Fear the Worst: A Thriller

“I suppose.” As grateful as I was to Yolanda Mills for giving me a lead on where to find Syd, I didn’t want to get into a discussion with her about why all this might have happened.

 

“Here’s the thing,” she said. “I can’t say for a hundred percent that that’s your little girl. I could be wrong.”

 

“But you might be right,” I said.

 

“Would it help if I sent a picture?”

 

I felt as though I might fall out of my chair. “A picture? You have a picture of Sydney? In Seattle?”

 

“Well, it’s not a very good one. I’ve had this phone for ages that will take pictures, but I’ve never been able to figure out how to do it, you know? I’m not really a gadget person. So I was fiddling with it at the shelter, taking random shots just to see if I could figure out which buttons to push, and your daughter happened to walk by when I was taking one of them. Her and a few others, but there’s one shot where it’s just her.”

 

I knew that if I saw that picture, I would know.

 

“Can you email it to me?” I asked.

 

“I know that can be done, but like I was saying, it’s been all I can do to figure out how to make it take a picture. I haven’t any idea how to upload it or download it, or whatever it is you do, to a computer. But my husband understands all that and he’ll be home in the morning. He works an overnight shift. But when he gets home, I could have him do it.”

 

Even though things suddenly seemed to be happening quickly, it would be an eternity waiting until morning to see that picture.

 

Kate, who’d been standing a few feet away, unable to hear the other end of the conversation, gently tapped my shoulder, rubbed her thumb and two fingers together, the money sign.

 

“Listen,” I said to Yolanda Mills, “is there any way I can repay you for this? Are you looking for a reward or anything?”

 

“A reward?” she said, and nearly sounded offended. “That wouldn’t be very Christian, would it?”

 

 

 

NINE

 

 

WHEN I FINISHED MY CALL WITH YOLANDA MILLS, I felt I’d had twenty coffees injected directly into my bloodstream. My body was shaking, and I couldn’t decide what to do first.

 

“I have to call Susanne,” I said. “No, not yet. This woman, she’s going to send me the picture in the morning. I need to call the detective. Kip Jennings. She could get someone from the Seattle police to put out one of those APB things or whatever on Syd. They could get the entire police force—”

 

“Tim,” Kate said. “Just hold on a second. You have—”

 

“I have to book a flight,” I said. “Maybe there’s a flight out tonight.” I whirled back around in the chair and started tapping at keys.

 

“You just need to take a minute,” Kate said. “You don’t even know for sure it’s Syd. You won’t know that until you see the picture, and even then, you may not know. Those cell phone shots, they’re not always the best. And you just wait. Whoever that Yolanda woman is, you can be sure she’s going to be wanting some kind of reward at some point. If it’s one thing I’ve learned, it’s that everyone’s always got an agenda, you know what I’m saying? They smile at you, but they’re just lying through their teeth, trying to figure out how they can screw you over. What you should do is—”

 

I turned and snapped, “For fuck’s sake, Kate, enough.”

 

She put a hand to her cheek as though I’d slapped her.

 

“Everyone’s always out to get you, aren’t they?” I said. “Your ex-husband, the people you work with, your landlord? Is there anyone out there who isn’t making your life a living hell?”

 

She looked at me and said, “Evidently not.”

 

“Oh, so now I’m doing it, too.”

 

She studied me a moment, then seemed to come to a realization. “You’ve used this whole thing with your daughter as an excuse to break off with me.”

 

I was too stunned to say anything right away. Then I almost laughed. “What?”

 

“You never return my calls. I know you look and see if it’s me calling and don’t pick up.”

 

“Kate,” I said.

 

“Is that what I was for you? A good fuck and now it’s over?”

 

“Kate, I don’t have time for this discussion right now. I have to book a flight.”

 

“You see? You’re doing it right now. It’s what my therapist calls an avoidance strategy.”

 

“Your therapist?”

 

“Just tell me, Tim. Is your daughter actually missing? Or is she just off at summer camp somewhere? Were you even talking to some woman from Seattle just then?”

 

I leaned back in my chair, let my arms hang down at my sides. Exhaustion, defeat, take your pick.

 

“I have a lot to do, Kate,” I said, keeping my voice as even as possible. And then I said something that was probably very stupid. “What do I owe you for the Chinese food?”

 

“Fuck you,” she said and went down the stairs.

 

I got out of the chair as if to follow, then decided there really wasn’t any point. I heard some containers of Chinese food being thrown around the kitchen, then the slamming of a door.

 

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