Daylight (Atlee Pine #3)(88)
What he found with Franklin was a mountain of diversions and inconsistencies. He marveled at the fact that no one had called out the woman on this before. Then the truth struck him: Why would her colleagues call her out when many of them were probably doing the very same thing?
When he looked at the timeline of her history and travel, something seemed to click in the back of his mind. That’s when he digitally laid Gorman’s timeline over Franklin’s. There was only one time period that matched.
A six-month sabbatical that both had taken at the same time. Only Franklin had not flown on a sub of Aeroflot. But she had ended up in Austria. And from there she could have gone anywhere by car or train or private jet, and Puller would have no accurate way to track that. The other thing that stuck out for him was the fact that shortly after Franklin returned to the States, she started her first bid for elected office. She had now won reelection multiple times and had a lofty perch on Ways and Means, and other committees, including—tellingly, for Puller—the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, meaning she was privy to most of the important intel secrets of this country.
A feeling of dread rising up in him, he placed all this in a file and emailed it to Pine. Then he sat back in his chair and wondered what else he could do to help.
A phone call he got a few minutes later answered that question for him.
CHAPTER
56
PINE HELD UP THE PAIR OF PAJAMAS as a whirlwind of memories engulfed her.
They were small, the size for a tall six-year-old, as Mercy had been. They had pink ponies on them. They were the PJs that Mercy had worn the night she vanished. Pine had a matching pair that their mother had bought them, although Pine’s were not pink, but blue.
She held the cloth up to her nose, hoping that it retained her sister’s scent. After all these years . . . there was none. It was just mildewed and smelled foul.
She picked up the packet of letters that had been underneath the pajamas. By her quick count, there were more than a dozen of them, faded and yellowed.
They were all addressed to Ito Vincenzo and had been sent from Leonard and Wanda Atkins in Taliaferro County, Georgia.
She opened the first one. It was dated three months after Mercy had been abducted.
She looked down at the signature at the end of the letter.
Len Atkins.
As she read the letter her mouth kept dropping and her eyes grew teary.
So happy we could give the girl a home.
They named her Rebecca.
The money you sent was a godsend.
And you more than paid me back for saving your butt in Nam.
Take care and we’ll send pictures when we can.
Pine thought, Rebecca? Pictures? Nam?
She tore through the other letters, most of which had a similar theme. They were all dated a year apart. But there were no pictures in any of them.
Ito Vincenzo had apparently given Mercy to another family, the Atkinses of Taliaferro County, Georgia.
Pine did a quick Google search and learned that in 1990 Taliaferro only had 1,900 people spread over nearly two hundred heavily wooded square miles. She learned there were even fewer people living there now, making it the least populated county in Georgia and the second-least populous county east of the Mississippi. She did another search and found that Taliaferro was a three-hour drive from her old home in Sumter County.
Pine inwardly groaned.
You idiot.
She had learned on her trip back to her old homestead that a man she now knew to be Ito Vincenzo had gotten into a fight with her father the very next day after Mercy had been taken. Once Pine had also learned that he had been the abductor, it should have been clear that Ito had taken Mercy someplace relatively close by. Otherwise, he could not have been back the next day to have the altercation with her father.
She tore through the rest of the box. At the very bottom, under a layer of old clothes, was a metal box. Inside were two things: old check registers and a single photo, an old Polaroid.
Pine gripped the photo but didn’t look at it. Not just yet.
It could be one of Ito and his family. But there had been all those photo albums for that. Why put one in here?
She set it down and picked up a check register.
The entries were neat and detailed. Ito had been a very organized man, apparently.
She scanned down the date column until she came to the relevant time period.
There it was. A check for $500 made out to Leonard Atkins. She quickly searched the other registers. She found a dozen more entries for $500 paid out to Atkins.
Five hundred bucks a year for a little girl’s expenses? It didn’t seem nearly enough, not even in Taliaferro County, Georgia. She glanced at the last check entry for the last register in the box. June 13, 2002.
And why had the money been paid at all? If Ito had gotten a little girl for the Atkinses, why hadn’t they paid him, not the other way around?
And how did he even know the Atkinses? They presumably were from rural Georgia, and Ito had spent his whole life in New Jersey. Vietnam?
Pine slowly put down the check register and stared at the facedown photo. The moment of truth had arrived. She felt her adrenaline spike and a wave of anxiety sweep over her with such force that she thought she might be having a panic attack.
If this is a picture of Mercy, what would she look like? Will we still be identical?
Pine had lifted the photo off the plywood floor when she heard a noise outside.