to come out here for a couple of hours of horseback riding,” she explains. “She finds it relaxing, and her doctor recommends it for her as part of her recovery.”
Around us are millions of dollars’ worth of barns, outbuildings, fencing, and lots of horses. This area is set aside from the main area of stables. I can see a number of children at play with ponies and horses in a corral about thirty meters away.
“What’s going on over there?” I ask.
Pamela says, “Part of the stables here are owned by a charity—Green Grass for Kids—that brings inner-city kids and others with special needs to the farm, gets them some fresh air, lets them see what horses are all about. It’s one of CANARY’s favorite charities.”
“Okay, run me through what happened.”
Pamela looks back at the other two agents—Tanya Glenn, a heavyset African-American woman, and Brian Zahn, a slim guy who doesn’t look like he’s old enough to shave—and she says, “Once the news got out about Atlanta, the First Lady dumped her schedule for the day. She wanted to come out here for a relaxing ride.”
“So there was no prep, no sweep, nothing made ready.”
Tanya speaks up. “We didn’t have the time … and after being on her detail as long as we’ve been, you know that when CANARY makes a decision, that’s it. She wanted to go riding. She went riding. She says this is one of the only two places in the world where she can relax.”
“What time was this?”
Pamela glances at her watch. “Near three hours ago.”
I say, “All three of you have horseback riding experience. So why weren’t you with her?”
The wind shifts and I hear kids squealing with laughter and joy from many meters away. Tanya says, “We always go with her, hanging back or riding ahead. But not today … she wanted to be alone, and she said she’d be back in sixty minutes.”
“Why wasn’t I notified when she didn’t return?”
Pamela looks both defiant and upset. “Orders.”
“From whom?”
“The President.”
“Tell me more,” I say.
“Just when she was overdue, and wasn’t answering her phone, that’s when I was contacted by the communications officer on Air Force One. I talked with Jackson Thiel, the head of the President’s detail. He told me to hang on for a second. I did just that. Then the President came on the line and told me to stand down, that he would take care of it.”
“And he told you not to call me?”
Pamela looks miserable now. “He told me … that I should keep quiet and not tell anyone. Anyone at all.”
I bite my lower lip and don’t say anything for a moment, knowing with sadness that Pamela’s career and those of the rest of the detail have crashed and burned. No matter. Depending on how this is going to play out, my career is probably going to scream right into the ground next to them.
“Where do you think she might be?” I ask.
Tanya speaks up again, and I note that Brian, the only male and the newest one on the detail, is keeping quiet. She says, “Sally, there’s miles of trails out there … you go down one and it branches off, and then it branches off again, and goes on … she could be anyplace. My guess is … she switched her phone off, or dumped it, and is just sitting under a tree being miserable.”
“Does she have her panic button with her?”
Pamela says, “Absolutely.”
Every protectee has a hidden panic button—the President’s is an Air Force One challenge coin he carries in his pocket at all times, the First Lady’s is on a small brooch she wears on a gold chain around her neck—and when it’s pressed, it sends off a strong beacon alarm and a GPS signal that gives out the exact coordinates down to one foot.
“But it hasn’t been activated.”
“No,” Tanya says. “It hasn’t.”
I glance once more at this miserable-looking trio of agents, who’ve done something even worse than having their protectee injured or killed: they’ve lost their protectee.
To Pamela, I say, “When you have a moment, call the supervisors for your replacement shifts. Make up a plausible story, but tell them that all three of you are staying on duty. We need to keep this as close-in as possible.”
Pamela nods and I say, “All right, do you have a map of the area?”
Pamela goes over to the hood of the near Suburban, where a map is spread out, and she points to a marked area where the