“Lead on.”
We climbed into a white government sedan, unmarked but for its FAA license plates. Horvath drove fifty feet to a chain link gate, swiping his ID card on the computerized badge reader and punching in a security code. The gate lurched open, beeping. After we drove onto the tarmac, he waited until the gate automatically slid closed behind us, then continued on toward a line of corrugated aluminum hangars that fronted the runway, not far from where the Duck and I had gone down.
“Your plane’s in there,” Horvath said, pointing to the westernmost hangar. “What’s left of it.”
I’d sat through more than a few postmortem examinations when I was with Alpha. You get used to them after awhile, even the stench, when you realize that the body on the autopsy table is there because you’d helped put it there, and because the individual it once belonged to posed a threat to national security. Dispassion comes easy when you watch a genuine bad guy being sliced and diced. But the Ruptured Duck was no bad guy. Inanimate object or otherwise, he was one of my best friends, who’d gotten me out of more scrapes than I cared to remember. Having to observe a clinical assessment of his remains by some federal paper-pusher like Horvath was hardly something I was looking forward to. Neither of us said another word as Horvath drove toward the hangar and stopped in front of it.
A padlock secured a side door. The FAA man dialed in the combination, then stepped inside to undo a couple of hinged bolts holding down the hangar’s bifold door. He pushed a button, engaging an overhead motor, and the big door slowly began to lift, like a metal curtain on a stage.
There sat the Duck, scraped and streaked with oil, his right wing crumpled, tail assembly smashed, miscellaneous pieces strewn about the hangar floor. They’d turned him right side up, back on his landing gear, but it only made my dead plane look even deader. Something caught in my throat and I could feel my eyes getting moist.
“I’ve seen far worse,” Horvath said, resting a hand on my shoulder.
“Me, too. At the glue factory.”
“This is what I thought you might want to see.” He strode toward the engine compartment. The cowling cover had been removed. “Your engine breather line was plugged,” Horvath said, holding up a short length of black rubber hose. “You applied full throttle, as you normally would at takeoff. But with the line plugged, pressure inside the engine built up, the crankcase seal blew, and there went all your oil. No oil, no engine. Simple as that.”
“You’re implying that I should’ve checked the breather line during my preflight inspection. Which means I’m at fault.”
Horvath smiled reassuringly. “No pilot would be expected to check his breather line on a preflight inspection, Mr. Logan. It’s too deep inside the engine compartment to get at readily. Besides, you’d have to open up the tube itself to check for obstructions. The only person who’s going to do that is your mechanic when the plane goes in for its annual inspection.”
“So, you’re saying it wasn’t my fault?”
“That would be my supposition at this point.”
I exhaled. “Then what caused the obstruction? That engine was overhauled a month ago. I’ve logged fifty hours since then without so much as a hiccup.”
Horvath’s eye twitched. He reached into his pants pocket and pulled out a plastic baggie. Inside was a small wad of duct tape.
“I found this inside the line,” he said, stuffing the oily gray wad into one end of the hose to show me how snugly it fit. “Whoever put it in there must’ve done it intentionally.”
“You’re telling me that somebody tried to sabotage my plane?”
“Not tried, Mr. Logan, did. That’s off the record, of course. We’re not allowed to discuss any findings until our investigation is completed. But I did think you’d want to know at least preliminarily.”
My eye began to twitch like Horvath’s, and I don’t have any tics. It was one thing to come after me by trying to bring down my airplane. It was quite another to do so without regard for the safety of my passengers, or for innocent people on the ground who also could’ve died. A rage burned through me like magma.
“Any idea who might’ve wanted to do something like this?” Horvath asked.
“I’ll have to get back to you on that one.”
You don’t spend as many years as I did hunting rabid humans without rankling more than a few bent on payback. No names or faces, however, came readily to mind. Was there a link between that wad of duct tape jammed inside my engine and the execution of Dorian Munz? Had somebody tried to kill me because I’d somehow stuck my nose where it didn’t belong in the employ of Hub Walker? My gut told me as much. There were a couple of things I knew with certainty at that moment, staring at the pathetic wreck of my airplane. One was that I intended to find whoever was responsible. The other was that I intended to hurt them. Granted, not a very Zen-like sentiment, but had the Buddha ever flown a plane like the Ruptured Duck, I’m sure he would’ve understood.
Horvath noticed my right hand. I had unconsciously balled my fingers into a fist.
“Looks to me,” he said, “like somebody’s spoiling for a dogfight.”
There’s an expression among fighter jocks that described what I was feeling, the adrenaline-fueled determination to close with the enemy and destroy him. They call it, “Fangs out.”
“You’re aware, Mr. Logan,” Horvath cautioned, “that this may well be a matter for law enforcement.”
“Whatever you say, Mr. Horvath.”
He nodded as if he understood the vengeful thoughts bouncing around inside my head, then turned away to survey the Ruptured Duck. I could see he was anxious to get back to his postmortem. I didn’t much feel like watching, and started to go. Horvath offered me a lift back to the parking lot, but I declined. The stroll would help calm me.
“You can’t just walk around an airport you’re not based at without an escort or proper credentials,” Horvath said. “There are security considerations, Mr. Logan. You’re a certified flight instructor. You should know that.”
“What’s the worst thing the FAA could do, ground me? I’m already grounded.”
He didn’t try stopping me.
I called Savannah as I walked back to the terminal building. There was no answer. I hung up without leaving a message. I wasn’t sure I wanted to talk to her, anyway, not in the mood I was in. Then my mechanic, Larry, called from Rancho Bonita. He, too, had caught my inadvertent appearance on television news.
“Please tell me that wasn’t your definition of a landing.”
“Whatever happened to, ‘Hello, Logan, I thought I’d check in to see if you’re alive or dead?’ ”
“If you were dead, you wouldn’t have answered your phone.”
“What do you need, Larry?”
“What do I need? I need my daughter to stop dating losers, that’s what I need. I need my wife to stop talking for five minutes when I come home from work — just five lousy minutes — so I can enjoy one lousy beer before she starts in on everything that needs fixing around the house, and why she’s feuding with that witch down at the nail salon. What do I need? I need to drop a hundred pounds. I need to be rich. I need peace of mind.”
“You should try becoming one with everything.”
“What is that, some of your Buddhist bullshit?”
“It means try loving your life, Larry, warts and all. But I’m guessing that’s not why you called. So, before you ask me, no, I have not yet seen Crissy Walker naked, though I did see her in a bikini, and she looks as good as you think she looks. So you can go ahead and eat your heart out right now.”
Did he appreciate vicariously my sharing with him firsthand observations of the former Playmate in her swimsuit? No question. But that wasn’t why Larry was calling.