I stood there and watched the wall clock for a few seconds. I looked through the window blinds to the stucco wall that ran behind the substation. Then I started walking toward the door.
“Me too,” Brittany mumbled into her fists. She wanted what the big people wanted.
Just like Matthew, I thought. He’d have followed me off a building.
Or into the sea.
Abby looked at me and she was smiling with tears running down her face. Brittany breathed in deeply, then out again.
“Coming up,” I said.
I left the room and scrambled across the parking lot to a liquor store to make the purchase. I got some candy and snacks, too, just in case. When I came back, Brittany was still sitting on her mother’s lap, but she now had both arms around her mother’s neck. They both looked at me as I walked toward them, and for the first time since six that morning I believed that somehow, some way, sometime not too long from then, Abby and Brittany Elder were going to be okay.
And that’s why I work this job.
Here is what she told me over the next twenty minutes:
She woke up when someone lifted her out of bed. She thought it was her daddy, but then she knew it wasn’t. She tried to call her mother, but her mouth was taped shut. She was jammed hard up against a man’s chest, with her head pushed to his chin, and he moved real fast and his breath was awful. She never saw him real good because it was dark and he had a bright light coming off his head that blinded her. He put her in a white van, and it was a big one because he was standing up with her. He put her in a bag that smelled like tennis shoes. It was tight at the top and she couldn’t get out. She cried for a long time while the car moved. He didn’t say anything. The radio had the news. Then the car stopped and he carried her into a room and put her on a bed. He let her out of the bag and put a dark thing over her head. She saw him for a second then. He had on a baseball hat and big sunglasses and something over his face. The hood had an opening for her to breathe through, but after she shook and moved around, she could see through it, just a little. The bedspread was red. It smelled like old people. They were in a room. There was a big glass wall with a snake in it and the snake was as big around as a telephone pole and about that long. It might not have been a real snake. The man stood and watched the snake for a while, and she saw him through the opening. He had a sharp, mean face and his hair was white and short. He wasn’t big or small or fat or thin. He went away and came back later dressed in something that was scaly. The scales were shiny, like a fish. Silver and gold and blue. He lay down on the bed beside her, with his back to her and he watched the snake. He moved funny. It was like he was crawling on his belly but not going anywhere. He had a hand on her while he did this. There was something up in the air behind her that made clicking noises every once in a while. She tried to scream and shake herself away from him, then he got over her and grabbed her arms and told her to be quiet because his mother was listening. He held real still then. Then he picked her up and carried her over to the glass. He put her up close to it and stood beside her. She couldn’t see anymore because the breathing hole went back down when he stood her up. He said, next time to the snake, or maybe to his mother. After a while he put her back in the bag. Then they drove in his car again and it stopped and he carried her inside the bag for a few minutes. He took her out of the bag and put something over her that he tied at the neck. It was a thing that rustled and felt dry when it brushed against her arms and legs. He cut the tape off her ankles but not her hands or mouth. Then she heard his footsteps on dried leaves and the footsteps got further away. After a long time she started walking. Then this lady came up and asked her if she was okay. Oh, and his eyes were brown.
And that was all.
Brittany fell asleep.
“We should go,” Abby whispered.
“Yes, you should. The deputies outside will take you to the Medical Center, where doctors can examine Brittany. They’re good and they’ll treat her well. Starting tonight, spend a few nights away from home. It’s going to be a while before she thinks of her bed as a friend. Please let me know where you are. Something that she’s forgotten for now could break this case. I’d like her to meet with our sketch artist as soon as possible. Tomorrow morning would be ideal for us.”
“Okay,” she said tentatively.
“It’s going to be all right. I’ve seen things turn out a lot... not as well as this.”
Abby pursed her lips. “I’m just renting. Should we move?”
“Yes.”
“How far?”
“I think around the corner would be far enough. It’s for Brittany. Not because of the guy who did this.”
She nodded and stood. Brittany draped over her shoulder like a big doll.
“The press will want to talk to you,” I said. “You can control their access, to a point. Don’t let them talk to Brittany. And don’t tell them Brittany saw him. Whatever you say, don’t say that.”
“Don’t worry. I won’t.”
“I know a reporter over at CNB who would handle this story professionally, and with respect for your privacy and your feelings. She knows what information to give out and what not to. She likes our unit and what we do. She’d spread the word, and it might help this not happen to someone else.”
“Is there more danger to us, if I talk?”
“That’s extremely unlikely. But there’s more danger to everyone else, if you don’t.”
She stood in front of me and managed to offer me her hand. I shook it with both of mine.
“I’ll talk to CNB on my own terms.”
“I’ll make that clear.”
I wrote my home phone on a card and slipped it into her purse.
“Call me tonight,” I said. “I want to know how you’re both doing, and I want to know what time you can meet with our artist tomorrow. I can’t tell you how important a good sketch can turn out to be. She’ll be real good to your girl.”
“I will. Thank you, Mr. Naughton.”
I held open the door for her and watched Brittany’s sleeping face slide past me. I thought of Ardith and the way she’d bring Matthew to our bed in the morning when he was just an infant, and how small his head looked against her. Odd how some things hurt so much to remember, but you won’t part with them for anything in the world.
I called Donna on my way back to the station. I left a Skip message and she called me back just as I was pulling into the Sheriff Department employees’ lot. I told her the girl was all right. Abducted, terrified and numb, but basically all right. I told her she had a scoop on the story — all she had to do was be good to a young mother and love me forever and without condition. I could tell she was at her desk.
“Be easier if I could see you once in a while ” she whispered.
“This evening, after work.”
“I’ll be talking to Abby Elder then, if you’re kind enough to give me her number.”
I did.
“Call her soon. You can be done with it by the time I leave here.”
“After Tonello’s, then?” she asked.
“Let’s skip that part.”
“Skipped, Skip. See you soon.”
“I look forward.”
“So do I, dear man. By the way, your best friend Jordan Ishmael called. He said there was about to be some big news coming out of the department. He said he’d be happy to keep me informed.”
“What in hell is that supposed to mean?”
“I was wondering if you might tell me. He tries to emit mystery, but comes off a glum bureaucrat.”
I wondered if he was trying to create a buzz over his Sheriff Department page on the Web, or something else related to his relentless, slow-motion pursuit of the department’s highest position. Maybe he was going to strip off his shirt, oil up his muscles and demonstrate his silent kill moves for the CNB cameras. Maybe he had secret video footage of my banged-up file cabinet.
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