some information on the street as to where new ones might’ve sprung up, so we can get a fast bead on where the car might’ve gone. It doesn’t always work. But it’s something we can do, and we’re doing everything we can.”

I got that sickening feeling again. The falling. This time I couldn’t scramble back to denial. I was too tired even to try. I just let myself fall. I let my entire existence hit rock bottom.

“When a thing like this happens?” my mother parroted back, emphasizing that the words were not believable to her. “You’re telling me a thing like this has happened before?”

“Oh yes,” Grace Beatty said. “Carjackings tend to happen fast, and it’s not all that unusual for a child or a pet to go unnoticed in the back seat. Of course, the children are more helpless. We actually like it a lot when a jacker finds out the hard way that there’s a big German shepherd or pit bull in the car. We think of that as help dispensing our justice.” She stopped talking. Scanned our faces. Seemed to realize she’d pulled the conversation off track. That her story was the wrong mood for the wrong audience. “But in cases like this . . .”

“If it’s happened before,” my mother asked, interrupting again, her voice thin and almost whiny, “what did they do with the children?”

“Three times out of four they just put them out of the car when they discover them. The fourth time they might try to ransom them back to the parent. They can usually find a registration in the glove compartment. They know how to get in touch.”

It struck me, with a panic I felt in my throat and lower intestines at the same time, that the phone was unmanned at home. Also that my child, my baby, the love of my life, might be out on the street at night alone. Or in the hands of a ransoming criminal. I had no idea which felt worse.

But my mother was still grilling the officer.

“And if it was just a crazed individual needing a car?” I heard her ask. As if far away. As if I were hearing her voice echo down a long tunnel. “And if he never takes it to one of those chopper places? And if he never calls us wanting money to give her back? Then what?”

“Well, then we really have to earn our paychecks,” Officer Beatty said. “But let’s try to be optimistic and believe we’ll get a good, clear early break.”

And, with that, I fell even deeper. Past the false bottom of my first well. To a whole new depth. One I’d never even known existed in the world.

“We have to call a cab,” my mother said as we walked out the door together.

“You didn’t drive my car here?”

“Oh my goodness, no! I would never drive your car. I’d be thinking the whole way that it was just about to explode.”

I let it go by. I was too tired. Too far down the well.

“If we need to make a phone call,” I said, “why are we walking out onto the street?”

“You don’t have your phone with you?”

“No.”

“Why didn’t you bring your phone with you?”

“I did.”

“Well, where is it now?”

I experienced a sudden flash of anger. It surprised me. I hadn’t felt it coming. “If I knew that, Mom, we wouldn’t have a problem!” I shouted at her.

I watched her rock back a step. Her eyes looked as though I might actually have hurt her. I saw her try on the idea of shouting back. Saw her anger rise up, then fall away again. She was experiencing a rare moment of humanity. This disaster was bringing out the best side she had.

“I’m sorry,” I said. “I didn’t mean that the way it came out. It was sitting in the console of your car.”

“Oh,” she said. Quietly. Then, “I see.”

We stood on the dark street together. Not talking. The mood seemed to sink further. I think it was coming down on both of us. The fact that we were somehow supposed to move forward from this moment. Draw a post-disaster breath.

“I’ll go inside and ask that nice policewoman to call us a cab,” she said.

I watched her move her huge, fragile body back to the police station door. It surprised me to hear that she thought Grace Beatty was nice. She hadn’t treated her as though she thought so.

I looked up and saw actual stars. And I was angry at them. For shining. As though nothing had happened. I was angry at life for going on. They say it always does, but this seemed like too extreme an example.

“Just one thing,” I heard my mother’s voice say. She was standing at the door to the station, one hand on the door pull. “I still don’t get how he could drag you out of the car. You had your seat belt on.”

I pulled a big breath. The blank denial came back to save me. For a minute, anyway.

“It just all happened really fast,” I said.

“But you did have your seat belt on.”

“Yes.”

To this very day I haven’t corrected the lie. To this very day, I feel guilty and uncomfortable about the lie. But in that moment, I couldn’t. I just couldn’t.

The most astonishing part of later that night is the fact I slept. Even briefly. It might only have been a minute or two, but it still amazes me.

I hadn’t meant to. There was nothing purposeful about it.

I’d just been lying on the bed. I’d brought the kitchen phone into my room and plugged it in. There was an old-fashioned phone jack in there, but I’d never used it. Because I had my cell.

I thought I was awake the whole time. But when the phone rang, it startled me out of a dream. Just as well. It was a terrible dream. I was thrashing through water that was jet black and felt as thick as quicksand. Every minute

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