waiting to see the Saks windows. âMaybe he went there?â she said in a heavy accent.
âHow about the tree? Would he have crossed the street to get up close to it?â another woman suggested.
âMaybe the cathedral,â someone volunteered.
âNo. No, Brian wouldnât do that. Weâre going to visit his father. Brian canât wait to see him.â As she said the words, Catherine knew that something was terribly wrong. She felt the tears that now came so easily rising behind her eyes. She fumbled in her bag for a handkerchief and realized something was missing: the familiar bulk of her wallet.
âOh my God,â she said. âMy walletâs gone.â
âMom!â And now Michael lost the surly look that had become his way of disguising the worry about his father. He was suddenly a scared ten-year-old. âMom. Do you think Brian was kidnapped?â
âHow could he be? Nobody could just drag him off. Thatâs impossible.â Catherine felt her legs were turning to rubber. âCall the police,â she cried. âMy little boy is missing.â
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
The station was crowded. Hundreds of people were rushing in every direction. There were Christmas decorations all over the place. It was noisy, too. Sound of all kinds echoed through the big space, bouncing off the ceiling high above him. A man with his arm full of packages bumped a sharp elbow into Brianâs ear. âSorry, kid.â
He was having trouble keeping up with the woman who had his momâs wallet. He kept losing sight of her. He struggled to get around a family with a couple of kids who were blocking his way. He got past them, but bumped into a lady who glared down at him. âBe careful,â she snapped.
âIâm sorry,â Brian said politely, looking up at her. In that second he almost lost the woman he was following, catching up to-her again as she went down a staircase and hurried through a long corridor that led to a subway station. When she went through a turnstile, he slipped under the next one and followed her onto a train.
The car was so crowded he could hardly get in. The woman was standing, hanging on to a bar that ran over the seats along the side. Brian stood near her, his hand gripping a pole. They went only one long stop, then she pushed her way to the opening doors. So many people were in Brianâs way that he almost didnât get out of the subway car in time, and then he had to hurry to catch up with her. He chased after her as she went up the stairs to another train.
This time the car wasnât as crowded, and Brian stood near an old lady who reminded him of his grandmother. The woman in the dark raincoat got off at the second stop and he followed her, his eyes fixed on her ponytail as she practically ran up the stairs to the street.
They emerged on a busy corner. Buses raced past in both directions, rushing to get across the wide street before the light turned red. Brian glanced behind him. As far as he could see down the block there were nothing but apartment houses. Light streamed from hundreds of windows.
The lady with the wallet stood waiting for the light to turn. The WALK sign flashed on, and he followed his quarry across the street. When she reached the other side she turned left and walked quickly down the now sloping sidewalk. As he followed her, Brian took a quick look at the street sign. When they visited last summer, his mother had made a game of teaching him about street signs in New York. âGran lives on Eighty-seventh Street,â she had said. âWeâre on Fiftieth. How many blocks away is her apartment?â This sign said Fourteenth Street. He had to remember that, he told himself, as he fell in step behind the woman with his momâs wallet.
He felt snowflakes on his face. It was getting windy, and the cold stung his cheeks. He wished a cop would come along so he could ask for help, but he