I'll See You Again

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I'll See You Again Page 1

by Jackie Hance




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  Contents

  Prologue

  Part One

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Part Two

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Part Three

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgments

  About Jackie Hance and Janice Kaplan

  To the community

  of loving friends and family

  who have helped us find light

  in the darkness

  PROLOGUE

  July 26, 2009

  Warren drives frantically toward the police barracks in Tarrytown, New York, tightly clutching the wheel of his Acura. His three little fair-haired daughters should be heading home right now in a two-tone red Windstar, driven by his sister, Diane, but something has happened. He’s gone to the spot on the road where he told his sister to wait, but saw no sign of any of them. Not Diane or her two children. Not his three girls.

  Cars don’t disappear. Children don’t vanish from the earth.

  The police barracks looms ahead. Warren rushes in, and his father, who has come with him, follows behind. Warren starts to blurt out his story, but the troopers are already aware of the situation.

  “Somebody else gave us the information,” one tells him. “Maybe your wife.”

  The police claim they have done a twenty-five-mile-radius search, and there’s no sign of the missing car. Later, Warren will wonder how they could have missed it.

  Children don’t vanish from the earth.

  After his last call with her, when she sounded so ill, Diane stopped answering her cell phone. Now Warren suggests that the police try to track it. Cell phones have GPS, and pinging a signal always works in the movies. If they locate the phone, maybe they can find her. In the background, Warren hears one of the officers take a 911 call from his friend Brad, who has also called to report the situation. Missing car. Missing children. Huge worry.

  The police, less concerned, gently urge Warren to leave.

  “There’s a diner about a mile down the street,” one of the cops says. “If your sister wasn’t feeling well on the road, maybe that’s where she went, to get something to eat.”

  Warren and his father drive to the diner, but the Windstar isn’t in the parking lot. As they drive around aimlessly for a few minutes, a sense of futility engulfs them, and Warren turns back to the police station. This time, the moment Warren pulls up, a trooper rushes out and opens the door of a police vehicle.

  “Get in the car,” he calls out to Warren. “I’ve got to take you to the hospital.”

  Warren feels the blood drain from his head. “This is bad,” he says to his father.

  They get to the hospital, and Warren rushes in, yelling for his girls—his daughters, his life. Nobody has told him anything.

  “Where are my children?” he asks.

  A trooper who is waiting there takes him to a side room. He tells Warren the news.

  Warren slams his fist, making a hole in the wall. Then another. He would punch a hole in the universe if he could, stop time, make it turn back. The trooper begins to sob, devastated. He shows Warren a picture of his own baby and Warren claps him on the back as the trooper cries in sympathy and fear and frustration.

  A strange composure descends on Warren. He wants to talk to somebody about organ donation, to see how he can help even as his own life is disintegrating. But there is confusion everywhere, and the troopers are gone.

  He asks for a room with a phone where he can be alone.

  His first call is home.

  Warren’s father’s version of a BlackBerry is a scrap of paper in his wallet with phone numbers of all the aunts and uncles and cousins. He hands it to Warren, who calls every one. He wants to be the one to tell them.

  An hour or so later, three of his close friends come into the hospital. Brad and Rob flank Warren and lead him outside, where their friend Doug is in a car to whisk him home. As his father stays behind to be with Diane’s husband, Warren’s community of friends is already coming together to protect him.

  A hundred yards away, reporters are beginning to arrive at the hospital with microphones and cameras. It’s a big story. Someone must have something to say. But nobody notices the grieving father as he leaves the hospital.

  Part One

  2009

  One

  Summers are supposed to be relaxing, so how did this one become so hectic? I thought as I started packing up Emma, Alyson, and Katie for a weekend trip with their aunt Diane, uncle Danny, and two little cousins.

  The girls had more activities than ever, and I seemed to spend all day driving them one place or another. The camping trip this weekend would be a peaceful break for everyone, even though I didn’t like the thought of Emma, Alyson, and Katie—eight, seven, and five years old—going away without me. We were almost never apart. But they had been looking forward to joining their aunt and uncle at the upstate campground—and I would have two whole days with no car pools to drive.

  I pulled the girls’ duffel bags out of the closet and lined them up in the bedroom.

  The pink duffel said Emma in blue lettering. The blue one had Alyson inscribed in pink. And the smallest purple bag had a pink Katie on it. Very cute. Just like my girls: each bag was distinctive, and the three together created a lovely harmony.

  I took shorts, T-shirts, and bathing suits from the dresser drawers and piled them on the beds so that the girls could make their own selections. Though they were young, each of my daughters already had a sense of style and definite ideas about what to wear, so it wouldn’t do just to make the decisions for them.

  A few minutes later, Emma, Alyson, and Katie crowded into the room, chatting and giggling, and started to pack. The sounds of three little girls make a special kind of music, and the walls of our house always resounded with the girls’ laughter and the sweet clamor of happy voices. I wasn’t looking forward to the quiet that would descend when they left.

  “We need bathing suits!” said Emma. “Don’t forget bathing suits, Mommy!”

  “They’re on the bed,” I said, pointing. Emma and Alyson were already good swimmers, and Katie had been learning this summer at camp. I myself rarely stepped into an ocean or a pool, but I was glad my daughters had more courage. I didn’t have to worry about them in the water.

  “You’re getting to be such a good swimmer,” I said to Katie. “You’re going to have so much fun at the lake.”

  “Would you swim with us if you came?” Katie asked.

  “I don’t like l
akes,” I admitted. “They’re all icky on the bottom.”

  “Oh, Mommy, you’re silly!” said Alyson.

  “We’ll wear water shoes so the lake won’t feel icky,” said Emma, being practical.

  Alyson turned her bright smile at me. “Do you think the crab would have gotten you if you had water shoes?”

  I laughed. The Mommy-bitten-by-a-crab story was part of family lore. When I was exactly Alyson’s age, I had gone into the ocean one day near my childhood home in New Jersey. I felt a sharp ping on my toes and ran screaming from the water. When I got to the beach, I saw that the nails on both of my big toes were gone.

  I concluded that a crab had bitten them off.

  And they never grew back right.

  Hence, my fear of water.

  Now Emma looked at me skeptically as I retold the story. She was old enough—and smart enough—to ask a lot of questions.

  “How could one crab bite off both your toenails?” she asked.

  “I don’t know, but it happened,” I said.

  “Mommy, there are no crabs in lakes, so you’d be okay,” Alyson promised.

  We got busy filling duffels with all the clothes three little girls could possibly wear in two days. I looked around the room to make sure they hadn’t forgotten anything important.

  “Don’t forget your bear,” I told Katie, whose favorite stuffed animal was the Build-a-Bear that we had made together at the local mall. “And everybody bring your journals so you can write about the weekend,” I added. I wanted them to be able to tell me about every detail when they came back.

  While the girls put the finishing touches to their camping bags, I dashed down to the kitchen to pack bags of food for them to take. I’d bought marshmallows and other ingredients to make s’mores, which seemed necessary for a camping weekend. Plus Honey Nut Cheerios, their favorite cereal, and peanut butter for Emma, who liked nothing better than low-fat smooth Skippy. She couldn’t be tricked into trying another brand (or even full-fat) because she immediately knew the difference. Not knowing what type of peanut butter Diane would pack, I figured better safe than sorry.

  I suddenly felt a hole in the pit of my stomach. Call me sentimental, but I was going to miss my girls terribly over the weekend. Of course, I hoped they’d have fun, but I already couldn’t wait to get them back so we could continue with our hectic summer.

  • • •

  With the girls going off, I should have been looking forward to a weekend alone with my husband. But the girls were my full-time job and our mutual joy. Weekends were usually dedicated to the girls’ sports and play rehearsals and parties. We did everything as a family, and the girls filled our every minute. Given two days with my husband without children, I didn’t feel excited, I felt anxious.

  They’ll be back on Sunday, I reminded myself. Stop worrying.

  Warren’s sister, Diane Schuler, had organized the trip. She planned to drive to the campgrounds with our daughters, as well as her two small children, Bryan and Erin. Her husband, Danny, would head there earlier to set up everything for their arrival. He and Diane had bought a camper a few years before, and they loved bringing it to the Hunter Lake Campground in the Catskills during the summers, using it as a base for activities.

  The girls had gone on a similar camping trip with their aunt Diane and uncle Danny the previous year and considered it a perfect summer treat.

  “Should Mommy come with you next time?” I had asked them after they came home from the last trip.

  “No!” Emma and Alyson insisted. “This is our special trip!”

  Only Katie had hesitated. “Do you and Daddy go camping?” she asked.

  “Not really,” I admitted. “That’s why you have aunts and uncles—to do the things that parents don’t.”

  The girls’ uncle Danny loved to hunt and fish and hike. Since Warren is more a football and baseball type, he didn’t mind letting Danny oversee an outdoor weekend for the girls. Warren had gone camping on family vacations when he was growing up, since at the time, it was all his family could afford.

  “The reason I work is so I never have to go camping again!” he joked to me once.

  Given my aversion to bugs and swimming outdoors, I heartily supported the sentiment. But we wanted the girls to have every experience possible, and if Diane and Danny could give them a taste of the outdoors, we were all for it. The girls had spent all week talking excitedly about how they would get to go fishing, swimming, and rowboating, so I lived vicariously through their excitement, relieved I didn’t have to actually partake.

  The camping trip, though, would be one of the rare times that the girls and I were separated. We had fun being together, so whether cooking dinner or baking cupcakes, dashing through the grocery store or buying new clothes, they hung close, my constant companions. I would miss them, but they’d be together with adults who loved them, in a place they’d been before. What could happen?

  Thinking about my three girls at a campsite for two days, I had the same mundane concerns any mom would have. Did the girls need extra-strength bug spray? Would they be able to sleep in a strange place? How would they handle slimy creatures at the bottom of the lake? (Obviously my worry, not theirs.) I reminded myself that going to the Catskills with loving family members wasn’t exactly a trek on the wild side.

  In fact, the only hitch at all had occurred the night before when Diane called to say her and Warren’s father wouldn’t be joining them. Mr. Hance had been on the trip last year when Emma, Alyson, and Katie ventured to Hunter Lake for the first time with their cousins and aunt and uncle. Five children, however well behaved, can wander in many directions, and I felt better having three adults instead of two there to help supervise.

  “I’ll get someone else to join us,” Diane said, mentioning various members of the extended family whom she might ask. I agreed, but tonight she called back after the girls were asleep to say that everyone she contacted was busy. She would drive the kids herself.

  I felt an irrational tremor of anxiety.

  “Diane doesn’t have another adult in the car,” I told Warren after we hung up. “Maybe the girls shouldn’t go.”

  “Why? You drive five kids all the time,” he said.

  He was right. Carpooling remained a fact of life in our town, and Diane’s children or the girls’ friends would often pile into our minivan. I’d shuttle a pack of children to soccer practice or gymnastics class or a birthday party without a second thought. An upstate trip somehow seemed different to me, but Diane reminded me that the campground wasn’t that far away, just an hour or so in traffic. Relax. All would be fine.

  Diane had always been trustworthy.

  • • •

  While they waited to leave for their trip on Friday, the girls practiced gymnastics on the front lawn. Emma and Alyson did graceful cartwheels and Katie tried a few somersaults. Looking at my three daughters playing happily together gave me a warm glow. My girls were more than just siblings. They were best friends.

  Though she arrived a few minutes late, Diane seemed happy and ready for the weekend when she drove up to our house with her two kids in tow. Since my car had a third row of seats, we moved kids and equipment from her Jeep to my red Ford Windstar. Katie needed a booster seat, so we strapped that in tightly. Always well-organized, Diane had juice boxes ready at each seat and DVD players in each row to keep the children entertained.

  “Everyone go the bathroom now,” Diane called out cheerfully. “We’re not stopping until we get there!”

  Emma took the seat next to her two-year-old cousin, Erin. Tall and slim, Emma looked and acted older than eight, and her outgoing, mature attitude made her an ideal in-car babysitter. Talented in both sports and school, she had a bit of my perfectionism about her. She liked to smooth her hair into a perfect ponytail in the morning (“No bumps!” she always insisted), and her clothes were always carefully chosen each morning. She had a flair for the dramatic, and when she starred in the school play that year as Cinder-elly, I h
ad a feeling she might have found her future career.

  In the car, Emma made sure her sisters had their own iPods so there wouldn’t be any arguments about what music to listen to.

  “Everyone have their pillows?” Emma asked, looking around. She was ever the good big sister and older cousin, making sure everyone was comfy for the ride.

  Seven-year-old Alyson buckled her seat belt with her usual air of delight. Easygoing and happy, she had been born smiling and never stopped. Her first-grade teacher once said to me that Alyson was the kindest girl in the class—and the most popular. Even the boys wanted to be her friends because she could run, jump, and climb the monkey bars as hard and fast as anyone. Alyson could make everyone—including her mother—feel a bit brighter with her ready smile and generous nature. She exuded sunshine, and today was no different.

  As the baby in the family, five-year-old Katie sometimes got clingy, but this trip didn’t unsettle her at all. After a big hug—she was a specialist in giving hugs—she got in the car, ready for the much-anticipated adventure. Katie was all about the love, offering kisses freely and asking for them often. Her big sisters always said that I spoiled her, but what third child isn’t treated just a little differently? With Emma and Alyson so close in age, they always had each other. And Mommy and Katie stayed home together, going about their day while the big sisters attended school.

  Warren pulled up to the house just as Diane started to drive away. He had already said his good-byes to the girls in the morning before he went to work, assuming they’d be gone before he arrived home. But because Diane had been late, he had another chance.

  “I get to say good-bye to my girls again!” he said. He rushed over to give each of them another hug and kiss and make sure everyone was safely buckled in. We both waved as they left.

  As I watched the car disappear down the street, I began to cry.

  “What’s wrong?” Warren asked.

  I shook my head, unable to explain. I wanted to be with them.

 

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