Authors: Nova Ren Suma
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Runaways, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Visionary & Metaphysical
the window didn’t have a pattern of frost
on it like the others in the kitchen.
The window was fogged in the center
into a round, warm shape, almost like a
pair of lips. Like someone had pressed
her glossed mouth to the window glass.
And breathed.
My mom was taking out her cell
phone and dialing the number for the
Pinecliff Police Department, the one that
was listed on Abby’s Missing notice.
She was making the call for me, like she
said she would. She believed me enough
to make this call.
When someone answered, she said
she wanted to find out more about a
missing-persons case in the area. It
involved an underage girl named Abigail
Sinclair. She wanted to know if there
was an active investigation, because she
had information that led her to believe
the girl didn’t run away, as suspected.
After a few questions, and discovering
she should call back in the morning
when the day shift was on, she asked if
she could leave a message for a specific
officer, one who had more knowledge of
the case. Officer Heaney, she said.
A pause.
“Yes,” she said. “Heaney. H-E-A-N-
E-Y, I think, or maybe H-E-E-N-Y? You
don’t have a large department; surely
you know who I mean.”
Then she got quiet. She was
completely silent as someone on the
other end of the line spoke, and I wasn’t
close enough to make out what they were
saying.
“What’s going on?” I said. She waved
at me to give her a second. “Did he
come to the phone? Is he there?”
“No,” she said into the phone. “No,
I’m afraid not, no.”
“Can’t you leave him a message?” I
asked. She didn’t respond.
“I understand,” she said at last. “All
right. Okay. Yes, thank you.” She left her
name and her number. She was in this
now, too.
When she ended the call, she took a
long moment before meeting my eyes.
She’d spoken to the police on the
phone as if she absolutely believed me,
had not a single doubt, and would go to
bat for me if she had to. But now she
was full of doubts. They flew and
flapped all over her, making grim
shadows darker than the tattooed birds
that lined her neck.
“How tipsy are you right now?” she
asked.
“Only a little,” I said. “I know where
I am. I know what’s happening. I know
who I’m talking to. What’d they say?
Tell me.”
“Besides tonight,” she said. “Besides
whatever you had to drink tonight. How
have you been feeling lately, Lauren?”
“Fine,” I said, in growing confusion.
“Are you sure?”
“Why wouldn’t I be?”
The question hung in the air,
unanswered.
“All right,” my mom said. “Just
making sure. I’ll tell you what they said.
They’re opening an investigation.”
I breathed a sigh of relief.
“Not because I called,” she was quick
to add. “Not because of us. Turns out the
case was just reopened, actually. Just
this morning. Because her legal guardian
called. Her grandfather, they said. From
what I understand, he called out of the
blue and said the family had reason to
believe she didn’t run away and they
wanted her case recategorized.”
There was a warmth inside me, and it
wasn’t the pendant heating up; it was
knowing Abby’s grandfather had heard
me. He did what I’d asked him to do.
And, because of that, someone would be
searching for her now. They hadn’t given
up.
“But,” my mom said, and lingered
there like she didn’t know how to finish.
“But?”
“But there’s no Officer Heaney at the
Pinecliff Police Department, Lauren. I
don’t know who you met that night, but
no one by that name or any name like it
works at the station. Are you sure he
was from the Pinecliff station?”
“Yes,” I said.
“And you’re sure you got his name
right?”
I nodded. “He said. Heaney, he said.
Pinecliff police, he said. I think. I’m
pretty sure. He was going to arrest us for
trespassing on private property. He
said.”
She shrugged. Then said what she
really meant. “Are you sure you talked to
someone that night? Are you sure you’re
not . . . confused?” There they were
again. The shadows on her face that
showed she doubted me. Now she
thought
I
was
having
imaginary
conversations with authority figures and
lying to make my story more convincing.
“Jamie was there with me. He met the
guy. He talked to him. Officer Heaney.
He had on a uniform. He . . . I think he
had on a uniform; it was dark.”
“It’s okay,” she said. “It doesn’t
matter. They’ve opened an investigation,
so if she’s out there and needs help,
they’ll find her, okay?”
I didn’t feel okay.
Not anything close to okay.
Yes, I wanted them to be looking for
Abby, but there was more to this. There
was the fact that I didn’t know if I could
trust my own mother.
That was when I saw it on her chest.
The hint of red. Bright and searing red.
Like a patch of flames.
My mom had new ink. Did she get
another tattoo while I was out at the
party? Because a blazing crimson thing
was
newly
visible
beneath
her
collarbone on her chest. Her shirt was
open beyond the third button, and
somehow I’d missed what looked to be
an unfamiliar picture there, until now,
because now I couldn’t seem to see
anything else. The tattoo was a fiery
heart above her real heart.
“Mom,” I said carefully, “you didn’t
tell me you were getting a new tattoo.”
“What?” she said. “But I’m not.”
“You already did. Can I see?”
“What, when? I didn’t. What do you
mean?” And right then, so I could see
her do it, and so the shadows watching
us could see, my mom took her hand and
held it over her chest. Covering the new
tattoo.
It was here, while studying her, while
paying attention, that I noticed the
difference in her face. It was very slight,
and there was a good chance I wouldn’t
have
noticed
if
I
hadn’t
been
concentrating. But I was. And my mother
—the one I’ve had all my life—has a
beauty mark on her left cheek, just
beside her lips. So black it’s almost
blue. I always wanted one of my own,
and when I was little she’d pencil one
on me with her eyeliner and say I was
just like her, except mine washed off in
the bath at night.
This mother, this one sitting at the
kitchen table with me in the early, early
hours of a dark morning—she had a
beauty mark on her
right
cheek.
Same spot and same color and same
shape. Wrong side.
She saw me staring and rubbed her
cheek. “Have I got some food on my face
or something?”
“No,” I said, “it’s nothing. I’m tired. I
should sleep.”
But, oh, it wasn’t nothing.
The secret tattoo was one thing, but
now this? This made me question
everything about her. It made me wonder
if telling her about Abby had really been
the right thing.
I shouldn’t have asked for help,
should I? I shouldn’t have trusted her. I
should have done this on my own. With
only myself. And the girls.
MISSING
JANNAH AFSANA DIN
CASE TYPE:
Endangered Missing
DOB:
April 4, 1995
MISSING:
January 2, 2013
AGE NOW:
17
SEX:
Female
RACE:
Middle Eastern
HAIR:
Brown
EYES:
Brown
HEIGHT:
5'3" (163 cm)
WEIGHT:
135 lbs. (62 kg)
MISSING FROM:
Clarkestone, MA, United
States
CIRCUMSTANCES:
Footage of Jannah was
caught on surveillance video at a gas station in
Clarkestone, Massachusetts, in the early-
morning hours of January 2. She may have been
meeting someone but appears to have left
before that person arrived. She was wearing a
white coat, blue jeans, and a Red Sox baseball
cap. Jannah also wears contact lenses.
ANYONE HAVING INFORMATION
SHOULD CONTACT
Clarkestone Police Department (Massachusetts) 1-
617-555-4592
HAVE YOU SEEN THIS
GIRL?
Please help find my sister Hailey
Pippering.
She comes here or she used to all
the time.
If you see this flyer and you know
anything, e-mail me PLEASE!!!!!
You don’t have to use your real
name! I won’t call the police. I just
want to know where she is!!!!
(Trina Glatt: disappearance
unreported)
—
46
—
THE
house was waiting for me.
Always there, when nothing else was.
The girls were gathered—the newest of
the girls, Trina, at their center. She was
flashing something that caught the
firelight. A blade of some kind . . .
sharp, silver. A knife.
No one knew how she smuggled it in,
and everyone wanted to hold it, but
when she said maybe it’d be for the best
if they avoided getting their prints on it,
they stopped reaching for the contraband
and they stopped asking.
Trina told us that it all began when
she got that knife. Before it came into her
life, she felt helpless. She felt like a
girl
.
She spat out that word like it was the
worst insult in the world, to be what we
all were, and so she offended every one
of us.
The knife itself was titanium, the
blade and handle coated in a silvery
finish. It was a butterfly knife that folded
in on itself so it could fit in the crevice
of a clasped hand.
Trina had stolen the knife from a
boyfriend who’d himself shoplifted it
from an army-navy surplus store. She
couldn’t explain why she’d swiped it
from his pocket while he was sleeping—
better would have been to rifle through
his wallet—but she wanted to take
something from him that would really
bother him. Something he’d notice,
something he couldn’t replace. She’d
planned to return it, maybe a week later,
but once she had it she found she
couldn’t part with it. The knife was so
compact, it could be tucked into her front
jeans pocket, and the secure sense of it
under her pillow helped her sleep at
night.
After she dumped him—all right, she
admitted,
he
dumped
her
—she realized
the knife was hers forever. She’d find
herself playing with it, like in school or
at home in full view of her mom’s
boyfriend on the couch. What was to
keep her from plunging it into someone
who tried to mess with her? Nothing.
Not saying she did or would. Just having
the weapon and knowing she could use it
was enough.
The thing is, she never once made use
of that knife. Not technically, because
slicing incisions into the arms of her
mother’s couch didn’t count. And making
snowflakes out of loose-leaf paper for
her little half sister didn’t count, either.
She never made use of the knife on a
person.
That was her biggest regret. She could
have done so much with it! When she
leaped up while telling this part of her
story, the other girls backed away. Not
like they could get hurt in the smoky
house, which was more charred and
patterned by fire each time I visited—
because this house held them close, kept
them safe—but they remembered being
hurt and reacted like they still could be.
Maybe it was talk of the knife that
brought her out after all this time. She
shifted from the curtains, and before
anyone knew what was happening, Fiona