The Twenty-Third, aka the Ghost Army, were an elite force of artists and special effects soldiers who worked “tactical deception.” They’d use stuff like inflatable tanks and rubber airplanes and even create a soundtrack of war, all to create the twentieth-century version of a Trojan horse.
“How did you find it?” Wilde asked.
“Drone with a sensor,” Gavin Chambers said. He gestured toward the Ecocapsule. “Please open the door.”
“No one is inside.”
“And opening it will prove that.”
“Don’t trust me?”
Exhaustion emanated from him. “Can we just check this box, please?”
“Who are you looking for?”
“No one.”
“You just said—”
“That was before you decided to blab to someone with a TV show.”
“She’s my attorney. If I tell her not to tell anyone, she won’t.”
“You can’t be that naïve.” Gavin Chambers looked off and shook his head. He was weighing a decision, but it was a fait accompli. There was only one way this could go. “It’s about Crash Maynard.”
“What happened to him?”
“He’s missing.”
“A runaway or—”
Gavin took out his gun. “Just open the goddamn door, Wilde.”
“Are you serious?”
“Do I look in the mood to continue this?” He did not. He looked like a worn garment fraying at the edges. “I told you that Crash is missing. Let me eliminate your hovel, so we can find him.”
Wilde wasn’t afraid of the gun, nor was he tempted to draw his own, but he also saw no reason to antagonize the man any further. He got what was happening here: Crash Maynard had vanished, and Wilde was as likely a suspect as anybody.
The Ecocapsule door opened by the same kind of remote you use to unlock your car door. Wilde reached into his pocket, pulled out the remote, and pressed the button with his thumb. Gavin tucked the gun back into the holster as the hatch door rose. He leaned his head in, looked around, pulled his head back out.
“Sorry about the gun.”
Wilde said nothing.
“Let’s go.”
“Where?”
“The Maynards want to see you. In fact, they insist on it.”
“Going to pull the gun again if I refuse?”
“You really going to hold that over me?” Gavin started down the path. “I said I was sorry.”
Neither man spoke during the short ride to Maynard Manor. In the morning sun, the mansion glittered atop a clearing of grass so uniformly green it might have been spray-painted that color. The painstakingly mowed lawn looked to be an almost perfect square, the house being dead center, with what Wilde estimated to be about three hundred yards of grass on each side before you reach the woods. There was an Olympic-sized pool on the right, a tennis court on the left, and a regulation soccer pitch with freshly laid-out lime in the back.
The SUV came to a stop by an ornate carriage house. Gavin got out of the vehicle. Wilde followed.
“Before we go any further, I need you to sign this.”
Gavin handed Wilde a piece of paper on a clipboard with a pen attached.
“It’s a standard NDA — that’s a nondisclosure agreement.”
“Yeah,” Wilde said, handing it back to him, “I know what an NDA is.”
“If you don’t sign, I can’t tell you any more about what’s going on.”
“Buh-bye then.”
“God, you’re a pain in the ass. All right, forget the NDA. Come on.”
Gavin started walking toward the woods in the back-left corner of the estate.
“Did you really think I, what, I kidnapped the boy?” Wilde asked.
“No.”
“Or hid him in my capsule?”
“Not really, but it was a possibility.”
Gavin kept walking. He stopped in the side yard midway between the house and the woods. “There is where we lose him.”
“Care to elaborate?”
“This morning, Crash wasn’t in his bedroom. We checked the CCTV footage. Security here is fairly extensive as you might imagine. CCTV covers the exterior from the home to right about where we are standing.” He took out his mobile phone, swiped across, turned it toward Wilde. “This is Crash walking past where we are now, probably heading in that direction.”
He pointed to the woods behind him and hit the play button. The camera must have had a night filter on it. On the screen, Wilde watched as Crash traveled from the house, across where they now stood, seemingly on his way to the woods. The time stamp in the lower left-hand corner of the video read 2:14 a.m.
“Anyone else show up on the CCTV before or after him?” Wilde asked.
“No.”
“So you figure Crash ran away.”
“Probably. All we know for certain is that he walked toward those trees.” He turned toward Wilde. “But someone with a strong knowledge of the woods could have been lying in wait.”
“Ah,” Wilde said. “That’s where I come in.”
“To a degree.”
“But you really don’t think I had anything to do with it.”
“Like I said — I was checking the boxes.”
“So I’m here because I happened to question Crash yesterday.”
“Hell of a coincidence that, don’t you think?”
“And Naomi Pine is also missing,” Wilde said.
“Hell of a coincidence that, don’t you think?”
“So there is a connection?”
“Two kids from the same high school class disappear,” Gavin said. “If there’s not a connection...”
“...it’s a hell of a coincidence, don’t you think?” Wilde finished for him. “What else you got?”
“They’ve been communicating.”
“Naomi and Crash?”
“Yes.”
“Recently?”
“I don’t know. The kid stays ahead of our monitoring — WhatsApp, Signal, whatever apps they use. They’re encrypted. My job isn’t to spy on the family. It’s to protect them.”
“Why?”
“Why what?”
“Why are you protecting them, Gavin? And I mean you, specifically. You read up on me, I read up on you. You don’t do fieldwork anymore, and Dash Maynard is just a television producer. So you’re not here simply to protect him and his family. You’re here because of Rusty Eggers.”
Gavin smiled. “What a deduction. Should I applaud?”
“Only if you feel it’s appropriate.”
“I don’t. It doesn’t matter why I’m here. Two teens have disappeared. You want to find one, I want to find the other.”
“Pool our resources?”
“We have the same goal.”
“I assume you brought me out here for a reason.”
“The Maynards insisted, actually. I figured while you’re here, I’d get your take.”
Wilde looked toward the woods and spotted a path. “You think that’s where Crash was headed?”
“From the angle of the walk on the video, yes. But more than that, that’s also the spot where he recently encountered Naomi Pine trespassing.”
Crash hadn’t “encountered” Naomi — he’d pranked, intimidated, and bullied her. Or at least, that was how Matthew described it. But now was not the time to get into semantics. Wilde started toward the path in the woods to get a better look.
“I assume you don’t have any CCTV coverage of where we are now,” Wilde said.
“That’s correct. We only worry about people near the estate. We aren’t interested in people, especially family members, who voluntarily choose to leave.”
“So,” Wilde said, “your working theory is that Crash met Naomi out here and that they are hiding somewhere together?”
“Seems most likely.”
“Yet you still panicked.”
“We didn’t panic.”
“You had armed men swarm my house.”