The Whole Block Called Him Creepy Until His Notebook Named The SUV That Took Lily-quetran123

Mercer’s thumb stayed on the line I had written at 7:43 p.m. The radio on his shoulder spat out dry bursts of static, then a dispatcher’s clipped voice under the hiss. Porch lights buzzed above us. Red and blue strobes kept washing over the white mailbox posts, over Lily’s little shoe in the street, over the wet shine on everyone’s parked cars. Mercer did not look up when he spoke.

— Run every dark blue Yukon and Tahoe with RK7 in the first three positions. Pull HOA vendor logs. I want camera-service records tonight.

Then he lifted his eyes to me.

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— Have you seen that man before?

The question landed harder than the wind.

I could still smell mulch, gasoline, and somebody’s cooling lasagna from an open garage two houses down. My hand tightened around the edge of the older notebook.

— Tuesday, I said. Four-eighteen in the afternoon. White service van. Lake County Gate and Camera. Same shoulders. Same orange paint on the left boot.

Mercer held his hand out again.

— Mr. Keene, I need every book.

I gave him my house key.

Before Abby disappeared, nobody would have called me careful. I was just a father with a bad back, a union route, and a daughter who never walked when she could hop, spin, or skip. She was nine the summer of 1986 and wore two plastic barrettes shaped like strawberries because she liked things that looked like candy. On Fridays I used to bring home cold root beer in glass bottles and let her stand on a kitchen chair to help me salt corn on the cob. She would talk with her whole body, knees knocking the cabinet, elbows in the air, shoelaces untied. If music came on from the little radio by the sink, she never finished a sentence in one place.

The night we lost her, the Walmart lot in Tinley Park was bright enough to fool you into thinking bright meant safe. Shopping carts rattled in the coral. Somebody had dropped a bag of charcoal, and black dust streaked the asphalt near our truck. Abby asked if she could put the receipt in my wallet because she liked doing jobs that sounded official. I remember the cold handle of the cart against my palm. I remember the smell of windshield washer fluid from the next car over. I remember turning for less time than it takes to zip a jacket.

When I faced the truck again, there was no red windbreaker. No strawberry barrettes. No child voice.

People asked me the same useless questions for months. Did she wander. Did she know the person. Was I sure about the time. Could I describe the vehicle better. I could describe everything except the one thing that mattered. I had no plate number. No exact minute. No clean memory of where the stranger had parked.

That failure did not stay in 1986. It moved into my hands. It changed the way I crossed parking lots. It turned every grocery run into a head count, every school dismissal into a scan of doors, curbs, blind spots, idling engines. When children laughed on this street, I counted bicycles. When a new car appeared after dark, I wrote it down. When somebody called me nosy, I nodded and kept my pen moving. The body learns a shape after a loss like that. Mine learned to lean forward, to listen for hinges, to keep a page open.

The neighbors only saw the page.

By 8:12 p.m., Mercer and two officers were in my garage under the pull-chain light, pulling notebooks from the shelf above my workbench. Dust floated in the yellow cone over their shoulders. One officer smelled like rain and coffee. Another flipped pages with gloved fingers, stopping whenever my handwriting boxed a time or a plate fragment. Mercer found the entry from Tuesday first.

4:18 p.m. White service van. Lake County Gate and Camera. Driver signed in at clubhouse. Badge read M. Dyer. Left boot orange paint. Rear plate 924-LM2.

I had written it because the van stayed in the fire lane ten minutes longer than the posted limit. That was enough for me.

Mercer asked where I had seen the driver after that. I told him near the cluster mailboxes yesterday, then again this evening, standing at the same angle, as if he liked places where people had one eye on keys and one eye on children. He sent a lieutenant to wake the HOA treasurer. Twenty minutes later the answer came back through the radio. The subdivision had paid a $486 invoice to Lake County Gate and Camera nine days earlier. The work order listed one subcontractor: Matthew Dyer.

Another officer came in carrying a printed still from a traffic camera. Grainy. Blue SUV. Partial plate full now. RK7-214. Registered to Dyer’s sister in Cicero.

Mercer laid the photo beside my notebook, and for the first time all night, his face changed.

— He knew the blind spot because he built it, he said.

The search spread differently after that. Until then it had been neighbors with flashlights calling Lily’s name into shrubs and drainage ditches, voices rising and falling with panic. After that it became organized. Patrol units hit toll readers and gas stations. A sergeant pulled Dyer’s prior addresses. Another team learned he had access to a vacant model home six blocks from us on Wexler Court, where a builder had left power on during a stalled sale. One unfinished garage. One side entrance. No residents. No cameras.

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