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Jack opened his car door, steadying himself as he eased his body into the seat, the pain especially harsh tonight. He wasn’t sure if the discomfort he was feeling was from illness or guilt, but it ached in his shoulders, ribs, and heart. He shut the door and dropped his head back against the headrest.

“…Christ.”

He closed his eyes, trying to meditate the pain away. He turned his head left and right, shifting his body to find a comfortable position until the pain subsided. He opened his eyes and found himself staring at Rebecca’s sketchbook on the passenger seat. He reached for it and flipped through a few drawings. There was a sketch of what looked like an angel hovering over a small sleeping child. The jagged lines made it appear rushed, but its entirety was exquisitely detailed and brilliant. Jack ran his fingers along the drawing, tracing the outline. It wasn’t just her talent that he found incomprehensible, it was the depth of her expression, the layers of substance within each of her renderings. Her talent was unquestionable, but it was the inspiration behind the hands that moved him, the breadth of her spirit. Her drawings reflected experience, understanding, maturity.

Jack closed the book. He knew his next move.

CHAPTER 34

The hallways of Monroe’s College For the Arts were lined with brand new tile and brick. Sculpted archways connected each intersecting hallway. It smelled new, Jack figured it must have been recently renovated, the school having been around for generations.

What Jack found it curiously devoid of was — art. Nothing hanging on the walls. Nothing to say this was a building for creative types, no examples of their work. Maybe that was more for elementary schools, something for the parents to admire during meet the teacher night. This was a respected establishment of cultured artists who didn’t need to hang their masterpieces along hallway walls. Jack searched for room 17.

He stopped and asked a student, who pointed back the way he came. He had passed it.

Jack entered a classroom with a dozen work stations, each with an unfinished sculpture sitting on top. The room itself was filled with all types of artwork — abstract, modern, classical — all demonstrating various degrees of skill. Some clearly didn’t belong, others were quite good.

A teacher was replacing paper on painting easels. Her brown hair was up in a tight bun, though a few rogue curls had broken loose around the temples. Jack guessed her age at about 35-36. Another teacher was washing paintbrushes at the sink in the back of the room. He had on a very worn striped flannel shirt that was stained with paint and clay. Jack pegged him at about 10 years older.

Class had just filed out, Jack would have to move quick or they’d have the perfect excuse to cut short his visit when the next group arrived.

“It’s never too late to discover your talent,” she said to him, smiling, pulling paper through and latching it on each station at a hurried pace.

“I’m not a student,” Jack said with a foolish grin.

“I know. In order to take my class you have to be accepted. The trials are rigorous and if you possessed the talent, youd’ve known…already.”

“You were about to say long ago?” Jack said. She stammered a moment. “It’s okay, I have no ego left to bruise,” he said with a grin. Once she realized she was off the hook, she smiled back.

“How can I help you?”

“Helen Strauss?”

She nodded. “Mmm, that’s me.”

“Detective Jack Ridge.” Jack flashed his badge and her smile turned upside down. Jack saw the other teacher approaching, surely curious as to the nature of his visit. “I’d like to ask you a few questions about a former student of yours. Carmen Muniz?” Helen nodded, understanding now why he was there.

“Carmen…” she said, full of sorrow.

“You’re the detective who found her. I’ve seen your face on TV,” the other teacher joined in. Jack stood waiting for an introduction. The teacher reached out his hand. “Oh, Michael Ketcher.”

Jack shook his hand, it was coarse with pottery dust. “So you’ve heard.”

“Yes,” Helen said.

“You both knew her?”

“One of the best students we’ve ever had,” Helen said, turning to Michael for corroboration. He was quick to reciprocate with emphatic nods of agreement.

“Oh jeez, without a doubt; we see so many students each year,” Michael said, “but few as naturally gifted as Carmen. That painting there on the wall is hers.” Michael pointed over Jack’s shoulder.

Jack about-faced to see a stunning portrait of the Virgin Mary hanging on the back wall of the classroom. So lifelike, it was as if you could reach in and touch her. It captivated Jack. He himself had only seen this level of artistic talent once before. Did that verify Leonard’s hypothesis? Or simply demonstrate that he occupied a very small corner of the world and needed to get out more.

“Some of her work still hangs in the gallery downstairs,” Helen said to the back of Jack’s head.

Jack turned and exchanged glances between the two.

“Do either of you remember anything bothering Carmen before she disappeared? Was she having problems with another student?”

“I can’t say,” Helen said. Jack waited patiently for her to elaborate. “Well, it was so long ago.”

“Carmen was always engrossed with her work,” Michael said. “She often stayed late after class. I don’t think things were too happy at home for her.”

“In what way?”

“Just an assumption.” Michael shrugged.

“I see, but otherwise, she wasn’t a troubled student?”

“Not when she was in here, she wasn’t,” Helen said. She drifted past them towards Carmen’s painting, standing before it reverently. Jack joined her and they admired it side by side. Michael leaned on a desk behind them.

“All that talent, gone forever…” Helen said.

Maybe, Jack thought. But that was way too long a conversation.

The hallway began filling up with noise; a wave of students was approaching. The first few entered the classroom, talking loudly, as if outdoors. They were followed by two more, then three more, and soon the class was full and buzzing.

“Well, I appreciate your time. Both of you.”

“Of course,” Helen said.

“Anything we can do to help, please,” Michael said. Jack turned to leave — got a few steps — then swiveled back around.

“Oh…one more thing.” Jack opened his briefcase and took out Rebecca’s sketch pad. Helen and Michael gathered around, curiously.

“I have a friend whose daughter is also an aspiring artist herself. Would you mind taking a look at these?”

“Not at all,” Helen said. She turned the book so both she and Michael could see. They flipped through a few of Rebecca’s drawings, each one eliciting the response Jack was expecting.

“They’re exquisite,” Helen said.

“What school does she attend?” Michael asked. Jack paused for dramatic effect.

“Eastbrook Elementary.”

Helen looked up at Jack, her mouth open. The noise in the classroom was getting very loud, lots of chatter and paper rustling, Helen had to raise her voice, “A child did these?”

Jack nodded. Helen and Michael flipped through a few more pictures with a look of shocked disbelief. Jack watched their expressions change with each page. “Have you ever seen work like this from a child that age?”

“How old did you say she was?” Michael asked.

“Nine.”

“I’ve read about it, never actually met one with this kind of talent so young,” Helen said. “The attention to detail… incredible.”

“So you’d say it’s very unusual for a child this age to be able to do this kind of work?”