It is every parent’s worst nightmare. Greer Dobbins’ daughter has been kidnapped—and spirited across the Atlantic to a hiding place in Scotland. Greer will do anything to find her, but the streets of Edinburgh hide a thousand secrets—including some she’d rather not face.
Art historian Dr. Greer Dobbins thought her ex-husband, Neill, had his gambling addiction under control. But in fact he was spiraling deeper and deeper into debt. When a group of shady lenders threatens to harm the divorced couple’s five-year-old daughter if he doesn’t pay up, a desperate Neill abducts the girl and flees to his native Scotland. Though the trail seems cold, Greer refuses to give up and embarks on a frantic search through the medieval alleys of Edinburgh—a city as beguiling as it is dangerous. But as the nightmare thickens with cryptic messages and a mysterious attack, Greer herself will become a target, along with everyone she holds dear. Praise for Amy M. Reade’s Secrets of Hallstead House
“Danger, mystery, a brave but resilient heroine, and a hero at her side, coupled with a house that is almost a character in its own right: these classic gothic romances are all to be found in Amy Reade’s debut novel.” --heroesandheartbreakers.com
Release date:
February 7, 2017
Publisher:
Lyrical Press
Print pages:
250
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The phone rang as I was gulping down my second cup of coffee, ready to head out the door to work.
“Hi. Is this Ellie’s mom?”
“Yes.”
“This is Maureen from the primary school office, just calling to confirm that Ellie is out today.”
“No,” I answered, setting the coffee cup down with a clunk. “She should be there.”
“Okay. Mrs. Dennis probably just marked her absent by mistake. I’ll call down to the classroom and get back to you.”
“Thanks.” I hung up, frustrated with Mrs. Dennis. This wasn’t the first time she had been careless about marking Ellie absent when she was sitting right in front of her. And now I had to wait for the office to call back and was going to be late for my class.
I had folded half a load of laundry before the phone rang again.
“Dr. Dobbins? This is Maureen again. Mrs. Dennis said Ellie wasn’t in the classroom, so I went down to check. She’s not there.”
“Is she in the bathroom?”
“Mrs. Dennis said there’s no one in the class bathroom. I checked the bathroom in the hallway and she wasn’t there. She’s not in the nurse’s office, either. The custodian is checking the other bathrooms and the gym to see if she’s there.”
It wasn’t like Ellie to leave her classroom without telling the teacher. “Let me call my neighbor. She walked Ellie to the bus stop with her kids this morning. I’ll call you back.”
I hung up and dialed Dottie, my neighbor across the street.
“Hi, Dottie. It’s Greer. Did Ellie get on the bus okay this morning?”
“Yeah. Why? Is something wrong? Is she sick?”
Dottie was known by all the moms in the neighborhood as a rabid worrier, and Ellie had been frequently sick this fall. The divorce seemed to be affecting her more now that she had started going to school.
“No, no,” I hastened to assure her. “They marked her absent because she’s not in the classroom.”
“Oh. She’s probably in the gym.” Ellie’s fondness for Mr. Leicester, the gym teacher, was legendary.
“You’re probably right. Thanks, Dottie. Talk to you later.”
I called the school right back. Maureen answered on the first ring. “My neighbor put her on the bus,” I informed her.
“She’s not in the gym, and Mr. Leicester didn’t see her this morning. I was just going into Mrs. Ravell’s office to see if Ellie’s in there.” I couldn’t imagine why Ellie would have to see the principal.
“Call me back as soon as you’ve checked.”
“Of course.”
I finished folding the laundry and put my coffee cup in the dishwasher. I double-checked my makeup in the mirror and was standing in the front hall gnawing on my thumbnail when the phone rang again. It was Maureen.
“She’s not in with the principal. I made an announcement on the PA system asking her to come to the office.”
“When was that?”
“Right before I called you.”
A small, cold pit of worry was beginning to settle inside my stomach. The school wasn’t that big—even if Ellie were in the farthest reaches of the building, she should be at the office in under three minutes. “Can you just put me on hold until she comes to the office?” I asked Maureen.
“Sure.” I heard a click, and my ears were assaulted by the very loud radio station the school used as its hold music. I held the phone several inches from my head while I waited. I bit a hangnail on my index finger, then shook my head. “Stop it,” I told myself. I paced the kitchen and living room while I waited for Maureen to come back on the line.
About five minutes passed. I had practically worn a hole in the living room carpet when I heard another click, followed by Maureen’s voice.
“Dr. Dobbins? She’s not here yet. Are you sure your neighbor put her on the bus?”
The cold feeling in my stomach began to grow. “I’ll call her again and double check, but she said Ellie got on the bus this morning, just like she normally does.”
I dialed Dottie as quickly as I could. “Dottie, you’re absolutely sure Ellie got on the bus this morning?” I blurted out before she could even say hello.
“Of course.” She sounded a little hurt. “I remember specifically because I noticed as she climbed the steps onto the bus that her hair ribbon had come undone.” I’d tied a dark blue grosgrain ribbon in Ellie’s hair. “They haven’t found her yet?”
“No.”
“Is there anything I can do?”
“Not right now. I’ve got to call the school back.” I gave her a perfunctory good-bye and hung up, my breath coming a little faster.
When I called the school again, Maureen put me right through to the principal.
“Dr. Dobbins, I don’t want you to worry,” she said soothingly. “I’m sure we’ll find her. But do you mind coming down here? If she’s hiding because there’s something bothering her, it might be a good idea to have you nearby just in case.”
I called the department chairman on the way to school and spoke to his secretary. I didn’t tell her the real reason I was going to be late, opting instead to blame my tardiness on the alarm clock. She said she would relay the message. The chair wouldn’t be happy to have to teach my class, but he would have to deal with it.
As I drove, my thoughts began to churn in sync with my stomach. What if Ellie had fallen asleep on the way to school? What if she were stuck on the bus in some parking lot, scared and crying? What if she were sick? Did the bus drivers check for sleeping kids when they finished their routes?
Worst of all, what if she had been kidnapped?
* * *
There was a bus in the parking lot when I got to the school. Walking past it, I tried to peer in the windows for a glimpse of Ellie. But I wasn’t tall enough to see anything. I pressed the buzzer to be admitted to the main office.
Maureen sat at her desk, frowning at her computer screen and talking on the phone. She waved me right into Mrs. Ravell’s office.
The principal sat behind her desk, also on the phone. Two women sat opposite Mrs. Ravell. I recognized one of them right away as Ellie’s bus driver. It must have been her bus I saw in the parking lot. I nodded to her.
Mrs. Ravell put the phone down and motioned me into a chair between the other women. “Dr. Dobbins, I’m sure you know Mrs. Bennett, Ellie’s bus driver.” I nodded. “And this is Mrs. Garcia, this week’s bus monitor,” she said, indicating the second woman.
“Hi,” I greeted her as I sat down. She flashed a worried smile at me.
Mrs. Ravell began speaking. “Mrs. Bennett has double- and triple-checked the seats, and the bus is empty of children. Mrs. Garcia is a first-grade teacher whose responsibility this week is to monitor the children getting off the buses. She got here only a moment before you did.” She turned her attention to Mrs. Bennett.
“Did you see Ellie Gramercy get off the bus this morning?”
The bus driver shrugged. “I assume she did since the bus is empty, but I’m not sure that I paid attention to her getting off the bus specifically. There’s a lot going on when the kids are getting to school, so it’s hard to notice one particular child.”
Mrs. Ravell nodded. “I understand.” She turned to me. “Once they get off the buses, the kids line up and go into the school single file.” She looked at Mrs. Garcia. “Did you see any child getting out of line this morning?”
Mrs. Garcia shook her head. “I didn’t notice anyone out of line, but there was a commotion involving two kids getting off the bus behind Mrs. Bennett’s. I suppose I could have missed something.”
“Is there just one teacher out front to supervise all the buses unloading?” I asked.
Mrs. Ravell shifted in her seat, looking uncomfortable. “Yes. We’ve never needed more than that. I stand in the vestibule and greet the kids as they come in, but there’s only one member of the staff out there. Plus the bus drivers, of course.
“There’s another thing we can check. There are security cameras mounted by the front doors to the school, and they capture the buses loading and unloading. I’ll have our AV tech pull those up and we can have a look at them.” She picked up her phone and spoke to Maureen, asking her to find the tech and send him in.
Shouldn’t that have been done already? A surge of anger flooded through me.
Mrs. Bennett and Mrs. Garcia left, leaving me alone with the principal. I caught myself biting my fingernail again and forced myself to stop by interlacing my fingers. “You’ve checked the nurse’s office?” I asked Mrs. Ravell.
She sighed and nodded. “No one has seen Ellie this morning.”
There was a knock at the door and it opened slowly. A bearded man peered into the office. “You called for me?”
Mrs. Ravell motioned in my direction. “Gus, this is Dr. Dobbins, Ellie Gramercy’s mother. We can’t seem to find Ellie in the building, and I’d like you to pull up today’s video of the buses unloading to see if we can figure out where Ellie went after she got off the bus.”
“Sure.” Gus fingered his tie nervously.
Mrs. Ravell moved out of the way as Gus went around her desk and signed into her computer. I walked behind the desk and stood with the principal, watching Gus pull up the video from earlier that morning.
The screen was divided into quarters. Black-and-white images of children jerked across all four boxes. I recognized some of them as kids in Ellie’s grade.
Ellie’s bus pulled into view, and Mrs. Ravell asked Gus to slow down the video. I watched, unblinking, as kids piled off the bus one by one. I saw Dottie’s three children and two other kids from down the block. A tall boy stepped down, and then I spotted her. My little girl was making her way in black and white down the bus steps, her big backpack slung over her shoulder.
“There she is,” Mrs. Ravell and I said simultaneously. Gus slowed the video to an agonizing crawl.
We watched as she made her way toward the front of the school. I could see Mrs. Garcia in the background, hurrying over to the bus behind Ellie’s to assist with the scuffle she had mentioned.
I kept my eyes on Ellie. She turned her head. She seemed to be looking for something. Then she kept walking across the screen in slow motion.
Then she turned her head again. It looked to me like her eyes narrowed. She stopped walking. The kid behind her walked into her. She looked at the boy, then back again at something off the screen.
She stepped out of line, looking behind her. I could see her eyebrows knit together as she shifted her backpack to the other shoulder.
“What is she doing?” asked Mrs. Ravell.
I shook my head, too intent on watching the video to answer.
“Gus, can you advance the video one frame at a time?” Mrs. Ravell asked.
The video stopped, then moved forward one frame as he pushed a button on the keyboard. Ellie was in mid-step, moving away from the line of students.
Another frame, and she set her foot down on the pavement. Another frame, and she moved again, this time farther away from the line.
Another frame, and now a dark image appeared in the corner. I couldn’t tell what it was. But frame by slow frame, Gus moved the video forward, and we could all see that a car was pulling in front of the bus while Ellie walked toward it.
I started taking deep breaths. Mrs. Ravell must have thought I was going to faint, because she gestured to Gus and took my arm, lowering me gently into the chair Gus vacated. I sat down without ever moving my eyes from the screen.
“Do you know whose car that is?” I didn’t even know who asked me the question.
I didn’t answer. I was watching my daughter approach the passenger side of the car as Gus continued to tap the keyboard slowly. The window on the passenger side was rolled down. Ellie leaned into the window and, frame by frame, she opened the car door and got inside. The car drove off.
My hands were shaking. I pushed the chair back and leaned forward, putting my head between my knees so I wouldn’t throw up or faint. Mrs. Ravell picked up her phone and said something to Maureen, but I couldn’t hear her because the sound of blood rushing in my ears was too loud.
Gus reversed the video and stopped it again at the point when the car pulled up in front of the bus.
“I can’t quite make out what kind of car that is,” he said, grimacing and shaking his head.
Maureen came hurrying into the office with a glass of water. “Here, Dr. Dobbins. Drink this. It’ll help.”
Mrs. Ravell was on the phone again, this time talking to the police. She hung up and pushed another button on her phone. Suddenly I heard her voice over the PA system, announcing a school-wide lockdown. It was strange, hearing her voice over the intercom and also in person, directly in front of me. Why the lockdown now, when Ellie is gone already? I stared at her.
As if reading my mind, Mrs. Ravell said gently, “I have to do that. It’s school procedure.”
I looked away from her and tried again to focus on the black-and-white frames in front of me, but my peripheral vision was going black. I swayed, and Maureen knelt down on the floor between me and the desk, cupping my face in her hands. She spoke sternly.
“Dr. Dobbins, pull yourself together. We have a job to do. Focus now, and help us find Ellie.”
Her stern words were exactly what I needed to hear. I sat up a little straighter. Mrs. Ravell spoke up. “The police are on their way. No one else can get in or out until I give the order.”
I inched the chair closer to the computer screen, straining my eyes to see what kind of car had pulled in front of Ellie’s bus. Maybe if we had that information… But only the front right side of the car was in the image. The make and model were impossible to determine. Tears blurred my vision. I cursed in frustration.
“Are there any other cameras outside the school?” I asked Gus.
“I’ll pull up the one closer to the main road.”
Ellie’s school was in a bucolic setting, with a large park separating it from the road. Anyone driving out of the school’s parking lot had to go past the park to get onto the main road. Gus’s fingers flew as he pushed several buttons. Before long, a split screen appeared, this time in color. He pushed more buttons, and the frames reversed until the time-stamp on the new video matched the time-stamp on the bus video. He then moved forward through images for several seconds until the car that had been in front of the bus—the car containing my little girl—pulled into view.
It rolled quickly through a stop sign and turned right onto the main road leading past the campus. In a matter of seconds it was out of sight.
It was my ex-husband’s car.
“That’s Neill,” I told Mrs. Ravell and Gus, my breath catching in my throat.
“Ellie’s father?” Mrs. Ravell asked.
I nodded, transfixed by the sight of his car driving out of sight on the monitor.
Maureen had returned to the main office and buzzed Mrs. Ravell. “The police are here. I’m sending them in.”
There was another knock at the door, and two police officers entered. Mrs. Ravell, who plainly knew both of them, introduced me quickly and outlined what we knew so far from the video surveillance. I stood up, still shaky, and offered her chair to one of the officers. He sat down and asked Gus to pull up the video from the line of buses. The other officer took out his phone and turned his back to the rest of us. I couldn’t hear what he was saying. After a moment, he clicked off the phone and joined us around the desk.
The officer at the computer turned to me. “You’re sure this is your ex-husband’s car?”
“Yes.”
“Do you happen to know the license plate number?”
I shook my head, mentally kicking myself for not memorizing Neill’s license plate. The officer swiveled back to the monitor and watched the video several times, moving the frames backward and forward, with the second officer leaning over his shoulder. Finally he looked up at Gus and asked to see the video closer to the main road. Gus complied rapidly, and in just a moment, the officers were watching Ellie disappear over and over again as they reversed and forwarded the frames again.
“Wait.” The second officer pointed to the screen. “Can you reverse that? Just one frame.” We all crowded around the computer to see what the officer was pointing to.
“See that? It’s a partial plate.” We hadn’t noticed it before. He turned to Gus. “Can you enlarge that frame?”
Gus pushed more keys and the frame appeared larger on the screen. If I stepped back from the computer and strained my eyes, I could make out four grainy letters on the license plate. The officer standing next to me got on his phone again, relaying numbers and letters to the person on the other end of the line. He clicked off the phone again. “We’ll get that information disseminated right away. He won’t be able to get far before someone sees him.”
The two officers talked to each other in low voices while I stared at the computer screen. Mrs. Ravell gestured toward Gus and spoke to him privately next to the door. It was only a few moments before my phone vibrated. I yanked it out of my pocket, hoping Neill had come to his senses and was bringing Ellie back to school. But then I noticed that Mrs. Ravell and Gus were looking at their phone screens, too. We had all been contacted at the same time.
It was an Amber Alert. I should have expected it, but I looked at the screen in confusion. It took me a second to realize I was reading Neill’s license plate number and physical descriptions of him and Ellie. My memory jerked back to the times I had received Amber Alerts for other missing children. I always felt a jolt of dread for the child and the parents involved. I would look at the cars and people around me to see if any of them matched the descriptions in the alert. But when they didn’t, the Amber Alert would melt into the background of my mind as I returned to whatever task was at hand. I almost never gave the alert a second thought. It didn’t involve me, so I never bothered to find out what happened to the child or the family who was the focus of the alert. And I felt a sudden stab of guilt and regret for all the times I didn’t spare any more pain for those people. Suddenly that pain was fiercely personal. It didn’t seem possible for this to be happening to my family. This was something that happened to other people. I wanted the nightmare to stop.
“Is there a place where we can talk to Dr. Dobbins privately?” one of the policemen asked Mrs. Ravell. She showed us to a small conference room and departed, closing the door quietly behind her.
“I’m Sergeant Boyd,” he said, “And this is Sergeant Templeton. Now I want you to start at the beginning and tell us what happened with you and your ex-husband.”
I took a deep breath to try to steady my nerves. As horrified as I was, this was no time to lose control of myself.
“My ex-husband and I divorced about three years ago,” I began. “I got primary custody, but he gets Ellie one night a week and every Saturday.”
“Why did you divorce?” Officer Boyd asked.
“Irreconcilable differences,” I said, hoping they wouldn’t pry any further.
“Such as?” Officer Boyd prompted.
“I found out he had a gambling addiction,” I stated. “It led to arguments, secrecy, you know. I couldn’t take it anymore and I left him. I took Ellie with me.”
“Has he ever abused Ellie?”
I shook my head. “No. Definitely not.”
“So it’s normal for her to go in the car with him?”
“I suppose so, but not on a weekday and certainly not at the start of the school day. He must have told her something that sounded urgent enough for her to leave the line of kids going into school. Maybe he told her I was sick. He could have told her anything. Do you think you can catch him?”
“I hope so.” The full importance of what was happening hit me just then. I tried to catch my breath as I bent forward. The police officer grabbed my arm and helped me to slide to the floor, where I sat with my back against the wall. The sounds in the room seemed to subside into a murky black background.
The next thing I knew, Officer Templeton was bent over me saying, “Dr. Dobbins, stay with me. I need your help, Doctor. You have to help us.” It was the second time that morning someone had reminded me to remain focused, remain alert. But I just couldn’t bear the weight that was pressing down on my chest, making it hard to breathe and making clear thoughts impossible. Only one thing was screaming its way through my head:
Neill has Ellie.
Neill has Ellie.
I was living in a nightmare.
What did he want with her, anyway? Where could he be going with her?I looked up into Officer Templeton’s face. I could see the concern in his eyes. He took my arm and helped me to sit up. Maureen appeared out of thin air with smelling salts and a glass of orange juice. I nodded my thanks, unable to speak, and tried to focus on what the officer was saying, but I realized he wasn’t talking to me. He was talking to Officer Boyd. I could only hear snatches of the conversation.
“…check his last known address…”
“…find out where he works…”
“…issue an APB…”
“Dr. Dobbins?” Hearing my name jerked me out of my trance. It was Officer Boyd.
“Yes?”
“We need some information from you about your ex-husband.”
I nodded. What followed was an exchange I barely could recall later. I dimly remember telling him that Neill was an English professor and that he had an apartment about thirty minutes away. I must have given him other information, too, but I don’t remember what it was.
The police issued instructions to Mrs. Ravell to end the lockdown. They were quite sure this was an isolated event. “Domestic incident” they called it, though Neill wasn’t part of our household anymore. As they prepared to leave the school, Officer Boyd asked me to accompany him to the police station to provide a list of Neill’s family contacts.
“I’ll have to stop at home to get my address book,” I said.
“You don’t have the contacts on you? On your phone?”
“No. I don’t have anything to do with his family.”
“I’ll follow you.”
We drove to my house, which was a short distance from the school. On the way I dialed Neill’s mobile phone. No answer, as I suspected. As I pulled into the driveway, Dottie came running across the street.
“I’ve been waiting for you!” She glanced nervously at the police car out of the corner of her eye. “What on earth is going on?”
“Neill took Ellie from school.”
She gasped, her hand flying to her mouth. “Where did he take her?”
“That’s the problem. We don’t know. Dottie, I’m sorry, but I’ve got to get numbers for Neill’s family and get down to the police station. I’ll tell you everything later.” I was walking up the front steps and opening the front door as I spoke.
She nodded. “Let me know if you need anything, honey. Anything.”
I closed the door behind me and ran into the office. I rifled through stacks of papers on my desk, finally locati. . .
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