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Stephen White - Missing Persons

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The stakes have just been raised for psychologist Alan Gregory: His friend and fellow therapist Hannah Grant has died at the office, mysteriously and suddenly. The police are baffled, leaving another apparent homicide unsolved in Boulder, Colorado. Only Alan has the means to decipher Hannahs clues, a quest that will take him to Las Vegas and lead him to question the integrity of those closest to him. The clock is ticking as Alan tracks one of Hannahs most elusive patients; has she been kidnapped, or is she a runaway? The answers to both cases may be locked in the mind of a patient he has been treating for a schizoid personality disorder. In a maze of dilemmas that could cost him his career, or his life, Alan takes a bold risk that will have readers racing to the stunning conclusion of Missing Persons. Smart and fast-paced, Missing Persons showcases the rapid-fire dialogue and taut story lines that have made Stephen White the bestselling author that he is today.

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Stephen White Missing Persons Book 13 in the Dr Alan Gregory series for - photo 1

Stephen White

Missing Persons

Book 13 in the Dr. Alan Gregory series

for Lynn Nesbit

Peace is poor reading.

Thomas Hardy

A girl was missing.

In any other town it would have been local news. Even here, on any other day, it might have been just local news.

But it wasnt any other town.

It was Boulder.

It wasnt any other day.

It was Christmas.

And a girl was missing.

Again.

God.

1

The fact that I was sitting with Diane behind Hannah Grants office at 6:30 on a mid-December Thursday evening meant that Id already lost the argument wed been having since she yanked me out from behind my desk five minutes earlier. She killed the ignition on her Saab and summed things up for me anyway. We cant leave in the morning if we cant reach Hannah. Its that simple.

She was right.

With only nine shopping days until Christmas, Diane Estevez and I were scheduled to make the short flight over the Rockies to Las Vegas for a weekend professional workshop-Diane, I suspected, was pretending to be much more enamored of EMDR than she really was-and Hannah was generously providing coverage for our clinical psychology practices while we were away. Without coverage, we couldnt go.

Diane had switched our Frontier flight the next day from noon to the cusp of dawn so that she could cram in a few additional hours getting intimate with some dice, and Hannah needed to consent to the slight change in plans. But Hannah-whose adaptive lassoing of her myriad OCD symptoms typically dictated that an unreturned phone call caused her a degree of psychological discomfort equivalent to the physical distress of a sharp stone in her shoe-had failed to return three different messages from Diane since breakfast.

Is that her car? Do you know what she drives? I asked. The only other car in the tiny lot was a silver Volkswagen Passat.

Looks like hers. Diane offered the comment with a slightly sardonic lilt, and I assumed that she was referring more to the cars pristine condition than to either its make or model. In stark contrast to the spotless Passat, Dianes Saab was covered in the gray-beige film that adheres to virtually every moving vehicle in Colorado after any slushy late fall snowstorm, like the one wed had the previous weekend.

I stepped out of Dianes car and peered into Hannahs. No clutter on the console. No errant French fries on the floor. No empty Diet Coke can in the cup holder. In fact, the only indication that the vehicle hadnt just been hijacked from a dealers showroom was a copy of Elle, still in its plastic sleeve, on the backseat.

The mailing label on the magazine read H. Grant, and was addressed to the Broadway office. The code in the corner indicated that the subscription would terminate the following April. Its hers, I said.

Diane had joined me beside the Passat. Hannah reads Elle?

My own reaction was a little different; I was thinking, Hannah leaves magazines in her car? Shame! I said, I think youre missing the point. It means shes inside with a patient. Shell return your call when she gets a minute.

I dont know about that. Im getting a feeling, she said. And not a good one.

About Hannah?

A little, but more about Vegas. Dianes tone was somber. She took her craps seriously. Lets go inside, she said.

Hannah was a clinical social worker and her therapy practice was in one of the old houses aligned on the side of Broadway closest to the mountains, only a few blocks from the Pearl Street Mall. The cumulative force of more than a decade of migration by psychotherapists had allowed mental-health types to usurp most of that particular urban habitat from sundry lawyers and accountants who had previously set up shop in the houses-some grand, some not-in the row. The uprooted professionals had moved to less charming but eminently more practical spaces in the modern buildings recently erected to fill parking lots a few blocks away on Canyon Boulevard.

The back door of the single-story house was locked. Diane and I followed a flagstone path down the side past a hedge of miniature lilacs that stood naked for winter. We made our way to the front of the building and strolled up a few stairs into a waiting room that had probably been the homes original parlor. On the far side of the lamp-lit room a thirties-something woman with an astonishing quantity of frizzy hair was sitting on a green velvet settee reading a copy of Yoga Journal while munching from a bag of Cheetos. I noted that she checked her wristwatch after she glanced up at us.

I also noted that her fingertips were almost the exact same color as her hair.

Which office is Hannahs? I whispered to Diane. Id never been in the building before. Hannah was one of Dianes close friends; I had no doubt that Diane knew which office she occupied.

Down that hall on the left. The one on the right is Marys.

Mary was Mary Black, M.D., a psychiatrist who without benefit of fertility concoctions had given birth to triplet boys only a few weeks before, on Thanksgiving eve. Both Marys extended maternal adventure and her extended maternity leave were in their earliest stages, which meant that Hannah was without doubt going to be working alone in the building for a while.

Diane stepped down the hall toward the offices. Look, she said.

Stuck into the jamb of Hannahs office door were four folded notes. Two were addressed to Hannah, one was addressed to H. Grant, and one was intended for H. G. Diane picked the one addressed to H. Grant. It appeared to have been written on the back of a page from a daily calendar of unintentionally humorous quotations by the second President Bush.

What are you doing, Diane? I blurted. Those are probably from patients. You cant read them.

Without even a microsecond of indecision Diane rejected my protest. Of course theyre from patients. Thats the point, she said. She glanced at the first note, handed it to me, and said, Look, Hannah missed her one oclock. Next, she grabbed the paper that was addressed to H. G. And see? She missed her four-thirty, too. How come shes missing all her appointments if her cars here? Huh? How the hell do you explain that?

I didnt know how to explain that.

The other two notes were from patients whose therapist had stood them up earlier in the day. Hannah had apparently been missing her clinical appointments since at least nine oclock that morning.

The woman with the orange Roseanne Roseannadanna hair appeared behind us in the narrow hallway. Despite the fact that she was balancing on tall, chunky heels, she still had to gaze up at an acute angle to look Diane in the eyes. Are you here to see Hannah? she asked. I have a six-fifteen appointment. Every Thursday. Shes never late.

The womans voice was part annoyed, and part something else. Concern? Fear? I wasnt sure. But her point about Hannahs reliability was well taken. Hannahs obsessiveness was legendary among her friends and colleagues. She was never late.

Never.

Id begun tasting acid in my throat; I had a bad feeling, too. Though, unlike Dianes, mine had absolutely nothing to do with dice. I tapped lightly on Hannahs office door with my knuckles. My cautious incursion was apparently way too timid for Diane; with an NHL-quality hip-check she moved me aside and grabbed the knob.

The door slid right open.

2

Hannahs classic black patent-leather purse, as unscuffed as the day it had been crafted, rested on the floor in the middle of the room. It stood up neatly, its arched handles perfectly vertical. But the bag was on the floor.

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