Harlan Coben 3 Novel Collection

Home > Mystery > Harlan Coben 3 Novel Collection > Page 91
Harlan Coben 3 Novel Collection Page 91

by Harlan Coben


  “You get them high?”

  “Not like you think. Come on, I’ll show you.”

  She started down the bright yellow corridor. He stayed by her side. She walked with her shoulders back and head high. The key was in her hand. She unlocked a door and started down the stairs. Mike followed.

  It was a nightclub or disco or whatever you call them nowadays. It had the cushioned benches and round tables that lit up and the low stools. There was a DJ booth and a wooden floor, no mirrored ball but a bunch of colored lights that swirled in patterns. The words CLUB JAGUAR were spray-painted graffiti style against a back wall.

  “This is what teens want,” Rosemary McDevitt said. “A place to blow off steam. To party and hang with friends. We don’t serve alcohol, but we serve virgin drinks that look like alcohol. We have good-looking bartenders and waitresses. We do what the best clubs do. But the key is, we keep them safe. Do you understand? Kids like your son drive in and try to get fake IDs. They want to buy drugs or find a way to get alcohol even though they are underage. We are trying to prevent that by channeling it in a healthier way.”

  "With this place?”

  “In part. We also offer counseling, if they need that. We offer book clubs and therapy groups and we have a room with Xbox and Playsta- tion 3 and all the rest of what you often associate with a teen center. But this place is the key. This place is what makes us, pardon the teenage vernacular, cool.”

  “Rumor has it that you serve.”

  “Rumor is wrong. Most of the rumors are started by the other clubs because they’re losing business to us.”

  Mike said nothing.

  “Look, let’s say your son came into the city to party. He could go down Third Avenue over there and buy cocaine from one alley. The guy in the stoop fifty yards away from here sells heroin. You name it, the kids buy it. Or they sneak into a club where they’ll get wasted or worse. We protect them here. They can get their release in safety.”

  “Do you take in street kids too?”

  “We wouldn’t turn them away, but there are other organizations better equipped for that. We aren’t trying to change lives in that way because frankly I don’t think that works. A kid gone bad or from a wrecked home needs more than what we offer. Our goal is to help keep the basically good kids from slipping up. It is almost the opposite problem—parents are too involved nowadays. They are on their kids twenty-four/seven. The teens today have no room to rebel.”

  The argument was one he had made to Tia many times over the years. We are too all over them. Mike used to walk the streets by himself. On Saturdays he would play in Branch Brook Park all day and not come back until late. Now his own kids couldn’t cross the street without him or Tia watching carefully, afraid of . . . of what exactly?

  “So you give them that room?”

  “Right.”

  He nodded. “Who runs this place?

  “I do. I started it three years ago after my brother died of a drug overdose. Greg was a good kid. He was sixteen. He didn’t play sports so he wasn’t popular or anything. Our parents and society in general were too controlling. It was only maybe the second time he had done drugs.”

  “I’m sorry.”

  She shrugged, started for the stairs. He followed her up in silence.

  “Ms. McDevitt?”

  “Rosemary,” she said.

  “Rosemary. I don’t want my son to become another statistic. He came here last night. Now I don’t know where he is.”

  “I can’t help you.”

  “Have you seen him before?”

  Her back was still to him. “I have a bigger mission here, Mike.” “So my son is expendable?”

  “That’s not what I said. But we don’t talk to parents. Not ever. This is a place for teens. If it gets out—”

  “I won’t tell anyone.”

  “It is part of our mission statement.”

  “And what if Adam is in danger?”

  “Then I would help if I could. But that’s not the case here.”

  Mike was about to argue, but he spotted a bunch of the goths down the corridor.

  “Those some of your clients?” he asked, entering her office.

  “Clients and facilitators.”

  “Facilitators?”

  “They sort of do everything. They help keep the place clean. They party at night. And they watch the club.”

  “Like bouncers?”

  She tilted her head back and forth. “That’s probably too strong a term. They help the newbies fit in. They help maintain control. They keep an eye on the place, make sure no one lights up or does drugs in the bathroom, that kind of thing.”

  Mike made a face. “The inmates controlling the prison.”

  “They’re good kids.”

  Mike looked at them. Then back at Rosemary. He studied her for a second. She was fairly spectacular to look at. She had a model’s face, the kind with cheekbones that could double as letter openers. He glanced back at the goths. There were four, maybe five of them, all a haze of black and silver. They were trying to look tough and failing miserably.

  “Rosemary?”

  “Yes?”

  “Something about your rap isn’t working with me,” Mike said.

  “My rap?”

  “Your sales pitch for this place. On one level it all makes sense.”

  “And on another?”

  He turned and looked at her straight on. “I think you’re full of crap. Where is my son?”

  “You should leave now.”

  “If you’re hiding him, I’m going to tear this place down brick by brick.”

  “You’re now trespassing, Dr. Baye.” She looked down the corridor at the group of goths and gave a small nod. They shuffled toward Mike, surrounding him. “Please leave now.”

  “Are you going to have your”—he made quote marks with his fin- gers—“ ‘facilitators’ toss me out?”

  The tallest goth smirked and said, “Looks like you’ve already been tossed around, old man.”

  The other goths giggled. There was a soft blend of black and pale and mascara and metal. They wanted so to be tough and they weren’t and maybe that made them that much scarier. That desperation. That want to be something that you are not.

  Mike debated his next move. The tall goth was probably in his early twenties, lanky, big Adam’s apple. Part of Mike wanted to go for the sucker punch—just deck the son of a bitch, take out the leader, show them he meant business. Part of him wanted to go with a forearm blow to that bobbing throat, leave the goth with sore vocal chords for the next two weeks. But then the others would probably jump in. He might be able to take on two or three, but maybe not this many.

  He was still mulling over his next move when something caught his eye. The heavy metal door buzzed open. Another goth entered. It wasn’t the black clothes that made Mike pull up this time.

  It was the black eyes.

  The new goth also had a strip of tape across his nose.

  His recently broken nose, Mike thought.

  Some of the goths came over to the broken-nose guy and offered up lazy high fives. They moved as though swimming through pancake syrup. Their voices too were slow, lethargic, nearly Prozac induced. “Yo, Carson,” one managed to utter. “Carson, my man,” croaked another. They lifted their hands to slap his back as if this took great effort. Carson accepted the attention as though he was used to it and it was his due.

  “Rosemary?” Mike said.

  “Yes.”

  “You not only know my son, you know me.”

  “How’s that?”

  “You called me Dr. Baye.” He kept his eyes on the goth with the broken nose. “How did you know I was a doctor?”

  He didn’t wait for the answer. There was no point. He hurried toward the door, bumping the tall goth as he did. The one with the broken nose—Carson—saw him coming. The black eyes widened. Carson stepped back outside. Mike moved faster now, grabbing the metal door before it closed all the way, heading outside.
<
br />   Carson with the broken nose was maybe ten feet in front of him.

  “Hey!” Mike called out.

  The punk turned around. His jet-black hair dangled over one eye like a dark curtain.

  “What happened to your nose?”

  Carson tried to sneer through it. “What happened to your face?”

  Mike hurried over to him. The other goths were out the door. It was six against one. In his peripheral vision he saw Mo get out of the car and come toward them. Six against two—but Mo was one of the two. Mike might just take those odds.

  He moved up close, getting right into Carson’s broken nose and said, “A bunch of limp-dick cowards jumped me when I wasn’t looking. That’s what happened to my face.”

  Carson tried to keep the bravado in his voice. “That’s too bad.”

  “Well, thanks, but here’s the kicker. Can you imagine being a big enough loser to be one of the cowards who jumped me and ended up with a broken nose?”

  Carson shrugged. “Anyone could get in a lucky shot.”

  “That’s true. So maybe the limp-dick loser would like another chance. Man-to-man. Face-to-face.”

  The goth leader looked around now, making sure that he had his supporters in place. The other goths nodded back, adjusted metal bracelets, flexed their fingers, and made too much of an effort to look ready.

  Mo walked over to the tall goth and grabbed him by the throat before anyone could move. The goth tried to spit out a noise, but Mo’s grip kept any sound from coming out.

  “If anyone steps forward,” Mo said to him, “I hurt you. Not the guy who steps forward. Not the guy who interferes. You. I hurt you very badly, do you understand?”

  The tall goth tried to nod.

  Mike looked back at Carson. “You ready to go?”

  “Hey, I don’t got no beef with you.”

  “I have one with you.”

  Mike pushed him, school yard style. Taunting. The other goths looked confused, unsure of their next move. Mike pushed Carson again.

  “Hey!”

  “What did you guys do to my son?”

  “Huh? Who?”

  “My son, Adam Baye. Where is he?”

  “You think I know?”

  “You jumped me last night, didn’t you? Unless you want the beating of a lifetime, you better talk.”

  And then another voice said, “Everybody freeze! FBI!”

  Mike looked up. It was the two men with baseball caps, the ones following them before. They held guns in one hand, badges in the other.

  One of the officers said, “Michael Baye?”

  “Yes?”

  “Darryl LeCrue, FBI. We’re going to need you to come with us.”

  26

  AFTER saying good-bye to Betsy Hill, Tia closed the front door and headed upstairs. She crept down the corridor, past Jill’s room and into her son’s. She opened Adam’s desk drawer and started ri- fling through it. Putting that spy software on his computer had felt so right—so why didn’t this? Self-loathing rose up in her. It all felt wrong now, this whole invasion of privacy.

  But she didn’t stop looking.

  Adam was a kid. Still. The drawer hadn’t been cleaned out in forever, and there were remnants from past “Adam eras,” like something unearthed in an archeological dig. Baseball cards, Pokémon cards, Yu-Gi-Oh!, Yamaguchi with a long-dead battery, Crazy Bones—all the “in” items that kids collected and then dispensed with. Adam had been better than most about the must-have items. He didn’t beg for more or immediately toss them aside.

  She shook her head. They were still in his drawer.

  There were pens and pencils and his old orthodontia retainer case (Tia had constantly nagged him about not wearing it), collector pins from a trip to Disney World four years ago, old ticket stubs from a dozen Rangers games. She picked up the stubs and remembered the blend of joy and concentration on his face when he watched hockey. She remembered the way he and his father would celebrate when the Rangers scored, standing and high-fiving and singing the dumb goal-scoring song, which basically consisted of going “oh, oh, oh” and clapping.

  She started to cry.

  Pull it together, Tia.

  She turned to the computer. That was Adam’s world now. A kid’s room was about his computer. On that screen, Adam played the latest version of Halo online. He talked to both strangers and friends in chat rooms. He conversed with real and cyber buddies via Facebook and MySpace. He played a little online poker but got bored with it, which pleased Mike and Tia. There were funny briefs on YouTube and movie trailers and music videos and, yes, racy material. There were other adventure games or reality simulators or whatever you’d call them where a person could vanish in the same way Tia could vanish into a book, and it was so hard to know if it was a good thing or a bad thing.

  The whole sex thing nowadays too—it drove her mad. You want to make it right and control the flow of information for your kids, but that was impossible. Flip on any morning radio and the jocks riffed on boobs and infidelity and orgasms. You open up any magazine or turn on any television show, well, to complain about the nonstop eyeful is passé. So how do you handle it? Do you tell your child it’s wrong? And what’s wrong exactly?

  No wonder people found comfort in black-and-white answers like abstinence but come on, that doesn’t work and you don’t want to send the message that sex is somehow wrong or evil or even ta- boo—and yet, you don’t want them doing it. You want to tell them it is something good and healthy—but shouldn’t be done. So how exactly is a parent supposed to work that balance? Weirdly enough, we all want our children to have our outlook too, as if somehow ours, despite our parents’ screwups, is best and healthiest. But why? Were we raised exactly right or did we somehow find this balance on our own? Will they?

  “Hey, Mom.”

  Jill had come to the door. She gave her mother a puzzled look, surprised, Tia guessed, to see her in Adam’s room. There was a hush now. It lasted a second, no more, but Tia felt a cold gust across her chest.

  “Hey, sweetheart.”

  Jill was holding Tia’s BlackBerry. “Can I play BrickBreaker?”

  She loved to play the games on her mom’s BlackBerry. Normally this was the time when Tia would gently scold for not asking before taking her phone. Like most kids, Jill did it all the time. She would use the BlackBerry or borrow Tia’s iPod or use the bedroom computer because hers wasn’t as powerful or leave the portable phone in her room and then Tia couldn’t find it.

  Now, however, did not seem the time for the standard responsibility lecture.

  “Sure. But if anything buzzes, please give it to me right away.”

  “Okay.” Jill took in the whole room. “What are you doing in here?”

  “I’m looking around.”

  “For what?”

  “I don’t know. A clue to where your brother is, maybe.”

  “He’ll be okay, right?”

  “Of course, please don’t worry.” Then remembering that life does not stop and craving some form of normalcy, Tia asked, “Do you have any homework?”

  “It’s done.”

  “Good. Everything else okay?”

  Jill shrugged.

  “Anything you want to talk about?”

  “No, I’m fine. I’m just worried about Adam.”

  “I know, sweetheart. How are things at school?”

  Another shrug. Dumb question. Tia had asked both her children that question several thousand times over the years and never, not once, had she gotten an answer beyond a shrug or “fine” or “okay” or “school is school.”

  Tia left her son’s room then. There was nothing to find here. The printout from the E-SpyRight report was waiting for her. She closed her door and checked the pages. Adam’s friends Clark and Olivia had e-mailed him this morning, though the messages were rather cryptic. Both wanted to know where he was and mentioned that his parents had been calling around looking for him.

  There was no e-mail from DJ Huff.

 
; Hmm. DJ and Adam conversed a lot. Suddenly no e-mail—as if maybe he knew that Adam wouldn’t be around to reply.

  There was a gentle knock on her door. “Mom?”

  “You can open it.”

  Jill turned the knob. “I forgot to tell you. Dr. Forte’s office called. I have a dentist appointment for Tuesday.”

  “Right, thanks.”

  “Why do I have to go to Dr. Forte’s anyway? I just had a cleaning.”

  The mundane. Again Tia welcomed it. “You may need braces soon.”

  “Already?”

  “Yes. Adam was your . . .” She stopped.

  “My what?”

  She turned back to the E-SpyRight report on her bed, the current one, but it wouldn’t help. She needed the one with the original e-mail, the one about the party at the Huffs’ house.

  “Mom? What’s going on?”

  Tia and Mike had been good about getting rid of old reports via the shredder, but she had saved that e-mail to show Mike. Where was it? She looked next to her bed. Piles of paper. She started going through them.

  “Can I help with something?” Jill asked.

  “No, it’s fine, sweetheart.”

  Not there. She stood up. No matter.

  Tia quickly jumped back online. The E-SpyRight site was bookmarked in her favorites area. She signed on and clicked the archives button. She found the right date and asked for the old report.

  No need to print it out. When it came up on the screen, Tia scanned down until she reached the Huff-party e-mail. She didn’t bother with the message itself—about the Huffs being away, about the party and getting high—but now that she thought about it, what had happened to that? Mike had gone by and not only had there been no party, but Daniel Huff was home.

  Had the Huffs changed plans?

  But that wasn’t the point right now. Tia moved the cursor over to check out what most would think would be the least relevant.

  The time and date columns.

  The E-SpyRight told you not only the time and date the e-mail was sent, but the time and date Adam opened it.

  “Mom, what’s going on?”

  “Just give me a second, sweetie.”

 

‹ Prev