“Don’t worry about it,” I told her. “It doesn’t matter about the food. The window, either. None of it matters. We’ll work it all out.”
Still, Ava tried to squirm away toward the door. She stood up again, and Nana pulled her back down with that surprising strength of hers.
“You sit down, right now!” she commanded. “You’re not going anywhere, young lady.”
I stayed where I was, giving her a little space. “You know what, Ava?” I said. “Nana’s right. We don’t have to make any decisions about this tonight.”
But in fact, that wasn’t entirely true. I’d already decided something.
Nana was right. M
aybe we couldn’t save every kid on the streets of DC, but there was no reason — no good enough reason — why we couldn’t help this one. Right here, right now. Even if it was only for a little while.
I’d call whoever I needed to in the morning. Get an expedited home check. Pull a few strings, if I had to. Make things right for this young girl.
“Just … stay,” I said. “Please.”
THE NEXT MORNING, Bree took over at home, and I was back at work. Whatever influence the First Lady had exerted on my behalf, I had no trouble getting onto the Branaff School campus — inside the gates this time.
I got there early so I could get a better feel for the place before the school day started. I wanted to retrace, as much as I possibly could, Ethan and Zoe’s footsteps on the morning they had disappeared.
As I came up the front drive toward Branaff House, the school’s Georgian-style mansion of a main building, I couldn’t help thinking about the modest charter John and Billie Sampson were trying to start up just a few miles from here. It was a world apart, that’s for sure. Branaff House was the crown jewel of an eighty-acre campus, with the kind of restored beauty that persuaded parents to part with forty-five thousand dollars a year for middle school.
It was also where the Coyle kids had last been seen. What had happened to them?
I started in the main foyer. According to the reports I’d read, this was where a fight had broken out that morning, between Zoe and Ryan Townsend.
It hadn’t lasted long, and Secret Service Agent Findlay immediately pulled both of the Coyles away from the scene and into an adjacent lecture hall.
At 8:22 a.m., Findlay had radioed his team that he was giving the kids two minutes alone to speak privately.
At 8:24, he opened the door again and found the lecture hall empty.
About ninety seconds after that, the van driven by Ray Pinkney had gone tearing off campus through the east gate — without Ethan and Zoe on board, as it turned out.
What that left was a three-and-a-half-minute window, from the last time Findlay saw the kids, until that van left the school grounds.
Somewhere in there, a kidnapping had taken place.
So what happened in those three and a half minutes?
I let myself into the lecture hall and closed the door behind me.
The room was high-ceilinged, with several austere portraits looking down from the walls. It was a little creepy, actually, but definitely imposing. It made even a big man like me feel small.
Whatever had gone down in that room, Zoe and Ethan couldn’t have been there for long. The clock was ticking on those three and a half minutes, whether they knew it or not.
There were two doors at the front, both covered by the same security camera in the hall outside. The only other possible exits were the five windows at the back.
Agent Findlay had reportedly found the center one unlatched, and I went to it now.
I hopped up on the heat register, slid open the window, and ducked outside.
It was an easy drop to the ground, landing me behind a thick tangle of lilac bushes.
Footprints found in the dirt that day confirmed that two people Ethan and Zoe’s size had come this way.
But where did they go from here? Were they still alone at this point? When exactly did things turn horribly wrong?