“Car seat,” he said to her.
Reba Cordova was a pretty woman with small doll-like features. She looked up and gave him a nod of sympathy.
“Who wrote these installation instructions,” he continued, “NASA engineers?”
Reba smiled now, commiserating. “It’s ridiculous, isn’t it?”
“Totally. The other day I was setting up Roger’s Pack ’n Play—Roger’s my two-year-old. Do you have one of those? A Pack ’n Play, I mean.”
“Sure.”
“It was supposed to be easy to fold up and put away, but, well, Cassandra—that’s my wife—she says I’m just hopeless.”
“So is my husband.”
He laughed. She laughed. She had, Nash thought, a very nice laugh. He wondered if Reba’s husband appreciated it, if he was a funny man and liked to make his wife with the doll-like features laugh and if he still stopped and marveled at the sound.
“I hate to bother you,” he said, still being Mr. Friendly, hands down and spread, “but I have to pick up Roger at Little Gym and, well, Cassandra and I are both sticklers for safety.”
“Oh, so am I.”
“So I wouldn’t dream of picking him up without a car seat and I forgot to switch our other into this car and so I stopped here to buy one . . . well, you know how it is.”
“I do.”
Nash held up the manual and just shook his head. “Do you think maybe you could take a quick look?”
Reba hesitated. He could see it. A primal reaction—more a reflex. He was, after all, a stranger. We are trained by both biology and society to fear the stranger. But evolution has given us societal niceties too. They were in a public parking lot and he seemed like a nice man, a dad and all, and he had a car seat and, well, it would be rude to say no, wouldn’t it?
These calculations all took mere seconds, no more than two or three, and in the end, politeness beat out survival.
It often did.
“Sure.”
She put her bundles in the back of the car and started over. Nash leaned into his own van. “I think it’s just this one strap over here. . . .”
Reba moved closer. Nash stood up to give her room. He glanced around. The fat guy with the Jerry Garcia beard and tie-dyed tee was still waddling toward the entrance, but he wouldn’t notice anything that did not involve a doughnut. And sometimes, it is indeed best to hide in plain sight. Don’t panic, don’t rush, don’t make a fuss.
Reba Cordova leaned in and that spelled her doom.
Nash watched the exposed back of her neck. It took seconds. He reached in and pushed the spot behind her earlobe with one hand, while covering her mouth with the other. The move effectively shut off the blood to her brain.
Her legs kicked out feebly, but only for a few seconds. He dug in harder and Reba Cordova went still. He slid her in, hopped in behind her, closed the door. Pietra followed up. She shut Reba’s car door. Nash took her keys from Reba’s hand. He used the remote to lock her car. Pietra moved to the driver’s seat of their van.
She started it up.
“Wait,” Nash said.
Pietra turned. “Shouldn’t we hurry?”
“Stay calm.”
He thought a moment.
“What is it?”
“I will drive the van,” he said. “I want you to take her vehicle.”
“What? Why?”
“Because if we leave it here, they will realize that this is where she was grabbed. If we move her car, we may be able to confuse them.”
He tossed her the keys. Then he used the plastic cuffs to tie Reba down. He jammed a cloth in her mouth. She started to struggle.
He cupped her delicate, pretty face in both hands, almost as though he were about to kiss her.
“If you escape,” he said, staring into those doll-like eyes, “I will grab Jamie instead. And it will be bad. Do you understand?”
The sound of her child’s name froze Reba.
Nash moved to the front seat. To Pietra he said, “Just follow me. Drive normally.”
And they started on their way.
MIKE tried to relax with his iPod. Aside from hockey, he had no other outlet. Nothing truly relaxed him. He liked family, he liked work, he liked hockey. Hockey would only last so much longer. The years were catching up. Hard thing to admit. A lot of his job was standing in an operating room for hours at a stretch. In the past, hockey had helped keep him in shape. It probably was still good for the cardio, but his body was taking a beating. His joints ached. The muscle pulls and minor sprains came in greater frequency and extended their stays.
For the first time Mike felt on the downside of life’s roller coaster—the back nine of life, as his golfer friends put it. You know it, of course. When you hit thirty-five or forty, you know on one level that you are no longer the physical specimen you once were. But denial is a pretty powerful thing. Now, at the tender of age of forty-six, he knew that no matter what he did, the slide would not only continue but accelerate.
Cheerful thought.
The minutes passed slowly. He did not bother calling Adam’s phone anymore. He would get the messages or not. On his iPod, Mat Kearney was asking the appropriate musical question, “Where we gonna go from here?” He tried to close his eyes, vanish in the music, but it wouldn’t happen. He started pacing. That didn’t do it. He considered driving around the block on a search, but that seemed stupid. He eyed his hockey stick. Maybe shooting on the goal outside would help.
His cell phone rang. He grabbed it without checking the caller ID. “Hello?”
“Any word?”
It was Mo.
“No.”
“I’ll come over.”
“Go to the game.”
“Nah.”
“Mo—”
“I’ll give the tickets to another friend.”
“You don’t have another friend.”
“Well, that’s true,” Mo said.
“Look, let’s give him another half hour. Leave the tickets at Will Call.”
Mo didn’t reply.
“Mo?”
“How badly do you want to find him?”
“What do you mean?”
“Remember when I asked to look at your cell phone?”
“Yes.”
“Your model comes with a GPS.”
“I’m not sure I follow.”
“GPS. It stands for Global Positioning System.”
“I know what it stands for, Mo. What are you talking about with my cell phone?”
“A lot of the new phones come with GPS chips built in.”