I realized we were headed for the Sarasota International Airport, but then the car passed by the main entrance without even slowing. About a mile farther, it made a quick turn down a long gravel road that led into what looked like an old, abandoned factory. There were several hulking cinder-block structures with vaulted roofs clad in corrugated iron, clustered around a sprawling expanse of white-hot concrete baking in the late-afternoon sun. At the far end was a row of small, single-engine airplanes. I realized the buildings must have been airplane hangars. Adjacent to the concrete yard was an open field choked with tall grasses and weeds. I couldn’t see it from the street, but I knew there would be a long single-lane runway cut through its center.
There was no way I could have followed the car in without drawing attention to myself, so I sped on to the next light and made a U-turn. Before I got to the lane where they had turned, I pulled in behind a long, low warehouse with rusted corrugated roofing and slid to a stop, sending a cloud of dust into the air. I caught a glimpse of myself in the window as I shut the door. I knew what I was doing was completely foolish, but I needed to know if I was right about who was sitting in the passenger seat of that car.
I hustled across the graveled surface to the far end of the warehouse and carefully peeked around the corner. A field of grassy weeds lay between me and the cluster of airplane hangars. I could see the black sports car parked in the center of the concrete courtyard, and there were a couple of men in black shorts and dark blue polo shirts making their way toward the car. The driver’s door opened, and a tall, shaggy-haired man wearing a black suit stood up, but it was too far to make out his face through the waves of heat coming up from the concrete. I needed to get closer.
There was a chain-link fence smothered in vines alongside the warehouse, creating a narrow strip of dried-out brush about two feet wide.
I whispered to myself, “You are one hundred percent out of your mind.”
I squeezed through the gap between the chain-link fence and the warehouse and inched my way closer, ducking behind the weeds and dodging broken bottles and rotting trash banked up against the side of the building. At the end of the fence, I came to what looked like an old electrical generator, surrounded by a low concrete wall. I ducked down behind the wall and peered over the edge.
The man standing by the car was indeed August. He was talking to one of the traffic control men while one of the planes positioned itself at the head of the runway. It must have been a private charter plane. Another car had arrived now, a gray Mercedes sedan, and a conservatively dressed middle-aged couple was waiting with small rolling suitcases. They were probably wealthy travelers off to a private island resort somewhere.
As one of the men opened the door on the plane’s side and lowered the folding stairs, another man wearing a pilot’s cap came sauntering out of one of the hangars. The man talking to August shook his hand and then signaled for the couple to bring their bags over. August walked around to the passenger side of his car and opened the door. A woman stepped out, holding a small package in one arm and an overnight bag in the other.
It was Corina—and the small package she was holding was Dixie Joyce, wrapped in the fleecy pink blanket I’d bought her at Walmart.
I held my breath as August reached into the front seat of the car and brought out Corina’s handbag. There was a gentleness in the way he handed it to her, and the thought flashed across my mind that they were a couple. She draped the handbag over her shoulder, and they walked together to the plane. August handed her overnight bag up to one of the men inside and then watched as Corina made her way up the steps with Dixie Joyce in her arms. When she got to the top, she looked back nervously at August. He waved at her, and then she disappeared inside.
The two ground crewmen folded the steps up and latched the door, and then one of them whistled and gave a thumbs-up to the pilot. He and August waved to each other as the plane started rolling forward.
Just as the plane lifted off the ground, I felt two things. First was an extraordinarily confusing mix of thoughts and emotions—I knew it would be a while before I’d sorted through this one. Second was a firm tapping on my left shoulder. It was so unexpected that a high-pitched scream spontaneously flew out of my throat as I spun around, my hands raised in front of me like two karate sticks. Standing before me was an elderly man in a dark blue security uniform with trembling hands and a look of terror in his face equal only to mine.
“Young lady, this is private property you’re on.”
“I know, I’m so sorry—I’m leaving now.”
“Well, now hold on, missy. I have to report you for trespassing, so I’m gonna need to see your driver’s license first.”
I had to think fast. If he worked for the people that operated the private charter planes, the last thing I needed was a trespassing report with my name on it. They seemed pretty chummy with August, and I didn’t want him to find out that I had been snooping around watching him.
Of course, I could have made a run for it. The poor old security guy was so befuddled it was almost comical. He had pulled out a yellowed report pad that had obviously never been used and was shaking a ballpoint pen in the air, trying to get the ink to flow. I noticed a silver loop-chain ID bracelet on his wrist. My grandfather had worn the exact same bracelet.
Summoning up my inner busty blonde, I pointed to August’s car and said, “Oh, please don’t report me. Do you see that man? He’s my boyfriend. He just put his mistress on a private plane. I thought he was cheating on me, and now I know it for sure.”
“Little lady, that’s none of my business. I still gotta fill out a report.”
I started rummaging through my pockets, pretending to look for my wallet. “Great. My boyfriend finds out I got heart trouble and right away he runs out and gets another girl, and now I’m gonna get busted for it.”
He looked up. “You got heart trouble?”
I shifted my weight and glared at him. “Yeah, and I gotta take Plavix every day and I got a twenty-four-hour headache from it, too, but what do you care?”
He held out his wrinkled hand and showed me his ID bracelet. It had a white symbol printed on it, like a six-sided snowflake.
I said, “So what is that supposed to be?”
“It’s my medical ID bracelet. It says I take a blood thinner every day to prevent another heart attack.”
I said, “Huh. Am I supposed to wear one of those?”
He’d suddenly taken on a fatherly tone. “Well, you should. If you ever got knocked out and taken to the hospital, they’d need to know. And if you’re having headaches every day, you gotta report that to your doctor. That’s not a good sign at all, young lady.”
I pushed my hands down in my pockets, slightly squeezing my breasts together with my arms. “Seriously?”
My friend Judy at the diner always says, “If you’ve got tit, flaunt tit.” I’m not particularly proud of myself in these moments, but it works. He led me back down the side of the warehouse, kicking the occasional piece of trash out of the way, and helped me into the Bronco.
I said, “Thank you so much for letting me go this time. I really appreciate it.”
He shook his head angrily, and I felt a little guilty for riling him up.
“What kind of asshole runs out on his girlfriend just cuz he finds out she’s got heart problems? I hope you’re gonna dump his ass right away.”