“She doesn’t have none.” But the assertion is halfhearted. As in, her own mother once again doesn’t know the answer.
I wait, in case she clarifies. In the silence, she takes a drag of her cigarette, so deep that for an instant her face appears skeletal. “We’re not the friendly type,” she says at last, exhaling slowly.
“Did Livia like school?”
“She went.”
“What was her favorite subject?”
“I dunno.” Inhale, exhale, tap. “She’d bring home these little projects she’d made. Like this fake pumpkin. Tiny, carved from orange plastic. Even the eyes were cut out. It was cute enough. Worthless, though. What the hell am I supposed to do with such a thing?”
I have no idea what kind of class at school leads to minuscule plastic jack-o’-lanterns. “Do you still have it?”
Roseline glances at the floor. There is more movement beneath the expansive layer of trash. I can’t look anymore.
“Maybe you could show me on Livia’s computer? It must have a record of her schoolwork.”
Roseline bangs her cigarette against the remnants of the beer can, shakes her head. “You see a computer? Girl had to use whatever they had at school.”
“So she liked school? Her other classmates—”
“She went. Every morning. Got up, got out. That’s all I care.”
But I can hear it in Roseline’s voice. That’s not all she cared. That’s not all she was worrying about.
“Sounds lonely,” I prod now. “Going to school each day without any friends.”
“The girl stayed out of trouble.”
“She’s shy?”
“She’s clever. Always where you don’t expect her. Seeing things she shouldn’t see. Hearing stuff she shouldn’t hear. Even when she was young. But then, you’d turn around, and she’d be gone again. Learned from her brother not to be in one place too long. Gonna be sneaky?” Roseline stares at me. “Better also be fast. Livia had skills.”
Meaning Angelique’s new acquaintance from fashion camp was habitually subversive? Or maybe, by virtue of snooping where she wasn’t wanted, in some kind of serious trouble?
“In the weeks leading up to Livia’s disappearance, did anything seem different?”
“Was what it was.”
The answer I expected. “Your son, Johnson? Is he more or less interested in his sister?”
“Johnson wouldn’t hurt his sister!” The answer is reflexive, and not entirely devoid of dread.
“Why not?”
“Family’s family. ’Sides.” Roseline’s first moment of levity. “Drama’s not good for business.”
I get her point. Except according to O’Shaughnessy, Johnson is pretty low level. Meaning he probably reports to higher-level gangsters who probably report to highest-level drug lords. Would they consider a fifteen-year-old girl off limits? Especially one who had a tendency to be where she shouldn’t?
“Where did Livia go to school?”
Roseline rattles off a name that is definitely not Angelique’s school. “Is that...?”
“A trade school. Nothing wrong with that. Kids need a life skill. Or...”
They’d fall back on the family business of dope dealing.
“Did she have a favorite teacher?”