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Stolen In The Night Part 25

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Tess ran the gauntlet of a bunch of reporters who, despite the police warnings, had rea.s.sembled outside the Stone Hill Inn. She avoided making eye contact with any of them.

"Do you know who took your son?" one of them shouted.

"Any news yet, Tess?" another called out.

"Do you feel you're being punished because of Lazarus Abbott?" cried a third.

Tess jerked open the door to the inn. She was shaking as she entered the foyer. Officer Virgilio was leaning against the sitting room door frame, talking on his cell phone, while the other larger man, Officer Swain, stood in the library, jiggling one foot as he leafed through the newspaper. He looked up as Tess appeared in the hallway.



"Is there any news, Officer Swain?" Tess asked.

"Sorry, ma'am," he said putting down the paper. He sounded sincerely sorry.

Tess nodded and sighed. "Those reporters are back. My nerves are really on edge. I can't stand much more of this hara.s.sment."

Mac Swain set the paper down on the table. "I'll get rid of them for you, ma'am," he said with quiet determination.

He walked outside and Tess could hear him ordering the reporters to vacate the premises. Tess shook her head. It was like trying to chase away a swarm of gnats. They might disperse for a moment, but she knew they would be back. Still, the sound of their grumbling retreat made her feel slightly better. Mac Swain opened the door and came back into the house.

"Thank you, Officer," she said.

"Happy to do it," he said.

"Have you seen my mother?" Tess asked.

Swain shook his head. "Sorry."

"Never mind," said Tess. She walked back to the kitchen and then over to her mother's quarters, tapping on the voile-curtained French doors. "Mom?"

Julie opened the French doors, clutching a wadded tissue in her hand. She was wearing a shirt-style jacket of colorful squares of fabric. Her eyes were red-rimmed and angry. "Oh, it's you," she said in an accusing tone.

"I'm looking for Mom," said Tess.

"She went out. With Mr. Phalen," said Julie.

"With Phalen?" Tess cried. "What is she thinking? Didn't you try to stop her?"

"She's a grown woman, for G.o.d's sake. Besides, I have my own problems," Julie said petulantly.

"What happened at the police station?" Tess asked. "Is Jake still there?"

"Yes, he's still there," said Julie, shutting the door behind Tess. "Of course he's still there. Why in the world did you send that attorney down there with him?"

"Because I thought they were going to arrest him. You know Jake publicly threatened Nelson Abbott. He needed an attorney."

"Maybe so. But not that Ramsey guy," Julie insisted. "The police absolutely loathe him. It's doing more harm than good to have him there." Julie collapsed in a patchwork heap on Dawn's couch. "Jake would have been better off on his own. He's known most of those cops for years. They probably would have been nice to him if he hadn't come in with that shyster lawyer. They blame that lawyer for everything that's happened."

Tess dug her nails into her palms and counted to ten. "Look, I'm sorry you feel that way. I was just trying to help Jake."

"Some help." Julie sniffed.

Tess raised her hands, palms out. "I can't...I don't know what to say. I'm a little preoccupied right now. My son is missing. He's out there all alone with a killer..."

Julie's eyes watered again and she immediately looked sheepish. She dabbed at her red nose with the mangled tissue. "I know. I didn't forget Erny. I never would."

Tess realized that this was true, but still, she felt a little bruised. She glanced at the door to be sure it was shut and then spoke in a low, angry voice. "I'll tell you something else. I know who is responsible for all of this. The chief of police is responsible, so if you want to blame someone, blame him."

Julie blinked away her tears and stared at Tess. "What are you talking about? Are you crazy?"

"No, I'm not crazy."

"Then where did you get an idea like that?" Then she frowned in disapproval. "Is this why you wanted Rusty Bosworth's address?"

Tess sighed. "Yes. And I got it from Charmaine. I went to his condo but Erny wasn't there. That would be too easy. He's put him somewhere else."

"Put him...? What are you talking about? Now you think that Rusty Bosworth killed Nelson? And took Erny? Did you tell that to the police?" Julie asked.

Tess looked at her balefully. "Sure," she said. "Tell them I suspect the chief."

Julie shook her head. "I don't know, Tess. I can't picture Rusty Bosworth doing something like that."

"Yeah, well, I'm sure you can't..." Tess said dismissively.

"I mean, the last I knew, you were blaming it all on Nelson Abbott," said Julie.

Tess turned on her sister-in-law. "I wasn't blaming him. I had information."

"Well, it couldn't have been very good information."

"It was incomplete," Tess snapped.

"Wrong, you mean," said Julie. "Just like with Lazarus."

Tess gasped, as if she had been slapped. "Thanks, Julie. Thanks a lot. You're a big help." She turned on her heel and left the apartment, slamming the French doors behind her. She felt cornered, with nowhere to turn. The police were still camped out down the hall. And outside the reporters were, no doubt, still lurking. Tess went to her room, opened the door, and looked at the two beds. Hers was neatly made while Erny's was thrown together, the bedspread lumpy, the pillow askew. Tess went over to his bed and sat down on the edge, taking his pillow up and holding it to her heart, burying her face in it, rocking back and forth as the tears she had tried to hold in all day began to fall. Tess felt as if she couldn't breathe, as if she couldn't catch her breath any longer. In her heart she kept saying his name: Erny. Where are you? Are you still alive?

As a child, she had only told the truth as she knew it. The adults around her had done the rest. But perhaps the perverse order of the universe had ruled that she had not yet suffered enough for her unwitting part in the injustice done to Lazarus Abbott. How much, she wondered, do I have to lose before my debt is paid? Where is my boy? she thought.

She felt as if Julie had attacked her when she was at her weakest. Attacked her when she didn't need reminding of her failings. She never forgot, not for one moment, that it was her word that sealed the fate of Lazarus Abbott. She may have ignored those reporters, but she had heard their insinuations.

They had no idea what was in her heart. None of them. They did not know what it was like to grow up in the aftermath of such a crime. Tess remembered the day of the execution with utter clarity. The family had been told they could attend the actual execution at the prison, but they all declined. Even Jake. When Lazarus was executed, Tess was at college, hiding in a library carel pretending to study, waiting for the news to come that would "end" her family's suffering.

But after it was over, long before she learned that Lazarus might not be guilty, Tess learned the sorry truth about vengeance and closure. After the execution was done, Tess realized that she felt no better for it. No less guilty for having stayed quiet as her sister was stolen in the night. No less secretly angry at Jake for having left them alone in the tent that night to go to a dance. Vengeance would not bring back her innocent, lovely sister or spare her father from the anguish that had led to his fatal heart attack. Or heal her family. She understood, too late, that the execution of Lazarus Abbott, even when she believed him to be guilty, had done no good. No good at all.

The bedroom door opened and Dawn came in wearing her car coat with the collar turned up. "Tess, are you all right?"

Tess furtively wiped her tears away. She got up from the bed, sniffling, and walked to the door where her mother stood. "Where were you?"

"Ken and I have been out driving around, looking for Erny. I've just come home to change into some rubber boots. We want to walk up the bridle path to the campground. At least as far as they'll let us go. Maybe I'll see something they missed. It's worth a try. I can't sit here and do nothing. Did you have any luck?"

Tess shook her head and followed her mother out of the bedroom.

"All right, let me see if I can find those boots," said Dawn as she turned down the hall to head for the mudroom. "Tess, go put a sweater on. You're shaking."

Tess didn't feel like arguing. Obediently, she pulled on a warm sweater and then walked down the hall. She looked into the sitting room. Kenneth Phalen was sitting in the Windsor chair by the fireplace. He seemed to feel Tess's gaze and looked up.

"Tess. I'm so sorry about your boy," said Ken. "I thought I'd help your mother look for him. You have to help in the search at a time like this. Just to keep your sanity."

"Yes," said Tess.

"I know how it feels when your child is missing. I'll never forget that sense of helplessness when we couldn't find Lisa." He shook his head. "She ran away about a dozen times before...the final time."

"Erny did not run away," said Tess. "That's what the police want us to believe, but it's not true. Somebody took him."

"Oh, I know. I know. But the feeling is the same. Just the sheer terror that something awful is going to happen to them. I can't tell you how many nights I went out looking for Lisa, making bargains with G.o.d that if I found her and she was all right.... Well, when they get into drugs, it's a nightmare."

Tess crossed her arms over her chest. "Kids don't just...get into drugs, do they? I mean, aren't there warning signs that they're very troubled to begin with?"

There was a flicker of resentment in Ken's eyes. And then it subsided. "How old is your son?"

"Ten," said Tess.

Ken shook his head. "Well, that's what you tell yourself now. You think that you'll make sure your kid has a happy life and then it won't ever happen to them."

"Isn't there some truth to that?" said Tess.

Ken shrugged. "If you're lucky," he said.

Dawn came down the hall wearing her rubber "Wellies." "Ken, are you ready?"

Ken rose immediately to his feet. "Sure," he said. He put on the gray parka that was hanging from a hook by the door. Then he pulled a walking stick from the umbrella stand. "Might need this," he said.

"Well," said Tess stiffly, "I appreciate your...helping out."

He grasped her shoulder briefly. "Courage," he said.

Tess felt tears spring to her eyes and she avoided his gaze.

"Let's go out the front," said Dawn. "We'll walk around the inn."

"Okay," said Ken. He led the way out the front door.

"Tess, walk us out. Get a breath of air," said Dawn.

Tess did as she was told, walking arm in arm with her mother out the front. Tess pulled her sweater tight around her and scanned the parking lot.

"I guess the vultures have scattered for the moment."

"They'll be back," said Dawn grimly. "Ken has his cell phone with him. We'll check in with you soon."

Tess nodded and breathed in the damp, gray air. "Thanks."

"Don't be afraid," said Dawn.

Tess released her mother reluctantly. Dawn stepped off the front step and started down the path where Ken had led. He was using the walking stick to part the gra.s.ses as he went along. Dawn turned back to look at Tess. "I won't be gone long." Then she frowned. "Now, what's that doing there?" Dawn asked as she spotted something out of place in the inn's carefully maintained front yard. She walked back across the gravel and picked up the pole that was propped against the latticework behind the bench.

Tess looked at the object Dawn was holding. "Oh," she said, "that's the fishing pole Erny made. Jake brought it over."

Dawn's expression softened as she looked at the makeshift fishing rod. "Oh," she said. "That's wonderful. What a kid."

"Oh, Mom," Tess cried.

Dawn shook her head and handed the pole to Tess. "Don't, Tess. Don't give up. You go put it in the mudroom. He'll be using it again before you know it," she said firmly.

"I will," said Tess.

"We'll be back soon," Dawn promised and then she disappeared around the side of the house.

Tess nodded and clutched the pole to her chest with both hands. She waved at her mother, though Dawn was already out of sight. Then Tess sank down on the bench, planting the fishing rod on the stone step in front of her and gazed at it. She could picture her son making it. Busily hunting up the elements he needed for the job. The long tomato plant stake. The twine, which had probably been used to secure the vine to the stake. Where did he find this stuff? she thought, smiling through her tears. Jake's house? Neither Jake nor Julie was much of a gardener. Then she remembered Jake saying that they were out at the Whitman farm. He probably found this stuff in one of their many fields that Nelson Abbott had tended so dutifully over the years. Luckily Nelson would never know that Erny had lifted this pole and twine from his garden to fashion a fishing rod.

Tess clutched the childish contraption to her, to her heart. He was hoping to catch a big fish and instead...

Tess pulled the twine through her fingers until she came to the small, rectangular metal lure that he had clumsily secured to the end of the twine through an eye at one end of the rectangle. She took the piece of metal in her fingers and turned it over. Then her heart leaped to her throat.

Erny's lure was a silver medallion, worn and scratched by time and dirt. Engraved on it was one word: "Believe." Tess felt confused and...suddenly frightened, as if she had stepped out of an open door and found herself on a high ledge. Mine? she thought, examining the medal. It had to be. The blood was pounding in her ears as Tess fumbled inside the top of her turtleneck and pulled out her own chain. Her medallion was still there, as it always was. Her hands shook as she put the two medallions together and saw that they were the same, although the one attached to the twine was scratched and battered. She turned the fishing lure/medallion over again and peered at it more closely. Etched faintly into the back, barely visible, were three numbers. Tess's heart was thudding and there seemed to be a rushing sound in the air around her. The three numbers formed a date. It took her a moment to comprehend it. Her brain felt woolly and it was difficult to make those numbers correspond to a day, a month, a year. To the date they represented. To Phoebe's date of birth.

CHAPTER 28.

"Phoebe?" she whispered, squeezing the battered medallion as if it were an amulet and she could summon her long-lost sister by breathing her name over it. "Phoebe..."

For one moment, she felt suspended in time. Felt as if, somehow, because she was holding this long-missing talisman, she might turn around and everything would be different. Her blonde-haired sister, still thirteen, in sweatpants and braces, would be hovering behind her, close enough to touch. Smiling at her...Phoebe's face, so long lost, now nearly forgotten, was suddenly vivid in Tess's mind's eye. Tess tried to hold on to it, to keep it with her somehow, but the edges began to blur and the image faded. Tess's heart sank and she felt as if a magic spell had been broken.

She looked down at the twine laced through her fingers. She had to free the medallion from the knot Erny had made to fasten it to his fishing line. There was no sensation in her fingers. They were white and numb. Somehow she managed to rapidly sort through the childish system of knots until she worked the end free and the twine fell away, coiled like a slinky, and she was able to pull the medallion loose. She pressed it, for a moment, to her lips. Phoebe. Your necklace. You were wearing it that last day....

The unpleasant tang of metal against her tongue jolted her back to the reality of the present. Her thoughts of Phoebe were replaced by thoughts of her son, who had recovered Phoebe's necklace. Found it, obviously, in the place where he found the tomato stake and the twine. Found it in the place where Phoebe's killer had hidden her, so long ago. At the Whitman farm. Where Nelson Abbott, his son, Lazarus, and his nephew had all worked.

Tess stood up on unsteady legs and ran toward the corner of the house where Ken and her mother had recently disappeared. She looked down the path, but there was no sign of them. "Mother!" she cried out. Tess felt almost dizzy with longing to show this relic of Phoebe's life and death to Dawn. Oh my G.o.d. Mom. Wait until you see what I have found. What Erny found...

But her shouts dispersed in the air. Dawn and Ken were nowhere in sight nor within shouting distance, apparently. Tess tried to gather her thoughts. Maybe she could call Dawn on her cell phone. But as soon as she thought of it, she knew it was futile. Dawn was from another generation. She never took her cell phone along on a walk. Dawn said that Ken had his, but Tess didn't know his number.

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Stolen In The Night Part 25 summary

You're reading Stolen In The Night. This manga has been translated by Updating. Author(s): Patricia MacDonald. Already has 365 views.

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