"THE THINGS SHE FORGOT" Chapter 12
Chapter 12
By the time Evelyn left the bookstore, the rain had turned cold again.
Not dramatic storm rain. Just the steady, exhausting kind that soaked slowly through coat sleeves and turned New York sidewalks reflective beneath gray afternoon light.
She walked three blocks before realizing Mara had been talking continuously through her earbuds while she barely absorbed a word.
“Evelyn.”
“What?”
“You disappeared again.”
Evelyn tightened her grip on the umbrella handle. “Sorry.”
“That’s the fifth time in ten minutes.”
Traffic hissed beside her through puddles.
Mara exhaled sharply through the phone. “I don’t like where this is going.”
“Meaning?”
“Meaning you’re starting to sound emotionally attached to the man who might be connected to multiple disappearances.”
Evelyn almost laughed.
Not because it was funny.
Because hearing it out loud made everything feel briefly unreal.
“I’m not attached to him.”
“You literally went quiet for thirty seconds after saying his name.”
“That proves nothing.”
“It proves your nervous system has terrible judgment.”
Rainwater dripped steadily from scaffolding overhead as Evelyn paused beneath a pharmacy awning.
The city smelled like wet asphalt and burnt coffee.
“I remembered him,” she said finally.
Silence.
Then Mara answered more carefully.
“What do you mean remembered?”
“The seminar.” Evelyn stared absently at pedestrians moving through the rain. “Lena and I attended one of his lectures before Blackwater.”
“And you forgot?”
“I forgot all of it.”
The sentence still unsettled her every time she said it.
Mara lowered her voice slightly. “Eve… maybe you should stop.”
Evelyn frowned automatically. “Stop what?”
“All of this.”
The answer came too fast.
The investigation.
The podcasts.
Adrian.
The digging.
The obsession that had swallowed her life so thoroughly she no longer knew where fear ended and curiosity began.
“You think I’m losing perspective.”
“I think you haven’t slept properly in a week and you’re chasing memories that clearly traumatized you the first time.”
Evelyn looked down at the rainwater gathering near the curb.
A bus passed too quickly through a puddle, spraying dirty water across the sidewalk.
“People keep telling me to stop,” she said quietly.
“That’s because normal people stop when things become dangerous.”
The frightening part was that Evelyn no longer knew whether she felt endangered by the investigation—
or by the possibility of finally understanding it.
“I need one more answer first,” she murmured.
Mara sighed heavily.
“Where are you going?”
Evelyn looked at the folded address written across the back of Elise’s seminar pamphlet.
Ruth Ward.
Upper West Side.
“I’m visiting Elise’s mother.”
“Absolutely not.”
Too late.
Evelyn had already started walking again.
Ruth Ward lived in a narrow prewar apartment overlooking Riverside Park.
The building smelled faintly of old radiator heat and furniture polish, the kind of place that carried decades quietly inside its walls. By the time Evelyn reached the fourth floor, rain had darkened the hem of her jeans and dampened strands of hair against her neck.
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For a moment she considered leaving.
The hallway suddenly felt intimate in a way police stations and archives never did.
This wasn’t evidence.
This was grief.
Then the apartment door opened before she knocked.
An older woman stood there wearing a dark green cardigan, silver hair loosely pinned back from her face. Her eyes landed on Evelyn with immediate recognition that felt almost painful to witness.
“You’re the podcast girl,” Ruth said softly.
Evelyn swallowed.
“Yes.”
No accusation in the voice.
That somehow made it worse.
Ruth stepped aside after a moment. “Come in before you freeze.”
The apartment looked lived in rather than decorated. Bookshelves crowded the walls. Framed photographs sat across nearly every surface. Rain moved quietly against the windows overlooking the street below.
Evelyn noticed Elise immediately.
Not physically.
Everywhere else.
Photos.
Drawings.
A scarf folded carefully over the back of a chair.
The preserved shape of someone deeply missed.
Ruth carried tea into the living room while Evelyn remained standing awkwardly beside the couch.
“You knew my daughter?” Ruth asked.
“Not personally.”
“But you knew Lena Vale.”
“Yes.”
Ruth nodded slowly as though fitting old pieces together privately.
“Elise talked about Lena before she disappeared.”
Evelyn’s pulse shifted.
“What did she say?”
Ruth hesitated before sitting down across from her.
“She said Lena looked frightened at the seminar.”
The room seemed quieter suddenly.
“What seminar?”
Ruth studied her carefully now.
“You really don’t remember him.”
Not a question.
Evelyn felt cold move slowly through her stomach.
“Remember who?”
“Dr. Cross.”
Rain tapped softly against the windows behind them.
Ruth lowered her teacup carefully into its saucer.
“Elise said he had a doctor’s voice.”
Evelyn frowned slightly.
“What does that mean?”
The older woman gave a faint, tired smile.
“She said he spoke softly enough that people told him things before realizing they were doing it.”
That sounded painfully accurate.
Ruth’s expression dimmed again.
“After the seminar, Elise became convinced someone was watching her.”
The sentence landed heavily between them.
Evelyn leaned forward slightly. “Did she say who?”
“No.”
“But she suspected someone.”
Ruth nodded once.
“She started taking different routes home. Keeping curtains closed.” A pause. “She stopped sleeping properly too.”
The familiarity of it unsettled Evelyn immediately.
Rain streaked silver down the windows beside them while Ruth continued quietly.
“A week before she disappeared, I heard her arguing with someone on the phone.”
Evelyn’s chest tightened.
“What about?”
“She kept saying she didn’t remember things the way he did.”
For one awful second, Evelyn stopped breathing entirely.
Because that sentence no longer sounded like Elise.
It sounded like her.
“Did she ever mention Adrian directly?” Evelyn asked carefully.
Ruth looked toward the photographs lining the bookshelf.
Then:
“She said he frightened her.”
The answer settled hard inside Evelyn’s ribs.
Fear.
Not attraction.
Not fascination.
Fear.
And yet Evelyn still remembered the calm steadiness of Adrian counting her through panic in the parking garage. The quiet way he noticed things before she spoke them aloud. The exhaustion hidden beneath his composure.
Protector or predator.
The line between them suddenly felt dangerously thin.
“You should leave him alone,” Ruth said softly.
Evelyn looked up.
The older woman’s eyes carried the exhausted certainty of someone who had spent years replaying impossible questions.
“Men who understand broken people too well usually break them further.”
The words followed Evelyn all the way back downstairs.
By the time she stepped outside again, evening had settled over the city in pale rainlight and blurred headlights. Her thoughts felt tangled now, pulled violently between instinct and evidence.
Elise feared Adrian.
But Adrian had also warned Evelyn repeatedly.
Protected her.
Found her during the panic attack.
Told her to lock the door.
None of it fit cleanly together.
She stopped abruptly beneath a streetlamp.
Across the road, parked beside the curb beneath drifting rain—
Adrian’s black sedan waited silently.
Evelyn stared at it for several seconds.
Then she noticed him inside.
One hand resting against the steering wheel. Dark coat. Head tilted slightly downward like someone lost in thought before sensing her attention.
He looked up slowly.
Their eyes met through rain-streaked glass.
Neither moved.
The city hummed quietly around them.
And before she could fully explain the decision even to herself, Evelyn crossed the street, opened the passenger door—
and got in.
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