Come to think of it, perhaps I do crave the comfort.
Teterboro is the closest airport from Manhattan for private aircraft. I flew into Teterboro with Swagg Daddy after our night of quasi debauchery in Indianapolis. When we reach the well-guarded gate on the south end, Magda is waved through straight to the tarmac. We pull up next to a Gulfstream G700, a plane that hasn’t really hit the market yet. I’m surprised. The G700 is expensive — close to $80 million — and government officials, even top-echelon, clandestine ones like PT, are not usually that extravagant. Middle Eastern sheiks use the G700, not FBI agents.
I have no idea where we are going or when we will be back. I assume that I am to be flown to Washington or Quantico for my meeting with PT, but I really do not know for certain. Magda has been instructed to wait for me. She gets out of the car and comes around to open my door. I would insist on doing it myself, but that might be patronizing. I thank her, climb the plane steps, and step inside.
“Hello, Win.”
PT sits up front with a wide smile. I haven’t seen him in nearly two decades. He looks old, but then again, I guess he is. He doesn’t rise from his seat to greet me, and I notice the cane next to him. He is big and bald with huge gnarled hands. I bend toward him and stretch out my hand. His grip is firm, his eyes clear. He gestures for me to sit across from him. The G700 can hold nineteen passengers. I know this because someone is trying to sell me one. The seats are, as you might expect, wide and comfortable. We sit facing one another.
“Are we going anywhere?” I ask.
PT shakes his head. “I figured this would be a good spot to meet privately.”
“I didn’t know the G700 had been released yet.”
“It hasn’t been,” he says. “I didn’t fly in on this.”
“Oh?”
“I use a government-issue Hawker 400.”
The Hawker 400 is a far smaller and older jet.
“I’m borrowing this for our meeting because it’s more comfortable than the Hawker.”
“That it is.”
“And because the Hawker probably has listening devices on board.”
“I see,” I say.
He looks me over. “It’s really good to see you, Win.”
“You too, PT.”
“I hear Myron got married.”
“He invited you to the wedding.”
“Yeah, I know.”
PT doesn’t elaborate, and I won’t push it. Instead, I try to take the lead.
“Do you know who the dead hoarder is, PT?”
“Do you?”
“No.”
“You’re sure, Win?”
I don’t like the glint in his eye. “I only saw a corpse photo of his face,” I say. “If you want to show me more—”
“No need,” he says. As I said, PT is a tall man. You can see that even as he sits. He rests his palms on his high knees, as though posing for a statue. “Tell me about the suitcase.”
“You’re not going to tell me who the victim is,” I ask, “or do you not know?”
“Win?”
I wait.
“Tell me about the suitcase.”
His voice has an edge. It is meant, I assume, to intimidate, but directed at me it comes across as something more worrisome.
It comes across as fear.
“I’m waiting,” PT says.
“I know.”
“Why won’t you tell us about your suitcase?”
“I am protecting someone,” I tell him.
“Noble,” PT says. “But I need to know.”
I hesitate, though in truth I knew that we would get to this point.
“Whatever you tell me stays between us. You know that.”
PT leans back and gestures for me to go ahead.
“My aunt gave me the suitcase when I was fourteen,” I begin. “It was a Christmas present. She made one up for all the males in the Lockwood family. Only the males. She gave the females a small makeup bag instead.”
“Sexist,” PT says.
“We thought so too,” I say.
“We?”
I ignore him. “I also detested the bag, the whole idea of leather monogrammed luggage, really. What’s the point? I didn’t want it, so a female relative and I traded pieces. I took the makeup bag with her initials on it. She took my suitcase. Oddly enough, I still use the makeup bag as my travel toiletry bag. Like an inside joke.”
“Wow,” PT says.
“What?”
“You’re dancing, Win.”
“Pardon?”
“I’ve never heard you overexplain like this. I assume it’s because you don’t want to tell me who the female relative was?”
He is correct, but there is no point in stalling. “My cousin Patricia.”
He looks confused for a moment. Then he sees it. “Wait. Patricia Lockwood?”
“Yes.”
“Dear Lord.”
“Indeed.”
He tries to take this in. “So how did her suitcase end up in that closet at the Beresford?”
The FBI would have figured out about the suitcase eventually. It’s in their files. That is one of the three reasons I decided to come clean. Reason One: I trust PT as much as you can trust someone in this situation. Reason Two: If I gave PT this information, he would probably share what he knows with me. And Reason Three: The FBI will sooner or later put it together without my help and then, alas, Cousin Patricia and I will appear as though we had something to hide.
“Win?”
“After the two men murdered my uncle,” I begin, “they made Patricia pack a suitcase.”
My words take a few seconds to register. When they do, PT’s eyes go wide. “You mean... good Lord, are you talking about the Hut of Horrors?”
“Yes.”
He rubs his face. “I remember... that’s right. After they murdered your uncle, they made her take some clothes. To distract or something, right?”
I say nothing.
“So what did they do with the suitcase?”
“Patricia doesn’t know.”
“She never saw the suitcase?”
“Never.” I clear my throat and speak dispassionately. From my tone of voice, I might have been talking about office equipment or bathroom tile. “Patricia was blindfolded and gagged. Her hands were bound behind her back. They threw her and the suitcase in the trunk and drove off. When they stopped, they made her walk through the woods. She doesn’t know how long, but she thinks for at least a full day. They never spoke to her. Not the whole time they walked. When they got to the shed, they locked her inside. She finally took off the blindfold. It was dark. Another day passed. Perhaps two. She isn’t sure. Someone left granola bars and water. Eventually, one of the men came back. He used a box cutter to slice off her clothes. He raped her. Then he took her clothes, threw down a few more granola bars, and locked her up again.”
PT just shakes his head.
“He did this,” I continue, “for five months.”
“Your cousin,” he says. “She wasn’t the first victim.”
“That’s correct.”
“I forget how many others.”
“We know of nine others. There may have been more.”
His jowls hang slacker now. “The Hut of Horrors,” he says again.
“Yes.”
“And they never caught the perpetrator.”
I don’t know whether he is asking or merely stating what we both know. Either way, his words hang in the air between us for too long.
“Or perpetrators plural,” PT adds. “That was the odd part, right? Two men kidnap her. But only one keeps her captive, is that right?”
I correct him. “Only one raped her. That is her belief, yes.”
In the distance, I can hear the whir of a plane taking off.
“So most likely...” PT begins, but then his voice sputters. He looks up at the cabin ceiling, and I think I see something watery in his eyes. “Most likely,” he tries again, “the hoarder was one of those two men.”