Colt, who had his back to me, turned and he was now holding the bag.
The bag I saw would have been funny, say, in a TV show. The Ziploc bags I had at my house had big pink daises printed in a line across the front. But I knew the piece of paper wasn’t funny even if it was in a Ziploc bag with daisies on it. It was less funny because I knew it came in the mail at my house, that’s why it was in that bag. My parents had gone over to check my house; Mom told me they’d be doing it. And obviously they did.
I made it to them and Colt said, “Feb, go back in with the agents.”
“What is it?”
“Feb –” Colt started but I reached out fast and snatched the daisy bag out of his hand.
Then I retreated faster and turned my back to him.
I saw the words I’m sorry I upset you about the dog… before Colt reached around me and snatched the bag right back.
“I said, go back with the agents,” he demanded but I was looking at the note in his hand.
“Puck,” I whispered to the note.
I’d been around his dog. He’d had Puck for years and even though a lot of the time he made himself scarce when I came home for visits most of the times, since my family was the only family he had left and I came back for special occasions, he was around.
So was Puck.
When he wasn’t on duty Colt took that dog with him nearly everywhere.
The last two years, Morrie and Dee then just Morrie would look after Puck when Colt went skiing in Colorado with Sully and Lorraine.
I liked Puck so when Colt went on vacation, I went to visit Morrie so I could be around Puck.
Puck was a great dog.
And Morrie had told me about Puck dying last week, right in the bar. Obviously, Morrie didn’t know I liked Puck as much as I did because Morrie was shocked when I burst into tears right behind the bar, right for all to see before I realized what I was doing and walked back to the office to cry about Puck in belated private.
The psycho had seen me too.
“Does this have to do with the case?” I heard Warren ask.
“I’m guessin’, yeah,” I heard Colt answer.
“May I see?” Warren was being polite and I watched the note transfer hands.
But all I could think was that I killed Colt’s dog. Lost women drinking away their lives in bars; loser assholes probably tearing through women’s lives in St. Louis; and now German shepherds who didn’t do any living thing harm just gave unconditional love and cost a bit of money to keep in food and shots – all of them gone, because of me.
“I’m sorry, Colton, but we need to show this to Ms. Owens,” Warren said and I turned to him, my movement stilted, like my joints needed oiling. “This will be upsetting,” he informed me.
I gave him a look that screamed, No kidding? but I didn’t speak. I just lifted my hand and took the note.
Typed out, it said:
I’m sorry I upset you about the dog. I didn’t mean to. I thought you’d be happy that he hurt like he made you hurt. His has to be the worst.
It will be.
For you.
After I finished reading for a second I went blind, the words erased from the paper and I saw nothing.
Then I turned to Agent Warren. “I need to make a statement on TV or something, tell him to stop. Tell him he’s not helping me. Tell him this is not making me happy.”
One of the profilers, went by the name of Nowakowski, said, “If you’d be willing to do that, we’ll consider it, Ms. Owens, but right now we’re unsure we want to alert the media to this.”
“Then I need to send a message somehow.” My voice was rising. “He thinks he’s making me happy. I need to tell him to stop.”
“Ms. Owens –” Nowakowski started.
“He’s watching me. I started crying when my brother told me Puck died… in the bar I started crying. He’s watching me. I need to be visible. What he’s doing to Angie, Puck, I need to be visible. I need to show him he’s not helping me, he’s harming me.”
The agents looked at each other and I felt a presence come close and I knew from experience it was my Dad.
“I don’t need to be here.” My voice was rising as well as getting louder, sounding more hysterical. “I’m not helping here. I need to be out there.” I pointed to the doors, my arm slamming into something solid, that something was Colt’s chest, but I didn’t stop. “I need to be where he can see me! I need him to see –”
“Girl, calm,” Dad said, his hand coming up to curl on my shoulder.
I couldn’t be calm if someone injected me. I’d killed Colt’s dog.
I turned and tipped my head back. Day three, third crying jag I grabbed Colt by the lapels of his jacket and got up on my toes, feeling the tears dropping from my eyes, instant rivers of salt. So much water, I had my eyes open but I couldn’t make him out, he was a total blur.