Authors: Chris Jordan
and smoked glass and daring architectural angles. Must be a
million precisely weathered cedar shingles keeping out the
rain. The property taxes probably exceed my yearly income.
No wonder the owner has, apparently, been targeted for ex-
tortion—he’s got a lot to give.
Kelly’s boyfriend or flight instructor, whatever the hell he
is, how did this happen? How did she find herself in this par-
ticular world?
Shane sets the parking brake and we get out. Lights come
on, illuminating a wide, elaborately shingled portico. The
oversize door opens—opaque green-glass panels set in a
brushed-steel frame—and Edwin Manning staggers out,
dressed more or less as we last saw him, with the exception
of his face, which has been recently washed.
“Who
are
you?” he wants to know. Then he adds, in a
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voice so faint it seems to fade away, “Leave me alone. Just
please leave me alone!”
He trips, falls to his knees, his skinny chipmunk face slick
with tears. The poor man is a mess. Shane and I help him to
his feet, each taking a black-clad arm. He doesn’t weigh all
that much and I can feel his pulse pounding, as if his whole
body is being struck like a gong.
He is, I realize, scared nearly to death, and that makes me
even more frightened.
“My daughter,” I tell him urgently. “That’s all we want,
my daughter back. Whatever else happened, I don’t care.”
Manning staggers like a drunk but there’s no smell of
alcohol. He’s exhausted and stressed to the point of falling
down. Not quite there yet myself, but I can see it coming if
Kelly isn’t home by, say, this time tomorrow.
Once when Kelly was about ten, a year or so after her
last treatment, she accompanied me on a house call, what
I call a catalog call because it’s all about looking at photos
of designs and fabric samples—satins, silks, laces and
finishes. Lots of catalogs, lots of possibilities. Long drive
to Montauk, a very successful novelist’s waterfront “cot-
tage.” Won’t mention her name because I don’t want to be
sued, but the bride-to-be (marriage number three) made all
of her money writing sexy stories about rich divas and had
either become one herself or started out that way. A very
unpleasant person to deal with, unless you happened to be
a fellow celebrity, in which case it was kiss-kiss-oh-I-
missed-you-
so
-much.
Anyhow, Kelly’s eyes got big when she saw the house
and the beautiful setting on the grassy dunes, and I could
tell she longed to live in a place like this rather than in
boring old suburban Valley Stream. Couldn’t blame her.
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The writer’s cottage looked like a Laura Ashley catalog
cover, the one where Ralph Lauren is visiting, and all the
children are perfectly chic. Not that there were any children
present other than Kelly. The rich bitch had kids from
earlier marriages, but they were all grown-up and not
speaking to her.
Kelly wandered from room to room as the bride-to-be-
again checked out flattering designs and bosom-enhanc-
ing brocades. As I soon discovered, the lady liked to vent
on the “little people,” meaning employees or contractors,
and she included me as one. Contractors were scum,
painters were scum, plumbers and electricians were scum.
Everybody who worked on her house was scum or stupid
or worthless. She said so on
David Letterman.
Failing to
mention that she changed her mind every other minute,
made ridiculous demands, then complained when it took
longer, cost more. I had already decided that I’d have a
scheduling conflict that would prevent me from adding her
to my client list, but didn’t quite know how to get out of
there without having my head bitten off. So I went along,
going through the motions, suggesting possible ensem-
bles that might work—most every suggestion dismissed as
“stupid”—absorbing abuse from a woman I’d just met and
hadn’t said boo to.
When we finally escaped, a mile or so down the road, Kelly
touches me on the hand and asks why that lady is so horrible.
All I can do is shake my head and tell her that for some people
money is like a poison. It makes them sick in the head. Kelly,
ten years old, she looks me in the eye and goes, “That woman
was always horrible, Mom. She was born that way. Tell her to
take her wedding gown and put it where the sun don’t shine.”
Ten. I laughed till I cried. Right now, exhausted and shaky
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and ready to fall apart for at least the third time, I’m won-
dering if she ever set foot on the Manning estate, and if so,
what she thinks of it, of them.
“Are you alone, sir?” Shane wants to know.
We’ve entered something like a glass hut with a high, ca-
thedral ceiling vented with skylights. Canvas-bladed ceiling
fans hang like monstrous white bats. Manning staggers to the
right, bringing us to a living space. Cherry floors set in a her-
ringbone pattern, stark leather couches, steel-and-strap
chairs, lots of bookcases filled with books. Look like real
books, too, not designer touches.
“Anybody here?” Shane asks, persisting. “Family, staff?
Anybody at all?”
Edwin Manning has collapsed into one of the custom
designer chairs, buried his face in his hands. When he looks up
again he seems to have gained some resolve. His voice is
hoarse, froglike, as if an invisible hand is gripping his throat.
“Nobody,” he croaks. “Sent everyone away. I’m entirely alone.”
“Where’s your wife? Seth’s mother, where is she?”
The little man snorts, shakes his head. “Dead. Died when
he was twelve. I never remarried.”
“Other children?” Shane asks.
“Just Seth.” He looks up, focuses on Shane. “If you call
the FBI, or anyone else, he’ll die. Is that understood? He’ll
die quite horribly. That’s really all I can tell you.”
Shane indicates that we should both sit. Put us on a level
with Edwin Manning. Have a look into his sad, red-rimmed
eyes, see what we can see.
“Has your son been abducted?” Shane asks, point-blank.
“Is he being held for ransom? Is this about money?”
Manning shakes his head, clears his throat. “I can’t talk
about it, not to you and not to anyone,” he says, as if reciting
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from a script. “That was made crystal clear. I have to do
exactly what they say or he’ll die.”
Shane sits back, digesting Manning’s strangely laconic
response. So far, almost every sentence ends in “die,” or
contains the word “death” or “kill,” and yet the big guy
doesn’t look the least bit discouraged. To the contrary, he has
the slightly satisfied expression of a man whose assump-
tions have been confirmed.
“Okay,” Shane says. “We’ve established there is an abduc-
tion in progress, and that you believe your son’s life to be in
danger. Have you received proof of life? An indication that
Seth is still alive?”
Manning breaks eye contact, such as it is. His small,
delicate jaw juts forward. “Stay out of this,” he says. “I read
your card. If you’re former FBI you know what can happen.”
“What about Kelly?” I demand. Somehow I’m on my feet,
trembling with anxiety and agitation. “Is she with your son?
Is that what happened? Has she been kidnapped, too?”
Manning rubs his temples, avoids looking at me. “Never
heard of her,” he says. “Seth never mentioned anyone by
that name.”
For the first time I get a strong sense that he’s lying. He
may not have met my daughter—what adult male brings
home an underage girl to meet his daddy?—but he’s heard
of her for sure. Mos def, as Kelly would say.
Shane leans in closer. His whole body seems to come into
sharp focus, as if to demonstrate that he could, if provoked,
crush the smaller man like bug.
“Are you aware that your son originally made contact
with Mrs. Garner’s sixteen-year-old daughter on the Internet?
That he took her skydiving, and apparently gave her flying
lessons, all without her mother’s consent?”
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Manning shakes his head. “I can’t discuss this.”
Shane leans closer still. His voice becomes softer, but
somehow no less forceful. “You are in deep trouble, sir. You
are out of your depth. Let me help.”
“I can’t do that. Leave my house at once, both of you.”
“Tell me what happened,” Shane suggests. “I’ll take it
from there.”
Edwin Manning suddenly erupts, shaking his head so hard
he almost spins out of the seat. “Go away!” he insists. “I don’t
know about your daughter,” he says, turning to me, meeting
my eyes for the first time. “If she’s with Seth, they’ll kill her,
too. Do you understand? You have to let me handle this. You
must. It’s the only way.”
Shane’s hands are suddenly gripping my upper arms,
pulling me away. Anticipating, almost before I quite know it
myself, that I’m about to launch myself at Manning, scratch
out his lying eyes.
“We’re leaving,” Shane announces. “If you change your
mind, call me. I can help.”
Couple miles down the road, heading out of the millionaire
enclave, Shane pulls over so I can throw up. Kneeling in the
darkness by the side of the road, the taste of dirty pennies in
my mouth. Shane keeping back, not tempted to hold my head,
because he knows what’s going on, why this has happened.
It’s not fear that’s makes me sick. It’s anger.
20. In The Bunker
Twelve hundred miles to the south, Ricky Lang heads for
the bunker. A concrete cube, ready-made and then buried under
a load of dirt and gravel long before Ricky was born. Suppos-
edly it dates from the Cuban missile crisis. Some crazy white
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man shit, blow the whole world to pieces. The way he heard, a
Cuban contractor buried the thing, all in a panic, convinced
Fidel was coming to town on a rocket. Kept his family there for
a few weeks, then walked away, never looked back. Whatever,
Ricky’s been familiar with the bunker since he was a kid, when
he used to play hide the weenie with some of the trailer girls
down there. The trailer park is long gone, but the bunker still
exists and you never know when a secure location will come
in handy. Especially one that cannot be detected from the air.
Ricky is keenly aware that any fool with a computer can
Google a satellite image these days, check out your backyard,
see if you mowed the grass. He’s made sure the Beechcraft
is concealed in a hangar, that activity in and around the
airfield is kept to a minimum. The place is probably still
under some sort of minimum DEA satellite photo surveil-
lance from the bad old days. Nothing to draw their attention
now—he made it his personal business to clean up the tribal
drug trade. Couple of the stubborn old farts thought it was
still a going concern, had to be fed to the gators. The others
soon saw the error of their ways, agreed to live on tribal
income and whatever they’d managed to hide in the ground.
Gator bait was usually ripe chicken, but like they say, ev-
erything tastes like chicken once you take the skin off.
“Smells bad down there,” Roy warns him, approaching the
bunker.
Ricky stops, looks Roy in the eye. “White shit smells dif-
ferent from people shit, you ever notice? One sniff, I can tell.”
“Oh yeah?” Roy responds, glancing away. “The boy don’t
know whether he’s coming or going, or where he’s at.”
“Uh-huh,” says Ricky. “Dug, you bring them loppers?”
“Yeah, Chief,” says Dug, bringing up the rear, letting the
big-branch loppers bump against his trouser leg. Seems to
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think carrying the loppers is some sort of game he can win,
if only he can figure it out.
Ricky holds out his hand, stops Dug in his tracks. “Ain’t
no chief to you,” he says. “I am chief to my own people,
only to them.”
No surprise, Dug looks confused, seeking help from his
brother, who shrugs as if to say
Roll with it.
“You got the key?” Ricky asks. “Open says me.”
Ricky’s laughing as Roy fumbles with the key. Neither
brother registering the humor in “open says me,” puns and
wordplay not being their thing. Which, in Ricky Lang’s febrile
mind makes the Whittle twins more amusing than the usual
swamp crackers, a tribe he has made use of, and thoroughly
mistrusted, for his entire life. Started out helping his father, Tito
Lang, swap tanned hides for the whiskey the crackers made in
their hidden stills. Saw the contempt in their colorless eyes—
drunk Indians selling their birthright for the poison that would
surely kill them. A poison self-administered, and no different
in its outcome than the hot bullets so many of the people fired