Silent Run
bank account.â He leaned forward, his gaze darkening. âThe thing is, Sarah, I wouldnât have cared if you had taken every cent I had, if youâd left Caitlyn with me."
She wanted to defend her actions, but she couldnât.
âI kept thinking youâd have second thoughts,â he continued, âthat youâd come back or call or write me a letter. A couple of weeks after you left I received some hang-up calls, breathing on the other end, but no one would talk. It drove me crazy, but I didnât want to change my number in case it was you or it was someone who knew about you.â He paused. âAnd then there was the break-in."
Her heart skipped a beat. âWhat are you talking about? What break-in?"
âAbout two weeks after you left, I came home and the back window of the apartment had been broken. Someone had come in, tossed the furniture, stolen some petty cash and my laptop computer. The police couldnât lift any fingerprints. They never figured out who did it.â He took a breath as he met her gaze. âI know what youâre thinking, that it was connected to your disappearance. I thought so, too, but another apartment in the building was also broken into. In the end, the police believed it was just your ordinary, run-of-the-mill burglar."
âIt seems odd to me,â she murmured, especially since she now knew that someone was trying to kill her. Had they been trying to kill her when she was with Jake, too? Was that why sheâd run? Had they broken into Jakeâs apartment to find out where sheâd gone, or to see if sheâd left something important behind? If sheâd cleaned out the apartment before she left, had she been trying to hide something?
âThe timing felt coincidental,â Jake admitted. âBut the fact that two apartments were broken into made it seem more random."
âWhich might have been what they wanted you to think."
âItâs easier to see that now. At the time I didnât have any idea you had a secretive past or were in danger. All I had was a note saying our relationship wasnât working and you were leaving."
She sighed at his unforgiving tone. âIs there anything you can tell me about myself thatâs good? Just one little thing, like maybe I squeezed the toothpaste from the bottom up, or I made really great popcorn, or anything?"
Jake didnât look eager to comply with her request. âI canât remember."
âIâm sure that felt good to say. A taste of my own medicine, huh?"
He tipped his head in acknowledgment. âItâs hard to swallow, isnât it?"
Silence fell between them. She couldnât bring herself to beg for more information, and it was clear that Jake couldnât get past the anger he felt toward her. It radiated off of him in thick, pulsing waves, making the air between them tense and uncomfortable. It was going to be a long night.
âYou liked to take pictures,â Jake said finally.
âOf what?â she asked.
âBuildings, landscapes, flowers, animals, pretty much whatever grabbed your interest. Not people, though. You never shot people. Even when Caitlyn was born, you seemed reluctant to take photos of her. I have no idea what you did with the ones you did take. They disappeared with you."
âWhat else?â she asked, eager for as much as he could give her. âWhat about your family? Do you have other siblings besides Dylan? Parents? Grandparents? Did we spend time with them?"
He gazed back at her, his expression still grim. âMy parents divorced when I was ten. Thatâs the last time I saw my mother. My father and I donât spend time together anymore. You never met him. We did, however, visit my grandmother a few times in the convalescent home. She liked you, but she had Alzheimerâs, so God only knows who she thought you were half the time. Are we done? Because this is a waste of time. It doesnât matter who you were or what you did with me. What we need to figure out is where youâve been the last seven months."
âI know, but how do we do that? All I have is a deeply ingrained sense of fear and the belief that Iâve been running for a long time."
âMaybe you have,â he said. âI should have dug deeper when you were with me. I should have asked more questions."
âWhy would you? It sounds like we had a normal relationship."
âI knew better than to take you at
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