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The Jodi Picoult Collection #4 Page 105
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That tells me either she’s a battered woman in hiding, trying to get the nerve to call her boyfriend and failing, or her boyfriend is covering his ass after accidentally killing her.
I spend Friday crossing off the names in Jess Ogilvy’s Day-Timer. My first call is to the two girls whose names pop up the most often in the history of months past. Alicia and Cara are grad students, like Jess. Alicia has cornrowed hair that hangs to her waist, and Cara is a tiny blonde wearing camouflage cargo pants and black work boots. Over coffee at the student center, they admit they haven’t seen Jess since Tuesday.
“She missed an exam with the Gorgon,” Cara says. “Nobody misses an exam with the Gorgon.”
“The Gorgon?”
“Professor Gorgona,” she explains. “It’s a seminar course on special education.”
GORGONA, I write in my notes. “Has Jess ever gone away for a few days before?”
“Yeah—once,” Alicia says. “She went to Cape Cod for a long weekend and didn’t tell us beforehand.”
“She went with Mark, though,” Cara adds, and she wrinkles her nose.
“I take it you aren’t a fan of Mark Maguire?”
“Is anyone?” Alicia says. “He doesn’t treat her right.”
“What do you mean by that?”
“If he says jump, she doesn’t even ask ‘How high?’ She goes out and buys a pogo stick.”
“We haven’t seen a lot of her since they started hooking up,” Cara says. “Mark likes to keep her all to himself.”
So do most abusive partners, I think.
“Detective Matson?” Alicia asks. “She’s going to be okay, right?”
A week ago, Jess Ogilvy was probably sitting here where I am, drinking coffee with her friends and freaking out about the Gorgon’s upcoming exam.
“I hope so,” I say.
* * *
People don’t just disappear. There’s always a reason, or an enemy with a grudge. There’s always a loose thread that starts to unravel.
The problem is that Jess Ogilvy is, apparently, a saint.
“I was surprised when she missed the exam,” Professor Gorgona says. A slight woman with a white bun and a trace of a foreign accent, she doesn’t seem nearly as threatening as Alicia and Cara made her out to be. “She’s my star student, really. She’s getting her master’s and writing an honors thesis at the same time. Graduated with a 4.0 from Bates and worked with Teach for America for two years before she decided to make a career out of it.”
“Is there anyone who might be jealous of the fact that she does so well in class?” I ask.
“Not that I’ve noticed,” the professor says.
“Did she confide in you about any personal problems?”
“I’m not exactly the warm and fuzzy type,” the professor says wryly. “Our communication was strictly adviser-advisee in an academic sense. The only extracurricular activities I even know she participated in are education-related: she organizes the Special Olympics here in town, and she tutors an autistic boy.” Suddenly the professor frowns. “Has anyone contacted him? He’ll have a hard time coping if Jess doesn’t show up for her scheduled appointment. Changes in routine are very traumatic for kids like Jacob.”
“Jacob?” I repeat, and I open the Day-Timer.
This is the boy whose mother left a message on the answering machine at the professor’s house. The boy whose name is entered into Jess’s schedule on the day she disappeared.
“Professor,” I say, “you wouldn’t happen to know where he lives?”
* * *
Jacob Hunt and his family reside in a part of Townsend that’s a little more run-down than the rest of it—the part you have to work harder to find behind the picture-postcard town green and the stately New England antique homes. Their house is just beyond the condos that are filled with the recently separated and newly divorced, past the train tracks for an Amtrak route that’s long defunct.
The woman who opens the door has a blue stain on her shirt and dark hair wound into a messy knot and the most beautiful eyes I have ever seen. They’re pale, like a lioness’s, nearly golden, but they also look like they’ve done their share of crying, and we all know that a sky with clouds in it is much more interesting than one that doesn’t have any. I’d place her in her early forties. She’s holding a spoon, which is dribbling its contents onto the floor. “I don’t want any,” she says, starting to close the door.
“I’m not selling anything,” I say. “You’re, um, dripping.”
She glances down, and then sticks the spoon into her mouth.
That’s when I remember why I’m here. I hold up my badge. “I’m Detective Rich Matson. Are you Jacob’s mother?”
“Oh, God,” she says. “I thought he’d already called you to apologize.”
“Apologize?”
“It’s really not his fault,” she interjects. “Granted, I should have known that he was sneaking out, but with him, this hobby is almost a pathology. And if there’s any way I can convince you to keep this quiet—not a bribe, of course, just maybe a handshake agreement . . . You see, if it becomes public knowledge, then my career could really take a hit, and I’m a single mom who’s barely scraping by as is . . .”
She is babbling, and I have no idea what the hell she is talking about. Although I did hear the word single. “I’m sorry, Ms. Hunt—”
“Emma.”
“Emma, then. I . . . have no idea what you’re talking about. I came because your son is tutored by Jess Ogilvy—”
“Oh,” she says, sobering. “I heard about Jess on the news. Her poor parents must be frantic. Are there any leads yet?”
“That’s why I’m here to speak to your son.”
Those eyes of hers darken. “You can’t possibly think Jacob had anything to do with her disappearance?”
“No, but he was the last appointment in her date book before she disappeared.”
She folds her arms. “Detective Matson, my son has Asperger’s syndrome.”
“Okay.” And I’m red-green color-blind. Whatever.
“It’s high-functioning autism. He doesn’t even know Jess is missing yet. He’s had a hard time lately, and the news could be devastating to him.”
“I can be sensitive about the subject.”
She measures me for a moment with her gaze. Then, turning, she heads into the house, expecting me to follow. “Jacob,” she calls as we reach the kitchen.
I stand in the entryway, waiting for a child to appear. After all, Jess Ogilvy is a teacher and Professor Gorgona referred to a boy she worked with. Instead, a behemoth teenager who’s taller than I am, and probably stronger, shuffles into the room. This is who Jess Ogilvy tutored? I stare at him for a second, trying to place the reason he looks so familiar out of context, and suddenly it comes to me: hypothermic man. This kid identified the cause of death before the medical examiner did.
“You?” I say. “You’re Jacob Hunt?”
Now his mother’s rushed apologies make sense. She probably thought I’d come to slap a fine on the kid, or arrest him for interfering with a crime scene.
“Jacob,” she says drily, “I think you’re already acquainted with Detective Matson.”
“Hi, Jacob.” I hold out a hand. “Nice to officially meet you.”
He doesn’t shake it. He doesn’t even look me in the eye. “I saw the article in the paper,” he says, his voice flat and robotic. “It was buried in the back. If you ask me, someone dying of hypothermia is worthy of at least page two.” He takes a step forward. “Did the full autopsy results come back? It would be interesting to know if the alcohol lowered the freezing point for the body, or if there’s not a significant change.”
“So, Jake,” I say.
“Jacob. My name is Jacob, not Jake.”
“Right, Jacob. I was hoping to ask you a few questions?”
“If they’re about forensics,” he says, growing animated, “then I am more than happy to help. Have you heard about the research coming
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