When the call ended, Sandy said, “You guys seem to be in a good place.”
“Yes—it’s amazing the effect antidepressants can have on a rocky marriage.”
“It’s not just the drugs that pulled you through all this. You should also give yourself a little credit.”
“For what? Coming completely unstuck, and ending up in a psychiatric unit?”
“You had an illness . . .”
“So they keep telling me.”
“And you’re through the worst of it now.”
“So they keep telling me.”
“And Tony’s behaving himself.”
“I think we’ve established a kind of armistice between us.”
“Sounds better than a lot of marriages I know.”
“Like you and Dean?”
“We were doing fine . . . or, at least, that’s what I thought. Until he heeded the call of the wild.”
“Maybe he . . .”
“What? Hated the fact that I’d gotten fat and dumpy?”
“Stop that.”
“But it’s the truth.”
“No, the truth here is that Dean probably just needed a bit of drama in his life.”
She looked at me quizzically.
“Drama? I don’t follow.”
“He might have been perfectly content with you and the boys. But then this woman came along and . . .”
“Yeah?”
“Maybe he saw an opportunity for drama, that’s all. A new life out in the woods. Very romantic—until you realize that leading groups of tourists up and down the same mountain also gets boring. And ‘boring’ is the one thing in life we most fear . . . more so than death, I think. Because it accentuates the uselessness of everything. Which is why you should never underestimate the human need for drama—it makes us believe we’re all starring in this wide-screen epic of our own making, rather than getting bogged down in the usual day-to-day stuff.”
Sandy looked at me carefully.
“What was the name of those antidepressants you’re on?”
I certainly popped the specified two capsules when I woke the next morning. Then I called home. No answer in London—making me speculate that Cha must have taken Jack out for a walk in his stroller. So I called Tony on his cell, just to say a quick hello, but received his voicemail.
“Know you’re in Paris,” I said, “but I simply wanted to say a quick bonjour and tell you that I am so looking forward to getting home and seeing you guys.”
I spent the afternoon in a shopping mall with Sandy, buying a few baby clothes and even splurging on a Banana Republic leather jacket for Tony. I popped two more antidepressants at lunchtime, and dropped the final two tablets right after saying good-bye to my sister at Logan Airport—in which she became teary about yet again dispatching her sister to alien terrain.
“You’ll pull through this,” I told her. “Because you have to.”
Before I boarded the flight, I went to a phone and called the house in London, hoping to touch base with Cha before she went to sleep (or, for that matter, if she was still up, walking the floors with Jack). But there was no answer. I glanced at my watch: 7:15 in Boston, just after midnight in London. She was evidently having an easy night of it with the boy, and had already gone to sleep.
Which is exactly what I did after settling down into my large premium economy seat, silently thanking Tony for such a spontaneous act of generosity. When we were airborne, I screwed in a pair of earplugs, blacked out the world with an eyeshade, and let the tautness of the last few days give way to exhausted sleep.
Then we were in London—and as Tony said, there was a minicab driver waiting for me at the arrivals gate. We’d been shoved across the Atlantic at allegro con molto speed, and had therefore arrived forty minutes ahead of schedule. Which meant we were cruising down the M4 at 6:45 AM—and I was resisting the temptation to ring home on my cell phone, for fear of waking Tony or Cha.
We made Putney in record time—a mere half hour from the airport. The driver helped me to the front door with my bag. I took out my key and unlocked it, opening it as quietly as possible. I stepped inside. And immediately knew that something was astray. The front hallway had been stripped of a collection of framed historical photographs of Old Cairo that Tony had brought back from Egypt.
Maybe he’d decided to put them elsewhere in the house . . .
But then, as I headed up the stairs toward the nursery, I glanced sideways into the living room. This stopped me dead. Almost all the bookshelves had been emptied, along with Tony’s extensive collection of CDs, and the fancy overpriced stereo he’d treated himself to shortly after we moved in.
We’d been burgled.
I ran up the stairs, shouting for Tony. I threw open the nursery door. Nothing . . . by which, I mean: no crib, no playpen, no toys, no baby carrier, no Jack. I stood in the middle of the empty room—divested of all its furniture, all its toys, and every bit of clothing I’d bought for him.
I blinked in shock. This wasn’t a burglary.
Then I dashed upstairs to Tony’s study. It had been completely stripped bare. I rushed down to our bedroom and flung open the wardrobe. All his clothes were gone, but mine were still there. And when I charged into the bathroom, all that I found in the medicine cabinet were my toiletries.
I reeled back into the bedroom. I sat down. I told myself: this isn’t making sense . . . this simply isn’t logical. My husband and my son have vanished.
NINE
IT TOOK ME several minutes to force myself up off the bed. I had no idea where this story was going. All I knew was: I had just walked into a nightmare.
The kitchen. It was the one room in the house I’d yet to check. I stood up. I went downstairs—and immediately saw that the sterilizer, all baby bottles, and the high chair we’d bought were gone. So too was the entire stock of formula, diapers, baby wipes, and all other infant paraphernalia.
I couldn’t fathom it. Someone had come along and expunged every trace of Tony and Jack from the house. No sign of them remained whatsoever.
I grabbed the phone and punched in the number of Tony’s cell phone. I was instantly connected with his voicemail. My voice was decidedly shaky as I spoke. “Tony, it’s me. I’m home. And I must know what’s going on. Now. Please. Now.”
Then I rang his office—on the wild off-chance that he might be in at seven-something in the morning. Again I was connected to his voicemail. Again I left the same message.
Then I rang Cha. No voicemail this time. Just a computer-generated voice informing me that the cell phone I was ringing had been switched off.
I leaned against the kitchen counter. I didn’t know what to do next.
The front doorbell rang. I ran toward it, hoping against hope that Tony was outside with Jack in his arms. Instead, I found myself facing a large beefy guy in his late twenties. He was in a tight, ill-fitting suit, a white shirt open at the collar, a tie dappled by food stains. He had no neck—just a straight roll of fat from his chin to his collarbone. He radiated greasy menace.
“Sally Goodchild?” he asked.
“Yes, that’s me,” I said.
“Got something for you,” he said, opening his briefcase.
“What?”
“I’m serving you with papers,” he said, all but shoving a large document in my hand.
“Papers? What sort of papers?”
“An ex parte court order, luv,” he said, thrusting a large envelope into my hand.
Job done, he turned and left.
I tore open the envelope and read. It was an order given by the Honorable Mr. Justice Thompson, yesterday at the High Court of Justice. I read it once, I read it twice. It didn’t make sense. Because what it stated was that, after an ex parte hearing in front of Mr. Justice Thompson the court had granted Anthony Hobbs of 42 Albert Bridge Road, London SW11, ex parte interim custody of his son, Jack Hobbs, until a further order was given.
I ran down the street until I caught up with the process serv
er, getting into his parked car.
“You’ve got to explain this to me,” I said.
“Not my job, luv,” he said.
“Please,” I said. “I need to know . . .”
“Get yourself a solicitor, luv. He’ll know what to do.”
He drove off.
I went back to the house. I sat down at the kitchen table. I tried to reread the court order again. Three sentences into it, I dropped it, clasped my arms around me, and felt the sort of deep chill that sparked off a low-level internal tremor.
This can’t be happening . . . this can’t be . . .
I stood up. I looked at the clock on the wall. Seven fifty-seven. I grabbed the phone. I tried Tony again. His voicemail answered again. I said, “Tony—I don’t know what sort of game you’re playing here . . . but you have to talk to me now.”
The court has granted Anthony Hobbs of 42 Albert Bridge Road, London SW11 . . .
I got to my feet. I opened the kitchen cabinet and reached into the bowl where all car and extra house keys were kept. The car keys were gone. Which meant that he had taken the car along with . . .
A wave of terror seized me.
After an ex parte hearing in front of Mr. Justice Thompson . . .
Why did he need a hearing? What was he arguing? What did I do that merited . . . ?
I reached again for the phone and called the local minicab company. They had a car at my front door in five minutes. I gave the driver the address: 42 Albert Bridge Road, SW11.
We headed right into rush-hour traffic. The driver was a recent arrival in England. He had yet to master the A-to-Z atlas of city streets, and his battered C-reg Volvo was in need of a new set of shocks. But he kept humming contentedly to himself as we sat, becalmed, in eight AM gridlock. He also lost his way twice—but seemed genuinely concerned by my ever-growing agitation in the backseat.
“It’s okay,” he said. “I get you there.”
But it took nearly an hour to negotiate the two-mile crawl to Albert Bridge Road. When we arrived, some instinct told me to ask him to wait for a moment while I got out of the cab and negotiated the ten steps up an imposing three-story-over-basement Victorian town house. I used the brass door knocker to announce my arrival, whacking it frantically. After a moment, it was opened by a diminutive, olive-skinned woman with tired eyes and a Hispanic accent.
“Yes?” she asked, looking at me warily.
Peering over her shoulder, I got a glimpse of the entrance foyer. Very minimalist. Very sleek. Very architect designed. Very expensive.
“Who lives here?”
“Miss Dexter.”
“Anyone else?”
“She has a friend.”
“What’s his name?”
“Mr. Tony.”
“And does Mr. Tony have a little boy?”
“A beautiful little boy,” she said, actually smiling.
“Are they here now?”
“They’ve gone away.”
“Where?”
“The country.”
“Whereabouts?”
“I don’t know. Miss Dexter has a place in the country.”
“Do you have a phone number, an address?”
“I can’t give . . .”
She began to shut the door. I put my foot in its way.
“I’m the little boy’s mother. I just need to know . . .”
“I can’t,” she said.
“Please help me here.”
“You have to go.”
“Just a phone number. I’m—”
The word “desperate” was on my lips, but I couldn’t get it out, as I found myself overwhelmed by despair and shock. The housekeeper looked at me with alarm.
“Please,” I whispered.
She glanced around nervously, as if somebody could be watching us, then said, “They went to his office.”
“When?”
“Half an hour ago. They had to stop there before they went to the country.”
I touched the top of her hand.
“Thank you.”
I walked quickly back to the cab.
“Can you get me to Wapping now?”
En route, I tried to process the limited information I’d received. The woman was named Dexter. She obviously had money—not just for that big Albert Bridge Road pile, but also for a country place. And the fact that my husband was referred to as Mr. Tony meant . . .
What? That he’d been around and about this house since . . . ?
After an ex parte hearing in front of Mr. Justice Thompson . . .
I reached for my phone, about to try Tony’s cell phone again. But then I stopped myself, thinking that if he knew I was on my way to the Chronicle, he’d have a chance to run interference or . . .
What is he doing? What?
“Get yourself a solicitor, luv. He’ll know what to do.”
But I knew no solicitors in London. I really knew no one here. No one at all I could call now and say . . .
No, this was all too absurd. This was some horrible prank, some fantastical misunderstanding that had ballooned into . . .
And he was so friendly on the phone when I was back in Boston. Before then, he couldn’t have been more considerate when Sandy’s ex fell off the mountain. Go, darling, go . . . and here’s a better class of air ticket to make your journey more comfortable. Because while you’re out of town . . .
Stop it, stop it—you sound like one of those demented conspiracy theorists.
We approached the Wapping gates. I paid the driver £30 and then approached the security cordon—a place Tony always referred to as Checkpoint Charlie. But instead of the Stasi on duty, I found myself face-to-face with a uniformed guard at a little visitors’ booth.
“Can I help you?” he asked.
“I’m here to see my husband,” I said.
“Which paper does he work for?”
“The Chronicle. Tony Hobbs—the foreign editor.”
“Oh right, him. And you’re his missus?”
I nodded. As he rang a number, he asked me to take a seat. He spoke into the phone, explained who I was, and then heard something from the person on the other end that made him cast a sideways glance at me, as if I was potential trouble. After he hung up, he turned to me and said, “Someone will be out here in a moment.”
“Someone?” I said, standing up. “Didn’t you speak with my husband?”
“Someone will explain . . .”
“Explain what?”
“She’ll be here shortly,” the guard said.
“Who is she?”
The guard looked a little alarmed by my raised voice. But instead of saying anything, he just turned away from me and busied himself with paperwork.
So I sat down in one of the plastic waiting room chairs, clutching myself tightly. A minute or so later, Judith Crandall walked in. She was Tony’s secretary—a woman in her late fifties who had been working for the foreign desk since she joined the paper thirty years earlier. “The original Chronicle lifer,” as Tony called her (takes one to know one)—and someone who knew where all the bodies were buried. She was also a rabid chain smoker, and had a lit cigarette in hand as she approached me. Her face looked grim, uneasy.
“Hello, Sally,” she said.
“What’s going on?” I said, my voice loud again.
She sat down in the chair next to mine and pulled it toward me, so we were huddling together conspiratorially.
“Tony resigned from the paper yesterday,” she said.
This took a moment to register.
“You’re lying,” I said.
She took a deep drag off her cigarette.
“I wish I was.”
“Why?”
“You’ll have to ask him.”
“But he’s here, isn’t he?”
“He was here—until about fifteen minutes ago.”
“You’re lying. He’s here. With Jack.”
She stubbed out her cigarette and immediately lit up another one.
“I am not lying,” she said in a low, conspiratorial whisper. “He left fifteen minutes ago.”
“With my son?”
“He was on his own. He showed up with his car and cleared his desk. Then he came over to a few of us and said good-bye and left.”
“Did he give you any forwarding address?”
“Albert Bridge Road in Battersea.”
“Same address that was in the court order . . .”
She said nothing, but looked away—which is when I knew that she was aware of everything that had happened.
“Who’s this other woman?” I asked.
“I don’t know.”
“You do know,” I said.
“He didn’t talk about her.”
“Please . . .”
“I’m serious.”
“Liar,” I shouted.
The guard stepped off from behind his desk and approached me.
“I’m going to have to ask you to leave now.”
“Sally,” Judith said, taking me by the hand, “this is doing no good.”
“He took my child. You know that. He’s disappeared with my son. And now I’m not leaving. Because I know you’re hiding him. I know it.”
That last sentence came out as a shriek—causing Judith and the guard to blanch. He recovered quickly, however, and said, “I’m saying this just once: you leave now of your own accord, or I will be forced to escort you off the premises myself. And if you fight us, I will have no choice but to call the police.”
Judith was about to reach for my hand but thought better of it.
“Please, Sally, don’t make him do that.”
“You know everything, don’t you?” I said, my voice a near-whisper. “You know who this Dexter woman is, and how long he’s been seeing her, and why he’s taken out an order barring me from . . .”
The Douglas Kennedy Collection #1 Page 89