He didn’t just look tired — he looked at least ten years older than he had a week ago, and in the space between his eyebrows there were deep creases that barely vanished even when he stretched the skin with his fingers.
He didn’t need another martini; he needed to go home.
The problem was, he didn’t want to go home.
Home, in the last week, had become so completely different from the wondrously happy place he and Kara and Lindsay had shared since the day Lindsay had been born that it no longer felt like a place of refuge at all. Lindsay’s absence hung over it like a suffocating blanket, and every moment he was in the house reminded him of his terrible impotence in the face of what had happened.
He should have protected his family — his little girl — and he had failed.
Failed so utterly, so paralytically, that Kara had taken charge, focusing like a laser on doing whatever she thought would bring their baby back.
But Steve had a deep, gnawing feeling about Lindsay, a feeling so bad that he couldn’t even confide it to his wife.
Instead, he had to keep it inside, where it was not simply festering, but now consuming him. And he was certain that if he breathed even a word of his feeling to Kara — that they were never going to see their daughter again — she wouldn’t simply cry or try to talk him out of it.
No, she would be furious at his lack of faith, and call him a traitor, and a bad father, and a terrible husband.
And deep down inside, he knew she was right.
He was a bad father, and he was a terrible husband, because no matter how hard he’d tried to do everything he could for them, to make their lives as perfect as possible, he’d failed.
He’d failed, and Lindsay was gone, and the part of him that didn’t already feel dead didn’t really want to go on living, either.
Russ Doran knew about Lindsay’s disappearance, of course, and he had let Russ think he was doing a nice thing by taking him out for a drink and a little distraction before he went home.
But there it was again: he didn’t want to go home. And that one simple fact left him hating himself.
He returned from the men’s room, telling himself to lay down a couple of bills, take a sip from the final drink, and go home to Kara, no matter how painful it might be. Yet by the time he reached the table, the martini looked so frosty in its fresh glass that he found himself unable to resist it.
Steve sat down.
Before he knew it, that martini was gone and another was in its place.
This wasn’t good. If he didn’t leave now, the last train would be gone, and there would be no choice but to spend the night in the apartment by himself.
When Russ Doran ordered still another round, Steve said nothing, and slowly the alcohol began to numb him. And then, in the middle of the fifth martini, Russ pointed up at the television screen above the bar.
“Look at that,” he said softly, then frowned at Steve. “Shouldn’t you be there?”
Steve looked up to see Lindsay’s photograph splashed across the television screen, and a moment later the camera pulling back to show a great mass of people, each of them holding a candle, walking slowly down a street in Camden Green.
Kara.
Dawn D'Angelo.
The cheerleading coach — what was her name? Spandler.
And all his friends and neighbors, plus at least half the rest of the town.
And he’d completely forgotten that the vigil was tonight.
He stood up so fast he almost tipped over his stool. He fumbled in his wallet and threw a couple of twenties down.
“Gotta go, Russ. See you tomorrow.”
“Whoa, wait a minute,” Russ said, grabbing onto his wrist. “Are you going to drive?”
“I’ve got to get home,” Steve said, and gently but firmly pulled away from Russ’s grasp.
Five minutes later he was in the Hertz office on West Fifty-seventh Street, and ten minutes after that he was on the road.
Maybe — just maybe — he could get there before it was over.
Chapter Thirty-six
Kara stood in her kitchen, closed her eyes and listened to the sounds of talking, laughing, eating, and drinking.
The sounds of life.
The sounds of normality.
The sounds she hadn’t heard since Lindsay vanished.
And the sounds that Steve should be hearing but wasn’t.
A flicker of anger ignited inside her; a flicker she instantly doused, reminding herself that Steve was dealing with the situation the only way he could, that she couldn’t help him, and neither, she suspected, could any of the people who had gathered here tonight. But it still would have been better for him to be here.
But he wasn’t.
She opened her eyes to see the roomful of friends — and people who until tonight had only been acquaintances — and suddenly, gratitude replaced the fear that had all but overwhelmed her; calm replaced the frenetic anxiety that had gripped her since the moment of Lindsay’s disappearance. If only Steve were with her…
Steve gripped the steering wheel and hunched forward in the driver’s seat of the tiny rented Hyundai, his frustration growing by the second. He needed to get home, and he needed to get home now. But traffic wasn’t moving.
Someone who must have found his driver’s license in a Cracker Jack box was holding everything up on the on ramp to the Sagtikos Parkway — maybe he should have just taken 25A all the way and not even bothered with the Long Island Expressway. But this time of night the expressway should have been clear, and he’d figured—
Who cared what he’d figured?
He pounded the horn, then cut around to the on-ramp shoulder, right of the lane of stalled traffic. Sure enough, at the top was an old man afraid to merge into the lane of northbound traffic.
Steve gunned the little car and darted from the shoulder into traffic.
But traffic was even worse when the Sagtikos turned into the Sunken Meadow above Northern State Parkway. It seemed as if every oversized SUV on Long Island was trying to get to Camden Green tonight, and Steve took a fresh grip on the steering wheel, bore down on the gas pedal, and swerved into a gap between two huge vehicles, each occupied only by a driver. One way or another, he was going to get home to Kara.
What had he been thinking, going out drinking with Russ while Kara walked in the vigil by herself?
He slipped between two more SUVs and hit the horn as he passed yet another one on the right, then veered back into the left lane and hit the accelerator as he saw the highway finally open up ahead of him.
Finally free — at least for a minute or two — he fumbled in his coat pocket until he found his cell phone and flipped it open. With one hand on the wheel, he punched the thumb of his other hand on the speed-dial key for his home number.
Raindrops began to splat on the windshield.
Where was the wiper control?
Just as Kara answered, a town car came out of nowhere and passed Steve on the right, sending a cascade of mist over his windshield, blinding him for a second.
Where the hell were the wipers?
“Hello?” Kara’s voice crackled in his ear.
“Kara?”
“Steve?” Though the crackle was momentarily gone, her voice was now muffled by voices in the background. “Honey? Where are you?”