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Authors: Barbara Fradkin

BOOK: Dream Chasers
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Then he thought of his own daughter, so defiantly confident and invincible. A little shiver ran through him. Hannah was also seventeen, and because school wasn't quite finished, she was staying in the house alone for the first time since she'd come to live with them a year ago. Green had been reluctant to go without her, but in truth more out of distrust of her motives than fear for her safety or desire for her company. When Hannah had challenged him on it, Sharon had sided with her. Distrust her, and she'll make you pay, Sharon said. Trust her, and she'll try to live up to it.

Easy for you to say, Green thought now as he toyed with his phone, fighting the urge to call her and satisfy the ridiculous fear that had threaded through him at the news of the missing teen. Was Hannah safely at home, or was she out at one of those starlight parties she loved so much? He didn't delude himself. She had arrived on his doorstep at sixteen, defiantly trying to be thirty. He knew she smoked dope, slept around and probably flirted with the wrong side of the law. But did she know where to draw the line? Did she know how to heed her instincts for danger and keep herself safe?

In the end, he settled on a third alternative. He phoned Brian Sullivan. Sullivan was back as acting staff sergeant of Major Crimes now that Gaetan Laroque had gone off on stress leave. Sullivan would have no direct knowledge of a routine missing persons investigation, but if the police feared something worse, then the Major Crimes detectives would be working the case too, at least on the sidelines. Sullivan was Green's oldest friend on the force and could be trusted to understand his reasons for calling. There were not too many cops Green felt he could lean on, but Sullivan was the first in line. Besides, he had a teenage daughter of his own.

Sullivan answered his cell phone on the fourth ring, and to Green's surprise, he didn't even bother to tease him for checking in on his first day of vacation. “I was hoping you hadn't heard,” he said.

“Why?”

“Because I want you to enjoy your holiday, you turkey. Your wife and son deserve that, even if you don't.”

Green digested the implications. An early morning chill hung in the air, and he shivered. Hugging his fleece around him, he curled deeper into the seat. “It's that bad?”

Sullivan paused. “It doesn't look good. This is a nice girl, a good student just finishing Grade Twelve at Pleasant Park High School in Alta Vista. Never gave her mother any trouble, and she hasn't been heard from in thirty-six hours.”

“Shit,” Green muttered. Sullivan didn't need to say more. Alta Vista was the neighbourhood Sullivan lived in, Pleasant Park the school his own daughter attended. It was a dignified family neighbourhood of leafy old trees and sprawling splitlevels, not some crime centre of the city. Green knew Sullivan was thinking of the other young women from similar neighbourhoods whose deaths they had investigated together in recent years. In too many cases, their only crime had been to be young, attractive and alone.

“Officially we're calling it a simple disappearance,” Sullivan said, “and we haven't ruled that out. The mother is the overprotective type, so the kid may have just run off with some boy, and she'll get in touch with her mother when she comes up for air.”

Green could hear the roar of traffic in the background and the sound of Sullivan drinking, probably his morning coffee. He'd caught his friend on his way to work. “You don't sound convinced.” “Well, her friends say she's not the type to let her mother worry like this. We know she lied to her mother about where she was going, said she had a play to rehearse, but there was no such thing. So she may have gone to meet someone secretly instead.”

“That still leaves all of yesterday unaccounted for.”

“Yeah. That's the worrisome thing.”

“Any lead on a boyfriend?”

“Not yet.” Green heard the suspicion in Sullivan's tone. Neither needed reminding that when a woman meets with foul play, her male partner is the most likely culprit.

“That's why the media blitz,” Sullivan added. “So if it is a case of innocent lovers running off, we're hoping one or both of them will come forward.”

“Who's lead?”

“Ron Leclair took it over.”

Green winced. Leclair was the sergeant in charge of the missing persons unit. In Green's opinion, he had his eyes too firmly fixed on the next rung of the ladder to watch what he was stepping in. However, if this became a high profile case, it could make his career. Provided the girl was found alive. Which meant Ron Leclair would pull out all the stops in his power to ensure she was.

“Have you got enough men assigned?” Sullivan chuckled.

“The guys back here do know how to wipe their asses without you, Mike. I'll tell them you've okayed whatever we need. But for now, it's MisPers' call.”

“For now.” Before Green could say more, the car door opened, and Sharon peered in. She didn't say a word, but the reproach in her dark eyes spoke volumes.

Two

J
enna
Zukowski thought she'd made very good time, but when she arrived at Pleasant Park High School, she found the parking lot almost full and police everywhere. The media vans and cameras were being held at bay across the street by a cordon of determined police officers. One, a hulking bruiser with a Hitler mustache, stood at the entrance to the lot, snapping out orders to his minions. He stopped her as she tried to turn into the drive and leaned in her window, his eyes flicking over the car's interior. She felt her face burn with embarrassment at the jumble of fast food wrappers and coffee cups scattered everywhere, but beneath the peak of his black cap, the cop's face remained expressionless.

“I'm Sergeant Gates. What's your business here, ma'am?”

Jenna felt the familiar flush spread further up her cheeks. Her body's betrayal added fuel to her indignation. What were all these police doing here, intimidating innocent people, when they should be out looking for the monster who preyed on women in the streets? For she had no doubt Lea Kovacev was dead. The police were lying to the public in order to prevent panic, and probably to cover up their own incompetence, because they would never have called in this three-ringed circus if they thought Lea was a simple runaway. God knows, Jenna had never been able to get them interested in any of the cases she'd dealt with.

“I'm the school board social worker assigned to this school,” she replied stiffly. “The principal called me early this morning and requested my help with the students.”

The police officer's eyes remained expressionless. “What kind of help?”

The flush deepened, and she clutched the steering wheel to hide her shaking. “Supportive counselling, answering questions the students might have. When an event like this occurs, the whole student body tends to get upset, particularly those who knew the girl well.”

“Our own officers will be conducting interviews throughout the day, ma'am. I advise you not to discuss any particulars with the students that might influence their statements, and if any of them have information pertinent to the case, no matter how trivial it appears, please direct them to one of our officers.”

She inclined her head slightly, not trusting herself to speak through her outrage. Who's going to speak to me at all if they know I'm going to turn them over to the cops, she thought as he waved her through. Ever hear of client confidentiality, officer?

Inside the school, the secretary directed her to the staff room, where the principal, Mr. Prusec, had called a meeting. When Jenna entered, she was greeted by a sea of tense faces. She saw her own pessimism reflected in them.

“Above all,” the principal was saying in his nasal singsong, “the schedule for classes and exams should carry on. The students need routine and a sense of normalcy, and even if they're upset, their exams will distract them and give them something to focus on other than their worries.”

This announcement drew grim nods from some teachers and exclamations of disbelief from others. “What if they can't concentrate!” a young woman said. “It won't be fair to them.”

“Then we'll take that into account when assigning their marks. And anyone too visibly upset to work should be quietly sent to the guidance office. We'll have all our guidance staff,” Mr. Prusec paused to gesture offhandedly at Jenna, “plus our board social worker here, available to provide assistance. But we don't want a stampede.”

“There are media and cops all over the place,” said another teacher, whom Jenna recognized as Mrs. Lucas. Jenna had never dealt with her directly before, but she had a reputation as a tough, no-nonsense veteran. One of those fossils who'd been teaching since before Jenna was born. “The kids will have questions.”

“I'll make a short announcement over the
PA
just before classes start, telling them what we know, which is essentially nothing at this point—” he stared hard at them in warning, “and informing them that if they have relevant information, they should let their teacher know, so that an interview can be scheduled with the police.”

Jenna pictured the chaos that would ensue from that request. Breathless with apprehension, she jumped in. “I think teachers should just steer everyone to the guidance office and let us decide if the police should be brought in. Otherwise, if students have to approach the teacher in front of their peers, there will be all kinds of rumours, questions and pressure.”

Mrs. Lucas fixed her with a withering stare. “I think we know how to speak to a student privately.”

Jenna felt another flush building and fought it in vain. It was her Achilles' heel, betraying her self-doubt and undermining her attempts at professionalism at the very worst times. She was twenty years younger than most of the teachers in the room, and despite her
MSW
and her clinical training, few of them thought she knew a damn thing about human nature.

To add to her humiliation, it was the principal who rescued her. The perfect incarnation of white, male, middle-class domination. “Jenna has a good point. Direct all students with any kind of involvement to the guidance office. The police will be starting with routine interviews of all the students in Lea's classes, so exams in those classes will have to be postponed. Assign the students a study period.” He paused. “And for the love of Pete, don't let them start talking about it!”

As the teachers filed out of the room, Jenna fell in step beside one of the guidance counsellors, an attractive young man with a goatee and a single piercing on his left ear. She knew he was married, with a baby adopted from China, but that didn't stop the tingle of pleasure she felt at his closeness. Of all the staff, she felt he understood the world as she did. No macho posturing there.

“It's difficult to operate in the dark,” she murmured. “Do you know anything about Lea Kovacev?”

The man chuckled. “Well, you know how it is, we seldom see the well-adjusted ones. I think she worked with the newcomers' club in school.”

“What does that do?”

“It's mostly for new immigrants, although kids new to the city can go there too. Basically it's to help kids make friends.”

“Have the police condescended to tell us anything, even off the record?”

“Not much. They spent most of yesterday talking to her friends and trying to track her movements. So far we just know she went home after school and then went out again around four in the afternoon, with her backpack, a cell phone and a beach towel—”

“Beach towel! That's a clue, surely!”

The guidance counsellor paused in his doorway with an indulgent smile. “I'm sure they're following up on it. But there are a lot of beaches and pools in the city, and maybe she just planned to sunbathe in the park.”

Jenna considered the implications. It was true that in the affluent neighbourhood of Alta Vista alone, there were probably dozens of backyard pools, but if Lea had gone instead to a public park or one of the city's beaches, there were always perverts lurking around hoping to satisfy their sick fantasies with the unsuspecting young girls who played there. A shiver passed through her. Girls had so little knowledge of—or control over—what they stirred up.

* * *

Green managed to wait until ten a.m. before he finally caved. Even in the likely event that Hannah was still asleep, ten o'clock was a perfectly reasonable hour for a parental phone call. There had been no further news releases about the missing girl, but Sullivan had assured him he'd call if anything developed. No phone call meant they were still slogging along, tracking down everyone Lea had ever talked to, following every lead and probably combing every public park within a five kilometre radius of her home. A huge task, but as time passed, hope was surely dimming among all concerned.

To his surprise, Hannah didn't even answer the phone. When the answering machine kicked in, he dialled again, thinking she might have been slow to wake up. Still no answer. He dialled her cell phone. Voice mail announced the caller was unavailable. He scowled. Hannah carried the phone around on her belt as if it were a lifeline and never turned it off.

He debated whether to leave a message. He and Hannah had been virtual strangers a year ago when, in a fit of pique at her mother, she'd come to live with him. Every seemingly simple decision took on layers of unspoken meaning in the complex dance of feelings between them. Accusations of interference and mistrust would fly, and the closer he inched to intimacy, the more prickly she became.

“Oh, just leave a message!” Sharon exclaimed in exasperation after fifteen minutes of listening to him dither. “Whether she gives you hell or not, she's going to know you care.”

So in the end he left her a chatty message about their arrival and the news of the missing girl, signing off with a casual request that she give him a ring just to let him know everything was okay.

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