Authors: Chris Jordan
always right about these situations. His track record is nothing
short of amazing. That’s why I’m responding, and why the
agency will take a look. I’m leaving the legal paperwork that
will enable us to pen register your telephone lines, have it on
the record if a kidnapper calls. You okay with that?”
“Yes, of course. Whatever it takes.”
“Let’s hope Randall got it wrong this time and your
daughter is just acting out. Believe me, hard as that is to deal
with—I have two grown daughters, so I know—hard as that
is, any sort of abduction scenario is much, much worse.” She
hands Shane a legal-size envelope, the paperwork for the
phone tap. “Sign and fax to the Melville office, they’ll get
the ball rolling. Are we clear?”
“Yes, ma’am, all clear,” says Shane.
She ignores the taunt, turns to me. “Mrs. Garner?”
“Find my daughter. That’s my only concern.”
“We’ll do everything we can. Now if you’ll excuse me, I
have to be in Washington by noon.” She shakes my hand
again, gives Shane a sisterly peck on the cheek.
“Don’t worry,” she assures me on her way out. “You’re in
capable hands.”
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* * *
drinking too much tea and trying to clear my head. Checking
my cell for messages that haven’t been left, generally
working my anxiety up to higher and higher levels. Desper-
ately wanting something, anything to happen, to convince me
we’re going forward, making progress.
The phone rings. My office phone.
I enter at a run, find Shane with the phone already up to
his ear, saying, “Yes. Yes. Got it. Thank you very much.”
He hangs up.
With my permission, Shane has cleared a space on my
worktable for his laptop, one of those sleek, turbocharged
things, with a wide screen and a titanium case. A spiral
notebook lies open, filled with neat, legible handwriting, some
of it emphatically underlined. The phone has been repositioned
nearby. He’s been busy, obviously, and I feel a little twinge of
guilt for getting much-needed sleep while he worked the
phones and the Web, set up the meeting with his high-ranking
friend.
“Anything I should know?” I ask, indicating the phone.
“Seth Manning’s car has just been located.”
“His car?” I say, excited. “What about Kelly?”
“Let’s take a break, I’ll bring you up to speed.”
He grabs his notebooks and I follow him back into the
kitchen. Shane takes a stool at the far end of the counter, helps
himself to coffee. I cling to the mug of tea like it’s a grenade
that might go off if released.
“Couple of interesting things,” he begins. “Background on
Edwin Manning. The name was vaguely familiar and now I
know why. He started a very successful, very private hedge
fund, Manning Capital. Big money. Listed assets of five
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billion dollars, over which he has more or less total control.
Which makes him a juicy target.”
“I’m not even sure what a hedge fund really does.”
“It makes money for people with money. Or that’s the idea.”
“What about the car? You said they found his car?”
Shane nods. “Correct. Seth’s vehicle has been located in
the long-term parking lot at Island Executive Airport in Far-
mingdale. Just the vehicle, locked. The police have impounded
it. We’ve agreed it will be given a full forensic search.”
“We?”
Flashing a quick, almost furtive smile, he strokes his trim
little beard, as if embarrassed to have been caught doing
something naughty. “Um, Detective Berg and I. That’s the
‘we.’ The way it played out I, ah, happened to suggest a full
search and he agreed it made sense. The idea being that the
case may fall under the 2252 statute.”
Takes a moment for my brain to slip into gear and put
together
airport
and
car in the long-term parking lot.
“Are you saying they flew somewhere? Kelly and this
man? Where did they go? Does this mean they really did run
away, they weren’t kidnapped?”
Shane consults his notes. “This doesn’t contradict our ab-
duction theory. A car registered to Seth Manning entered the
lot at 5:13 a.m., almost six hours before your last contact with
Kelly. The I.E. is not a major commercial facility—it’s a
small, private airport—but it has charter flights to all the
metropolitan airports. LaGuardia, Kennedy, Newark and, by
helicopter, to Manhattan. There are regular flights to Atlantic
City. So theoretically your daughter could have been almost
anywhere when she called you.”
Despite all the caffeine, my head is still thick with
Ambien-induced sleep, so I’m having trouble processing.
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Chris Jordan
Can it only be yesterday that Kelly vanished? Doesn’t seem
possible. Seems like weeks.
“Theoretically?” I ask, seizing on the word. “What does
that mean?”
“Means her name was not listed on the manifest of any
charter flight leaving yesterday morning,” he explains. “Nor
was it listed on any private flight plan filed with the tower.”
“The FBI told you that? Your friend Monica?”
“Not Monica personally. People who work the Long
Island office.”
“So Kelly didn’t fly? She and this man were kidnapped
in the airport parking lot? Is that what you’re saying?”
“No,” he says. “My apologies. I’m not making myself
clear. I’m not saying she and Seth Manning didn’t fly out of
Island Executive, just that they didn’t leave on a chartered
flight. It’s a very busy airfield, lots of private and corporate
aircraft use it. Hundreds. Civilian pilots are encouraged to file
a flight plan, but not all do so.”
“Somebody must know what happened to them.”
“Somebody does,” he agrees. “We just have to find out who.”
25. Surprise, Surprise
The Lincoln Town Car is starting to feel like a sturdy old
friend. Keeping just below the speed limit, we cruise into
Island Executive Airport in less than forty minutes door to
door. More like door to long-term parking lot. Out over the
runways, small planes teeter like fragile kites, looking much
too slow to stay aloft. The same trick of the eye that makes
you think a 757 is barely moving, and these little jobs are way
smaller. And yes, I’m one of those who’ve never really under-
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stood how a squat little box with stubby wings can make itself
fly. My ninth-grade science teacher, Mr. Polanski, tried his
best, but it still doesn’t make sense.
Only one of the reasons that the idea of Kelly and small
planes freaks me out. Parachutes? Skydiving? Forget about it.
Safely parked on the outer rim of the lot—Shane likes an
open space on either side—we head for a blocky-looking
building near the lone tower that overlooks the runways. The
building is divided into bays with separate entrances. There
are signs for Flight Instruction, Maintenance, and Flight Op-
erations. Shane heads for door number three.
It’s all I can do to keep up without breaking into a run. He
notices, apologizes and shortens his stride.
“Long legs,” I say.
“And big feet,” he points out.
A blast of cold air greets us inside Flight Operations. Tem-
perature control is low enough to keep polar bears frisky, and
I find myself hugging my bare arms.
“Sorry, miss,” says the man behind the counter. Older guy
in his sixties with the hanging jowls and the soulful eyes of a
faithful bulldog. “Thermostat is out of whack. Grab a jacket.”
He points to a row of hooks inside the door and a selection
of bright orange jackets, all with Ground Crew stenciled on
the back. The jacket is big enough for three of me, but it helps.
“Now,” says the man behind the counter, rubbing his hands
together. “Bob Cody, what can I do ya?”
Bob has a thinning white flat-top, radar-scoop ears, and
the kind of deeply creased, leathery skin that’s seen way too
much sunlight over the years. But his smile is friendly enough
and he seems genuinely interested in helping.
“This is Jane Garner,” Shane begins, laying his business
card down on the counter. “Her daughter is missing.”
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Chris Jordan
“Oh my God,” Bob says, glancing at the card. “That’s
terrible.”
“You were on duty when the police tow truck snagged the
Boxster this morning?”
Bob nods eagerly. “Seth’s Porsche. Yeah, I saw that. The
old man’ll be pissed. Excuse me, miss. I mean missus.”
Shane looks pleased. He sort of relaxes his big frame on
the counter, leaning on his elbows to make himself appear
smaller, less imposing. It’s a conversation between equals
now, two men of the world helping out a lady.
“This is going to be our lucky day, Mrs. Garner,” Shane
says to me. “Bob knows the Mannings. I’ll bet he’s seen
Kelly with Seth, right, Bob? Pretty girl, slender and athletic.
Dark hair. Taking lessons?”
On cue I produce Kelly’s photo, the one that shows her
in the cockpit of the little airplane. Bob studies the photo-
graph, shakes his head. “I’m sorry, no. But Seth has quite a
number of students, I do know that, because he’s always
careful with the flight plans. Not all the pilots are, but he is.
That’s mostly when I see him nowadays, when he hands in
the paperwork.”
While Bob studies the photo, Shane studies Bob. Nods to
himself, as if satisfied that the jug-eared gent is being truthful.
“Recognize the aircraft?”
Bob nods eagerly, which makes his jowls jiggle slightly.
“Yep. Cessna Skylane. That’s the plane Seth uses for flight
instruction. Took delivery just last year. Beautiful piece of
machinery, just beautiful.” He pauses, looks from me to
Shane. “Is Seth in some sort of trouble?”
“No trouble,” Shane says firmly. “Kelly is the one in
trouble, because she neglected to tell her mom where she and
Seth were headed.”
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No trouble.
First time I’ve heard Randall Shane lie, and it’s
a more than a little unsettling to know how good he is at it.
“Yeah, well, kids do that sometimes,” Bob says, sounding
a little uneasy.
“Detective Berg called earlier,” Shane says. “Apparently
Seth forgot to file a flight plan.”
Bob is shaking his head. “I don’t know who the detec-
tive talked to, but Seth Manning, he’s like clockwork. He’s
been flying out of this facility since he was sixteen, and he
never misses.”
“You seem very certain.”
Bob nods emphatically. “I was his original flight instruc-
tor. Seth was one of my best students. Not just because he
had a feel for it—lots of students have that—but because he’s
meticulous and organized. A good pilot is always prepared,
always checking, that’s as important as any of the physical
skills. Some students I had to drum that in, but not Seth. I
kid you not, he enjoys working through the checklists. Which
is part of what makes him an excellent flight instructor.”
“Uh-huh,” says Shane. “So you passed the torch.”
“You could say that.”
“Mind if I ask why?”
Bob gives him a wary look. “Not that it’s any of your busi -
ness, but I developed cardiac problems a couple years ago.
Persistent episodic tachycardia, which is doc talk for bum
ticker. Flunked the physical.”
Shane nods. “Some guys cheat on that, find a friendly
doctor.”
“Not me. It was time to retire, before I killed some kid.”
“So you’re absolutely sure that Seth didn’t fly out of here
yesterday?”
“Positive,” Bob says, getting a bit huffy. “You know why
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Chris Jordan
I’m positive? Because that’s his Skylane right there. Got a
prime tie-down right by the flight school.”
Shane looks out the window, spots the plane, seems sat-
isfied. “Any aircraft missing or stolen in the last few days?”
Friendly Bob has had about enough of us. I can tell be-
cause his big ears have reddened. He backs away from the
counter, putting space between himself and Shane. “What
kind of crap are you talking, mister? Why would Seth Man-
ning steal a plane when he has one of his own?”
“For thrills? To impress a pretty girl?”
“That’s bull. The kid is no thief. What is this really about?
Who sent you here?”
Shane drums his fingers lightly on the Formica, rat-a-tat-
tat. “It’s like I said, Mrs. Garner is trying to locate her daughter.”
Bob looks sick, puts his hand to his chest.
“Seth must have friends at this airfield,” Shane persists.
“Maybe he borrowed a plane.”
Bob sits down, massaging his chest. His face has drained,
leaving him pale as a paper napkin. I’m worried he’s going
to keel over, but Shane isn’t backing off.
“Same answer,” says Bob, sounding faint. “He’d file a
flight plan.”
“Charter flights?” Shane says. “Could Seth have char-
tered a plane?”
Bob sounds pissed. “You don’t give up, do you? Anybody