by Tami Hoag
It didn’t make sense to me that Jade would be so careless as to use a traceable phone number to make ransom demands. Any fool would know enough to make that kind of call from a pay phone or from a disposable cell phone.
If the call had come from a disposable phone, like the one I had purchased the day before, and the SO had been able to trace the number to a phone sold at a particular store, they might have been able to get an ID on Jade from a salesperson.
“What happens now?” Molly asked.
“First, I’m giving you this,” I said, handing her the phone I’d bought for her, along with a slip of paper with my numbers on it. “This is for you to contact me. It’s prepaid for one hour of time, then it quits working. These are my numbers. You see or hear anything regarding Erin, call me right away.”
She looked at the cheap phone like I’d handed her a gold brick.
“Do your folks know you’re out of the house?”
“I told Mom I was going for a ride on my bike.”
“Was she conscious at the time?”
“Mostly.”
“I’ll drive you home,” I said. “We don’t need the deputies out looking for you too.”
We both started for the door, then Molly turned and looked up at me.
“Will you go to the place for the ransom?” she asked.
“I won’t be allowed, but I have other leads to follow. Do I still work for you?”
She looked unsure. “Do you want to?”
“Yes,” I said. “I do. And even if you fired me, I would stay in this to the end. When I start something, I finish it. I want to see Erin back safe.”
Phone still clutched in her hand, Molly came and put her arms around my waist and hugged me tight.
“Thank you, Elena,” she said, more serious than any twelve-year-old should ever be.
“Thank you, Molly,” I returned, more serious than she knew. I hoped I would prove worthy of her trust and her gratitude.
“You’re a very special person,” I said as she stepped back. “It’s a privilege to know you.”
She didn’t know what to say to that, this special child I knew went unnoticed by the people who should have treasured her most. In a way, I supposed it was just as well. Molly had done a far better job raising herself than her mother could have done.
“I wish I didn’t have to be special,” she confessed softly. “I wish I could just be normal and have a normal family and live a normal life.”
Her words hit home with me. I had been twelve once, wishing I had a normal family, wishing I wasn’t the sore thumb, the outsider. Unwanted by the man who was supposed to be my father. A burden to the woman who was supposed to be my mother. At twelve I had long since lost my value as an accessory to her life.
I said the only thing I could: “You’re not alone, Molly. Us special chicks stick together.”
Chapter 32
Do we pull him in?” Weiss asked.
They had crammed into the lieutenant’s office—Landry, Weiss, and two other detectives: Michaels and Dwyer; and an unwelcome newcomer to the party—Special Agent Wayne Armedgian, FBI. Robbery/Homicide lieutenant William Dugan stood behind his desk, hands on his hips, a tall, tanned, gray-haired man who aspired to retire and go on the Senior PGA tour.
Dugan looked to Landry. “What do you think, James?”
“I think what we’ve got is too thin and circumstantial, unless Jade’s blood type happens to match what we got out of the stall where Jill Morone was killed. Even that would be a stretch to hold him on. If we had a clue what his blood type is. He sure as hell isn’t going to tell us. We’d need a court order to get a sample. Besides, we know that blood is likely Van Zandt’s, anyway.”
“You think,” Weiss challenged. “Jade was seen arguing with the girl at Players. And he lied about not going back to the equestrian center.”
“He lied about not having to go back,” Landry corrected. “No one at the guard gate saw him come through. No one in the barn area saw him.”
“No one saw Van Zandt either,” Weiss said.
Landry shrugged. “They both know the back way in. Van Zandt was all over Jill Morone at Players before Jade got there. And we had the tip about the bloody shirt.”
“The shirt we don’t have,” Weiss reminded him. “We don’t even know that it really exists. We do know Jill Morone vandalized a couple of grand’s worth of Jade’s stuff. If he walked in and caught her . . . He could have killed her in the heat of the moment, then made it look like a rape attempt to try to put it on Van Zandt. Maybe he planted the shirt and made the nine-one-one call.”
“Let’s say they both did it,” Landry offered. “I could be happy with that. They can have side-by-side executions.”
“What do we know about the nine-one-one?” Dugan asked.
“It came from a pay phone outside Publix in the Town Square
shopping center, half a block from the town house Van Zandt is staying in,” Weiss said, watching Landry.
“Van Zandt’s lawyer is screaming harassment and conspiracy,” Dugan said.
Landry shrugged. “Judge Bonwitt said we had sufficient grounds for the search. Bert Shapiro can kiss his ass and mine.”
“Conspiracy with whom?” Armedgian asked.
“Someone broke into Van Zandt’s place last night while we had him here,” Weiss explained. “And then we got the tip about the bloody shirt.”
“Just as well you didn’t find it,” Armedgian said. “It probably would have gotten tossed out of court. Shapiro would have argued the shirt could have been planted.”
“Van Zandt could move to Miami. Him and O.J. could become golf partners,” Weiss suggested. Everyone but Landry chuckled politely at the bad joke.
“Or we could have that cocksucker dead to rights on a murder, locked up in jail while we nail the case down,” Landry said, “instead of running around loose, free to get on a plane and leave the country anytime he wants.”
“You think Van Zandt and Jade are in the kidnapping together?” Armedgian asked.
“Could be. Van Zandt’s the pervert, Jade’s the mastermind. Or it’s Jade and someone else.”
“Motive?”
“Money and sex.”
“And what have you got on him?”
“Jade was last to see Erin Seabright. He claims she quit her job and left town, but she never told anyone else she was quitting,” Landry explained.
Dwyer picked up. “Phone calls made from the kidnappers to the Seabright house came from a prepaid cell phone. With the phone number, we were able to get the name of the company that produced the phone, and from them we were able to get a serial number on the phone the calls came from. The phone was purchased at the Radio Shack on Okeechobee in Royal Palm Beach.
“The store has records of sales, but not of the serial numbers of the individual phones sold. They sold seventeen cell phones in the week prior to Erin Seabright’s abduction. We’ve tracked three buyers through credit cards. The rest were cash transactions.”
“We showed Jade’s picture to the staff,” Michaels said. “No one could ID him, but one of the clerks thought the name rang a bell.”
“Why would Jade use his own name?” Armedgian asked.
“We could bring him in and ask him,” Landry said. “But he’s already threatened to call a lawyer, and if he pulls in the same breed of lawyer Van Zandt did, he’s out of here in three minutes, and we’ve blown the ransom drop with nothing to show for it. This close to the appointed hour, they could panic and kill the girl—or kill her just because we pissed them off.”
“Or you could hold Jade and try to get him to turn on his partner,” Armedgian suggested.
Landry gave him the did-anybody-ask-you? look. “Do you know these people? Have you talked with Don Jade?”
“Well, no—”
“Ice wouldn’t melt in his asshole. He’s not copping to anything. We go near him, he’s calling the dogs. It’s a waste of time. Our best bet is to tail Van Zandt and Jade from a
good distance, see if one of them goes to the girl, or if we can nail one or both of them at the drop. Then we’ve got real leverage and the lawyers will want to talk deal.”
Armedgian fussed with the knot in his tie. “Do you really believe they’re going to carry through with the drop?”
“Do we have a choice?” Landry said. “What do you want to do, Armageddon? Blow it off and go eat clams at Chuck and Harold’s?”
“Landry,” Dugan growled.
“What? What did I say?”
“The attitude . . . Special Agent Armedgian is here to assist us.”
“I know what he’s here for.”
Armedgian raised his eyebrow. He appeared to have only one. A thick black caterpillar that crawled from one side of his bowling ball head to the other. “And what’s that?”
Landry leaned toward him. “You’re here because of the Belgian—through no fault of your own. And if you’d coughed up the goods on him the first time you were asked, maybe Jill Morone would still be alive.”
Armedgian hung his eyelids at half-mast. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“Neither do I,” Dugan said. “What are you talking about, James?”
“I’m talking about the feds wanting a little international feather in their cap. Van Zandt turns out to be a serial killer, they want the bust.”
“The only thing we have on Van Zandt,” Armedgian said, “is some speculation from an agency in Europe. That’s all. He’s had a couple of minor charges dismissed. You should have learned the same thing just by asking Interpol, Detective Landry.”
Landry wanted to get in his face and point out that someone had asked, but this asshole would bring Estes’ name into it, and then all hell would break loose. As it was, Weiss was giving him the eye.
“Didn’t you contact them?” Dugan asked. “I thought you contacted them.”
“Yeah, I contacted them.” Landry kept his attention on the fed. “All right, I’ll play. What are your people doing here? I don’t want them underfoot, fucking up the drop.”
Armedgian held his hands up. “It’s your show. I’m here to consult and advise.”
My ass, Landry thought.
“I’ve worked kidnappings,” Armedgian said. “Have you checked out the drop site?”
Landry made his eyes wide. “Gee, should we do that?”
“Landry . . .”
“I understand it’s very open,” Armedgian said.
“I’ve got a man out there keeping an eye on the place,” Dugan said. “It’s a difficult location for surveillance. He’s hiding in a horse trailer across the road from the show grounds.”
“There’s one road that circles through Equestrian Estates,” Michaels said. “And a dirt side road that can be accessed through a gate near the drop site. “We can’t have cars cruising through there.”
He gave the fed the hard stare too.
“My people can tail Van Zandt, Lieutenant,” Armedgian offered. “That way your people are clear of any harassment charges.”
“Fucking magnanimous,” Landry muttered.
Dugan scowled at him. “That’s enough out of you or I’ll feed you to Bert Shapiro myself.”
Landry kept his eyes on Armedgian. “Lawyers or feds. We get fucked over either way.”
He just hoped Erin Seabright didn’t end up paying the ultimate price.
Chapter 33
Bring the money to the place. Sunday. Six P.M.
Since there had been no further instructions, I had to assume the location of the drop was the place the kidnappers had originally chosen.
The Horse Park at Equestrian Estates show grounds had been in existence only since the 2000 show season, when it had been the site of the U.S. Equestrian Team Olympic team trials for dressage. Unlike the show grounds in Wellington, it was a compact and simple place, with four sand competition arenas used specifically for dressage, and three warm-up rings set in a U around the perimeter of a large grass field. Like most of the stabling at the equestrian center, the barns consisted of several huge tents with portable stalls, all situated at the front of the property. The stalls were occupied during shows only. The rest of the time, the place was a big empty playground in the middle of nowhere.
At the back and center of the property stood the only permanent structure: a grand-looking two-story stuccoed building with huge white columns out front. The building housed the show secretary’s office on the first level, and the announcer’s electronic control center on the second floor.
From the second floor one could survey the entire grounds. It was the perfect surveillance and sniper’s perch if it could be accessed undetected.
The building sat at the very back of the property. Behind it ran a canal, the bank on the far side thick with trees. On the other side of the trees ran a trail used by dirt bikes and all-terrain vehicles, much to the dismay of people showing high-strung horses. If a person were to take the trail and get across the canal, they could use a staircase that ran up the back side of the building.
Certainly the kidnappers knew all of these things. They had chosen the spot. A strange choice, I thought. There weren’t a lot of ways in and out. They would see the enemy coming from a distance, but so too would the enemy see them. Trapping and catching them was only a matter of manpower. Why not choose a busy place with lots of commotion, lots of people, lots of escape routes?
No police. No detective. You broke the rules. The girl will pay the price.
No way this was going to go well.
The kidnappers knew the Sheriff’s Office was involved now. They couldn’t risk showing up with Erin at such an open place. I couldn’t see why they would risk showing up themselves. My conclusion was that they wouldn’t.
Six P.M. Sunday. A week from the day Erin Seabright had been taken. I wondered if the timing was significant. I wondered if all the cops would be at Equestrian Estates in rural Loxahatchee while the kidnapper dumped Erin’s body at the back gate of the equestrian center in Wellington—the spot where she had been grabbed.
I played the videotape of the kidnapping, wanting to see something I hadn’t seen before, wishing for some sudden epiphany.
Erin standing outside the gate. Waiting. For who? A friend? A lover? A drug connection? Don Jade? Tomas Van Zandt? She doesn’t seem nervous as the white van approaches. Does she recognize the van? Does she think this is the person she’s supposed to meet? Is it the person she’s supposed to meet?
Landry had told me he had contacted Narcotics to see about Erin Seabright’s drug connections, if the bust for possession of Ecstasy wasn’t just a one-time thing. I wondered what they had come up with. I would have known exactly who to look at for information two years before, when I’d been a part of the narcotics team. But two years is a long time in the drug business. Things change fast. Dealers go to prison, they go to Miami, they get killed. The turnover of personnel is especially swift regarding dealing drugs to high school kids. The dealers need to be at or around the age of their customers or they won’t be trusted.
It was difficult for me to give very much credence to the drug angle anyway. If she was into a coke dealer or a heroin dealer for a lot of money, maybe. But it would take a hell of a lot of Ecstasy to run up a three-hundred-thousand-dollar tab that would hatch a desperate kidnap for ransom scheme. Erin’s crime had warranted nothing more than a slap on the wrist by the juvenile court. She hadn’t been charged with dealing, just possession.
I wondered what Chad Seabright, honor student, knew about Erin’s drug use. I wondered how complete Erin’s corruption of him might have been. He had no believable alibi for the night of the kidnapping.
But Landry hadn’t asked me about Chad.
Do you think Don Jade could be Van Zandt’s partner in this? In the kidnapping?
Landry hadn’t asked that question for no reason. Had Erin been there to meet Jade? Was Jade the older man in her life? A good bet the answer was yes. But if that was true, then Jade would have had control over Erin, and s
he wouldn’t have been a threat, even if she had known what had really happened to Stellar.
I thought again about the horse and the way he had died, and the fact there had been a sedative in his system. Paris hadn’t pinpointed the drug. She had listed several possibilities: Rompun, acepromazine, Banamine.
The consensus was that Jade had killed horses before and gotten away with it. But if that was true, he would have known better than to sedate the horse first. He wouldn’t have taken the chance of anything showing up in the necropsy.