He sat at the table, sipping coffee and reading texts and emails on his phone. The computer was still open for all to see. There were no tugs on the fishing line. He returned to the ORDER HERE counter, now staffed by a woman in her thirties, a decade removed from the waitress who had served him but with similar facial bones. Sisters, he guessed.
She was barking orders and Shaw took her to be the manager or owner.
“Help you? Your eggs okay?” The voice was a pleasant alto.
“They were good. Question: That woman on the bulletin board?”
“Oh, yeah. Her father came in. Sad.”
“It is. I’m helping him out, looking for her.”
A statement as true as rain. He tended not to mention rewards unless the subject came up.
“That’s good of you.”
“Any customers say anything about her?”
“Not to me. I can ask people who work here. Anybody knows anything, I’ll call you. You have a card?”
He gave her one. “Thanks. He’s anxious to find her.”
The woman said, “Sophie. Always liked that name. It says ‘student.’ The flyer does.”
Shaw said, “She’s at Concordia. Business. And codes part-time at GenSys. According to her father, she’s good at it. I wouldn’t know a software program if it bit me.”
Colter Shaw was quiet by nature, yet when working a job he intentionally rambled. He’d found that this put people at ease.
The woman added, “And I like what you called her.”
“What was that?”
“
“This’s my daughter, Madge,” the manager said.
Oh. Not sister.
“And I’m Tiffany.” Mom read the card. “Colter.” She extended a hand and they shook.
“That’s a name?” Madge said.
“Says so right here.” Tiffany flicked the card. “He’s helping find that missing woman.”
Madge said, “Oh, girl on the poster?”
Tiffany gave a wry glance toward Shaw.
Madge said, “I saw her pictures on your computer. I wondered if you were a policeman or something?”
“No. Just helping her dad. We think this is the last place she was at before she disappeared.”
The daughter’s face tightened. “God. What do you think happened?”
“We don’t know yet.”
“I’ll check inside,” said Tiffany, the mother — the generation-bending names of the women were disorienting. He watched her collect the flyer from the corkboard and disappear into the kitchen, where, presumably, it was displayed to cooks and busboys.
She returned, pinning up the flyer once more. “Nothing. There’s a second shift. I’ll make sure they see it.” She sounded as if she definitely would, Shaw thought. He was lucky to have found a mother, and one close to her child. She’d sympathize more with the parent of missing offspring.
Shaw thanked her. “You mind if I ask your customers if they’ve seen her?”
The woman seemed troubled and Shaw suspected she wouldn’t want to bother clientele with unpleasant news.
That wasn’t the reason for the frown, however. Tiffany said, “Don’t you want to look at the security video first?”
8
Well. This was interesting news. Shaw had looked for cameras when he’d first walked in but had seen none. “You’ve got one?”
Tiffany turned her bright blue eyes away from Shaw’s face and pointed to a small round object in the liquor bottles behind the bar.
A hidden security camera in a commercial establishment was pointless, since the main purpose was deterrence. Maybe they were getting...
Tiffany said, “We’re getting a new system put in. I brought mine from home for the time being. Just so we’d have something.” She turned to Madge and asked the young woman to show Sophie’s picture to customers. “Sure, Mom.” The waitress took the flyer and started on her canvass.
Tiffany directed Shaw into the cluttered office. She said, “I would’ve told her father about the tape but I wasn’t here when he brought the poster in. Didn’t think about it again. Not till you showed up. Have a seat.” With a hand on his shoulder, Tiffany guided Shaw into an unsteady desk chair in front of a fiberboard table, on which sat stacks of paper and an old desktop computer. Bending down, her arm against his, she began to type. “When?”
“Wednesday. Start at five p.m. and go from there.”
Tiffany’s fingers, tipped in lengthy black-polished nails, typed expertly. Within seconds a video appeared. It was clearer than most security cams, largely because it wasn’t the more common wide-angle lens, which encompass a broader field of view yet distort the image. Shaw could see the order station, the cash register, the front portion of the Quick Byte and a bit of the street beyond.
Tiffany scrubbed the timeline from the moment Shaw had requested. On the screen patrons raced to and from the counter, like zipping flies.
Shaw said, “Stop. Back up. Three minutes.”
Tiffany did. Then hit PLAY.
Shaw said, “There.”