Duckworth nodded. “Did she get back to you?”
Trevor shook his head. “Nothing. I kept looking to see if the text was delivered, and it didn’t come up that it was. So then I phoned, and it went straight to message.”
“She must have turned off her phone,” Maureen said. “Sometimes I turn off my phone, meaning to restart it, and then I forget, and your father’s trying to reach me and I’ve left my stupid phone off.”
“Yeah, but it’s more than her phone being off. She didn’t show.”
“What happened next?” Duckworth asked.
“I started looking around the mall, wondering if she’d gone shopping and lost track of time, always circling back to the food court to see if she was there. But she wasn’t. And the whole time, I’m holding my phone, you know? In case I get a text or anything. But nothing.”
“How long did you wait?”
“Except for the theaters, the mall closes up at nine. So when it got to be nine, I stood for a while where people were buying tickets, thinking maybe Carol got held up and she’d show up at the last minute, but there was no sign of her. So I left the mall, and looked around the parking lot for her car.”
“What does she drive?”
“She’s got a little silver Toyota. A Corolla. It’s about five years old.”
“Did you see it?”
Trevor shook his head. “So I decided to go by her place.”
“Where does she live?”
“She’s got an apartment in Waterside Towers?”
Duckworth knew it. A condo development about half a mile downstream from the falls, in the town’s core.
“I drove over there, and Carol has an assigned parking space, and her car wasn’t there. But then I thought, maybe she had some kind of car trouble, and came home in a taxi and—”
“Did you try her landline?” Maureen asked.
“She doesn’t have one,” Trevor said. “Just her cell. So anyway, I hang around in the lobby and managed to get into the building when someone else was going in, and I go up to her door and bang on it, and there’s no answer.”
Duckworth asked, “When was the last time you tried her cell?”
“One minute before I came into your room,” Trevor said. “I waited in the parking lot of her place all night. When the sun came up, I came home.” He looked to be on the verge of tears. “I don’t know what to do.”
“Where’s she work again?” his father asked.
“She works at the town hall.”
“That’s right.”
Maureen’s eyebrows went up a notch. “For Randall Finley?”
Trevor shook his head. “No, she doesn’t work in the mayor’s office. She’s, like, in the town planning department. She’s got some kind of degree in how to organize cities, that kind of thing.”
“How’d you meet her?” Duckworth asked.
“Does that matter?” Trevor asked.
“Probably not,” he said. “Just curious.”
“I went in there to drop off a résumé, and she recognized me. We were in a couple high-school classes together. We met up later for a coffee — this was about a month ago — and we started seeing each other.”
“When were you planning to bring her around her so we could meet her?” Maureen asked.
Trevor looked at her. “Seriously? That’s what you’re concerned about right now?”
Maureen frowned. “Sorry.”
Duckworth said, “I’m sure she’s fine. I’ll bet there’s a simple explanation. A family emergency, maybe. Something that called her out of town.” He glanced at his watch. “The town hall opens up in another hour or so. We’ll drop by, see if she’s there.”
Trevor nodded very slowly, licked his lips as though there was something he still had to say.
“There’s more,” he said quietly.
“What’s that?” Duckworth asked.
“We weren’t... we weren’t entirely honest with you yesterday, when you talked to us at Starbucks.”
Duckworth waited.
“I mean, it wasn’t my place to say anything. If anyone was going to say anything, it was going to be Carol.”
“Why’s that?”
“She’s the one who saw something.”
“Saw something at Knight’s? When you were leaving?”
“Not something, exactly. Just someone. And she didn’t see anyone doing anything. In fact, it’s probably nothing.”
“I don’t understand.”
“Okay, so we’re coming out of Knight’s, and it’s kind of dark, and we’re heading for my car — I’d picked her up at her place that night — and she goes, ‘Hey, how you doin’?’ to someone.”
“She saw someone she knew?”
“Yeah. This woman, standing by the alley that goes down the side of Knight’s. You know where I mean?”
“I do.”
“So Carol goes up to her, but I kind of hang back, because it’s not anybody I know, and I feel kind of funny when she introduces me to a friend, because she’s got a good job, and I’m still trying to find something, and I don’t want to have to do a whole bunch of explaining.”
“Sure.”
“So she talks to this girl for about thirty seconds, then says goodbye, and then me and her go to my car and that’s kind of it.”
“Who was she?”
Trevor shrugged. “I asked her, and she said just someone she knew, no big deal, and she actually seemed a bit pissed because this friend didn’t seem to want to talk to her anyway. Kind of gave her the bum’s rush.”
“That’s it? That’s the part you left out?”
“Okay, so, when you found me at Starbucks and started asking us about being at Knight’s, that really, honestly pissed me off, you know.”
“I got that,” Duckworth said.
“I mean, I was thinking of introducing her to you guys, but before I get a chance to do that, suddenly there you are interviewing us like we’re a couple of suspects or something. But then after you left, we were talking, and that’s when she mentioned that she had spoken to this friend of hers. She said that even if we didn’t see anything suspicious, maybe her friend had. She wondered if she should tell you, and then she thought maybe it would be better to get in touch with the friend, and if she did see anything, she could get in touch with you herself.”
“Okay.”
“Carol felt bad that the very first time she meets my dad, she’s not straight with him. She thought that if that other woman knew anything and could help you, that’d be a nice way to make it up to you. Not that you’d ever have known in the first place.”
Maureen said, slowly, “That’s what you were talking about.”
Trevor looked at her. “What?”
“On the phone, last night. I was going past your room and I heard you say something like you didn’t think it was a good idea.”
“You were listening to me?”
“It was just something I heard when I was walking by,” she said.
“Yeah, that’s what we were talking about. I said she didn’t have to do anything, that she didn’t have to get involved just to try to make a good impression on him.” He tipped his head toward his father.
“But she decided to do it.”
Trevor nodded. “She said she was going to give her friend a call. That’s all. Just call her up and tell her something had happened around that time at Knight’s, and that if she saw anything she should get in touch with you.”
“That was the last time you spoke with her?” Duckworth asked.
His son nodded.
“You remember anything at all about this woman?”
“It was dark. And like I said, I didn’t go over. She was probably around our age.”
“White? Black?”
“White.”