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    A Tap on the Window


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      ALSO BY LINWOOD BARCLAY

      Trust Your Eyes

      Never Saw It Coming (A Penguin Special)

      The Accident

      Never Look Away

      Fear the Worst

      Too Close to Home

      No Time for Goodbye

      Stone Rain

      Lone Wolf

      Bad Guys

      Bad Move

      New American Library

      Published by the Penguin Group

      Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street,

      New York, New York 10014, USA

      USA | Canada | UK | Ireland | Australia

      New Zealand | India | South Africa | China

      Penguin Books Ltd., Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England

      For more information about the Penguin Group visit penguin.com.

      First published by New American Library,

      a division of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.

      First Printing, August 2013

      Copyright © Barclay Perspectives, Inc., 2013

      All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights. Purchase only authorized editions.

      REGISTERED TRADEMARK—MARCA REGISTRADA

      LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA:

      Barclay, Linwood.

      A tap on the window/Linwood Barclay.

      p. cm.

      ISBN 978-1-101-62344-2`

      1. Private investigators—Fiction. 2. Runaway children—Fiction.

      3. Upstate New York (N.Y.)—Fiction. I. Title.

      PR9199.3.B37135T37 2013

      813'.54—dc23 2012050861

      PUBLISHER’S NOTE

      This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

      The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party Web sites or their content.

      Contents

      Also By

      Title Page

      Copyright

      Dedication

      Prologue

      ONE

      TWO

      THREE

      FOUR

      FIVE

      SIX

      SEVEN

      EIGHT

      NINE

      TEN

      ELEVEN

      TWELVE

      THIRTEEN

      FOURTEEN

      FIFTEEN

      SIXTEEN

      SEVENTEEN

      EIGHTEEN

      NINETEEN

      TWENTY

      TWENTY-ONE

      TWENTY-TWO

      TWENTY-THREE

      TWENTY-FOUR

      TWENTY-FIVE

      TWENTY-SIX

      TWENTY-SEVEN

      TWENTY-EIGHT

      TWENTY-NINE

      THIRTY

      THIRTY-ONE

      THIRTY-TWO

      THIRTY-THREE

      THIRTY-FOUR

      THIRTY-FIVE

      THIRTY-SIX

      THIRTY-SEVEN

      THIRTY-EIGHT

      THIRTY-NINE

      FORTY

      FORTY-ONE

      FORTY-TWO

      FORTY-THREE

      FORTY-FOUR

      FORTY-FIVE

      FORTY-SIX

      FORTY-SEVEN

      FORTY-EIGHT

      FORTY-NINE

      FIFTY

      FIFTY-ONE

      FIFTY-TWO

      FIFTY-THREE

      FIFTY-FOUR

      FIFTY-FIVE

      FIFTY-SIX

      FIFTY-SEVEN

      FIFTY-EIGHT

      FIFTY-NINE

      SIXTY

      SIXTY-ONE

      SIXTY-TWO

      SIXTY-THREE

      SIXTY-FOUR

      SIXTY-FIVE

      SIXTY-SIX

      SIXTY-SEVEN

      SIXTY-EIGHT

      SIXTY-NINE

      SEVENTY

      For Neetha

      “Can you swim?”

      “Man, you’re crazy! Let me go!”

      “Because even if you can, I don’t like your chances. We’re so close to the falls, the current’s unbelievably fierce. Before you know it, you’re swept over. And it’s a long way down.”

      “Let me go!”

      “You might grab onto one of the rocks just before the top, but the thing is, if you hit one, it’ll probably kill you. Like driving into a wall at a hundred miles per hour. If you were in a barrel, like some of those daredevils who’ve tried going over in one, you might have one chance in a hundred, which is pretty good odds, when you think about it.”

      “I’m tellin’ you, mister, swear to God, it wasn’t me.”

      “I don’t believe you. But if you’re honest with me, if you admit what you did, I won’t throw you over.”

      “It wasn’t me! I swear!”

      “If it wasn’t you, who was it?”

      “I don’t know! If I had a name I’d give it to you. Please, please, I’m begging you, man.”

      “You know what I think? I think when you go over, it’ll feel like flying.”

      ONE

      A middle-aged guy would have to be a total fool to pick up a teenage girl standing outside a bar with her thumb sticking out. Not that bright on her part, either, when you think about it. But right now, we’re talking about my stupidity, not hers.

      She was standing there at the curb, her stringy blond, rain-soaked hair hanging in her face, the neon glow from the COORS sign in the window of Patchett’s Bar bathing her in an eerie light. Her shoulders were hunched up against the drizzle, as if that would somehow keep her warm and dry.

      It was hard to tell her age, exactly. Old enough to drive legally and maybe even vote, but not likely old enough to drink. Certainly not here in Griffon, in New York State. The other side of the Lewiston-Queenston Bridge, maybe, in Canada, where the drinking age is nineteen and not twenty-one. But that didn’t mean she couldn’t have had a few beers at Patchett’s. It was generally known your ID was not put through a rigorous examination here. If yours had a picture of Nicole Kidman on it and you looked more like Penelope Cruz, well, that was good enough for them. Their policy was “Park your butt. What can we getcha?”

      The girl, the strap of an oversized red purse slung over her shoulder, had her thumb sticking out, and she was looking at my car as I rolled up to the stop sign at the corner.

      Not a chance, I thought. Picking up a male hitchhiker was a bad enough idea, but picking up a teenage girl was monumentally dumb. Guy in his early forties gives a lift to a girl less than half his age on a dark, rainy night. There were more ways for that to go wrong than I could count. So I kept my eyes straight ahead as I put my foot on the brake. I was about to give the Accord some gas when I heard a tapping on the passenger window.

      I glanced over, saw her there, bending over, looking at me. I shook my head but she kept on rapping.

      I powered down the window far enough to see her eyes and the top half of her nose. “Sorry,” I said, “I can’t—”

      “I just need a lift home, mister,” she said. “It’s not that far. There’s some sketchy guy in that pickup over there. He’s been giving me the eye and—” Her eyes popped. “Shit, aren’t you Scott Weaver’s dad?”

      And then everything changed.

      “Yeah,” I said. I had been.

      “Thought I recognized
    you. You probably wouldn’t even know me, but, like, I’ve seen you pick up Scott at school and stuff. Look, I’m sorry. I’m letting rain get into your car. I’ll see if I can get a—”

      I didn’t see how I could leave one of Scott’s friends standing there in the rain.

      “Get in,” I said.

      “You’re sure?”

      “Yeah.” I paused, allowed myself one more second to get out of this. Then: “It’s okay.”

      “God, thanks!” she said, opened the door and slid into the seat, moving a cell phone from one hand to the other, slipping the purse off her shoulder and tucking it down by her feet. The dome light was a lightning flash, on and off in a second. “Jeez, I’m soaked. Sorry about your seat.”

      She was wet. I didn’t know how long she’d been there, but it had been long enough for rivulets of water to be running down her hair and onto her jacket and jeans. The tops of her thighs looked wet, making me wonder whether someone driving by had splashed her.

      “Don’t worry about it,” I said as she buckled her seat belt. I was still stopped, waiting for directions. “I go straight, or turn, or what?”

      “Oh yeah.” She laughed nervously, then shook her head from side to side, flinging droplets of water like a spaniel coming out of a lake. “Like, you’re supposed to know where I live. Duh. Just keep going straight.”

      I glanced left and right, then proceeded through the intersection.

      “So you were a friend of Scott’s?” I asked.

      She nodded, smiled, then grimaced. “Yeah, he was a good guy.”

      “What’s your name?”

      “Claire.”

      “Claire?” I stretched the name out, inviting her to provide a last name. I was wondering if she was someone I’d already checked out online. I really hadn’t had a good look at her face yet.

      “Yep,” she said. “Like Chocolate E. Claire.” She laughed nervously. She moved the cell phone from her left to right hand, then rested the empty hand on her left knee. There was a bad scratch on the back, just below the knuckles, about an inch long, the skin freshly grazed and raw, just this side of bleeding.

      “You hurt yourself, Claire?” I asked, nodding downward.

      The girl looked at her hand. “Oh shit, I hadn’t even noticed that. Some idiot staggering around Patchett’s bumped into me and I caught my hand on the corner of a table. Kinda smarts.” She brought her hand up to her face and blew on the wound. “Guess I’ll live,” she said.

      “You don’t quite look old enough to be a customer,” I said, giving her a reproachful look mixed with a smirk.

      She caught the look and rolled her eyes. “Yeah, well.”

      Neither of us said anything for half a mile or so. The cell phone, as best I could see in the light from my dash, was trapped screen down beneath her hand on her right thigh. She leaned forward to look into the mirror mounted on the passenger door.

      “That guy’s really riding your bumper,” she said.

      Headlight glare reflected off my rearview mirror. The vehicle behind us was an SUV or truck, with lights mounted high enough to shine in through my back window. I tapped the brakes just enough to make my taillights pop red, and the driver backed off. Claire kept glancing in the mirror. She seemed to be taking a lot of interest in a tailgater.

      “You okay, Claire?” I asked.

      “Hmm? Yeah, I’m cool, yeah.”

      “You seem kind of on edge.”

      She shook her head a little too aggressively.

      “You’re sure?” I asked, and as I turned to look at her she caught my eye.

      “Positive,” she said.

      She wasn’t a very good liar.

      We were on Danbury, a four-lane road, with a fifth down the center for left turns, that was lined with fast-food joints and a Home Depot and a Walmart and a Target and half a dozen other ubiquitous outlets that make it hard to know whether you’re in Tucson or Tallahassee.

      “So,” I said, “how’d you know Scott?”

      Claire shrugged. “Just, you know, school. We didn’t really hang out that much or anything, but I knew him. I was real sad about what happened to him.”

      I didn’t say anything.

      “I mean, like, all kids do dumb shit, right? But most of us, nothing really bad ever happens.”

      “Yeah,” I said.

      “When was it, again?” she asked. “’Cause, like, it seems like it was only a few weeks ago.”

      “It’ll be two months tomorrow,” I said. “August twenty-fifth.”

      “Wow,” she said. “But, yeah, now that I think of it, there was no school at the time. ’Cause usually everyone would be talking about it in class and in the halls and stuff, but that never happened. By the time we got back, everyone had sort of forgotten.” She put her left hand to her mouth and glanced apologetically at me. “I didn’t mean it like that.”

      “That’s okay.”

      There were a lot of things I wanted to ask her. But the questions would seem heavy-handed, and I’d known her less than five minutes. I didn’t want to come on like someone from Homeland Security. I’d used Scott’s list of Facebook friends as something of a guide since the incident, and while I’d probably seen this girl on it, I couldn’t quite place her yet. But I also knew that “friendship” on Facebook meant very little. Scott had friended plenty of people he really didn’t know at all, including well-known graphic novel artists and other minor celebrities who still handled their own FB pages.

      I could figure out who this girl was later. Another time maybe she’d answer a few questions about Scott for me. Giving her a lift in the rain might buy me some future goodwill. She might know something that didn’t seem important to her that could be very helpful to me.

      Like she could read my mind, she said, “They talk about you.”

      “Huh?”

      “Like, you know, kids at school.”

      “About me?”

      “A little. They already knew what you do. Like, your job. And they know what you’ve been doing lately.”

      I suppose I shouldn’t have been surprised.

      She added, “I don’t know anything, so there’s no point in asking.”

      I took my eyes off the rain-soaked road a second to look at her, but said nothing.

      The corner of her mouth went up. “I could tell you were thinking about it.” She seemed to be reflecting on something, then said, “Not that I blame you or anything, for what you’ve been doing. My dad, he’d probably do the same. He can be pretty righteous and principled about some things, although not everything.” She turned slightly in her seat to face me. “I think it’s wrong to judge people until you know everything about them. Don’t you? I mean, you have to understand that there may be things in their background that make them see the world differently. Like, my grandmother—she’s dead now—but she was always saving money, right up until she died at, like, ninety years old, because she’d been through the Depression, which I’d never even heard of, but then I looked it up. You probably know about the Depression, right?”

      “I know about the Depression. But believe it or not, I did not live through it.”

      “Anyway,” Claire said, “we always thought Grandma was cheap, but the thing was, she just wanted to be ready in case things got really bad again. Could you pull into Iggy’s for a second?”

      “What?”

      “Up there.” She pointed through the windshield.

      I knew Iggy’s. I just didn’t understand why she wanted me to pull into Griffon’s landmark ice cream and burger place. It had been here for more than fifty years, or so the locals told me, and even hung in after McDonald’s put up its golden arches half a mile down the street. Folks around here who liked a Big Mac over all other burgers would still swing by here for Iggy’s signature hand-cut, sea-salted french fries and real ice cream milk shakes.

      I’d committed myself to giv
    ing this girl a ride home, but a spin through the Iggy’s drive-through window seemed a bit much.

      Before I could object, she said, “Not for, like, food. My stomach feels a bit weird all of a sudden—beer doesn’t always agree with me, you know—and it’s bad enough I’ve got your car wet. I wouldn’t want to puke in it, too.”

      I hit the blinker and pulled up to the restaurant, headlights bouncing off the glass and into my eyes. Iggy’s lacked some of the spit and polish of a McDonald’s or Burger King—its menu boards still featured black plastic letters fitted into grooved white panels—but it had a decent-sized eating area, and even at this time of night there were customers. A disheveled man with an oversize backpack, who gave every indication of being a homeless person looking for a place to get in out of the rain, was drinking a coffee. A couple of tables over, a woman was divvying up french fries between two girls, both in pink pajamas, neither of whom could have been older than five. What was the story there? I came up with one that involved an abusive father who’d had too much to drink. They’d come here until they were sure he’d passed out and it was safe to go home.

      Before I’d come to a stop, Claire was looping the strap of her purse around her wrist, gathering everything together like she was planning a fast getaway.

      “You sure you’re okay?” I asked, putting the car in park. “I mean, other than feeling sick?”

      “Yeah—yeah, sure.” She forced a short laugh. I was aware of some headlights swinging past me as Claire pulled on the door handle. “Be right back.” She leapt out and slammed the door.

      She raised her purse in front of her face as a shield against the rain as she ran for the door. She disappeared into the back, where the restrooms were located. I glanced over at a black pickup, its windows tinted so heavily I couldn’t make out who was driving, that had pulled in half a dozen spots over.

      My eyes went back to the restaurant. Here I was, late at night, waiting for a girl I hardly knew—a teenage girl at that—to finish throwing up after an evening of underage drinking. I knew better than to have allowed myself to get into this position. But after she’d mentioned that some guy in a pickup was putting the moves—

      Pickup?

      I glanced again at the black truck, which actually might have been dark blue or gray—hard to tell in the rain. If anyone had gotten out of it and entered Iggy’s, I hadn’t noticed.

     


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