Оценить:
 Рейтинг: 0

The Rain Sparrow

Год написания книги
2019
<< 1 ... 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 >>
На страницу:
16 из 21
Настройки чтения
Размер шрифта
Высота строк
Поля

“But you don’t think so?”

“Something’s not right, or Brody would have let us call his father that night. His dad was not out of town.”

“The kid lied.” He wasn’t surprised. No drowned rat of a boy refused to go home to dry clothes and a warm bed without good reason.

“I think so. I asked him directly and he sidestepped the question with a vague reply that was all but an admission.”

Hayden inhaled deeply and sat back in the chair.

Home was hell for some kids. A few were lucky enough to escape. He’d lied about a lot of things, too, usually to his mother but often to others. Lies he passed off as excuses. His mama was out of town. She was sick. He’d forgotten to ask her.

He swallowed back the intruding thoughts. They were discussing Brody, not him.

“I talked to Trey,” Carrie said. “He couldn’t recall any problems from that address, not since he’s been on the force.”

“Did he know anything about the kid’s father?”

“Basically common knowledge stuff and what Brody told me. Clint Thomson is employed at the Big Wave boat factory. He hangs out at Brannon’s bar on Second Street. No record of arrest except for a DUI a few years ago.”

“An alcoholic?”

“Or maybe a man who has a few beers after work and got caught once.”

“What about Brody’s mother?”

“She left before Trey came back to Honey Ridge, but I asked my mother. Brody’s mom, Penny, was the quiet type who didn’t socialize much. She didn’t even attend church, which is a social no-no in Honey Ridge. Mama didn’t recall anything about their divorce.”

“No close friends or job or anything?”

“I didn’t ask, but apparently not, because Mama, who basically knows everyone and his dog in Honey Ridge, was barely acquainted. Apparently, the breakup was one of those private things that happen. She was unhappy in her marriage and left.”

“But she left her son, too.”

“Sad, isn’t it? Maybe she thought Brody, being a boy, would be better off with his father. I’ve known couples who did that. Mama took custody of the girl. Daddy took the boy.”

“But wouldn’t she care if the old man is knocking him around? I wonder if he hears from her. If she knows things are rocky?”

“I think your writer’s brain is kicking into gear.”

“Meaning?”

“We don’t know if Brody is being mistreated, Hayden. Maybe he and his dad had a disagreement that night. Maybe he got in trouble at school and didn’t want to face the music at home. Kids do that.”

Hayden rubbed the back of his neck. “I guess that’s possible.”

His fertile mind did overreact at times and suspect trouble where none existed. That was how he got his story ideas. Experience had taught him that beneath every smile was a heartache. Behind every cloud was a tornado. Not that he’d mention a tornado to Carrie.

“When Trey was about that age, he got in trouble with Dad for something. I don’t remember what he’d done, but he ran away and hid in Grandpa’s barn all day.” She spread her hands. “And I can promise you, the Riley kids were not abused.”

All of what she said was true, but Hayden’s instincts, honed for survival, rarely let him down. “If he doesn’t complain and no one sees anything illegal going on, his dad could get away with hurting him.”

“He goes to school. His teachers would notice.”

Hayden didn’t smirk. He didn’t even react. Once in a great while a teacher noticed, but mostly not. Hayden knew better than anyone. Teachers were only human, and if a kid kept his mouth shut and wasn’t a class disturbance, no one noticed; no one asked the uncomfortable questions.

That was the problem with home situations. A stranger, even an interested one, couldn’t see what was happening behind closed doors. “Perhaps you’re right and it’s nothing serious.”

For all her reasoning to the contrary, the small frown between Carrie’s eyebrows said she still worried.

“Does he come into the library much?”

“Almost every day after school.”

Hayden glanced at his watch. “Which can’t be too long from now.”

“What if he does? How is that helpful?”

A muscle jerked below his eye. He reached up and rubbed as if he had an itch. A tic. A twitch. A mental hiccup in a man with crazy in his genetic code. “If something is happening to him at home, he’s safe here.”

Knowing the kid had a refuge, even for little while, brought Hayden a measure of peace.

“Tawny and I set up a cookie tray in the foyer for after school.” Carrie gestured toward the front of the library. “I think that may be his dinner.”

“Another reason to be concerned.”

“Maybe. But maybe I’m wrong. All of the kids, especially the older boys, gobble the cookies like hungry wolves.”

“Gut feelings count.” Especially his gut. She wouldn’t understand, and he certainly couldn’t explain.

“I care about kids, Hayden. If his home situation is bad—” she bowed her shoulders “—well, I want to be alert to any signs. He’s a nice little boy. Puts the books and magazines neatly back where they belong or brings them to the reshelf cart. Doesn’t turn down the page corners.”

“Librarians get testy about those page corners.” His lips quivered.

She arched an eyebrow at him. “Defacing a perfectly wonderful book is a serious thing, especially when we have bookmarks at the desk. Free!”

Letting the grin slip through, he lifted both hands from the tabletop. “Won’t get an argument from me.”

Mr. Franks had taught him that people who respect themselves respect public property, too. This was after Hayden had carved his name on a bathroom stall. He’d never forgotten that lesson or how the event had begun the change that saved his life.

Carrie silently slid her chair back from the table and started to stand.

“If you need any help with your research, let me know.”

“Can you point me to archives of the town’s history?”

“Sure, but you can learn more, especially the colorful, gossipy stuff, from the good ol’ boys down at the Miniature Golf Café. You are guaranteed to get an earful any day of the week.”

“Would you be willing to come along and introduce me? I’ll buy your breakfast.”
<< 1 ... 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 >>
На страницу:
16 из 21