Authors: Chris Jordan
lates his odds. What he’d prefer is to subdue the suspect and
then conduct the search, in case the shack is a ruse or a trap,
as seems likely. But his adversary is pumped and hyper and
despite being a head shorter looks about as easy to subdue
as a charging rhino on amphetamines.
Everything about Ricky Lang screams
go on, make your
move,
like he’s been practicing his quick-draw techniques
and wants to try them out. Plus there’s the fact that he may
be clinically insane, talking to invisible children and mutter-
ing about, of all things, Superman. What that signifies, Shane
hasn’t a clue. Other than a conviction, born of experience,
that psychotic suspects are infinitely more difficult to subdue.
“They’re in the shack,” Shane says, watching Lang’s
hands. “Kelly and Seth. Alive?”
Ricky Lang grins. “Only one way to find out, man.
Because you ain’t got X-ray vision, that’s obvious. You had
X-ray like me, you’d already know.”
Shane makes his decision, slips over the side. Ready to
duck under the hull if Lang reaches for the Glock. Instead he
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slams the gear into reverse, leaving Shane standing, as
promised, in waist-deep water.
By the time Shane wades over the soft, mucky bottom to
the stilts beneath the shack, the big racing machine is nothing
but a white rooster tail fading into the hazy distance. He’s
pulling himself up a rusty iron ladder when he remembers
that the cell phone is in his pants pocket, and therefore has
been submersed in salt water.
Great, perfect. And maybe that’s what Ricky Lang
intended all along. Neutralize the larger man with promises,
put him off balance with feigned insanity, then dump him in
the water a couple of miles offshore and make an escape.
Crawling up the ladder, Shane shakes his head. Still
doesn’t make sense. No need to play games when Lang had
the Glock. One bullet does it, either to disable or kill. No need
for mind games or boat rides or stories about superheroes.
Unless his captives are really stashed in the shack. Alive
or dead.
At floor level Shane hauls himself up through an opening
in what remains of a narrow porch that runs around the entire
building. The seagulls have fled, but unless the birds are big
beer drinkers, the shack has a history as a party destination.
Empty cans and bottles strewn everywhere. The windows and
doors have been securely boarded with heavy plywood by
Biscayne National Park, which has stenciled warnings all
over the plywood.
No Trespassing
Condemned Property
Criminal Penalties Apply
This Means You!
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Chris Jordan
Shane, dripping and no longer hopeful, bangs a fist on the
plywood. “Kelly! Seth! Anybody there?”
He puts his ear to the plywood. Hears a moaning. Not
human, but wind whistling through the building. Which
means there must be an opening. He lopes around the deck,
scuffling through the party debris, searching. Finds, on the
side facing the sea, a section where the plywood has been un-
fastened along the bottom edge. Leaving a gap of an inch or
so, more than enough for the wind.
Shane braces himself, heaves against the heavy plywood.
Not quite enough leverage. He repositions his feet against the
base of the wall, leans back, using his legs.
With a mighty screech the sheet of plywood comes loose,
yanking screws and through-bolts through the softened wood
frame. Shane lands on his ass with his hands full of splinters
and the plywood in his lap.
Catches his breath, shoves the plywood aside, and crawls
through the dark opening.
Shane stands up.
The floor is spongy underfoot. There’s a stink he asso-
ciates with nesting birds. A few slashes of sunlight penetrate
through the galvanized metal roof and under the eaves. As
his eyes adjust he’s able to determine that the shack is basi-
cally one big room, bare to the wood frame walls, stripped
of anything that’s not nailed down.
Empty. No place to hide a captive, every indication the
shack hasn’t been occupied in years.
He resists the impulse to pound his fist through the wall.
Because now he knows what Ricky Lang was up to, tak-
ing him for a boat ride. He’s buying time. Whatever is go-
ing down, it’s going to happen while Shane is stranded in
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an abandoned stilt shack a mile or two from the nearest
shoreline.
He’s been played.
Shane hurries outside to the porch, finds his cell phone in
a soggy pocket. Shakes off the salty moisture, flips it open.
Before daring to activate it, he blows the keys dry with his
own breath, offering up a prayer.
Small miracle, the screen light comes on, the phone boots
up. He waits impatiently while it searches for a connection.
“Come on, you little beast,” he urges. “I’ll buy you a new
battery, promise.”
The screen resolves. The bars climb. Connection estab-
lished. Carefully he punches in a number, watches it play out
across the screen.
“Special Agent Healy? Can you hear me? Good, excellent.
This is Randall Shane. I’ve got a situation. You’re gonna love
it, trust me.”
Part III
Dead Or Alive
1. Giving The Finger
For me, fear is like the flu. It starts in my belly and the
small of my back and makes me want to hide in bed until the
flu, or the fear, is over.
No bed today, no hiding. As much as I dread confronting
Edwin Manning, it has to be done. My idea is to start by
ringing his doorbell, assuming he has one, but the uniformed
security guard in the lobby has other ideas.
“Sorry, miss. Only way you get upstairs is if they call
down, put you on the access list.”
“This is a matter of life and d-d-death,” I stammer.
“Sorry, miss, those are the rules.”
I’m looking past him, wondering if I can make a dash for
the elevators. He senses my desperation—or maybe he
doesn’t want to waste batteries Tasering me—and offers to
call the penthouse, make an inquiry.
“What do I say?” he asks me, wanting to be helpful.
“Tell him this is Jane Garner and if he doesn’t talk to me
his son will die.”
The guard’s mild brown eyes widen in shock.
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“I didn’t kidnap his son,” I assure him. “But I know who
did. Tell him all of that.”
The guard hands me the intercom phone. “Better tell him
yourself.”
The voice on the other end does not belong to Edwin
Manning—might be the egg man, I can’t tell—but I neverthe-
less make my spiel, essentially repeating what I told the as-
tonished security guard and adding, “You’ve one minute.
I’m in the lobby.”
Fern says I’m the bravest woman she knows, but surely
that can’t be true or I wouldn’t be fighting the impulse to
throw up. It’s not that I’m afraid of Edwin Manning or his
henchman. That’s not where the fear originates. The fear has
to do with not knowing what is going to happen in the next
few hours, and how I will survive if it all goes wrong.
What do you do if the world ends?
I’ve no idea and it makes me afraid.
In less than a minute Edwin Manning emerges from the
elevator accompanied by Mr. Popkin. Both men look as
concerned and uneasy as I feel, but there’s something in
Manning’s palpable anxiety that makes me know exactly
what to do.
Before he can speak I reach out and take his hand. “You
have to come with me,” I tell him. “If you love your son,
come with me.”
Our little team has assembled in my suite at the Europa.
Randall Shane, looking beleaguered and for some reason
ashamed as he holds an ice pack to his swollen face. In
addition, Special Agent Sean Healy and his partner, Special
Agent Paloma Salazar. All of whom had thought it might be
nice if Mr. Manning was persuaded to join us, and agreed that
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he’d be more likely to respond positively to a desperate
fellow parent, which is where I came in.
Acting desperate had not been a problem.
“Who’s this?” Healy wants to know when the egg man
comes through the door.
“Salvatore Popkin,” the bald man responds, holding out
his left hand for a shake. “I work for Mr. Manning.”
Healy glances at the hand. “You’ll have to wait outside.
Family only.”
When the egg man starts to protest, Manning goes, “Do
what he says,” without a backward glance.
As Popkin backs awkwardly out the door, dissed and dis-
missed, I take him aside. “Sally? There’s a nice restaurant out
by the pool. Get something to eat or drink, whatever you
want. Put it on my room. I’ll let you know when your boss
is ready to leave.”
The egg man blushes, not a pretty sight.
Back inside, Manning paces in a tight circle, flexing his
hands like he wants to strangle someone. “Don’t tell me,” he
says. “It all went to shit, right? That’s why you brought me
here, to make your excuses.”
Special Agent Salazar guides Manning to a chair and
insists that he sit, relax. She’s about thirty, with big lovely
eyes, dark pixie hair that frames her oval face. She’s
dressed in a nicely tailored linen suit, can’t be more than
a size four, tops, and wearing expertly applied makeup.
Only thing wrong with the picture is that she’s wearing
flats instead of heels, but for all I know that’s an agency
regulation. Makes sense—if you have to chase down a
suspect, or stand and fire your weapon, heels are probably
not a good idea.
Apparently the arrangement is that she will do most of
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Chris Jordan
the talking and Healy will take notes and comment when he
sees fit.
In a clear, melodic voice with a slight Latino accent, Agent
Salazar informs Edwin Manning that the FBI has informa-
tion they are obliged to share about his son.
Manning stares fiercely at his hands. “You’re going to tell
me he’s dead. Get it over with.”
“Sir, we have no information regarding the physical con-
dition of your son.”
His head lifts. “So he’s alive?”
“We don’t know his status,” says Salazar carefully. “We
are in active pursuit of a suspect who confessed to the abduc-
tion of your son and Mrs. Garner’s daughter, and then fled.
We believe he may be heading for home. Indian territory.”
If Edwin Manning looked sick before, now he looks on
the point of death. “I told you people to leave us alone.
Begged you. Now look what you’ve done!”
“Has Ricky Lang made contact with you today?”
Manning shakes his head.
“Has he at any time demanded payment for the safe return
of your son and/or Mrs. Garner’s daughter?”
“It isn’t about money,” says Manning savagely, his eyes
shiny. “Is that all you people understand?”
Maybe it’s just me, but the scorn for money seems kind
of strange, coming from a guy who manages an eight-billion-
dollar hedge fund. On the other hand he’s obviously been
through the wringer, so I decide to cut him some slack. For
a moment there in the lobby of his condo I’d thought we were
finally in sync. Maybe not—he’s yet to admit to knowing
about Kelly, or to acknowledge the fact that I’m as much a
victim as he is.
When Shane glances up from his ice pack, he has two
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slightly blackened eyes that make him look like a melancholy
raccoon. “They’re trying to help,” he says to Manning. “I’m
the one who screwed up.”
Healy snorts. “You said it.”
Shane keeps his silence for the rest of the meeting.
The petite but somehow imposing Agent Salazar remains
a study in calm. Perched on the corner of one of the suite’s napa
leather sofas, she elucidates her agency’s position deftly, and
without a lot of the law enforcement jargon her partner favors.
“Here’s where we stand, Mr. Manning. Two days ago you
declined assistance and refused to confirm that your son was
missing. We respected your wishes. Then Mrs. Garner and
her consultant—he’s the big gentleman over there, I believe
you’ve met—Mrs. Garner and Mr. Shane developed evidence
that her daughter Kelly was abducted from a private aircraft
registered in your name. As near as we can determine she was
a passenger on a flight piloted by your son, Seth Manning.
We have a witness who will testify that the aircraft, a Beech-
craft King Air 350, is being stored in a hangar at an unreg-
istered airfield located within the Nakosha reservation.
Therefore we conclude that your son was abducted at the
same time as Kelly Garner, and that because of your finan-
cial connections to the Nakosha gaming resort, he may have
been the prime target, and Miss Garner may simply have been
in the wrong place at the wrong time.
“At Mrs. Garner’s request we have opened an investiga-