Out of Cold
4.5/5
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About this ebook
After a homeless man dies during a cold winter night, Robyn and her friends work to uncover who the man was before his time on the streets. They have only two clues to guide them: a class ring and an old photograph that the man left behind. Robyn just wants to honor the homeless man's memory. But as the search heats up, she begins to suspect that someone's investigating her too...
Norah McClintock
Norah McClintock won the Crime Writers of Canada's Arthur Ellis Award for crime fiction for young people five times. She wrote more than sixty YA novels, including contributions to Seven (the series), the Seven Sequels and the Secrets series.
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Reviews for Out of Cold
19 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This is a very good book. I found myself not stopping when reading this. Excellent writing and description of the setting.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Robyn's boyfriend, Nick, vanishes. Robyn volunteers at a homeless shelter. When one of the clients attacks her, gets banned from the shelter, and subsequently freezes to death, Robyn feels responsible. As she starts to realize how little anyone knew about him, she becomes determined to investigate his life and figure out if she was responsible for his death.
Book preview
Out of Cold - Norah McClintock
CHAPTER ONE
M
y father’s enormous loft was as silent as a mortuary and as dark as the inside of a coffin—except for the glow from his study. I walked toward it.
Staring out at me from the computer screen at my dad’s desk was a not-quite-right likeness of Ted Gold, the man my mother had been seeing for almost a year. My parents are divorced. Despite my mother’s best efforts to keep her personal life, well, personal, my father is well aware of Ted. He’d even met him a couple of times—not my mother’s idea. I stared at the Ted-like picture on the screen and wondered what my father was up to. Knowing him, probably nothing my mother would approve of.
Somewhere else in the loft, something hit the floor with a bang.
I jumped. Dad?
I poked my head out of his study just in time to see someone—a woman I had never seen before—picking a heavy hardcover book up from the floor. She was wearing a bathrobe and had a towel wound around her head. She didn’t look anywhere near as surprised to see me as I was to see her.
You must be Robyn,
she said, smiling. Mac was hoping to be here when you arrived, but he called to say that he was running late.
That was typical of my father. He has made a career out of being late for every type of occasion, from school concerts to wedding anniversary celebrations, which helps explain why he and my mother are no longer married. He asked me to tell you he should be home by nine.
She glanced at the clock on the mantelpiece. "Uh-oh. If I don’t get going, I’m going to be late." She disappeared into what was supposed to be my room, but which my dad also uses as a guest room. Nice to meet you,
she said as she closed the door.
Meet me? She hadn’t even told me her name.
Okay, so a woman I had never seen before (an awfully young woman, considering that my father was firmly in his forties) had taken a shower, or maybe a bath, in my father’s bathroom and was getting dressed in my (parttime) bedroom. What was a girl supposed to do in an awkward (for me, if not for her) situation like this?
I decided to bail. I left my suitcase near the front door where I had dropped it and went downstairs to see if Nick was around.
I hadn’t seen Nick in seven days—and before that, I hadn’t seen him alone, just the two of us, in weeks. My mother claimed that she had nothing against Nick personally, but that didn’t mean she considered him ideal boyfriend material for me. Nick has had a few problems, some of them with the law. He also didn’t have what my mother would consider the best family situation. Both of his parents are dead. His stepfather and stepbrother are both in prison. Nick is supposed to be living with his aunt, but that didn’t work out—Nick didn’t get along with his aunt’s new boyfriend. So for the last couple of months he’d been renting an apartment from my father, who owns a building that used to be a carpet factory. My father lives on the top floor. The first floor is occupied by a trendy gourmet restaurant called La Folie. The second floor consists of six apartments. Nick lives in one of them. My mother has never been comfortable with that. She was much, much less comfortable after what had happened last month, before I went on a weeklong school trip.
You were almost killed,
she’d said. And it was all Nick’s fault.
It wasn’t all Nick’s fault, but there was no point in arguing with my mother. And I hadn’t been killed. Everything had worked out just fine. But that hadn’t stopped my mother from having a total meltdown. She forbade me to see Nick ever again. She ordered my father to evict him and was furious when he refused. Fine,
she’d said. Robyn is not setting foot in that building as long as that boy is there.
I argued with her until I almost lost my voice. In the end, it was Ted who negotiated a compromise—basically, a month of extremely limited access that broke down like this: I wasn’t allowed to see Nick or even talk to him for a whole week. For two weeks after that, I could only see him in my mother’s or Ted’s presence. Nick had been so uncomfortable after the first time that mostly we had just talked on the phone. Who could blame him? My mother had allowed him to come over to her house to watch a movie with me and then had sat in one corner of the room the whole time—reading, supposedly. I had hoped my father would cut us some slack. He hadn’t. Other than refusing to evict Nick, he had gone along with my mother. He didn’t want to make waves. Your mom has every right to be upset,
he’d said.
For the final week, I was out of town. My mother had looked relieved when she saw me off on the bus.
But, at long last, my punishment was over. I could see Nick whenever I wanted—without a chaperone. I couldn’t wait. I had called him a couple of times while I was out of town, but he hadn’t answered his phone. He’d probably been working. Nick put in a lot of hours at a part-time job. He also went to school. That didn’t leave him with a lot of spare time.
My heart was pounding as I knocked on his door.
There was no answer.
I knocked again.
Still no answer. He wasn’t home.
I heard footsteps in the stairwell. Nick? But no, instead of coming up from street level, the footsteps were coming down from the third floor. Must have been the mystery woman from my father’s place. I waited in the second-floor hallway until I heard the door on the ground floor swoosh open and clang shut again. Then I went down to La Folie. Nick had landed a job there (thanks to my father) right after he had supposedly almost got me killed and shortly after he had broken his ankle. He was probably in La Folie’s kitchen, perched on a stool, scraping plates and loading them into the industrial dishwasher.
. . .
Isn’t Nick working today?
I asked Lauren, the hostess.
She gave me a funny look. No,
she said. He isn’t.
I was pretty sure she was going to say something else, but just then a party of six came through the door. Excuse me, Robyn,
she said as she bustled away.
If Nick wasn’t at home and he wasn’t at work, maybe he was visiting his aunt. Or maybe he was just out. I went back up to my father’s place and lugged my suitcase to my room. I’ll say one thing for the mystery woman—she was neat. Everything was exactly as I had left it. You would never have known that she’d been there at all. I was on my way to the kitchen to make a cup of tea when I heard the door. It was my father. His face lit up when he saw me.
Robbie! How was the trip?
he said. Did you have a good time?
I had spent the past week on what my school had billed as a cultural field trip, but there had been no fields involved. This trip had been decidedly urban—three days of lectures and handson learning at a museum, two days of educational sightseeing, and an evening at the theatre. My best friend Morgan had gone too, and we had been rooming together, which meant, I had a pretty good time, Dad.
My father was still smiling while he looked around. Where’s—
She said she had to run. Who is she, anyway?
Tara?
So that was her name.
You hungry?
my father said as he hung up his coat. Because I’m starving.
I’m fine.
I followed him into the kitchen and took a seat at the counter while he rummaged around in the fridge. So who exactly is she?
Out came a chunk of cheese—extra-old cheddar, I think—and the end of a ham, followed by a jar of Dijon mustard, a tomato, half a loaf of dark bread, and a container of coleslaw.
Sorry, did you say something, Robbie?
Tara—who is she?
She’s a very old friend,
he said, smiling. There was a twinkle in his eye that made me think he wasn’t telling me everything.
She doesn’t look that old,
I said. In fact, she seems kind of young.
Does she?
He pulled a knife from the drawer and sliced up the tomato. I think she’s just about right.
He rinsed the knife and cut into the cheese. Are you sure you’re not hungry?
I’m sure. How long have you known her?
Long enough, I guess.
He pulled out another knife and used it to spread a slice of bread with a thin layer of mustard. Did you tell your mother you’re back?
I called her as soon as the bus got in.
Which reminded me. Have you been snooping on Ted?
He looked confused. Or maybe he was just acting confused. With my father, it’s sometimes hard to tell.
What do you mean?
he said.
I saw a picture of him on your computer. Have you been checking up on him?
It wouldn’t have surprised me. For some reason that I didn’t quite understand, especially given how rough the divorce had been, my father still seems to be in love with my mother. It would be just like him to try to dig up some dirt on Ted. Well, good luck. Ted is a sweet, mild-mannered, all-round nice guy. If he had any secrets, they were more likely to be along the lines of anonymous donations to good causes than scandals or indiscretions.
Checking up on him? Why would I do that?
my father said. He had been layering ham, cheese, and tomato onto the mustardy bread, but he stopped and looked me in the eye to show that he was innocent of any wrongdoing. The thing is, though, my father is pretty good at deceit. He’s the first to admit that it’s often necessary in his line of work. He had been a police officer for nearly twenty years. These days he runs his own private security and investigations business. He says that sometimes, if you want to get the truth out of a liar, you have to lie yourself. My mother sees it differently. She says that lying comes as naturally to my father as breathing does to the rest of the world. I promised your mom that I wouldn’t snoop into her affairs,
he said. And I keep my word.
Uh-huh. I studied him for a moment, trying to decide if he actually expected me to believe that. Then he said, Robyn, about Nick—
I was going to ask you about him,
I said. I went to look for him, but he wasn’t home and he’s not at work. I thought for sure he’d be here. Have you seen him?
You went downstairs?
Yeah, but he wasn’t there.
Did you talk to Fred?
He meant Fred Smith, owner of La Folie.
No, but I talked to Lauren,
I said.
What did she say?
That Nick wasn’t working today.
Wait a minute. Did you just call me Robyn?
The last time my father had called me by my proper name instead of using my nickname was when he’d told me about the divorce. Is something wrong? Did something happen to Nick?
My father dropped the top piece of bread onto his sandwich.
I wish I knew,
he said. He cut the sandwich in half, carried it and the container of coleslaw over to the counter, and sat down opposite me. I haven’t seen him since you left for that school trip.
What do you mean, you haven’t seen him? You mean he hasn’t been home?
My father laid a hand on my shoulder.
Dad, where’s Nick?
I don’t know.
What do you mean, you don’t know?
He’s gone, Robbie. I don’t know where. I don’t know why. I don’t even know exactly when he left. All I know is, he’s gone.
. . .
Gone?
Morgan said at school the next day. What do you mean, he’s gone?
I mean, he’s not here. He’s someplace else.
"Someplace else where?"
That was the million-dollar question. I told Morgan everything I knew, which wasn’t much. Two days before we got back from our trip, my father had been downstairs having lunch at La Folie. After he ate, he went back to the kitchen to say hi to Nick, but Nick wasn’t there. When my father asked Fred Smith how Nick was doing, Fred told him that Nick didn’t work there anymore.
Did he get fired?
Morgan said.
He quit.
Fred had told my father that Nick was nice about it. He thanked Fred for giving him a job and apologized for leaving on such short notice.
He didn’t say why he was quitting?
Morgan said.
I looked grimly at Morgan. He said he was going out of town.
Why? For how long?
Fred didn’t ask, and Nick didn’t say.
What about your dad? Didn’t Nick say anything to him?
I shook my head. My dad checked Nick’s apartment after he talked to Fred. Most of Nick’s things are gone.
He’d left his furniture, almost all of which my father had given to him, and the few kitchen things he owned—dishes, a couple of pots, all bought at thrift stores—but he had taken his clothes and his more personal possessions.
I don’t get it,
Morgan said. Why didn’t he call you and tell you where he was going?
I had asked myself the same question a hundred times.
Didn’t he even leave a note?
Morgan said. You don’t think he’s in trouble, do you?
All I could do was shrug. Then I said what had been on my mind all night. Morgan, what if he left because he didn’t think he had any reason to stay?
What do you mean?
He’s not getting along with his aunt. Joey’s in prison.
Joey was Nick’s stepbrother. Angie and the baby don’t live here anymore.
Angie was Joey’s girlfriend. She had recently had a baby boy. And he wasn’t allowed to see me unless my mom or Ted was right there with us. What if he got fed up?
Nick had had problems controlling his anger in the past. I was pretty sure he resented the way my mother had been treating him. Maybe he’d decided that putting up with her just to be with me wasn’t worth it. Or maybe—I hated to think about it—maybe he’d met someone else.
He knows you were away.
Morgan said. He knows when you were supposed to be back. If he cares about you, Robyn, he’ll call.
If he cared so much, why hadn’t he told me he was leaving? Why hadn’t he called me already?
. . .
I got the key to Nick’s apartment from my father and checked the place myself after school. Apart from a film of dust that had accumulated since he’d left, the place was spotless. I looked for a note but didn’t find one. I even checked under the furniture in case it had fallen behind a dresser or under a table. Nothing. He was really gone.
I called Nick’s Aunt Beverly and asked