Harlan Coben - Home
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- Название:Home
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Home: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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For ten long years two boys have been missing.
Now you think you've seen one of them.
He's a young man. And he's in trouble.
Do you approach him?
Ask him to come home with you?
And how can you be sure it's really him?
You thought your search for the truth was over.
It's only just begun.
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He didn’t finish the sentence. Myron rose.
“Do what you have to,” Neil said, starting for the door. “But keep me in the loop.”
Chapter 19
Is it noon yet?” Chick asked.
Myron checked his watch. “Five minutes away.”
“I better set up the laptop, then.”
They were sitting at the enormous marble bar at La Sirena, an Italian restaurant in Chelsea’s famed Maritime Hotel. The place was somehow sleek and warm, modern yet with a definitive sixties vibe. The border between dining inside and dining alfresco was almost nonexistent. Myron made a mental note to take Terese here pronto.
There was no television on the wall-it wasn’t that kind of place-so Chick brought a laptop so they could live-stream the CNN interview.
“I couldn’t stay home today,” Chick said. His skin always glistened, so that he looked as though he’d undergone some kind of hot-wax treatment. Maybe he had. “Brooke and I just stare at each other and wait. It brings it all back, you know?”
Myron nodded.
“It’s hard on so many levels, but it’s like we’ve been living in purgatory for ten years. You have to keep yourself busy or you lose your mind. So I came into my office this morning. Then I met with my lawyers to see what we could do.”
“Do about what?” Myron asked.
“About Patrick not talking. I was looking for some legal recourse. You know, to make him cooperate.” Chick looked up from the laptop. “What did you want to see me about anyway?”
Myron wasn’t sure how to raise the subject of the texts with Nancy Moore yet. Should he go the direct route or ease into it?
“Hold up,” Chick said. “It’s about to air.”
The modern era. La Sirena had a good blend of the art world, Village hipsters, and Wall Street masters of the universe. The place was lively with the arriving lunch crowd, and here, at the bar, two men were huddled over a laptop watching a news program. No one looked twice.
“Wait, where are they?” Chick asked.
Myron recognized the room. “That’s the Moores’ living room.”
“They’re not doing it in a studio?”
“Guess not.”
On the screen, Anderson Cooper sat in a plush leather chair. Nancy and Hunter sat on a couch across from him. Hunter wore a dark suit and dark tie. Nancy wore a light-blue dress that was stylish yet conservative.
“Where’s Patrick?” Chick asked. “Myron?”
“I don’t know. Let’s watch, okay?”
The interview began without Patrick. Anderson started with some background-the kidnapping, the ransom drop, the strain of no answers, the long wait for this day. He raised the fact that Nancy and Hunter were now divorced, clearly implying that the breakup was a direct result of what had happened. Neither Nancy nor Hunter bit, though.
“We share custody of our beautiful daughter,” Nancy said by way of explanation.
“We raised her together,” Hunter added.
After a few more minutes, Chick shook his head and said, “Unbelievable. They’re giving him nothing.”
It was somewhat true. Anderson wasn’t pushing them, which was understandable under the circumstances. These weren’t politicians running for office. These were parents who had suffered greatly and were now trying to comprehend their sudden… Would you call it luck?
Nancy did most of the talking. She explained to Anderson how grateful they were to have Patrick home again. “Our son has been through a terrible ordeal,” she said, biting her lower lip. When Anderson tried to get some details, they deflected by talking about Patrick’s need for privacy and “space for recovery and transition.”
This was the message, repeated in various forms: Please give Patrick and the Moore family privacy to recover from this terrible ordeal. They used the phrase “terrible ordeal” to the point that Myron wondered whether they’d been coached to say it.
Anderson pressed on. He asked about the kidnapping, if they were any closer to catching the perpetrators. The Moores offered no real answer, deferring questions “about possible apprehensions” to the “authorities.”
When Anderson raised that “horrible day,” Nancy said, “It was a long time ago. You need to remember he was only six years old.”
“How much does he remember?”
“Very little. Patrick was moved around a lot over the years.”
“What do you mean, ‘moved around’?”
Tears flooded her eyes. Myron waited for Hunter to take her hand. He didn’t. “Our son nearly died from a stabbing.”
“That was during his rescue in London, correct?”
“Yes.”
“How long had he been in London?”
“We don’t know. But he went through”-Myron mouthed the words with her this time-“a terrible ordeal.”
Myron watched Nancy and Hunter on the screen, looking for any clues or body language that might suggest… What exactly? Deception? Did he think that they might be lying here? Why? What would they be hiding, if anything? He also sneaked glances at Chick, as though that might tell him something too. How was Chick reacting to Nancy? Did Myron sense a wisp of-again, what?-longing, regret, guilt?
Conclusion: Studying body language was tremendously overrated.
Myron had so often heard of people wrongly convicted (or wrongly exonerated) because jurors felt that they could “read” the perpetrators, that they didn’t show enough (or showed too much) remorse, that their reactions were not in what the jurors considered the range of normal. As though humans came in one size and shape. As though we all react the same way to a horrible or stressful situation.
We all think we can spot the tell in everyone else, but ironically, no one can spot it in us.
Finally, Anderson got to it: “What about the other boy who was taken that day?”
Chick sat up.
“What has your son been able to tell you about Rhys Baldwin, who is still missing?”
“Finding Rhys is our number one priority right now,” Nancy said.
Chick muttered something under his breath.
“This will never be over,” she continued, “until we know the truth about Rhys.”
Hunter nodded his vigorous agreement. “We are cooperating as much as possible with law enforcement…”
Chick sat back. “Do you believe this crap?”
“… but unfortunately there is little that Patrick knows that can help.”
“They’re cooperating? That’s what they’re claiming?” Chick was nearly apoplectic. “I should hold my own press conference.”
Like that would do any good.
Toward the end of the segment, Nancy and Hunter rose from their seats and turned to the right. Chick quieted down as the camera pulled out. A woman of about twenty years old appeared.
“This is our daughter, Francesca,” Nancy said.
Francesca gave the viewers an awkward nod. Then she looked off camera and mouthed the words “It’s okay.” Three seconds passed.
When Patrick stepped into view, he was holding his sister’s hand.
“And our son, Patrick,” Nancy said.
It was the same boy Myron had rescued, the same boy he had seen huddled in the corner of his bedroom. He wore a Yankees baseball cap, a blue hoodie, jeans. The camera zoomed in tight on his face. He kept his eyes down. Nancy and Hunter moved to either side of their children. For a moment it looked as though they were posing, albeit clumsily, for a holiday photo. Hunter and Nancy tried to look strong and defiant. Francesca looked overcome with emotion, her eyes brimming with tears. Patrick kept his eyes down toward the ground.
Then Anderson thanked them for “opening up their home” before going to commercial.
Chick stared at the blank screen for a few seconds.
“What the hell was that?”
Myron didn’t reply.
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