would go for coffee.
Steven wasnât hiding Jeremyâs computer in his room. But that didnât mean he wasnât hiding it. And the way the room had beenâit didnât seem like a healthy kidâs room to me. If Steven felt Jeremy was disordering his universe, he could have done anything to him.
By the time I signed out and made it to the front of the school, she was already riding her bike back and forth along the sidewalk. Her helmet was the same blue as her jeans. A part of me had hoped for the kilt-and-kneesocks-on-a-bicycle thing.
âLetâs goâ5485 Briarwood,â she said. She started riding away, heading north along the street.
âOr in English, hello,â I called after her.
So this wasnât a coffee date. Or even a social call. My feet felt heavier all of a sudden.
I caught up with her before we reached the main road. âWhere are we going?â I asked. There was no traffic here, so we could ride side by side.
âYour coachâs house,â she said.
âOh.â I thought about that for a minute. It didnât add up to anything good. âWhy?â
âTo see what color car his wife drives.â She glanced at me, then powered ahead before I could ask questions.
She was upset about Jeremy. I got that. But stalking the coachâs wife didnât strike me as a good idea.
Maybe the best thing was to let her get it out of her system. Then we could go for coffee, talk, whatever. At least I was here with her.
After twenty minutes of hard riding, we reached a neighborhood with street names like Birchwood and Oakcliff. It was one of the older parts of New Haven, with big pastel-colored houses and old-fashioned windows. The trees on the boulevard reached across the street, and the leaves were raked into fancy jack-oâ-lantern garbage bags. There were a few rental houses too. You could tell those by the patchy lawns and the flags in the windows. Yale students, probably.
The coachâs house was a pale yellow two-story with a wide porch. Abby rode past without stopping. I braked just before the driveway. The coachâs carâa gray Jettaâwasnât in the driveway, but there was a pale blue Impala there. âThis one!â I called.
She wheeled around and glared at me. âKeep riding!â
I rolled my eyes. It was nearly dinnertime. What were the chances of anyone looking out the front windows? But she kept riding, so I followed. She stopped at the drugstore on the corner.
I caught up with her. âSorry. Didnât realize it was such a stealth mission. Should we have been in disguise?â I smiled, hoping for a laugh.
Her face flushed red. âForget it.â She turned away and wiped her eyes.
I felt like a worm. âLook, Iâm sorry. I justâdo you want to tell me whatâs going on here? Because Iâm confused.â
âThe police told Dad it was a dark green car,â she said, studying the sidewalk. âTheyâre going to go public with the information tomorrow.â
âA dark greenâoh.â The pieces clunked into place. âBut why did you think Coachâs wife had anything to do with it?â
âNot her, dummy, him!â She glared at me.
My jaw dropped so hard that the bike helmet strap dug into my chin. âI told you, he didnât do it.â
She looked away. âI thought if you saw the carâ¦â
I took a deep breath and tried again. âYou have to understand, I know Coach. Heâs not the guy. And the cars arenât even the right color, so that proves it, right?â
âIt doesnât prove anything,â she muttered.
I leaned on the wall of the drugstore and let my head clunk against the brick. My helmet got there first. âAbby, you canât just go chasing after people. This is for the police to solve.â
âI thought you cared about Jeremy.â
âI do, but the police will handle it. Look, Iâm a