Wild Fire - Wild Fire Part 35
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Wild Fire Part 35

"Never mind. Are you staying?"

"No. We'll fuel up, then head back to New York." As he spoke, I spotted a fuel truck coming in our direction, which is quicker service than I get at my gas station. It must have something to do with the FBI markings on the chopper.

I turned and looked around the mostly empty tarmac. The corporate jets were parked in a row on a blacktop ramp in the distance, and beyond them was a scattering of smaller light airplanes. There was no activity to speak of.

It was much colder up here, and I could see my breath, which is not what I wanted to see at 1:30 in the afternoon on a sunny day in early October.

Kate said, "Smell that air."

"I don't smell anything."

"The mountain air, John. And look at those trees, and those mountains."

"Where the hell are we?"

"In God's country."

"Good. I have a few questions to ask him."

Apparently the Adirondack lodge building was the main passenger terminal, and we walked around to the front entrance, which had a covered veranda surrounded by a rustic railing. There was a picnic table and Pepsi machine on the veranda, and a security guy was sitting there smoking a cigarette. No one would mistake this place for JFK International Airport.

Kate said to me, "I'll call Tom."

"Why?"

"Maybe someone is supposed to meet us here."

"Well, I don't see how they can miss us." In fact, there wasn't another soul around, and there were hardly more than a dozen vehicles in the parking lot, half of which were probably abandoned by people who had one-way tickets out of this godforsaken wilderness.

We entered the terminal, which was much warmer than the frozen alpine valley outside. The terminal interior was small, functional, and quiet.

As small and isolated as this place was, there was a security checkpoint, complete with a walk-through metal detector and a baggage scanner. There were no security people at the checkpoint, and no passengers for that matter, so I assumed there was no imminent departure.

Kate scanned the empty terminal and said, "I don't see anyone who might be here to meet us."

"How can you tell in this crowd?"

She ignored that and observed, "There are the car-rental counters ... there's a restaurant, and there are the restrooms. Where do you want to start?"

"Over here." I turned toward the sole airline ticket counter, whose logo said: CONTINENTAL COMMUTAIR.

Kate asked, "What are you doing?"

"Let's see what Harry was supposed to find here."

"That's not what Tom-"

"Fuck Tom."

She considered that and agreed, "Yeah, fuck him."

I approached the small ticket counter, where an imposing middle-aged woman and a young man sat on stools, watching us. They looked like brother and sister, and unfortunately, I think their parents were, too. The lady, whose name tag said BETTY, greeted us. "Good afternoon. How can I help you?"

I replied, "I need a ticket to Paris."

"Would you like to go through Albany or Boston?"

"How about neither?"

Betty informed me, "Sir, there are no direct flights to anywhere from here, except to Albany and Boston."

"You're kidding? How about arriving flights?"

"Same. Albany and Boston. Continental CommutAir. Two flights a day. You just missed the last flight to Boston." She cocked her thumb at the arrival and departure schedules on the wall behind her and informed us, "We go to Albany at three P.M."

One airline, two cities, two flights to each city. That made my job a little easier and quicker. I said to her, "I'd like to speak to the manager."

"You're speaking to her."

"I thought you were the ticket agent."

"I am."

"I hope you're not also the pilot."

Kate seemed impatient with my silliness and pulled out her creds. "FBI, ma'am. I'm Special Agent Mayfield and this is Detective Corey, my assistant. May we speak to you in private?"

Betty looked at us and said, "Oh ... you're the people who just landed in the helicopter."

I guess big news traveled fast here. "Yes, ma'am. Where can we go to check out passenger manifests?"

She slid off her stool, told her assistant, Randy, to hold down the fort, then said to us, "Follow me."

We went around the counter and through an open door into a small, empty office with desks, computers, faxes, and other electronic things.

She sat at one of the desks and asked Kate-I don't think she liked me-"What do you need?"

Kate replied, "I need a list of passengers who arrived here on Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and today. Also, departing passengers for those days, plus tomorrow."

"Okay ..."

I asked her, "Has anyone else been here, or called you in the last few days to ask about passenger manifests?"

She shook her head. "Nope."

"If someone had called or been here when you weren't here, would you know about it?"

She nodded. "Sure. Jake, Harriet, or Randy would have told me."