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Authors: Greever Williams

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BOOK: On Tenterhooks
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He pulled the keyboard toward him and typed in the address for the
Say Goodbye to Me
website
.
As soon as it loaded, he began his letter.

 

Maggie
,

 

This world got a little dimmer when you left it behind. You put the light and color in my world. I know you are in a better place, but I am in a worse place without you here with us. Your mother says we have to move on
.
I know she’s right
.
But I don’t know how
.
Even though you
were already out of the nest
, th
is
house still seems too quiet.
Not having you
here at the moment isn’t nearly as bad as knowing that you will never be here again. I miss your smile
.
I miss your laugh and the way you could always see the good in things.

 

I don’t understand how this could’ve happened to you
.
Why didn’t you talk to us?  How could we have been so blind as to miss it? I know you didn’t plan for this to happen, but that doesn’t help much with the pain.

 

I have to say goodbye now. I know that. But I don’t know how to do that
.
I can write it down here: GOODB
YE. B
ut does that do anything?  I don’t know. I guess I’ll have to see if I feel any better once
I send this
.

 

Regardless of all that, I want you to know that I will love you always
.
I will carry you and our happiest memories in my hear
t
.
W
henever the day seems too dark or too
long
, I will pull out thos
e happy memories and smile
.
I’ll think of you. I love you
Maggie
.

 

Love,

Dad

 

He scanned the message and pressed SUBMIT.
Then he
stood up from the computer desk and went to find his keys and wallet
.
He had a sudden urge for some Virginia peanuts.

Chapter
19

 

“That was weird,” said
Susan
Nikko
, hanging up the phone.

 

“What? Who was it?”
her husband
asked,
half-listening
.

 

“It was Sharon, f
rom Abby’s school
.”

 

“The busy
body that works in the office?”

 

“Ye
s
.”

 

“Why?
What’d she want?”

 

“She said some
strange
preacher sho
wed up today, asking for Abby.”

 

“What? Seriously?”
he
asked, muting the TV. “Who was he?  What did he want?”

 


According to her,
he didn’t say,
Jack,

Susan
frown
ed
. “
When
Sharon questioned
w
hether he had our permission, he basically
said never mind.”

 

“He didn’t say what church
he was from or anything?

 

“No.
He said he was ‘here to see her’ or ‘here for her;’ or something
like that
.”

 


That
is
weird
.
I know we got some house
calls and stuff like that right after Zack died, but it seems a little late
for that now
.
And at school? T
hat’s weird,”
Jack
said.

 

“That’s not all,” said Susan. “Sharon said he was totally creepy.”

 

“Creepy how?”

 

“Well,
she
said he smiled real wide
,
like he was in on some secret joke
.
And when she picked up the phone to call us to see if we
had given our
permission, he put his hand over hers
, it
was like a block of ice.”

 

“Hmmm,”
Jack
said,
stroking his chin and
feigning deep concern. “So a preacher shows up, smiles and has cold hands
,
and she thinks it

s suddenly creepy?”

 

“Jack, I’m serious!
I’ve seen this
five-
foot
tall
woman
dominate
twelfth-
grade boys with just an evil glare
.
She was
freaked
out
,
and I think
she was
genuine
ly
scared. Her voice was still trembling just now as she was telling me about it.

 

“Okay, babe,” s
aid Jack, putting his hands up,
“I
admit
, it does sound a little weird
.
But
I don’t think we need to call the cops
in
yet. Look, we’ll ask
Abby
about it when she gets home
tonight, okay?”

 

“Okay.
But m
aybe I should call her and ask her
if everything is al
l
right. Y’know,
just to be safe
?”

 

“Susan, don’t
.
Sweetie look, she’s out with her friends, hopefully relaxing a bit. She needs it
.
If you call and ask about some preacher, she is instantly going to think about Zack
,
regardless of why the guy was there. She needs a break.”

 

Susan moaned and put the phone back.

 

“Fine,” she said, “b
ut I am going to ask her about
it
as soon as she gets home.”

 

“Good
.
I agree
.
We will, okay? Promise.”

 

“Okay.
I am worried about her
,
Jack
.
She doesn’t sleep, she hardly eats,
and she’s
like a zombie sometimes.”

 

“I know,
Sweetie
.”

 

He pulled her closer and kissed her forehead, putting his arms around her.
“I see it too
.
We are going to keep her safe, I swear it
.
But it’s like the counselor said

w
e have to know when to push and when to let it go.

“I know, I know,” she said, sniffling. “She is all we’ve got left, and I want her to be okay.”

 

“She will be
,
Sweetie
,” he said, squeezing her into his chest. “She will be.
I promise.

 

Chapter
2
0

 

Six hours after he left his office, Steve still had nothing to show for his efforts
.
A well-known internet hosting company owned
www.saygoodbyetome.com
.
Only t
he employees in that
company knew how to contact the actual owner, and Steve knew there was no way they would
provide
that information without a court order
.

 

All he learned from the search of the domain name itself was that
someone
had registered
it
several months before Julie’s death (which made him
second-guess
his theory that he was being specifically targeted) and that it was set to expire 15 years after it was registered
.
The phone number, address and contact info about the
t
echnical and
b
illing contact for the domain name all pointed to the hosting company

a dead end for now.

 

He put the technical search aside and then spent time using the search engines to find references to the site itself
.
He
searched for
“say goodbye to me website” and “say goodbye to me
.

Although the latter produced
nearly 10 million results, none were
useful
.
He scanned the results for the first 22 pages and gave up.
The
phrase wa
s used in songs, love poems and even
news
articles, but nothing seemed to link to the
website
.
It appeared that the only way to get to the site was to enter the address directly into the web browser
.
This was another bizarre twist on
the
typical scamming website, which
usually
was
well-linked
and well-advertised
.

 

Dead end after dead end was not what he had expected to find
.
His only other thought was to go back to the site itself and see if there
were
any type of clue
he
might
have missed
.
But s
oftware
and coding
were
not his
best skills
.
He ran the site’s
domain name
through several filtering
programs
,
and all of them came back with a clean bill of health
.
So
,
once
again,
he
logged
in
.

 

T
he same bland, black and white form he’d seen and used the night before
greeted him
.
Say Goodbye to Me in tall, plain lette
rs covered the top of the page, followed by
the
simple
tagline:

A chance to tell them how you feel, even though they’re gone.”
Further down the page
was the date, a
To
: field
a
From
: field and a
Subject
line.
Rounding out the page was
an
open text box,
the one
into
which
Steve had poured his heart last night. Below the text box was a tiny, unassuming button with the word
SUBMIT
on it
,
and below that
,
a simple horizontal line
marked
the e
nd of the page
.
That was it

n
othing to scroll to, nothing to see.
He decided to peek under the hood and viewed the source code
for
the page
.
As he expected, it was very simple.
No
meta
data
explained
who had created the page or why.
A few lines of code format
ted
the text
,
and a
nother
line pointed the form to a
computer
script that Steve knew
captured
the data someone
submitted
and sent it to a predefined email address, which of course wasn’t visible on the page or even here in the code
.
That info was stored securely back on the server that hosted the
website
, and it was not accessible from here. He followed the rest of the code down the page until he came to the last line
.
It read: