his mind.”
Lydia didn’t buy it. “Paul was really smart. Maybe genius-level smart. If he really wanted to be in the Navy, he would’ve gone to NAPS or West Point Prep, not some ultra-strict, conservative Christian boarding school in the middle of Asshole, Alabama.”
Claire closed her eyes for a moment. She nodded in agreement.
Lydia asked, “Are you sure he didn’t sneak out?”
“As sure as I can be,” Claire admitted. “He had perfect attendance the whole time. His picture was still in the trophy case by the headmaster’s office, so there’s no way he skipped class or got disciplined for being off-campus, and Spring Break was a week later.”
“How do you know?”
“Because he went to the Kennedy Space Center to watch the shuttle launch. There was some kind of technical problem, so it didn’t go up. I’ve seen the pictures. He’s standing in front of a big banner with a date on it and you can see the empty launch pad in the distance, and I remember the date was during the second week of March because of—”
“Julia.” Lydia looked back at the woman with the broom. She was scraping chairs across the sidewalk as she put together the tables.
Claire said, “That skeevy jackass who got Dad arrested still runs the place.”
Lydia could vividly recall her mother talking about Sam’s arrest in her librarian voice, a furious whisper that could freeze an open flame.
Claire said, “It’s weird, I miss Daddy more when I’m with you. I guess because you’re the only person I can really talk to who knew him.”
The door to the Starbucks opened. A group of kids tumbled out onto the sidewalk. Each carried a steaming cup of coffee. They were visibly hungover as they fumbled for their packs of cigarettes.
Lydia stood up. “Let’s get out of here.”
The Tesla was parked in front of the Taco Stand. Lydia glanced through the restaurant’s front windows. The decor had been considerably updated. The chairs were padded. The tables looked clean. There were napkin dispensers on the tables instead of rolls of cheap paper towels.
Claire asked, “We’re still going to the house, right?”
“I guess.” Lydia didn’t know what else to do but keep moving forward.
She got behind the wheel of the Tesla again. She tapped the brake to start the engine. Rick would enjoy hearing details about the car. The touchscreen. The way the steering wheel vibrated if you crossed the yellow line. She would use the information to soften him up, because when Lydia told him what she and Claire had been up to, he was going to justifiably have a fucking fit.
“Go back up the Atlanta Highway.” Claire entered the Fuller address into the touchscreen. “I remember dancing to ‘Love Shack’ with Julia at one of Mom and Dad’s Christmas parties. Do you remember? It was three months before she went missing.”
Lydia nodded, though her mind was still on Rick. Unfortunately, they didn’t have one of those relationships where they hid things from each other. They laid it all out, no matter the consequences. He would probably stop speaking to her. He might even see her crazy road trip as the final straw.
“This is the way Julia went.” Claire pointed through the Arch toward the Hill Community, where Julia had lived during her freshman year. “The dorms are air-conditioned now. Mom says they’ve got free cable and wi-fi, a gym, and a coffee bar.”
Lydia cleared her throat. She had gone from thinking that Rick was going to be mad at her to being mad at Rick for telling her what to do, which was crazy because none of the conversations had actually taken place anywhere but inside her own head.
Claire said, “The Manhattan’s still over there. It’s completely different now.”
“Does Mom still walk the path on the anniversary?”
“I think so. We don’t talk about it much.”
Lydia chewed the tip of her tongue. She wanted to ask if Helen and Claire ever talked about her, but she was too afraid of the answer.
Claire said, “I wonder what’s wrong with her.”
“With Mom?”
“With Lexie Fuller.” Claire twisted in her seat to face Lydia. “Paul obviously chose me because of Julia. I was so vulnerable after she disappeared. He was drawn to my tragedy. Don’t you see it?”
Lydia hadn’t seen it until now.
“When we first met, Paul pretended he didn’t know about Julia, but of course he knew. His parents lived fifteen minutes away from where she disappeared. The farm wasn’t self-supporting. His father did seasonal work with the campus grounds crew. His mother did