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The Disappearing Act(88)

Author:Catherine Steadman

She hesitates, biting her lip before answering. “Yes.”

“Did she have anyone else with her?”

Lucy’s expression darkens before she answers definitively, “No.”

Thank God. Suddenly the image of Joanne springs to mind again. “Wait. Did Michelle look anything like the other girl who came to visit me? On Thursday?” It’s a crazy thought, as it would have been incredibly risky on Joanne’s part to try to get past Lucy as both Michelle and Emily.

Lucy thinks for a moment before shaking her head. “No. Well, I suppose they were both brunettes and about the same height, but they were quite different as people. Michelle was a lot more—I don’t know—she was really friendly, chatty, we spoke a lot—” She breaks off, aware of the irony of her character appraisal. She hesitates, an idea clearly coming to her.

“Here, follow me,” she says, turning and disappearing behind the reception area into an alcove housing a more functional work space. A large desk laden with paperwork is flanked by a video security system with four small screens showing constantly shifting images of the building’s lobby, lifts, car park, hallways, pool, and gym. Lucy’s going to show me footage of Michelle.

She takes a seat, tapping through the system, until she locates last night’s lobby footage and switches one of the screens to playback. We both watch the footage as residents I don’t recognize come and go at double speed. It turns out there’s actually quite a few people living in this building. It just goes to show how lonely a city can be; I’ve never seen a single one of them in the flesh before. The time code in the top right-hand corner speeds past midnight. She slows the playback as we hit 3:50 a.m. at reception.

My gaze flickers to Lucy’s screen-lit face and I can’t help but question why on earth she would let someone, even a personal assistant, up to someone’s apartment at four in the morning.

“Lucy, why did you think an assistant would be coming up to my apartment in the middle of the night?” I ask as delicately as I can.

She glances at me. “I don’t know. I mean…you’re an actor. It’s LA. I didn’t ask. Could have been emergency mineral water for all I know.”

My gaze is pulled back to the screen as a dark figure enters the lobby. She strides up to reception and gives Lucy a wave. They’re talking. The woman is wearing tight black jeans, a black Celine hoodie, and an unmarked baseball cap that her long dark ponytail swings from. I can’t see her face from this camera angle, and to give Lucy credit this woman really does look like an assistant dashing in to run a quick errand. She leans across the reception counter chatting to Lucy, who smiles and nods.

The camera angle of the footage changes and I see the front of her now, the peak of her cap still masking everything but her mouth and chin.

Lucy fast-forwards the footage. The woman is now in the lift, her baseball cap still obscuring her face, and then suddenly the woman is looking up to check the floor number. In fast forward it’s only a flash of her features and then it’s gone. My arm shoots toward the screen but Lucy is on it, already rewinding until the face is frozen on screen looking up at us.

My breath snags in my throat. I know this woman very well.

“Oh my God.”

The woman on the screen is Emily. The girl I met at that audition four days ago. The girl who has been missing ever since. The girl who was drugged and raped just over a month ago and who I had assumed might now be dead because of it. But she’s not dead; she’s there on the screen very much alive. About to break into my apartment.

Emily was here. And she was here more than once.

“Keep playing the footage, Lucy. Go to my hallway,” I tell her and blessedly she doesn’t question me. I watch as Emily rounds the corner of my corridor and approaches my door. I imagine myself sleeping soundly within. She pauses briefly outside the door, and then the green door light flashes and she slips quietly into the apartment. Lucy taps the footage into double time again and we stare at my closed apartment door as the timestamp above speeds along. There’s movement as the door reopens, the timestamp showing that eleven minutes have passed since she entered. She reemerges and in her hand is one of my old Whole Food bags, laden. Inside are her things: her laptop, her mobile, her rental documents, and the photograph I unstuck from her bedside table. She stole back the things I took from her apartment.

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