sleeping.’
‘OK,’ said Ren. ‘So when you checked on the children, they were sleeping. Was there any sign of a disturbance, anything out of place in their room?’
Mark shook his head. ‘Absolutely not. Nothing.’
‘Did anything happen while you were in the room?’ said Ren.
‘What do you mean?’ said Mark.
‘Did you have a conversation with Shelby Royce?’ said Ren.
‘Chit-chat,’ said Mark. ‘Hope they behaved for you, what time did they go to sleep, are you bored, that kind of thing.’
‘And what was her demeanor at this point?’
He shrugged. ‘Fine. She seemed a little bored.’
‘Did she seem at ease?’ said Ren.
‘Yes.’
‘Did you get the sense that she was eager to finish up?’ said Ren.
‘No more eager than most sitters at that age, I guess …’
‘Did she mention that she was going anywhere, or planning to meet up with anyone afterward?’
‘No,’ said Mark.
‘You understand I’m asking all these questions because you are the last person to have seen Shelby before she dis-appeared …’
‘Yes, I’m sorry if I seem a little … I suppose I want the attention focused on Laurie. I … know that sounds terrible.’
‘It’s understandable,’ said Ren. ‘But Shelby Royce, and her state of mind, and her actions, are crucial to us working out what happened here. Right now, we can’t call this an abduction, because we have no evidence that it is.’
‘What?’ said Mark. ‘But … what else do you think happened?’
‘That’s what we’re trying to establish,’ said Ren. ‘They may have left voluntarily.’
‘There is no way that Laurie would do that,’ said Mark. ‘No way.’
‘I’ll put that in my notes, so everyone is aware of how you feel about that,’ said Ren.
He nodded.
‘OK,’ said Ren, ‘after you had checked on them, what did you do?’
‘I went back down to my wife.’
‘Did you tell the sitter what time you intended to come back to the room?’ said Ren.
‘No, no … I … left. I went back to the restaurant.’
‘How long did all of that take?’ said Ren.
‘How long to get back to the restaurant?’ said Mark.
‘No,’ said Ren. ‘From when you left the table to when you returned to the table.’
‘Oh …’ he rubbed his chin. ‘Fifteen minutes?’ He paused. ‘Twenty?’
‘And how long did you spend in the restaurant before you went back up to the room and discovered that your daughter was missing?’
‘Twenty minutes, maybe thirty,’ said Mark. He paused. ‘Closer to thirty.’
Ren nodded. ‘Mr Whaley, do you have any reason to believe that someone would want to harm you or your family?’
‘No,’ said Mark. ‘No … why would someone …?’ The words caught in his throat. ‘Please, please, find her,’ he said. ‘Let me get out there and look for her. Please. I can’t stay here. This is … it’s been hours now,’ he said. ‘Please, I can’t just sit around here doing nothing …’
‘All the Sheriff’s Office detectives are on this,’ said Ren. ‘And more of my colleagues are on their way. I’m sorry that you have to stay here, but these answers could help us to find your daughter.’
‘Laurie …’ said Mark. He took in a breath.
‘Mr Whaley,’ said Ren, ‘who knew that you were coming to Breckenridge this weekend?’
‘Some of our friends, I guess. Erica probably mentioned it to some of hers. It’s … it’s our wedding anniversary this Tuesday; that’s why she pressed for going to dinner I think, even though we had Laurie. I wasn’t thinking that way, but she was.’
‘Mr Whaley, several witnesses have said that you and your wife had a heated discussion over dinner …’
He blinked. ‘I wouldn’t have called it heated …’
Ren waited. He didn’t fill the silence.
‘Can you tell me what the discussion was about?’ said Ren.
‘Couple stuff. It wasn’t about Laurie.’
‘It doesn’t have to be about Laurie to be relevant to the investigation,’ said
Tim Curran, Cody Goodfellow, Gary McMahon, C.J. Henderson, William Meikle, T.E. Grau, Laurel Halbany, Christine Morgan, Edward Morris