THE TRAIL went cold in New Orleans the same time as the
weather, a double header for which Jack Montgomery wasn't
prepared. Since hired by Cindy Eckhardt to look into the
kidnapping of her husband Dayton — chief executive for
Eckton Computing and missing since New Year's Day — he'd
reveled in all kinds of heat.
First there was the temperature that had the Gulf Coast in
an unseasonably sweaty grip. Next, the series of hot leads
that had him hoofin'it across the state line, from Texas
into Louisiana. Finally, the burning in his gut that made
him believe this case was going to go down like cream.
But then the tables had turned, flipping him a big fat
bird. And now he found himself standing in the middle of
Jackson Square, a week into the new year, freezing his ass
off and wondering whether he'd be doing better to turn
left or right.
It wasn't that Cindy, the trophy wife nearly thirty years
her husband's junior, didn't trust the cops or the feds to
get the job done, as much as it was her needing to know
someone had her back. Especially since Dayton's heart
medication had been found on the ground at the kidnapping
scene, and a week into the case the authorities were no
closer to a solution than they'd been on day one.
He started walking aimlessly. The sign for Café Eros came
into view, reminding him that he was hungry enough to eat
a six-foot submarine sandwich. Café Eros, eh? Well, he'd
never been one to turn his back on love — even if right
now the only affair he was interested in involved his
stomach and a whole lot of food.
Burrowing into his hooded sweatshirt, Jack headed for the
building's courtyard. He jogged up the stairs to the small
eatery's second floor, hoping it wasn't busy, not in the
mood for a crowd.
Too much noise interfered with his ability to process
information, to analyze, to reason, to think — which was
why he and special ops had made such a good fit for eight
of his twelve years in the Marines. The missions he had
run required secrecy, and communication was often
accomplished with hand signals and nothing more.
When hitting a dead end like this one, however, he doubted
even total silence would help. What he needed was a sign.
But first he needed a sandwich.
At the counter, behind which was painted a mural of a
swaggering swashbuckler, Jack ordered a bowl of gumbo and
half a muffuletta. When in Rome, and all that. He took a
seat at a table decorated with a purple, green and gold
Mardi Gras tablecloth and picked up a copy of the Times-
Picayune.
He scanned the front page, listening to the smoky jazz
playing from the café"s corner speakers — God, he loved
jazz — sipping at a hot chicory coffee blend, the warmth
of the mug thawing his fingers and doing a good job of
heating up the iceberg in his gut. He was not cut out for
the cold.
He'd lived most of his life in Texas for that very reason.
His three tours of duty were the only years he'd spent
away from the Lone Star State. Bring on the heat and
humidity; that was his motto. Even the mosquitoes and the
ragweed couldn't drive him away.
Nothing in his life had prepared him for what he'd
suffered during his years in special ops — the lack of
food, of sleep, of shelter, often of contact with another
soul whose native tongue was the same as his. And weather
so hot and humid, the air so heavy with moisture that
there were days that just breathing had been hard work.
Ending his trip down weather lane, he turned to page two,
eating as he skimmed the paper. The coffee was hot and
biting, the gumbo steaming with spicy sausage and the tang
of tomatoes, okra and bay leaf. At this rate he might dig
in and stay for awhile.
Sounded a lot more appealing than admitting he'd screwed
up somewhere, and that the job he'd taken at the request
of the Eckhardt family was quickly heading down the tubes.
He'd been surprised when Becca Nelson, the University of
Texas coed who ran his Austin-based private investigation
business between classes from her Blackberry, had told him
of Cindy Eckhardt's call.
He had a reputation for finding people who didn't want to
be found. The sixteen-year-old Dallas trust funder who'd
wanted to play in a rock 'n' roll band. The bride from
Fort Worth who'd changed her mind on the way to the
church. Most recently, the San Antonio bank executive
who'd left his position in the midst of a midlife crisis,
taking a new name — and a whole lot of his employer's
money with him.
Jack owed much of the notoriety to Becca. She was in the
fifth year of her four-year degree plan, having spent
thirty-six months working her way around the world before
starting school at twenty-one. Since hiring on five years
ago when he'd first set up shop, answering an ad he'd
placed in the UT newspaper the Daily Texan, she'd made it
her mission to get his name out there in an effort to
ensure job security.
Hers.
She'd had no problem with the fact that he ran his
business out of his SUV, and had taken over converting him
to a rolling electronic wonder, crawling around with a
tool belt bigger than she was, outfitting the Yukon's
dashboard to resemble a Black Hawk cockpit.
She'd set up the meeting with the Eckhardt family, flooded
his PDA with scanned clippings and e-mailed him online
stories. Seemed Cindy and Dayton had been loading the car
New Year's morning, heading for the airport and an Aspen
vacation, when the kidnapping went down.
With Dayton outside, Cindy had made one last trip into
their Hyde Park home, coming out less than ten minutes
later to find Dayton gone, the doors of his Lexus wide
open, suitcases strewn about.
The police had taken one look at the obvious signs of a
struggle, interviewed witnesses who'd seen two masked men
in a black Jeep without plates and put out an APB.
Enough of the crime's details had been in the news that
Jack wasn't surprised things had begun going south. The
kidnappers had only to flip on a local broadcast and hear
everything the media proclaimed the public had a right to
know.
Screw that. Dayton Eckhardt wasn't the public's husband or
father. No one but the Eckhardt family, the Austin PD and
the FBI had a right to anything. And, the way he saw it,
in that order — the very reason he checked in with Cindy
every few hours, new news or not.
Unfortunately, so many of the particulars had been leaked
that the kidnappers were no longer even a blip on the
radar. If anything, they were burrowed deep underground.
Three days and counting, the police were down to zero
leads and were still waiting for a ransom demand. Jack had
lucked out with the New Orleans connection — especially
since the feds had turned up nothing much in Louisiana
beyond rumors that a psychic was involved.
Dayton Eckhardt had started Eckton Computing in the Big
Easy before market conditions — property taxes, salaries,
the value of a square foot of warehouse space — had sent
the start-up to Austin a year ago. Eckhardt had left
behind more than a few disgruntled employees — not to
mention, rumor had it, Dayton's disgruntled mistress.
One of the ex-employees Jack had interviewed thought she'd
seen Dayton at a Christmas party in the Quarter. That made
no sense, but it was the only scrap Jack had, and he held
on tight. There had been no activity on Dayton's cell
phone since the kidnapping, and none on his personal or
corporate e-mail accounts. At least nothing outgoing.
There had been plenty of incoming, and most of it junk.
Even that had been analyzed by the Eckton tech working
with the Austin PD. So far, nothing but ads for erectile
dysfunction meds and spam mail promising live sex via
webcams.
Jack was more into having fun with the real thing. Or he
would be, one of these days. When he found the time. When
he found the woman. When he found a reason to look for
either instead of spending his time looking for strangers
who'd vanished without a trace. Instead of looking to find
himself.
His life had been in flux for a while, the transition from
special ops to civilian PI tougher than he'd anticipated.
Six years ago at his fifteenth high school reunion, after
catching up with his friends who'd made up "the deck" —
he'd been the jack, Quentin the queen, Heidi the joker,
Ben the ace, Randy the king — fitting back into real life
had seemed a doable prospect.
The three-day reunion had been a hell of a party. He'd
stood onstage at The Cave Down Below — the warehouse club
booked for that Friday night — looked out at the four
friends who'd been his high school anchors and choked
himself up, barely recovering before belting out Bruce
Springsteen's "Born in the USA."
He remembered sitting on a picnic table next to Heidi the
next day, and telling her about not wanting to hit eighty
and wonder how he got there. Or what happened during the
years in between.
And even though he'd been tired of traveling the world, he
hadn't been quite ready to settle down. He'd continued to
drift for a couple of years after the reunion, living on
the road and out of his duffel bag for the full tour that
he'd fronted for Diamond Jack, the band he'd put together
once his discharge had come through.
Music had been a huge part of his life for as long as he
could remember. His days playing bass in "the deck's" high
school ensemble had been one of the best times of his
life. He'd learned about belonging. About true friendships
and human nature, about faults and flaws and royally
freaking things up — which was exactly what he'd done
after graduation.
And here he'd gone and done the same thing now. No, dude.
You didn't. You're just stuck with the big stinkin' pile
of crap left by everyone who worked this case before you.
Telling himself that was a whole lot easier than buying it
as the truth.
Truth held position number one at the top of Jack's
culpability barometer. And not the ask-me-no-questions-and-
I'll-tell-you-no-lies sort of honesty he'd witnessed too
often, but balls-to-the-wall-or-die.
If knowledge was power, then truth was omnipotence…and was
why Jack nearly sputtered gumbo across the newspaper when
he flipped to page fifteen, and the headline halfway down
leaped out.