Authors: Chris Jordan
Plus we both like Washington. That’s where we hooked up,
when I first got hired by the bureau. So we throw the bags in
the car and drive from New Rochelle to D.C., four and a half
hours door to door, piece of cake.
“Amy, she loves the museum. She adores it. Everybody
says this about their kids, but Amy was truly amazing. Twice
as smart as me, and she was only twelve years old. Jean and
I had just the best weekend, watching Amy soak up all that
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knowledge. She was having such a great time, taking notes
and collecting pamphlets that we end up staying longer than
we intended. Would have made sense to stay over, and we
discussed the possibility, but decided we had to get back
home that night because Amy has school the next day and
I’ve got work and Jean has work—did I mention Jean was
a lawyer? No? She worked for the Legal Aid Society in New
York. Anyhow, it’s night, heavy traffic. We’re on the New
Jersey Turnpike when my eyelids start to get heavy. So I pull
into the Walt Whitman rest area and let Jean take over. She’s
wide-awake, fully caffeinated and raring to go. Amy’s in the
back, sound asleep. Probably dreaming of her eventual
Nobel Prize nomination for her sixth-grade world-studies
class project.”
“Oh Shane,” I say, knowing what’s coming.
“Yeah,” he says. “It was bad. Next thing I know, I’m wak-
ing up in a wreck and I’m the only survivor. While I was
asleep Jean got sideswiped by a tractor-trailer and we got
dragged under his rear wheels.”
I hug the big guy, but he doesn’t really hug me back. Too
tense, too focused on the pain.
“So that’s my story,” he says. “Why I resigned from the
FBI.”
“What did you do?”
“What can you do? I buried them. Then, see, I was so
afraid of forgetting, so unable to let go, that I spent a year or
so working on a family scrapbook. Which turned out not to
be such a good idea for me, mental health-wise. That house
in New Rochelle? Must have looked like Howard Hughes
was living there. I wasn’t saving my own toenail clippings,
or worse, but I was obsessing on assembling the perfect
family scrapbook that would somehow take us all back to our
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happy boring life together. That was my purpose in life,
culling through snapshots of dead people.”
“So what happened?” I want to know. “How did you get
through it? How did you survive?”
He shrugs. “Ran into someone more desperate than me.
This lady in the neighborhood, she came to me because she
knew I used to be FBI. Short version—she had a problem
with her missing daughter and I agreed to help her if I could,
and it turns out I could, and I sort of kept going from there.”
“I’m glad you did. No matter how this turns out.”
“Don’t say that. Don’t even think it.”
“Can’t help it. Sorry.”
“Try this,” he suggests. “Show me yours. The secret of
who fathered Kelly. Get it off your chest.”
I want to share, really I do, but as usual, something holds
me back. Something deep and veiled puts a cautionary finger
to my lips and says, no, not now, not yet.
“If we get her back,” I tell him. “If Kelly survives she
deserves to know what happened to her father. Knew I’d have
to tell her someday. I’ll tell her first, and then I’ll tell you,
promise.”
“Not if,” he says agreeably. “When.”
At that moment a gun blasts in the distance. I’m no expert
on gunshots, but when you hear one go off in the middle of
the Everglades you know what it is. Not a firecracker, not a
backfire. A gunshot, no doubt.
Shane grips my hand, doesn’t say a word. He doesn’t
need to.
Two more shots fire, and I know in my heart that
someone just died.
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15. Something Rises From The Black Water
Minutes go by, jagged little shards of eternity.
We’re at the edge of the hardwood island, facing the sunrise,
because the thudding sounds came from that direction.
“Shotgun,” Shane decides. “Fish had a rifle, so it’s not him.”
Thing is, I’m not thinking about our guide, or what he
might or might not have done. I’m thinking about an execu-
tion at dawn, because that’s what it sounded like to me. The
final, deliberate, carefully aimed shots that turn a living hu-
man being into something lifeless and ugly.
“Hard to say how far,” Shane muses. “Less than a mile,
that’s for sure.”
As I stare, something separates itself from the brightening
horizon and begins to fly back and forth, relentless and buglike.
“Helicopters are up,” Shane says approvingly. “Resuming
their pattern. Remind me to ask Fish if he’s got a flare gun.”
I’m hearing Shane but not fully processing his words—
helicopters, pattern, flare. I’m concentrating on the stillness
in my heart, wondering if it will ever resume beating. Of
course it never stopped, not really, it’s just a symptom of un-
bearable anxiety, thinking your heart has ceased beating.
Shane says lots of other stuff, probably reassuring things,
but I’m not listening.
We never do see Leo Fish coming back. All of a sudden
he’s there in front of us, soaking wet from the armpits down,
and looking especially grim.
“Best follow me,” he says, retrieving his little boat from
the bushes.
“Is it my daughter?” I ask, mouth dry.
“Can’t say,” Fish says, turning away.
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Back to the taciturn hermit. As Shane and I clamber into
the little boat, it feels like gravity has doubled. Everything is
much heavier, even the air. I’m at the point where breathing
is no longer automatic; I have to concentrate on expanding
my lungs, sucking in the syrupy air. The mosquitoes so thick
you have to breathe through a tightened mouth or risk draw-
ing them into your lungs.
Fish, not a young man, poles the boat with fierce concen-
tration, shoving us rapidly along, and the blood-tinted sky
ripples in the wake. The blood color gives way to garish,
neon-orange and by the time Fish nudges the little boat up
on dry land—five minutes? ten? my inner clock no longer
functions with clarity—the sky has become a thin wash of
blue with a few stars or planets still showing.
I realize, with a sickening shock, that darkness made the
wilderness smaller. With the blooming light comes a sense
of vast distance. The tiny helicopters are miles and miles
away, too far to make any sound. They say the horizon is only
about three miles away when you’re at ground level, but
from here it looks a thousand miles and a million years, with
distance and time hopelessly entangled. Vast but hardly
silent—a million birds are screaming bloody murder and
things are splashing in the water, disturbed by our presence.
Before I quite know what is happening, Fish has grabbed
the rope and he’s running across the grass, dragging the boat.
Moving with urgency, as if he knows that some terrible thing
awaits us. Which he must. He came this way, right? He’s
already been here. He knows but won’t say because he’d
rather show me.
Panic is like a fierce little bird trapped in my chest. I want
to fall to my knees and let it happen, a full-scale panic attack,
fluttering heartbeats, hyperventilation, the whole works. But
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my legs have ideas of their own, they carry me forward, over
the damp grass and the firm mud beneath, through the ragged,
toothy fronds of saw grass and palmetto slashing at my knees.
Racing forward, my eyes searching wildly for the one terrible
thing I hope never to see, my daughter’s name resonating
within me,
kellykellykellykelly
on an endless loop until
suddenly I burst through a thick stand of palmetto bushes or
trees or whatever they are, and go facedown with a great
womp! into the black water.
Shane pulls me out, holds me up, shakes me. Shaking me
dry or maybe trying to shake some sense into me. Hard to say
because I’m blubbering and with water in my ears not really
listening. I see his mouth move, but what is the silly man saying?
“Nutter!” he says.
So he thinks I’m crazy. That makes two of us. Then the
syllables begin to separate themselves and I realize he’s
saying, “Not her.”
Not her. Not Kelly.
He sets me down, looking as worried as ever I’ve seen him.
Worried for my state of mind, obviously. As he should be.
“Back with us, missy?” Fish wants to know.
Too soon to speak, but I manage to nod in the right places.
“Shots were fired here,” he says, indicating a thick area
of mangroves. “I was too far away to see it, but there’s plenty
of trace left behind. See the way those branches are bent?
Two people lying there. Hiding, is my guess. Just above,
where the branch is busted, that’s from the first shotgun. Ten
gauge, from the sound of it, and looks to be a slug shot.
Sorry, missy. That’s the size gun and ammunition a man
might use hunting deer or wild boar.”
“Or people,” I manage to gasp.
“Or people,” he concedes. “Which is what he was doing,
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right enough. The way he fired the first two shots, he was
maybe tryin’ to back ’em out of the mangroves. There’s no
blood, no indication they was hit.”
“They?” I ask. The guide’s methodical approach helps calm
me, ever so slightly, and my heartbeat is no longer fluttering.
It helps there are no bodies. I was expecting bodies.
“The two was hiding in the mangroves,” Fish explains.
“You see that area over there? Where it opens up and the
water looks a little deeper along the shore? That’s one of
Ricky Lang’s old camps. Used to be trailers and shacks and
such like, until the rangers burned it all down. Ricky lived
here till he was about twelve years old, is my guess. I’m also
guessin’ he has someplace nearby where he kept his captives.
Yur daughter and the young man.”
“Seth,” I tell him. “His name is Seth.”
“Whatever you say, missy.”
“What happened? Where are they?”
Shane wants to know as badly as I do. We’re both waiting
on Leo Fish, hoping he has the answers.
“Can’t know for sure,” he concedes. “Signs and trace give
me clues, but it ain’t certain. Two people hiding in the man-
groves, two shots to scare ’em out. Minute or so later, comes
another shot from a different gun. A twelve gauge, probably
an AA-12. Very distinctive sound.”
“An AA-12, are you sure?” Shane wants to know, his
voice laden with concern.
“Ain’t dead sure of nothin’ in this life, son. But it had the
sound of an auto assault shotgun, firing a single. The Cuban
paramilitary units used to train with the AA-12, pretending
to invade Cuba. Very scary noise, when firing on full auto.
Those boys would spook the wildlife for miles around,
playing with their full-auto shotguns.”
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“Two shooters,” Shane says.
“Yup, they was two. One killed by the other.”
Shane and I both have the same reaction. We look at the
bare ground, as if expecting a body to materialize. Fish shakes
his head and goes, “Sorry, missy. I ain’t used to explaining.
That dark stuff spattered on the mangrove?” he says, pointing.
“That’s blood, and if you’ll pardon me for saying so, it includes
specks of brain matter. So we know it was a head shot.”
If there’s blood and brains on the mangrove leaves I’ll take
Fish’s word for it. I have no desire for a closer look. I’m still
trying to puzzle out why, if someone was killed, there’s no
body. And how does he know that one shooter killed the other?
How—and this is killing me slowly—how does he know
the spatter doesn’t come from Kelly or Seth?
“Because I seen him, missy. The dead man. He was shot
from behind and fell back in the water. Made sure of who it
was afore I come back for you.”
Fish hefts his push-pole, studies the oily black water, then
plunges the pole into the surface not a yard from my feet. He
levers the pole down, grimacing with the effort.
Something rises. A wet thing with not much of a face.
“Sorry, missy,” says Fish. “Seems like you need to see this,
to prove it ain’t your daughter. This a local boy name of Dug
Whittle and you’ll notice he dint let go of his shotgun. A ten
gauge. So he was the one shootin’ at the mangroves.”
“Ricky did this?” Shane asks.
“That’d be my guess.”
“Oh my God,” I say, seeing what happened, finally pic-
turing what Fish had seen at a glance. “She escaped! Kelly
escaped! She was running away. She and Seth.”
“Looks like,” Fish says, lowering the pole. “But it didn’t
hold. Ricky Lang has got ’em now.”
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16. Later Alligator
She floats in a jungle canopy, under a blanket of lush
green fronds that cover her, good as any camouflage. All she