“We’ll soon find out,” he said. “I’ll call you in a few hours.”
“I’ll be here, praying,” the elderly woman said.
Google said traffic still wasn’t moving. He switched to an app called Waze, which let its users report problems, and saw that a tanker had overturned in the median of I-95 and burst into flames, stopping traffic in both directions. His alternative was to take the Florida Turnpike, but users were reporting more accidents there. He was stuck.
Inside the Starbucks he bought a cup of Pike Place, then took a table and connected his laptop to the free Wi-Fi. He recognized the bearded guy at the next table working on his laptop. Smart criminals knew to change their look. Not this clown.
“Hey, buddy, remember me?” he asked.
“Can’t say I do,” the bearded one said.
“Last November, Starbucks in Pembroke Pines. You tried to steal the personal information off my laptop while I was using the Wi-Fi, and I hauled you outside to the parking lot and beat the boogers out of you. Remember me now?”
The bearded one swallowed hard. “I’m not doing that stuff anymore.”
“Got a job?”
“I’m unemployed at the moment.”
“Those are nice clothes for a guy who doesn’t have a job. And a really nice watch. I think you’re lying. I frequent Starbucks a lot. If I see you again, I’ll break something.”
“You can’t threaten me like that.”
“It’s not a threat. It’s a promise that you can take to the bank.”
The bearded one wanted to make a stand, but the beating was still fresh. He slurped down his coffee and went to the exit. Turning, he stared at Lancaster.
“Don’t let there be a next time,” Lancaster said.
Never turn your back on an asshole. Lancaster had learned that lesson the hard way in Somalia when a SEAL team member had turned his back on a little boy standing outside a hut and nearly gotten Jon and the rest of the team killed. Lancaster watched the bearded one walk across the parking lot, get into his black BMW M3 — not the car most unemployed people drove — and leave.
He went back to work. When he wasn’t doing private jobs, he worked rescues for Team Adam, a select group of retired law enforcement officers who helped the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children find minors who were victims of abductions. The pay was minimal and the hours long, but in addition to the satisfaction of being part of a team that had the highest success rate of any law enforcement group in the country, he got to use the latest crime-fighting wizardry, courtesy of Uncle Sam.
The most recent tool sat on his laptop, a software mapping program called Collector Application — CA for short. With CA he could supervise search missions without being present during the search. Best of all, CA took the guesswork out of the process, and allowed the search team to home in on what was important.
He pulled up CA and typed in the location where Janey MacKenzie had been last seen. A topographical map of Melbourne appeared on the laptop’s screen with a red star indicating the location of the bar where she worked. It was called the Slip Slide. All set, he rang up Shorty. “Where are you?”
“I just reached Melbourne,” the tracker said, his pack of bloodhounds baying in the back of his pickup. “You on the road yet?”
“I’m still in Fort Lauderdale. Looks like it’s going to be a while before I can get to you. Let’s get this party started, shall we?”
“Works for me. I’ve got my son Hollis and his friend Caleb with me. Hollis has a map of Melbourne on his iPad. Where do you want us to start our search?”
“A bar called Slip Slide on North Eleventh Street. Our missing girl is named Janey MacKenzie, and she disappeared three nights ago after leaving work. But first go to her grandmother’s house and introduce yourselves. The old lady’s name is Mrs. Dotson, and she has the sheets from Janey’s bed that you can use to scent the dogs. Grandmom is super sweet. If you’re polite, she’ll give you a homemade cookie.”
“Got it. You really think this girl isn’t out partying somewhere?”
It was a fair question. Key West and South Beach were responsible for many missing-persons cases, their lure as strong as a siren’s song, and Janey was a perfect candidate for such an excursion. She had a wild side, her arms covered in sleeves of tattoos, her face a pincushion of piercings. A visit to her grandmother’s home, where Janey lived, told another story that had convinced him this was an abduction. Janey was studying business at the community college with the goal of marketing a line of beauty products whose fancy bottles and labels were scattered around the house. And she was helping pay her grandmother’s mortgage by working at Slip Slide. Janey had accepted the responsibilities of adulthood, and people like that didn’t run off on a moment’s notice.
“That was what I first thought,” he replied. “This young lady’s different. She sent some texts, but they don’t sound like her.”
“You think the kidnapper’s sending them?”
“I do. Call me after you go see Mrs. Dotson.”
“You got it.”
Lancaster ended the call. He was nearing the end of the hunt and could feel the mixture of elation and dread that always greeted him. If they found Janey safe, champagne for all. But if she was found dead or badly hurt, the ending would be as uplifting as a David Lynch movie. Thirty minutes later, Shorty rang him back.
“We just left Mrs. Dotson’s. She let the dogs sniff the girl’s bedsheets. We’re ready when you are.”
“Do your dogs have their GPS collars on?” he asked.
“Of course. This isn’t my first rodeo, Jon.”
“Sorry.” He minimized the Collector Application program on his laptop’s screen and then pulled up another program called Traccar. Traccar was a GPS tracking platform that let him monitor the bloodhounds’ search for Janey in real time. None of these gadgets had been in use when he’d been a cop, which was why so many missing-persons cases he’d worked on had hit dead ends. That was then, this was now. A second map of Melbourne appeared on his laptop screen, courtesy of Traccar. He counted five tiny flashing red dots on the screen, all of them congregated around the same spot.
“How many dogs did you bring with you?” he asked.
“I brought six of my best,” Shorty said.
“Only five are showing on my computer screen. One of the collars isn’t turned on. Five bucks says it’s one of Caleb’s dogs.”
“You think so?”
“I sure do. Go check.”
“Hold on.” Silence, then, “Damn, it was one of Caleb’s. How’d you know that?”
“I’ve worked with you and your son before, and you’ve never screwed up. Caleb is new, so it stood to reason that it was one of his dogs that didn’t have the GPS tracking device turned on. Now let’s see if we can find this missing young lady. Start with the area around the Slip Slide. I’ll be watching from my laptop.”
“Sounds good. Wish us luck.”
“Good luck.”
He ended the call, then bought a double espresso and sucked it down. He was about to turn forty-two, and the late-afternoon caffeine jolt had gone from habit to ritual. But he had to be careful; too much caffeine made him as charming as a rattlesnake.
He stared at the flashing dots on his laptop’s screen. Janey did not own a car and drove her grandmother’s aging Corolla to work. On the night of Janey’s disappearance, her grandmother had needed the car to go grocery shopping, forcing Janey to walk to work, a distance of about a mile. Melbourne was a sleepy burg with little crime, which was why her disappearance later, after she left work, should have been cause for alarm. But Janey’s reputation for being flirtatious — “Only way a girl can make money in this town,” her grandmother had declared — had been enough reason for the lazy sheriff to convince himself that Janey was shacking up down in the Keys.