cookies people are going to orderย โ€ฆ โ€œThree and a half years ago, Sandy Harrison was here with her husband

and their three children. Her husband took their eight-year-old son to the bookstore, and she was left with the two younger girls.โ€ Agent Locke said all of this in a perfectly normal voice. Not a single shopper turned to look at us, but her words froze me to the spot. โ€œSandy and the girls were in line for lemonade. Three-year-old Madelyn made a beeline for the cookies, and Sandy had to pull her back. It was Christmastime, and the mall was crammed full of people. Madelyn was desperately in need of a nap and on the verge of a

meltdown. The line was moving. Sandy made it to the counter and turned to ask her older daughter, Annabelle, whether she wanted regular lemonade or pink.โ€

I knew what was coming. โ€œAnnabelle was gone.โ€

It was easy to picture the mall at Christmastime, to see the young family splitting up, the father taking the son and the mother juggling two young girls. I saw the smaller one on the verge of a tantrum, saw the motherโ€™s attention diverted. I imagined her looking down and realizing that even though sheโ€™d just looked away for a few seconds, even though she was alwaysย soย careful โ€ฆ

โ€œMall security was called immediately. Within half an hour, theyโ€™d alerted the police. They stopped traffic into and out of the mall. The FBI was called on board and we issued an AMBER Alert. If a child isnโ€™t recovered in the first twenty-four hours, then chances are good that he or she will never be recovered alive.โ€

I swallowed hard. โ€œDid you find her?โ€

โ€œWe did,โ€ Agent Locke replied. โ€œThe question is, wouldย youย have?โ€ She let that sink in for a second, maybe two. โ€œThe first hour is the most crucial, and youโ€™ve already lost that. The girl was missing for ninety-seven minutes before you even got the call. You need to figure out who took her and why. Most abductions are committed by family members, but her parents werenโ€™t divorced and there were no custody issues. You need to know this familyโ€™s secrets. You need to know them inside and outโ€”and you need to figure out how someone got that little girl out of this mall. What do you do?โ€

I looked around at the mall, at the people here. โ€œSecurity footage?โ€ I asked. โ€œNothing,โ€ Locke said tersely. โ€œThereโ€™s no physical evidence, not even a

scrap.โ€

Dean spoke up. โ€œShe didnโ€™t cry.โ€ Agent Locke nodded, and he continued. โ€œEven at Christmastime, even in a crowd, Iโ€™m not going to risk forcibly grabbing a kid whose mother is three feet away.โ€

I couldnโ€™t quite bring myself to get in the abductorโ€™s head, so I did the next best thing. I got into Annabelleโ€™s. โ€œI see someone. Maybe I know him. Maybe he has something I want. Or maybe he dropped something and I want to give it back.โ€ I paused. โ€œIโ€™m not the one crying and begging for cookies. Iโ€™m the older sister. Iโ€™m a good girl. Iโ€™mย matureย โ€ฆ so I follow him. Just to get a better look, just to hand something back to him, whatever. โ€ฆโ€ I paced out the steps. Five of them, and I was around the corner and facing a service door.

Obligingly, Dean went to open it, but it was locked.

โ€œMaybe I work here,โ€ he said. โ€œMaybe Iโ€™ve just stolen the access card.

Either way, Iโ€™m prepared. Iโ€™m ready. Maybe I was just waiting for a childโ€” any childโ€”to take the bait.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s the question, isnโ€™t it?โ€ Agent Locke said. โ€œWas this a crime of

opportunity or was the girl a specific target? To find her, youโ€™d need to know.โ€

I backed up and tried to play the scene all over again.

โ€œWhat kind of person are you looking for?โ€ Agent Locke asked. โ€œMale?

Female? Whatโ€™s the age range? Intelligence? Education?โ€

I looked at the cookie store, then the service door, then at Dean. This was what he was talking about the night before. This was the job.

All business, I turned back to Agent Locke. โ€œExactly how old was the girl?โ€

You'll Also Like