by Rick Mofina
That night, after the lights dimmed in Hood’s cell, he lay on his bunk. For a time, he watched the computer screen glow on the face of his guard, then closed his eyes.
He felt her little wrists in his hands.
Smelled the sweet forest-scented breezes sweeping up to the cliff as she gasped, sobbed, pleaded for her life. She was so light in his large hands.
It was just a game.
He’d played it before with the dog, then the rabbit.
Now the butterfly girl with the bright eyes.
She said she wanted to play.
She weighed nothing at all. Surely, she would float in the air. He had to know if she could fly.
All of them thought they were better than him.
“We’re not supposed to play with you.”
Liked they walked on air.
How could they say he murdered her? It was just a game.
The keyboard was clicking
“Sleeping.”
But Hood was not sleeping.
He was awakening his plan.
He would not die here.
FIFTY-SEVEN
The chief pressman of the San Francisco Star and his crew were hard at work in the massive basement of the Star building in downtown San Francisco.
They were testing ink, aligning newsprint, readying the Star’s twenty-five-ton Metroliner presses to roll the paper’s second edition, which would consist of some 310, 000 copies destined for subscribers in the city and in the Greater Bay Area.
The story by Tom Reed and Molly Wilson was a front-page wallop, lined under the paper’s flag, above the fold, across six columns. A copyrighted exclusive. Even before ink stained newsprint of the first paper, it set off a chain of events that would cause the nation to question their outpouring of sympathy for Emily and Doug Baker.
Just after 1:00 A.M. Pacific Standard Time, the San Francisco Star released its final summary list of forthcoming front-page stories to the Associated Press wire service. At APs’ world headquarters in Manhattan, the national night editor read the short sentence summarizing the Reed-Wilson article. “Condemned killer’s lawyer claims proof missing girl’s mother is child killer.” The editor picked up her phone to make a call when an incoming line rang. The New York Times Internet night editor demanded the Star’s story; that call was followed immediately by the Washington Post, then CNN and CNBC. Others were coming in. The AP editor implored the Star’s night desk to move the entire story on the AP wire. The Star was reluctant but agreed to release a 250-word summary of the article on its Internet site by 3:00 A.M. PST and a full version by 4:00 A.M. PST.
“The demand is intense,” said the AP editor, mindful of the paper’s right to protect exclusive enterprise work. She reasoned that AP could quickly grab a damp copy from the Star’s San Francisco loading docks.
The paper gave the wire its full story with the understanding that it would not release it until well beyond the deadline of the Star’s California newspaper competitors.
The AP then issued a wire service alert that went to virtually every subscribing newsroom in the Unites States and on most of the planet. Thirty-six minutes later, it moved the article. Just before 5:00 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, large news radio networks were rewriting the AP item and reading it on the air, crediting the San Francisco Star. The same was happening with Internet news groups and 24-hour TV news operations around the world, which aired footage of “the drama in the Rocky Mountains,” the Bakers’ news conference, still photographs of Isaiah Hood, Montana State Prison, the execution chamber gurney. By 5:00 A.M. in New York, the staff at network news breakfast shows were flipping through rolodexes, waking professors, lawyers, authors, victims’ right advocates, experts on the topics of “mothers/fathers who kill”; “wrongful convictions”; “fragile justice system”; “anti-death penalty”; “halting executions”; “political fallout of wrong decisions”; “compensating the innocent”; “media distortion”; “re-opening and prosecuting old cases.”
By the time most Americans awoke, they not only knew what the Bakers were accused of, but if guilty, why they likely did it; how they likely did it; what led the FBI to think they likely did it; why poor Isaiah Hood was likely innocent; why people should consider, sadly, that ten-year-old Paige Baker was likely dead; how this case illustrates “precisely what is wrong with our flawed justice system”; the “American media machine”; “the stresses on urban families”; and the “state of California.” Throughout the morning, every network news producer was screaming at their staff, “Why we can’t we get Hood’s godamn lawyer on the godamn air?”
By 7:00 A.M. California time, the first “flowers of remembrance” for Paige Baker were delivered anonymously to the doorstep of her family home in the Richmond District.
FIFTY-EIGHT
FBI Special Agent Frank Zander took another swallow of his black coffee. He needed to concentrate on what Agent Rob Clovis was telling the task force members gathered at the command center office in the predawn.
Clovis was a gravel-voiced technical wizard from the FBI’s Evidence Response Team in San Francisco, which had responded to the call-out for Glacier. He’d flown in last night with remote video camera equipment to assist Bill Horn’s team in the search for Paige Baker’s corpse deep in the crevasses among the cliffs of Sector 23. Clovis was completely bald and had the sober intensity of an engineering professor who realized he was talking over the heads of his students.
“It’s one of the most advanced remote fiber-optic camera systems in the world,” Clovis said. “It’s still under development by a company in Silicon Valley. They worked nonstop adapting this system for us to probe the crevasse. That’s why it took a little time to get it here. We wanted to set up last night but the snow and high winds grounded us. It’s clear this morning.”
The air was a mingling of cologne, mouthwash, perfumed hotel shampoo and coffee as Clovis directed his technical team to set up what looked like laptop computers and high-tech electrical equipment on the tables of the cramped room.
“How does it all work, Rob? Run that by me again. In English,” Lloyd Turner asked.
Clovis set his coffee down.
“We’ve got just over two thousand feet of hybrid cable not much bigger in diameter than, say, a yo-yo string.” He held his thumb and forefinger nearly touching. “We have a miniature remote video camera and high-intensity light attached to the end of the cable. The cable is connected to a control panel so we can direct the camera. The images it captures are carried by the cable to a color monitor, like a TV screen.”
Turner was nodding.
“Think of it as the same principal used in microsurgery. Or what cities use to inspect sewer systems for damage to avert expensive exploratory excavation. But we’re going to do something a little different.”
Clovis nodded to the room’s large TV monitor.
“We’re going to transmit our probing of the crevasse to you live, in real time. The company boosted the signal strength for the cable and customized the satellite transmitter and receiver.”
“You’re going to bounce the images off a series of satellites from the crevasse to our monitor here in the command center?” Zander said.
“Correct. Following some of the principals NASA uses for sending signals for its missions. You will see what the camera sees after a two-or three-second delay. We’ll transmit narration from the crevasses about depth and conditions.”
Zander looked at the other members. All seemed impressed. He had one concern. “Isn’t there a risk of TV people with their satellite gear intercepting the images?”
Bowman shuddered at the thought.
Clovis shook his head. “Our signal is encrypted.”
The radio clipped to Clovis’s wrist came to life.
“Chopper’s loaded and ready, Rob.”
“Roger.” Clovis nodded to the others and grabbed a small case of equipment. “That’s our ride.”
On his way out of the task force room, Clovis had to shuffle
past Nora Lam, who was on her way in. Her face was grave as she studied the agents, slamming her files and clipboard on one of the tables.
“Did anybody have any warning this story by the San Francisco Star was coming? My phone has not stopped ringing.”
“Tom Reed was here,” Zander began, halted by Lam’s hand as she interrupted to answer her trilling cell phone for a short, terse call.
“That was the Office of the Attorney General in Washington,” Lam said. “They want to know if you intend to charge somebody soon. This appears to them to be a slam dunk. And I’ve got Maleena Crow demanding you release Doug Baker.”
“Well we need to wait for--” Zander was cut off again.
“And the governor’s office in Helena has been calling since the story broke this morning demanding to know what the hell is going on. Isaiah Hood’s execution is set for midnight tonight.”
Zander sat down, steepling his fingers in front of his face.
Lam sat down next to him.
“Frank, this case has suddenly become the top file in the nation and these are the facts: the clock is ticking down on an execution directly related to your investigation; nobody wants to confront the fact that Hood may be innocent; Washington is demanding a resolution fast. We’ve got a governor who’s frantic over Hood, over this whole thing. You have to assure people the FBI is in control of this file and not the other way around.”
“I’ve heard enough, Ms. Lam,” Zander snapped. “I am aware of the stakes here. Our priority is our investigation, not politics, and not public opinion. It is also not my concern to clean up any wrongful convictions rendered by the State of Montana. If the governor has doubts, they are his to deal with.” Zander’s heart rate was increasing in time with the distant thumping of an approaching chopper. “If we laid charges now, it could all crumble to dust in our faces.”
Lam’s face flushed as she nodded.
“The crevasse should do it,” Zander said. “We’re close, very close.”
The helicopter was nearing. Zander stood. It was time for him to leave with Bowman to get Emily Baker at the command post.
“One way or another, we’ll be resolving this case,” he said. “But we’ll need a few hours.”
Zander and Bowman left, just as Lam’s cell phone trilled again.
FIFTY-NINE
Emily Baker awoke. Or maybe she didn’t. She was not sure she had even slept.
The snow had long since vanished. Warmer breezes were caressing her tent. Dawn was breaking. Her body ached as the horror of her daughter’s disappearance came sharply into focus, engulfing her.
She heard low radio transmissions of searchers getting their assignments from rangers at the command post search table. How many hours Paige had been lost in the wilderness? Emily’s thoughts veered to images of her little sister’s casket.
No. Please. She had to be strong for Paige. Today could be the day something good would happen. Something to awake her from the nightmare.
Emily stepped slowly from her tent into the morning light under the watchful eyes of FBI agents and rangers. A young FBI agent from Salt Lake City approached her with a steaming tin cup of coffee.
“Did you get some sleep, Emily?”
“I’m not sure,” she said, accepting the warm cup into both hands. “Is Doug coming back?”
“They haven’t told us.”
“Is Tracy Bowman at the command post, I don’t see her.”
“No. I think--uhm…” The agent glanced back to the others at the equipment tables. “They’re searching the northern sectors today.”
“Sure, like they did yesterday. And the day before.” Emily followed the agent’s attention to the other agents and rangers. “What’s going on?” she asked and started moving toward the tables.
“I wouldn’t--” the agent said.
“Excuse me.” Emily ignored her.
This morning, it seemed a larger number of agents and rangers were huddled around the table. Brady Brook was busy studying a map and talking on his radio to a searcher in a far-off sector. Emily picked up how others were stealing glimpses at her, over the brims of their coffee cups, from whispered conversations, diverted ever so subtly from laptop computers or the small color TV monitors that were flown in--Was it yesterday?--as the search gathered national news attention.
Their cool glances became stares of icy accusation as she stood before the table.
“Jesus Christ,” somebody whispered at the realization Emily was standing before them.
“Has something happened? Did you find Paige? Did you find something? Please? Anything?”
No one answered.
Their attention had been fastened to the small TVs that had been tuned to the twenty-four-hour news networks and their reports stemming from the San Francisco Star story.
“What’s going on? Somebody, please, tell me!”
One of the rangers had secured an Internet link through a satellite phone and had found the Star’s Internet site--and the full story by Tom Reed and Molly Wilson.
“What is it?” Emily’s voice was breaking; she was inching around the tables in order to see what the others were seeing, reading. “What’s happened? Did you find her?”
Thunder filled the sky as a helicopter flew by their ridge, en route to Sector 23. The air was quiet again as Emily’s eyes began catching the images on one of the TV screens.
“Will someone tell me, please?”
No one wanted to inform her. Another helicopter was approaching, hovering near the command post. Emily heard snatches of the TV news reports: “As preparations are made for tonight’s execution of Isaiah Hood, disturbing evidence has surfaced challenging his guilt; evidence that may explain the mystery behind the disappearance of ten-year-old Paige Baker….” That was all she could hear. The noise of the landing helicopter overwhelmed the TV news report, leaving Emily to stare at the images of her dead sister’s face, Isaiah Hood, Paige, Doug, the execution chamber at Montana State Prison and herself at the earlier news conference, in anguish over Paige. The chopper kicked up the wind; it thumped on Emily’s back as she raised a hand to cover her mouth.
What was happening?
The others stared at her. She saw the computer laptop, its large screen displaying the Star story on the Internet under the headline: CONDEMNED MAN CLAIMS PROOF MISSING GIRL’S MOTHER IS A KILLER.
The young ranger, realizing Emily was reading the story, reached to fold the screen closed. Emily shot out a hand to stop her and continued to read.
TOM REED and MOLLY WILSON
THE SAN FRANCISCO STAR
WEST GLACIER, Mont--Tonight, the state of Montana will execute Isaiah Hood, who claims to be innocent of murdering the five-year-old sister of Emily Baker 22 years ago in Glacier National Park.
Hood’s attorney offered what he said is proof Baker played a role in her sister’s death. It comes as rangers and FBI agents search for Baker’s 10-year-old daughter, Paige, who vanished with her beagle, Kobe….
Emily groaned.
“I don’t think you should see anymore.” The ranger raised her voice over the helicopter’s whirling blades and tried in vain to close her computer as Emily held the screen up and read…the haunting words from letters she’d written as a child coming to life, leaping into her soul.
“…I am guilty of her death. She begged me to save her. I don't know what happened. She pleaded and screamed. I had her hand, but I don't know what happened that day. I will never forget her eyes staring into mine as she fell. God please forgive me….”
Rachel’s eyes. Falling.
Emily dropped her coffee cup. Oh God. Eyes blurring, heart pounding in time with the helicopter, a roaring in her ears.
She moved from the table.
Someone shouted her name. Inching from the table. Numbed. Her face in her hands. Dust, pebbles, swirling about her, blocking the sun, calling her name. She was falling; she was lost until someone, something…a firm hand on her shoulder. Her name above the fury.
“Emily.”
A woman. A voice she knew.
“Emily, it’s time.”
Bowman. Tracy Bowman.
“It’s time for you to come with us to the command center. We need to talk.”
Special Agent Frank Zander was standing behind Bowman.
SIXTY
Isaiah Hood’s execution would take place in sixteen hours.
The press was searching for his lawyer, David Cohen, but Cohen had switched off his cell phone; even his concerned Chicago law firm could not reach him.
Newspaper, radio and wire service reporters, as well as TV network news bureaus from across the nation, were calling every hotel and motel near West Glacier, Montana, frantically trying to find him. Magazine and tabloid reporters, and three Hollywood scouts wanting to discuss buying Hood’s rights, joined the hunt.
Cohen did not want to be found.
Not yet, he thought after finishing his breakfast and checking out of his tiny motel near Flathead Lake, a few miles south of Glacier National Park.
Watching the TV behind the manager, he saw another report of the case. It showed a three-year-old still photo of himself that one of the Chicago stations had fed the network. Fortunately, Cohen was traveling to Glacier wearing sunglasses and a baseball cap.
Nearing the park, he knew Hood was sitting in the death cell under a death watch as the clock ticked down. The way things stood, there were no tomorrows for him. Only hours.
Cohen passed a news satellite truck lumbering northbound. He picked up a cell phone and switched it on to retrieve messages. Listening only for the caller, then skipping through the message. “Francis Lord with the L.A. Times,” Next. “Chuck Ryker, ABC News, New York.” Next. “Nancy Womack, Great Falls Tribune.” Next. “Mr. Cohen, this is Phil Braddock with the Washington Post.” Next. “Hi David, it’s Dianna Strauss at the New York Times.” Next. “Anna Barrow, Newsweek.” Next. “This is Larry Dow, USA Today.” Next. “David, it’s Lane. Please call me. Please!” Next. “Abe Gold at the firm. We’ve seen the news reports. What the hell do you think you’re doing? Don’t you make another move without informing us. Is that understood? Call me on my personal cell phone number….”