In 1992, four flight attendants walked into Dallas Fort Worth International Airport for a routine overnight shift and were never seen again.
No bodies, no evidence, no witnesses.
For 26 years, their families searched for answers in a case that baffled investigators and haunted an entire airline industry.
But when construction workers broke through a sealed maintenance tunnel in 2018, they discovered something that would finally expose the horrifying truth about what happened in those underground corridors and the monster who had been hiding in plain sight for decades.

The fluorescent lights hummed in terminal C of Dallas Fort Worth International Airport as Patricia Vance checked her reflection in the crew lounge mirror one last time.
It was 9:47 p.m. on November 14th, 1992, and she adjusted her navy blue uniform jacket, smoothing the golden wings pinned above her heart.
At 31, Patricia had been flying for American Airways for 8 years, and tonightâs Redeye to Seattle would be just another routine flight.
âYou ready?â asked Denise Hullbrook, her friend and fellow flight attendant, stepping out of the restroom.
âDenise was 26, blonde, with the kind of warm smile that put nervous pá´ssengers at ease.â
âAs ready as Iâll ever be for a midnight departure,â Patricia replied, slipping her compact into her overnight bag.
The lounge door opened and two more flight attendants entered.
Yolanda Martinez, 29, her dark hair pulled into a sleek bun, carried a thermos of coffee.
Behind her came the youngest of their crew, 23-year-old Bethany Cross, still new enough to the job that she double-cheed her manual before every flight.
âFlight 447 crew reporting for duty,â Yolanda announced with mock formality, raising her thermos in salute.
They had 40 minutes before boarding would begin.
The plan was simple.
Review the flight manifest, check their equipment, and head down to gate C47 where their Boeing 757 was being prepared.
It should have been a routine night, one of thousands they had each experienced.
None of them could have known that in less than an hour they would all disappear without a trace.
Patricia gathered her things and led the group toward the door.
âLetâs get the equipment check done early. I want to grab something to eat before we board.â
They walked together down the wide terminal corridor, their rolling suitcases clicking rhythmically against the polished floor.
The airport was quieter at this hour.
Fewer travelers, fewer staff, their heels echoed in the vast space as they made their way toward the service elevator that would take them down to the groundle crew entrance.
The elevator doors opened with a soft chime.
The four women stepped inside and Denise pressed the ĘuŃŃon for the lower level.
As the door slid closed, none of them noticed the maintenance worker in stained coveralls watching from behind a cleaning cart 30 ft away, his eyes tracking their descent.
The elevator descended into darkness.
The morning sun cast long shadows across the bedroom where Ellen Vance sat on the edge of her bed, her phone pressed to her ear with trembling hands.
26 years had pá´ssed since her sister Patricia vanished.
But Ellen still kept her number saved in her contacts.
Still sometimes found herself starting to dial it before reality crashed back in.
âMrs. Vance, this is Detective Sandra Briggs with the Dallas Fort Worth Airport Police.â The voice on the phone said, âIâm calling because weâve had a significant development in your sisterâs case.â
Ellenâs breath caught.
She had received calls over the years, each one raising and crushing hope in equal measure, tips that led nowhere, possible sightings that evaporated under scrutiny, theories that collapsed under investigation.
She had learned to armor herself against hope.
âWhat kind of development?â Ellen asked, her voice carefully controlled.
âWeâd prefer to discuss this in person,â Detective Briggs replied. âWould you be able to come to the airport today? I know this is sudden, but the situation is time-sensitive.â
Ellen glanced at the clock on her nightstand.
It was barely 7 in the morning on a Tuesday in March 2018.
She had taken the day off from her job at the accounting firm where she worked, planning to spend it organizing her motherâs belongings.
Her mother had pá´ssed away 6 months earlier, having never learned what happened to her eldest daughter.
âI can be there by 10,â Ellen said.
âThank you. Ask for me at the airport police headquarters. Itâs in terminal A.â
After the call ended, Ellen sat motionless for several minutes, staring at the framed pHŕšĎograph on her dresser.
It showed two sisters at a backyard barbecue in the summer of 1991.
Patricia, radiant in a sundress, her arm around a younger Ellen.
Both of them laughing at something beyond the cameraâs view.
Ellen had been 19 then, just starting college.
Patricia had been her hero, the glamorous older sister who traveled the world and sent postcards from exotic cities.
The day Patricia disappeared, Ellenâs life had fractured into before and after.
She showered and dressed mechanically, her mind churning with possibilities.
What could they have found after all this time?
The official investigation had gone cold within months of the disappearance.
Four flight attendants vanishing from one of the busiest airports in the country without a single witness, without leaving behind any evidence.
It had been called everything from a voluntary disappearance to alien abduction in the media frenzy that followed.
Ellen knew better.
Patricia would never have left without a word.
None of them would have.
The drive to the airport took 45 minutes through morning traffic.
Ellen had avoided DFW for years after the disappearance.
The sight of those terminals too painful to bear.
Even now, pulling into the má´ssive complex of runways and buildings, she felt her chest ŃΚÔĐ˝Ńen with old grief.
Airport Police Headquarters occupied a nondescript building adjacent to Terminal A.
Ellen parked and made her way inside, giving her name to the officer at the front desk.
Within minutes, a woman in her mid-40s approached, extending her hand.
âMrs. Vance, Iâm Detective Sandra Briggs. Thank you for coming so quickly.â
Detective Briggs had short gray hair and sharp, intelligent eyes that had clearly seen too much.
She led Ellen down a corridor to a small conference room where another man waited.
This one older, perhaps 60, with a weathered face and the bearing of someone who had spent decades in law enforcement.
âThis is Captain Frank Morrison,â Detective Briggs said. âHe was one of the original investigators on your sisterâs case back in 1992.â
Ellen shook his hand. noting the sadness in his expression.
âYou remember, Patricia?â
âI remember all four of them,â Morrison said quietly. âThat case has haunted me for 26 years. Please sit down.â
They settled around the conference table, and Detective Briggs opened a folder, though she didnât immediately reference its contents.
Instead, she looked directly at Ellen.
â3 days ago, a construction crew was doing renovation work in the lower levels of Terminal C.â She began âthey were updating the electrical systems in some of the older maintenance corridors. These are areas that havenât been accessed in years, some of them sealed off when the airport expanded in the late â9s.â
Ellenâs hands gripped the armrests of her chair.
âWhen they broke through a wall into an abandoned service tunnel, they found something.â Detective Briggs continued. âFour sets of skeletal remains.â
The room tilted.
Ellen heard a sound escape her throat.
Something between a gasp and a sob.
âWe havenât made a formal identification yet.â Captain Morrison said gently. âBut the remains were found with personal effects, airline uniforms, employee badges, and preliminary forensic analysis suggests the remains have been there for approximately 25 to 30 years.â
Detective Briggs slid several pHŕšĎographs across the table.
Ellenâs hands shook as she picked them up.
They showed corroded metal badges, scraps of navy blue fabric, and the unmistakable shape of the golden wings flight attendants wore.
One pHŕšĎo showed a badge more clearly than the others.
Ellen could just make out the engraved name.
P. Vance.
âOh god,â Ellen whispered. âOh god, Patricia.â
Detective Briggs reached across the table, her hand hovering near Ellenâs, but not quite touching. âIâm so sorry. Weâll need DNA confirmation, of course, but given the location and the evidence, we believe these are your sister and her crew.â
Ellen couldnât breathe.
After 26 years of not knowing, of hoping against hope that maybe Patricia was alive somewhere, had amnesia, had started a new life, this brutal finality was almost too much to process.
âHow?â She managed to ask, âHow did they die?â
The two investigators exchanged a glance.
Captain Morrison cleared his throat.
âThe medical examiner is still conducting the full analysis,â he said carefully. âBut there are indicators of trauma to the skeletal remains. This wasnât an accident. Mrs. Vance, weâre treating this as a homicide investigation.â
Ellenâs mind reeled.
Murder.
All four of them murdered and hidden in a sealed tunnel for over two decades.
âWe need your help.â Detective Briggs said âyou were closely involved in the original investigation. You knew your sisterâs routines, her life. Weâre reopening this case with fresh eyes, and anything you can tell us might be crucial.â
Ellen wiped her eyes, forcing herself to focus.
If they had finally found Patricia, if they finally had a chance to learn the truth, she would give them everything she had.
âWhat do you need to know?â she asked, her voice steadier.
Detective Briggs opened her folder fully.
âLetâs start with the night of November 14th, 1992. Tell me everything you remember about the last time you spoke with your sister.â
Ellen closed her eyes, reaching back through the years to that final phone call.
It had been early evening around 6:00.
Patricia had called from her apartment in Arlington, getting ready for her shift.
âShe was tired,â Ellen said. âSheâd been flying a lot that month, picking up extra shifts to save for a down payment on a house. But she sounded happy. She was talking about maybe taking some time off around Christmas, coming to visit our parents.â
âDid she mention anything unusual?â Captain Morrison asked. âAnything that worried her?â
Ellen thought carefully.
âShe said something about airport security being ŃΚÔĐ˝Ńened. There had been some incident the week before. I donât remember the details. She wasnât concerned about it, just mentioned it in pá´ssing.â
Detective Briggs made a note.
âDo you remember if she mentioned anyone specific at work? Someone who made her uncomfortable? Any conflicts with colleagues or pá´ssengers?â
âPatricia got along with everyone.â Ellen said âshe loved her job. The only thing she ever complained about was the scheduling system, but that was standard.â
âWhat about her personal life?â Detective Briggs pressed. âWas she seeing anyone? Any relationships that might have been problematic?â
Ellen shook her head.
âSheâd broken up with her boyfriend about 6 months earlier amicably. She wasnât seeing anyone new as far as I knew.â
They continued for another hour, Detective Briggs asking detailed questions about Patriciaâs habits, her friends among the flight crew, her routes between home and the airport.
Captain Morrison occasionally interjected with questions that revealed just how thoroughly he had studied the original case.
Finally, Detective Briggs closed her folder.
âWeâll be conducting interviews with all the original witnesses we can locate. Staff members who were working that night, other flight crews, anyone who might have seen something. Weâre also going to examine all airport security footage from that period that still exists.â
âAfter 26 years,â Ellen asked doubtfully.
âYouâd be surprised what gets preserved,â Captain Morrison said. âAnd technology has advanced. We can enhance and analyze footage now in ways that werenât possible in 1992.â
Ellen stood, her legs unsteady.
âWhen will you know for certain about the identification?â
âThe DNA analysis should be complete within a week,â Detective Briggs said. âWeâll contact you as soon as we have confirmation. In the meantime, please donât speak to the media about this. We need to control the information flow to protect the investigation.â
Ellen nodded numbly.
The media, of course, they would descend like vultures once this got out.
The story of the vanished flight attendants had been national news in 1992, the subject of speculation and conspiracy theories.
Finding their remains would reignite all of that.
As she drove home, Ellenâs phone rang.
The caller ID showed a number she hadnât seen in years.
Rachel Hullbrook, Denise Hullbrookâs younger sister.
Ellen pulled over and answered.
âRachel.â
âEllen, I just got a call from the police.â Rachelâs voice was thick with tears. âThey found them. They found Denise.â
âI know,â Ellen said softly. âI just left the airport.â
â26 years,â Rachel said. â26 years of wondering, and they were there the whole time, right there under the airport.â
They stayed on the phone for a long time.
Two women who had become linked by tragedy, crying together across the miles.
Morning sisters who had walked into an airport one November night and never come home.
The conference room at Airport Police Headquarters buzzed with activity as Detective Sandra Briggs á´ssembled her task force.
It had been 3 days since the discovery of the remains, and the media blackout wouldnât hold much longer.
She needed to move fast.
Seated around the table were six people.
Herself, Captain Morrison, two younger detectives from the Dallas Police Departmentâs cold case unit, a forensic analyst, and a woman in her 50s with steel gray hair pulled into a ŃΚÔĐ˝Ń bun.
âFor those who donât know her, this is Dr. Helen Casper,â Detective Briggs said, gesturing to the gray-haired woman. âSheâs a forensic anthropologist who specializes in historical crime scene analysis. Sheâs been examining the remains and the tunnel location.â
Dr. Caspar nodded curtly and opened her laptop.
âWhat we have is both more and less than you might expect. The tunnel where the remains were discovered is part of the airportâs original infrastructure. Built in 1974 when this section of terminal C was first constructed. It was used for maintenance access to electrical and HVAC systems.â
She pulled up a blueprint on the projection screen.
âIn 1998, during a major terminal expansion, this entire section was deemed obsolete. Rather than tear it out, they simply sealed it off. The entrance was covered by new construction, essentially creating a tomb.â
âSo, whoever put the bodies there knew the tunnel was going to be sealed?â asked Detective Raymond Torres, one of the younger investigators.
âNot necessarily,â Dr. Casper replied. âThe ceiling happened 6 years after the disappearances, but whoever hid the bodies chose a location that was already rarely accessed. The tunnelâs entrance in 1992 would have been through a maintenance area that was typically locked and only used by specific personnel.â
She clicked to the next image showing pHŕšĎographs of the discovery site.
âThe remains were found in what appears to be a storage al cove approximately 80 ft from the tunnelâs original entrance. They were positioned deliberately laid out side by side.â
Detective Briggs studied the pHŕšĎos.
Even as skeletal remains, there was something profoundly disturbing about seeing four bodies arranged so carefully in the darkness.
âPositioned how? Respectfully or as a display?â
âThatâs the question.â Dr. Caspar said âthereâs no evidence of binding or restraints that would have survived. The positioning suggests they were placed there with some care, but whether that indicates remorse or something else, I canât say.â
Captain Morrison leaned forward.
âWhat about cause of death?â
Dr. Casparâs expression darkened.
âThree of the four victims show clear evidence of blunt force trauma to the skull. The injuries are consistent with being struck multiple times with a heavy object, something like a pipe or crowbar. The fourth victim shows different trauma patterns.â
She paused and the room fell silent.
âThe fourth victimâs hyoid bone is fractured,â Dr. Caspar continued. âThatâs the small bone in the throat. A fracture there typically indicates manual strangulation.â
Detective Briggs felt a cold weight settle in her stomach.
âSo, weâre looking at someone who bludgeoned three victims and strangled one. Do we know which victim was strangled?â
âBased on the position of the remains and the personal effects found nearby, we believe it was Bethany Cross, the youngest of the four.â
The forensic analyst, a thin man named Marcus Webb, spoke up.
âWhy the different method? Why strangle one but use blunt force on the others?â
âThatâs a key question,â Dr. Casper agreed. âIt could indicate escalation or deescalation depending on the sequence. It could suggest a different emotional state or a different relationship with that particular victim. Or it could simply be opportunistic based on what was available at the moment.â
Detective Briggs made notes.
âWhat else can you tell us about the scene itself?â
Dr. Caspar clicked through more images.
âThe tunnel showed no signs of a struggle at the location where the bodies were found. If the murders occurred there, they happened swiftly without the victims having much chance to fight back. However, we did find trace evidence suggesting the bodies may have been moved a short distance within the tunnel system.â
âMoved from where?â Torres asked.
âWeâre still mapping it out, but thereâs a junction point about 40 ft back toward the entrance where we found fabric fibers caught on a sharp edge of exposed conduit. The fibers match the flight attendants uniforms.â
Captain Morrison rubbed his temples.
âSo, someone killed them, possibly at or near the tunnel entrance, then moved them deeper into the tunnel to hide them.â
âThatâs one scenario,â Dr. Caspar confirmed. âWeâre also finding other trace evidence. Hair samples that donât match the victims. Fingerprints on metal surfaces that have been protected from degradation. Weâre running everything through databases, but itâs going to take time.â
Detective Briggs stood and walked to the projection screen, studying the blueprint.
âLetâs talk about access. Who would have been able to get into this maintenance tunnel in November 1992?â
Captain Morrison pulled out a yellowed file folder, one of many boxes of original evidence that had been retrieved from storage.
âAccording to the original investigation, maintenance tunnel access was restricted to three groups. Airport maintenance staff, airline ground crew supervisors, and airport security personnel. All required key card access.â
âHow many people total are we talking about?â Detective Briggs asked.
Morrison flipped through pages.
âIn 1992, there were approximately 200 people with access credentials for various maintenance areas throughout the airport. Specific access to the terminal C lower level tunnels was more restricted. About 40 people.â
âDo we have names?â
âWe have the personnel list from 1992,â Morrison said. âBut thatâs 26 years ago. People have retired, moved away, died. Weâre going to have to track down as many as we can.â
Detective Briggs turned to the two cold case detectives.
âThatâs your priority. Start with anyone whoâs still in the Dallas Fort Worth area. I want interviews with every person who had access to those tunnels.â
The younger detective, a woman named Lisa Park, raised her hand.
âWhat about security footage from the night of the disappearance? Is there anything?â
Morrisonâs expression turned grim.
âThatâs where we run into problems. The airportâs security camera system in 1992 was limited compared to today. Most cameras covered pá´ssenger areas, not service corridors. The footage that did exist was recorded on tapes that were recycled every 30 days unless flagged for retention.â
âAnd nobody flagged it?â Park asked, surprised.
âBy the time the disappearance was reported and taken seriously, the tapes had already been recycled.â Morrison said, and the bitterness in his voice was evident. âThe flight attendants werenât reported missing until the next morning when they failed to show up for their flight. Even then, the initial á´ssumption was that theyâd simply missed their shift or had some personal emergency. It wasnât treated as a critical missing personâs case for almost 48 hours.â
âWhy the delay?â Torres asked.
Morrison sighed heavily.
âBecause adults go missing for voluntary reasons all the time. Four adult women, all employed, all with access to transportation and money. The initial responding officers á´ssumed it would resolve itself. By the time we realized something was seriously wrong, crucial hours had been lost.â
Detective Briggs could hear the old guilt in Morrisonâs voice.
He had been carrying this case for over two decades, and the failure to find these women had clearly haunted him.
âWe work with what we have,â she said firmly. âDr. Caspar, continue the forensic analysis. I want everything you can give me on those remains in that tunnel. Captain Morrison, pulled together everything from the original investigation, every interview, every tip, every theory. Weâre going to go through it all again with fresh perspective.â
She looked around the table.
âOne more thing, we need to consider that whoever did this might still be alive and might still be in the area. They managed to kill four women in an airport, hide the bodies, and evade detection for 26 years. That suggests intelligence, planning, and access. This person could still be working at the airport.â
The room fell silent as that reality sank in.
âWe keep this quiet as long as possible,â Detective Briggs continued. âWe donât want to spook our suspect, but we also need to work fast. Dr. Caspar, how long until we have definitive DNA confirmation on the idenŃΚŃies?â
âAnother 3 days at most,â Dr. Casper replied.
âThen we have 3 days before this becomes public,â Detective Briggs said. âLetâs make them count.â
As the meeting broke up and the team dispersed to their á´ssignments, Captain Morrison approached Detective Briggs.
âThank you,â he said quietly.
âFor what?â
âFor not giving up on them. Iâve been requesting a cold case review for years, but the department never had the resources.â
âIf that construction crew hadnât broken through that wall, theyâd still be down there.â Detective Briggs finished.
She put a hand on his shoulder.
âWeâre going to find out who did this. Those women deserve justice and so do their families.â
Morrison nodded, but his eyes were distant.
âI keep thinking about something. The way the bodies were positioned, laid out carefully. The different method used on the youngest victim. This wasnât random violence. Whoever did this had a relationship with these women, or at least believed they did.â
Detective Briggs had been thinking the same thing.
âYou think it was someone they knew?â
âI think it was someone who had access to them, who could get close without raising suspicion, someone they might have trusted, at least initially.â
As Morrison walked away, Detective Briggs returned to the conference room and stared at the projected blueprint of the tunnel system.
Somewhere in that maze of corridors and aloves, four women had met a monster.
And that monster had walked away, had continued living their life, had perhaps watched as families mourned and investigators searched in vain.
She thought of Ellen Vance, of the pain in her eyes when she had identified her sisterâs badge.
26 years of not knowing, of hoping and grieving in equal measure.
And now, finally, answers were coming.
But Detective Briggs knew from experience that sometimes the answers were worse than the mystery.
Her phone buzzed with a text from Dr. Caspar.
âFound something else in the tunnel. You need to see this.â
Detective Briggs grabbed her keys and headed for the door.
3 days until this went public.
3 days to get ahead of the investigation before the media circus began.
She just hoped it would be enough.
The service elevator descended into the bowels of terminal C with a mechanical groan that set Detective Briggsâs teeth on edge.
Dr. Caspar stood beside her holding a flashlight and a folder of pHŕšĎographs.
Her expression unreadable in the dim light.
âI wanted you to see this in person before I include it in my official report,â Dr. Caspar said as the elevator shuddered to a stop.
They stepped out into a concrete corridor that smelled of dust and stale air.
Construction barriers blocked off most of the hallway and yellow caution tape marked the route to the discovery site.
A uniformed officer stood guard at the entrance to the sealed section, nodding at them as they approached.
âThe construction crew has been cleared out for the day,â Dr. Caspar explained, ducking under the caution tape. âWe have the area completely secured.â
They walked through a rough opening that had been sledgehammerred through a concrete wall.
Beyond it lay the maintenance tunnel, a narrow pá´ssage lined with exposed pipes and electrical conduits.
Emergency work lights had been strung along the ceiling, casting harsh shadows that made the space feel even more claustrophobic.
Detective Briggs followed Dr. Caspar deeper into the tunnel, their footsteps echoing off the walls.
The air grew colder and heavier the farther they went.
After about 80 ft, they reached the al cove where the remains had been discovered.
The bodies had been removed, but chalk outlines marked where each victim had lain.
âThe bodies were here,â Dr. Casper said, gesturing to the outlines, positioned side by side, heads all pointing the same direction. âBut thatâs not what I wanted to show you.â
She led Detective Briggs past the al cove to a junction where the tunnel branched in two directions.
The left branch had been completely sealed with concrete, but the right branch continued for another 20 ft before ending at a metal door, rusted and covered in decades of grime.
âWe didnât notice this door initially because of the rust and the poor lighting,â Dr. Casper said. âBut when we were collecting evidence samples, one of my team members found it.â
She approached the door and shown her flashlight on the handle.
Detective Briggs leaned closer and saw what had caught the forensic anthropologistâs attention.
Scratches marked the metal around the lock.
Fresh scratches that had scraped away the rust to reveal clean metal underneath.
âSomeone opened this door recently,â Detective Briggs said, her pulse quickening.
âWithin the last few weeks, Iâd estimate,â Dr. Casper confirmed âbefore the construction crew broke through the wall.â
âCan we open it?â
Dr. Casper pulled out a large key ring.
âMaintenance gave us master keys. This lock is old, but it still works.â
She inserted a key and turned it with some effort.
The lock mechanism groaned, and the door swung inward with a screech of protesting hinges.
Beyond the door lay a small room, no more than 10 ft square.
It had clearly been used for storage at some point. metal shelving units lining the walls, most of them empty.
But what drew Detective Briggsâs attention was the corner of the room where a camping chair sat facing the wall.
On the wall, someone had arranged pHŕšĎographs.
Detective Briggs stepped closer, her skin crawling as the images came into focus.
There were dozens of them pinned to the concrete with thumbtacks.
Most were newspaper clippings yellowed with age showing the four flight attendants.
Headlines screamed about the mysterious disappearance, the failed investigation, the heartbroken families.
But mixed among the news clippings were other pHŕšĎographs, personal ones.
Pictures of Patricia Vance at a restaurant laughing with friends.
Denise Hullbrook at a shopping mall.
Yolanda Martinez leaving her apartment building.
Bethany Cross at what looked like a family gathering.
âThese are surveillance pHŕšĎos,â Detective Briggs said, her voice ŃΚÔĐ˝Ń. âSomeone was watching them before they disappeared.â
Dr. Caspar nodded grimly.
âAnd thereâs more.â
She pointed to the bottom row of pHŕšĎographs.
These were more recent, the paper still white, the images in color rather than the faded tones of the older pictures.
They showed Ellen Vance leaving her home, getting into her car, Rachel Hullbrook, Deniseâs sister, walking through a parking lot.
Other women Detective Briggs didnât recognize, all pHŕšĎographed without their knowledge.
âHeâs been coming back here.â Detective Briggs whispered. âAll these years heâs been coming back to this room.â
On the floor beneath the camping chair lay a spiral notebook.
Dr. Caspar had already pHŕšĎographed it in place, so she carefully picked it up and handed it to Detective Briggs.
The detective opened the notebook with gloved hands.
The pages were filled with handwritten entries dated and detailed.
The earliest entry was from April 1993, 5 months after the murders.
âreturned today. Everything remains undisturbed. Theyâre sleeping peacefully. I sat with them for an hour, explaining again why it had to happen this way. P still doesnât understand, but she will in time.â
Detective Briggs felt ice forming in her stomach.
She flipped through more pages, each entry more disturbing than the last.
The writer visited the tunnel regularly, sometimes monthly, sometimes with gaps of a year or more.
He wrote about the victims as though they were still alive, as though they could hear him.
âNovember 14th, 1994, 2 years today. Brought flowers, but thereâs no place to put them down here. D would have liked yellow roses. She always wore a yellow scarf on Tuesdays. I remember everything about her. Everything.â
The entries continued through the years, showing a mind that was deeply fractured.
Sometimes the writer expressed remorse, other times justification.
Sometimes he wrote about his day-to-day life, mundane details about work and weather as though journaling to friends.
The most recent entry was dated March 2018, just 4 days before the construction crew had broken through the wall.
âTheyâre going to tear down this section. I heard the foreman talking about it. I have to move my things, but I canât move them. Theyâve been here for so long. This is where they belong. I failed them again, just like I failed them that night when everything went wrong.â
Detective Briggs looked up at Dr. Caspar.
âWe need to process every inch of this room. Fingerprints, DNA, anything that can tell us whoâs been here.â
âAlready in progress,â Dr. Caspar said, âI have a team coming in within the hour, but thereâs one more thing.â
She led Detective Briggs to the far corner of the room where one of the metal shelving units stood.
On the bottom shelf, partially hidden behind a rusted tool box, sat a small wooden box.
Dr. Casper opened it carefully.
Inside were four items, each wrapped in plastic. a womanâs wristwatch, a small gold necklace with a cross pendant, a pearl earring, and a class ring.
âTrophies,â Detective Briggs said.
âPersonal effects taken from the victims,â Dr. Casper confirmed. âWeâll need to have the families identify them, but Iâd bet anything these belong to the four flight attendants.â
Detective Briggs stared at the items, thinking about what they represented. a killer who had not only murdered four women, but who had maintained a relationship with their bodies for over two decades.
Who had stolen pieces of them to keep as momentos, who had pHŕšĎographed their families, suggesting an ongoing obsession that extended beyond the original victims.
âThis changes everything,â she said. âThis isnât just a cold case anymore. Weâre dealing with someone whoâs active, whoâs been active this whole time.â
âThose recent pHŕšĎographs of Ellen Vance and the others suggest heâs choosing new victims,â Dr. Casper finished quietly.
Detective Briggs pulled out her phone and called Captain Morrison.
He answered on the first ring.
âMorrison, we need to put protection on the families immediately. Ellen Vance, Rachel Hullbrook, any family members of the victims, and we need to find out everyone whoâs had access to this section of the airport in the last month.â
She listened to his response, then added, âThereâs a room down here, a shrine. Heâs been coming back here for 26 years, and based on what we found. I think heâs planning to kill again.â
After ending the call, Detective Briggs took one last look around the room, the camping chair faced the wall of pHŕšĎographs, positioned so that someone sitting there could study the images for hours.
She imagined the killer sitting in this cold, dark space, reliving his crimes, feeding his obsession.
âBag everything,â she told Dr. Casper. âEvery pHŕšĎograph, every page of that notebook, every fiber and fingerprint. This is our best chance at identifying him.â
As they made their way back through the tunnel, Detective Briggsâs mind raced with implications.
The killer had recent access to this sealed area, which meant he either worked in airport maintenance or security or had connections with someone who did.
The level of access required to repeatedly enter this space unnoticed suggested someone with authority, someone trusted, someone who had been hiding in plain sight for over two decades.
When they emerged from the tunnel into the construction area, Detective Briggsâs phone rang again.
It was Detective Torres.
âWeâve got a problem,â he said without preamble. âIâve been going through the personnel list from 1992, cross- referencing with current airport employees. There are seven people still working at DFW who had maintenance tunnel access back then.â
âSeven,â Detective Briggs repeated. âThatâs actually fewer than I expected.â
âThatâs not the problem,â Torres said. âThe problem is that one of them is Gerald Nichols. Heâs the current head of Terminal C maintenance operations. Heâs the one who ordered the construction work that led to discovering the bodies.â
Detective Briggs felt the pieces clicking into place with sickening clarity.
He knew.
He knew the bodies were there, and he knew the construction would expose them.
âSo, why order the work?â Torres asked.
Detective Briggs looked back at the dark opening in the wall, thinking about the final entry in that notebook.
âI failed them again because he couldnât stop it.â She said âthe airport administration ordered the renovations. He tried to prevent it, but when he couldnât, he made sure he was the one who directed the construction crew. He was trying to control the discovery.â
âShould we bring him in?â
âNot yet,â Detective Briggs said, her mind working through strategy. âIf we spook him now, he might run or destroy evidence. We need to be smart about this. Get me everything on Gerald Nichols. Work history, personal life, connections to the victims, and do it quietly. I donât want anyone tipping him off.â
She ended the call and turned to Dr. Caspar.
âHow long until you can process that room?â
â48 hours for preliminary results,â Dr. Casper said.
âBut if you need something faster,â
âI need everything as fast as you can give it to me.â Detective Briggs interrupted. âWeâre running out of time.â
As she rode the elevator back to the surface, Detective Briggs thought about Gerald Nichols.
If he was the killer, he had been working at this airport for at least 26 years, walking the same halls as thousands of unsuspecting travelers everyday, hiding behind a mask of normaly while maintaining a secret shrine to his victims in the darkness below.
And if the recent pHŕšĎographs in that room meant what she feared they meant, he was preparing to kill again.
Gerald Nichols lived in a modest ranch house in Ulysis, a suburb roughly equidistant from the airport in downtown Dallas.
Detective Briggs sat in an unmarked car across the street at 6:30 the following morning, watching as lights came on inside the house.
Beside her, Detective Torres sipped coffee from a travel mug and studied the file they had compiled on Nicholls overnight.
â54 years old, divorced twice, no children,â Torres read. âStarted working at DFW in 1988 as a junior maintenance technician. Worked his way up through the ranks. Became head of terminal C maintenance in 2003. Spotless work record. No complaints. No disciplinary actions.â
âToo perfect.â Detective Briggs muttered.
âNeighbors describe him as quiet. Keeps to himself. No close friends that anyone knows of. His ex-wives both moved out of state years ago. Weâre trying to track them down for interviews.â
The front door opened and a man emerged carrying a lunch cooler and a thermos.
He was of average height and build with thinning gray hair and wire rimmed glá´sses.
He wore the dark blue uniform of airport maintenance staff.
Nothing about his appearance suggested a killer, but Detective Briggs knew that meant nothing.
The worst monsters often looked the most ordinary.
Nicholls got into a white pickup truck and backed out of the driveway.
Detective Briggs waited until he turned the corner before starting her own vehicle.
âWeâre just observing today,â she reminded Torres. âI want to see his routine. See if he does anything unusual.â
They followed Nicholls at a discrete distance as he drove to the airport.
Instead of parking in the employee lot nearest Terminal C, he drove to a more remote lot on the far side of the complex.
Detective Briggs made note of it, but didnât find it particularly suspicious.
Many employees preferred the less crowded lots.
Nicholls entered the airport through a service entrance using his key card.
Detective Briggs and Torres couldnât follow without being obvious, so they instead headed to the airport police headquarters where Captain Morrison was coordinating with the forensics team.
âDr. Casparâs preliminary results are in.â Morrison said when they arrived.
He looked like he hadnât slept, his eyes red rimmed and his desk covered with file folders and coffee cups.
âAnd?â Detective Briggs prompted.
Morrison handed her a report.
âMultiple fingerprints recovered from the shrine room. Most are degraded, but they got several clear prints from the notebook and the wooden box containing the trophies. Theyâre running them through AIS now, but it takes time.â
âWhat about DNA?â
âHair samples from the camping chair. Theyâre processing them, but DNA analysis takes longer than prints.â
Detective Briggs scanned the report, stopping at one section.
âThey found fibers on the chair, recent fibers, not degraded like the older evidence.â
Morrison nodded.
âDark blue polyester consistent with airport maintenance uniforms. But thatâs not conclusive. Dozens of people wear those uniforms.â
Detective Torres spoke up.
âWhat about the pHŕšĎographs? The recent ones of the families.â
âWeâre having them analyzed.â Morrison said, âThe pHŕšĎo paper and printing quality suggest they were printed within the last year, probably from a home printer, not a professional lab.â
Detective Briggs set down the report and turned to the whiteboard that dominated one wall of Morrisonâs office.
He had been reconstructing the timeline of the original case, and now pHŕšĎographs of all four victims were pinned to the board alongside maps of the airport and personnel lists.
âTell me about the night of November 14th, 1992,â she said. âWalk me through everything that happened.â
Morrison stood and approached the board, his movement stiff with old guilt.
âThe four flight attendants reported for duty at the crew lounge in terminal C at 9:47 p.m. We know this because they all signed in. Their flight, American Airways 447 to Seattle, was scheduled to depart at 11:30 p.m.â
He pointed to a timeline he had drawn.
âAt 10:15 p.m., they should have been at gate C47 for pre-flight preparations. They never arrived. The gate crew á´ssumed they were running late. By 10:45 p.m., the flight supervisor tried calling them. No answer. At 11:00 p.m., the flight was delayed. At 11:30 p.m., replacement crew was called in. The original four were officially listed as no shows.â
âWhen did someone go looking for them?â Detective Briggs asked.
Morrisonâs expression darkened.
âNot until the next morning. Their supervisor filed a report at 6:00 a.m. on November 15th. Initial investigation treated it as a personnel issue, not a missing personâs case. It wasnât until family members started calling that afternoon, worried because none of the four had come home or answered their phones, that we realized something serious had happened.â
âPrecious hours lost,â Detective Briggs said.
âBy the time we started a real investigation, the trail was cold,â Morrison confirmed. âWe reviewed the crew lounge sign-in sheet. We interviewed the other staff on duty that night. We pulled what security footage existed, but we found nothing. It was like they vanished into thin air.â
Detective Torres studied the board.
âWhat about the maintenance tunnel? Did anyone check it during the original investigation?â
Morrison hesitated.
âWe did a sweep of the public areas and some of the service corridors, but the maintenance tunnels were considered low priority. They were locked, access controlled. The á´ssumption was that four women wouldnât have gone down there voluntarily, and if theyâd been taken by force, there would have been signs of struggle in a public area.â
âWho was working maintenance that night?â Detective Briggs asked.
Morrison flipped through one of his files.
âAccording to the duty roster, there were three maintenance workers on shift in terminal C. One was responding to a plumbing issue in the restrooms. One was doing routine HVAC checks and one wasâ he stopped his finger on a name.
âGerald Nicholls,â Detective Briggs said, reading over his shoulder.
Morrison nodded slowly.
âHe was á´ssigned to electrical systems inspection in the lower levels.â
The room fell silent.
Detective Briggs felt the weight of that information settling over them.
Gerald Nicholls had been working in the area where the bodies were eventually found on the night the four women disappeared.
âWhy wasnât he considered a suspect back then?â Torres asked.
âHe was interviewed,â Morrison said, pulling out a yellowed report. âI remember it.â He said he was in the suble working alone most of the night. No one could confirm his alibi, but no one could disprove it either. He seemed cooperative, genuinely shocked by the disappearances, and there was no physical evidence linking him to anything.
âBecause we didnât know to look in the right place,â Detective Briggs said bitterly.
Her phone buzzed with a text from Dr. Caspar.
âFingerprint match, call me.â
Detective Briggs stepped out of the office and dialed.
Dr. Caspar answered immediately.
âWe got a hit on the fingerprints from the notebook,â she said. âBut youâre not going to like this.â
âTell me.â
âThe prints belonged to Gerald Nicholls. Aphus matched them to Prince on file from his airport security clearance background check.â
Detective Briggs closed her eyes.
They had him.
Physical evidence placing him at the shrine, proving he had been maintaining that disturbing memorial for years.
âThereâs something else,â Dr. Caspar continued. âWe found prints from someone else, too. smaller prints, likely female. Weâre still trying to match them, but they appear on several of the more recent pHŕšĎographs.â
âHeâs not working alone,â Detective Briggs asked, surprised. âOr he has access to someone elseâs space.â
âThe female prints are overlaid on some of his prints, suggesting she handled the pHŕšĎographs after he did.â
Detective Briggs thanked her and returned to Morrisonâs office.
âWe have Nichols prints in the shrine room on the notebook and the pHŕšĎographs. We can bring him in.â
Morrison stood immediately.
âIâll get a warrant.â
âWait,â Detective Briggs said, thinking fast. âWe bring him in for questioning. He lawyers up immediately. We need more than his prince in a room. We need evidence directly linking him to the murders.â
âWe have his fingerprints at a crime scene,â Torres pointed out.
âAt a secondary crime scene,â Detective Briggs countered. âThe defense will argue the shrine room isnât where the murders occurred. Theyâll say he discovered the bodies years ago and created the shrine out of some twisted grief or fascination, but that doesnât make him the killer. We need to connect him to the actual murders.â
Morrison sank back into his chair.
âSo, what do we do?â
Detective Briggs thought about the recent pHŕšĎographs in the shrine, about Ellen Vance and the other family members who were being watched by someone with a history of killing.
âWe need to force his hand. Make him think weâre getting close. See how he reacts.â
âThatâs dangerous,â Morrison warned.
âIf he is the killer and he feels cornered,â
âHe might make a mistake.â Detective Briggs finished. âRight now, he thinks heâs safe. Heâs been safe for 26 years. We need to disrupt that sense of security.â
She turned to Torres.
âI want surveillance on him around the clock. I want to know everywhere he goes, everyone he talks to. And I want someone reviewing every inch of his work history, looking for any gaps, any unexplained absences that might correlate with other unsolved cases.â
âYou think there might be other victims?â Torres asked.
âI think a man who can kill four women and hide their bodies for 26 years while maintaining a shrine to them isnât someone who killed just once.â Detective Briggs said âthis kind of obsession doesnât come out of nowhere.â
Over the next several hours, they á´ssembled a surveillance team and reviewed Nicholsâs work history in detail.
What they found was disturbing.
In 1998, when the tunnel section had been sealed off, Nicholls had taken a two-week vacation, unusual for him.
In 2003, just before his promotion to head of maintenance, there had been another missing personâs case at the airport, a female janitor who had vanished without a trace.
The case was never solved.
âPull everything on that case,â Detective Briggs ordered. âI want to know if Nicholls was working the night she disappeared.â
As the afternoon wore on, reports came in from the surveillance team.
Nicholls had worked a normal shift, conducted routine inspections, ate lunch in the employee cafeteria.
Nothing unusual.
But at 300 p.m., he left his office and took a service elevator down to the lower levels.
âHeâs heading toward the tunnel area.â The surveillance officer radioed.
Detective Briggs grabbed her jacket.
âIâm going down there. Keep him under observation, but donât approach.â
She made her way through the airport to the construction area in Terminal C.
The tunnel entrance had been resealed with temporary barriers after the forensics team finished processing the scene.
She positioned herself in a maintenance corridor with a clear view of the area.
After 10 minutes, she saw him.
Gerald Nichols approached the barriers, looked around to ensure he was alone, and then moved one of the barriers aside.
He slipped through the opening and disappeared into the tunnel.
Detective Briggs waited, her heart pounding.
5 minutes pá´ssed, 10.
Then Nicholls emerged, his face pale, his hands shaking.
He carefully repositioned the barrier and walked quickly back toward the elevator.
She didnât confront him, didnât reveal her presence.
Instead, she waited until he was gone, then entered the tunnel herself.
The shrine room door was open.
Inside the camping chair had been moved, positioned now to face the empty al cove where the bodies had been discovered, and on the floor, placed carefully in the center of the room, was a fresh bouquet of yellow roses.
Detective Briggs pHŕšĎographed everything, then called Dr. Caspar.
âHe came back. Heâs mourning them.â
âOr saying goodbye,â Dr. Caspar suggested darkly. âIf he knows weâre getting close, he might be preparing to run or preparing to finish what he started.â
Detective Briggs said, thinking of those recent pHŕšĎographs of Ellen Vance and the other family members.
She left the tunnel and made her way back to headquarters where Captain Morrison was waiting with new information.
âWe found something in his work records,â Morrison said, spreading documents across his desk. âFor the past 5 years, Nicholls has been requesting night shifts. Specifically, he works 10:1 p.m. to 6:00 now a.m. The same shift he was working the night the flight attendants disappeared.â
âHeâs recreating it,â Detective Briggs said. âReliving it.â
Morrison nodded grimly.
âAnd thereâs more. His schedule shows he has tomorrow night off. Itâs the first night heâs had off in 3 months.â
Detective Briggs felt a chill run down her spine.
âWhatâs the date tomorrow?â
Morrison checked his calendar and his face went white.
âNovember 14th,â
âItâs the anniversary.â
26 years to the day since the four flight attendants had vanished.
And Gerald Nichols had the night off.
>>
Gerald Nichols sat in his white pickup truck, engine idling, his eyes scanning the parking lot behind building B.
His hands gripped the steering wheel so ŃΚÔĐ˝Ńly his knuckles had gone white.
Everything was falling apart.
26 years of careful planning, of maintaining control, and it was all unraveling because of that construction crew and their sledgehammers.
He had known this day might come eventually.
He had prepared for it, rehearsed it in his mind countless times.
But now that it was here, fear clawed at his chest in a way he hadnât anticipated.
Through the windshield, he saw Sarah emerge from the building.
Her backpack slung over one shoulder, her dark hair catching the afternoon sunlight.
His breath caught.
She looked so much like Bethany.
The same graceful walk, the same way of tilting her head when she was thinking.
For a moment, he was transported back to November 1992.
Watching Bethany move through the airport terminal, unaware of his presence.
Sarah approached the truck and opened the pá´ssenger door.
Gerald forced a smile, trying to appear calm.
âHey, sweetheart. How were your classes?â
She climbed in and set her backpack on the floor.
âThey were fine. Dad, where did you go this morning? You scared me.â
âJust had some errands to run,â he said, putting the truck in gear. âEverythingâs okay now.â
But Sarah was looking at him strangely, her expression more guarded than usual.
âDad, I need to ask you something.â
Geraldâs heart rate spiked.
âWhat is it?â
âThat pHŕšĎograph I found in your truck? The woman in the flight attendant uniform? Who was she?â
His mind raced.
How much did she know?
Had the police already contacted her?
He glanced in the rearview mirror and spotted what might be an unmarked police car three rows back.
They knew they had found Sarah.
âWe need to go,â he said urgently, pressing the accelerator harder than necessary.
The truck lurched forward.
âDad, youâre scaring me,â Sarah said, gripping the door handle. âWhatâs going on?â
âDid you talk to anyone today?â he demanded. âAnyone unusual? Did anyone ask you questions about me?â
Sarahâs silence was answer enough.
Gerald cursed and made a sharp turn out of the parking lot, tires squealing.
In his mirror, he saw the unmarked car following, no longer bothering with subtlety.
âDad, stop the truck,â Sarah said, her voice rising. âStop it right now.â
âI canât,â he said, taking another turn too fast. âYou donât understand, Sarah. Theyâre trying to take you away from me. Theyâre going to fill your head with lies.â
âWhat lies?â Sarah shouted. âTell me the truth. Was that woman? My mother? Was she?â
Geraldâs vision blurred with tears.
âYou werenât supposed to find out this way. I was going to tell you when you were ready.â
âTell me what? That you kidnapped me? That you murdered my mother?â
The words hung in the air like poison.
Gerald felt something inside him break.
She knew.
His Sarah, his daughter, his reason for living, knew what he had done.
âIt wasnât like that,â he said desperately, running a red light. Behind them, police sirens wailed to life. âYour mother was special. They were all special. They didnât understand how I felt about them, but I never wanted to hurt them. It just happened. It went wrong.â
âYou killed four women,â Sarah said, her voice shaking with horror and rage. âYou killed my mother and kept me prisoner my entire life.â
âI saved you,â Gerald shouted. âI raised you. I gave you everything. I loved you.â
âYouâre insane,â Sarah breathed.
Gerald swerved to avoid another car, his driving becoming more erratic as panic overwhelmed rational thought.
More police vehicles joined the chase, boxing him in from multiple directions.
He made a desperate turn onto a side street, but it á´ á´á´á´ ended at a construction site.
He slammed on the brakes, the truck skidding to a stop just feet from a chainlink fence.
Police cars surrounded them immediately, officers emerging with weapons drawn.
âGet out of the vehicle. Hands where we can see them.â
Gerald sat frozen, his mind unable to process the end of everything he had built.
Sarah was crying beside him, her hands covering her face.
âIâm sorry,â he whispered to her. âIâm so sorry, Bethany.â
âIâm not Bethany,â Sarah said through her tears. âMy name is Sarah and you took my mother from me.â
The driverâs side door was yanked open.
Hands grabbed Gerald, pulled him from the truck, forced him to the ground.
He didnât resist.
There was no point anymore.
As handcuffs clicked around his wrists, he watched Sarah being helped from the pá´ssenger side by a woman he recognized as one of the detectives who had been investigating.
âDonât hurt her,â he called out. âPlease donât hurt my daughter.â
Detective Briggs appeared in his field of vision, her expression hard.
âSheâs not your daughter. Sheâs Bethany Crossâs daughter, and you stole 25 years of her life.â
They hauled him to his feet and read him his rights, but Gerald barely heard the words.
His eyes stayed on Sarah as another officer wrapped a blanket around her shoulders and led her to a police car.
She looked back at him once, her face a mask of betrayal and grief, and then she was gone.
At Airport Police Headquarters, Gerald Nicholls was processed and placed in an interrogation room.
Detective Briggs and Captain Morrison sat across from him, a recorder running between them.
Gerald had waved his right to an attorney, much to their surprise.
âI want to tell you everything,â he said quietly. âIâm tired of carrying it alone.â
Detective Briggs exchanged a glance with Morrison, then nodded.
âStart at the beginning. November 14th, 1992.â
Gerald closed his eyes, and when he spoke, his voice was distant, as if recounting someone elseâs memories.
âI had been watching them for months. Patricia, Denise, Yolanda, and Bethany. They were so beautiful, so kind. They would smile at me when they saw me in the terminals, ask how my day was going. No one else ever did that.â
âSo, you stalked them,â Detective Briggs said flatly.
âI was learning about them,â Gerald corrected, âtheir schedules, their routines, their lives. I took pHŕšĎographs because I wanted to remember every moment. I knew Bethany was pregnant. I could see the change in her, the way she carried herself. I thought about the baby she would have, wondered if it would have her eyes.â
âAnd on November 14th,â Morrison prompted,
Geraldâs hands trembled on the table.
âI knew their shift schedule. I knew they would take the service elevator down to the lower level to access the crew entrance. I waited in the maintenance tunnel. I just wanted to talk to Bethany to tell her how I felt, but all four of them came down together.â
He paused, his breathing becoming labored.
âPatricia recognized me. She smiled and said hello. I tried to tell them why I was there. Tried to explain how special they were to me. But Denise got scared. She said I shouldnât be down there, that they were going to report me. She reached for her radio.â
âSo you attacked them,â Detective Briggs said.
âI panicked,â Gerald said, his voice breaking. âThere was a pipe on the ground, part of some repair work. I grabbed it. I just wanted them to stop, to listen, but Patricia tried to run, and I swung at her.â
âThen everything happened so fast. Yolanda was screaming. Denise was trying to pull Bethany away. I couldnât let them leave. They would tell. They would ruin everything.â
The horror of what he was describing hung heavy in the room.
Morrison had to look away.
âBethany was last,â Gerald continued, tears streaming down his face now. âShe was backing away from me, her hands on her stomach, protecting her baby. She begged me not to hurt her. She said she forgave me, that she understood I was sick, that I needed help. She was so kind even at the end.â
âBut you killed her anyway,â Detective Briggs said, her voice hard.
âMy hands were around her throat before I realized what I was doing.â Gerald whispered. âShe looked into my eyes and I saw something there. Not fear, pity. She pied me and then she was gone.â
He buried his face in his hands.
âI sat with them for hours afterward. I didnât know what to do. I knew I should turn myself in, face what I had done. But then I thought about Bethyâs baby, that innocent life. I could save it. I could raise it right. give it the love and care it deserved.â
âSo, you delivered the baby yourself?â Morrison asked, horrified.
Gerald nodded.
âEmergency C-section right there in the tunnel. I had read medical textbooks, watched videos. I thought I could do it. By some miracle, the baby survived. A little girl. She was so small, so perfect.â
âYou kept her in a storage unit for 25 years.â Detective Briggs said, âYou stole her childhood, her idenŃΚŃy, her chance at a normal life.â
âI gave her everything I could,â Gerald insisted. âI educated her, cared for her, kept her safe from a world that would have destroyed her. Sheâs brilliant, kind, everything her mother was.â
âSheâs traumatized,â Detective Briggs corrected. âSheâs a victim, just like her mother, just like the other three women you murdered.â
Gerald slumped in his chair, the weight of his crimes finally settling on him fully.
âWhat will happen to her now?â
âThatâs none of your concern,â Morrison said coldly. âWhat will happen to you is youâll spend the rest of your life in prison for four counts of firstdegree murder and kidnapping.â
âCan I see her?â Gerald asked desperately. âOne more time to say goodbye.â
âNo,â Detective Briggs said standing. âYouâll never see her again, and thatâs the least of what you deserve.â
As they led him back to the holding cell, Gerald Nichols looked smaller somehow, diminished.
The monster who had haunted the airportâs tunnels for 26 years was just a broken, pathetic man facing the consequences of his obsession.
But Detective Briggs felt no satisfaction.
Four women were still á´ á´á´á´ .
Families had still suffered for over two decades, and Sarah Nichols, nay Bethany Cross Jr. would carry the scars of her stolen childhood for the rest of her life.
The media descended on the story within hours.
By evening, every news station was covering the arrest, the discovered remains, the shocking revelation of the surviving daughter.
Captain Morrison held a press conference, carefully controlling what information was released to protect Sarahâs privacy.
In a quiet room away from the chaos, Ellen Vance sat with Sarah, two women connected by tragedy in ways neither could have imagined.
Rachel Hullbrook was there too, along with representatives from the families of Yolanda Martinez and Patricia Vance.
âYour mother was brave,â Ellen told Sarah gently, showing her pHŕšĎographs of Bethany from before the murders. âShe was the youngest of the crew, but everyone loved her. She was funny and warm and kind.â
Sarah traced her finger over her motherâs face in the pHŕšĎograph.
âI wish I could have known her.â
âShe knew you,â Rachel said. âShe was carrying you when she died. You were loved from the very beginning.â
Sarahâs shoulders shook with sobs, and Ellen pulled her into an embrace.
âYou have us now,â Ellen said. âWeâre your family, your motherâs family. Youâre not alone anymore.â
Outside the window, the sun was setting over Dallas, casting long shadows across the city.
In an airport terminal across town, pá´ssengers boarded planes, unaware of the horror that had unfolded beneath their feet decades ago.
Life continued, indifferent to the darkness that occasionally surfaced.
But for the families of the vanished crew, for Sarah, who had been born into captivity, and for the investigators who had finally brought a killer to justice, nothing would ever be quite the same.
3 months later, Ellen Vance stood in a small cemetery in Arlington, Texas, watching as four caskets were lowered into the ground side by side.
The memorial service had drawn hundreds of people. former colleagues of the flight attendants, investigators who had worked the case, and family members who had waited 26 years for this moment.
The winter sun was pale and cold, but Ellen barely felt it.
Her motherâs grave was just 30 ft away, and Ellen took some comfort knowing that Patricia would now rest near the mother who had died, still searching for her.
Sarah stood beside her, wearing a black dress Ellen had helped her pick out.
It was one of many firsts for Sarah over the past 3 months.
First time in a department store, first time choosing her own clothes, first time making decisions without Gerald Nichols controlling every aspect of her life.
The adjustment had been difficult.
Sarah was living temporarily with Ellen while she worked with therapists to process her trauma.
Some days were better than others.
Some days Sarah could barely get out of bed. overwhelmed by the reality of what had been done to her.
Other days she showed remarkable resilience, determined to build the life she had been denied.
The minister concluded the service with a prayer and people began to disperse.
âRachel Hullbrook approached them, her eyes red from crying.â
âDenise would have wanted to know you,â Rachel said to Sarah, touching her arm gently. âShe was always the nurturing one. She would have been a wonderful aunt to you.â
âI wish I could have known all of them,â Sarah said softly.
As the crowd thinned, Detective Briggs made her way over.
She had been instrumental in helping Sarah navigate the legal and practical challenges of establishing a new idenŃΚŃy, accessing education records, and beginning to build an independent life.
âThe trial date has been set.â Detective Briggs said âJuly 15th. The prosecutor wanted me to let you know that you donât have to testify if you donât want to. Geraldâs confession is detailed enough.â
Sarah considered this.
Over the past months, she had been wrestling with complicated feelings about the man she had called father for 25 years.
Part of her still remembered the kindness he had shown her, the bedtime stories, the patient tutoring, but that was increasingly overshadowed by the horror of understanding what he had done, how he had manipulated her, how he had stolen her mother from her.
âI want to testify,â Sarah said firmly. âThose women deserve to have someone speak for them, and I need to face him to tell him that Iâm not his anymore.â
Detective Briggs nodded with respect.
âYouâre stronger than you know.â
After the detective left, Ellen and Sarah walked together among the headstones.
Patriciaâs new grave marker was simple but elegant, listing her dates of birth and death and the words, âBeloved daughter, sister, and friend, forever in flight.â
âTell me about her,â Sarah said. âTell me what she was like.â
Ellen smiled, memories flooding back.
âShe was fearless. When we were kids, I was always the cautious one. But Patricia would climb the highest trees, explore the darkest parts of the woods behind our house. She wanted to see everything, experience everything.â
âIs that why she became a flight attendant?â
âThat was part of it. But she also loved people. She had this gift for making everyone feel special, feel seen. Pá´ssengers would request her flight specifically because she remembered their names, asked about their families.â
They sat on a bench near the graves and Ellen continued sharing stories.
Patricia teaching her to ride a bike.
Patricia defending her from bullies in middle school.
Patricia calling every week from whatever city she had landed in.
Always making time for family no matter how busy she was.
âShe would have fought for you,â Ellen said, âif she had known what was going to happen. If she had any chance to protect you and your mother, she would have.â
âDetective Briggs said they all tried to protect each other,â Sarah said. âIn his confession, Gerald said Yolanda threw herself in front of Denise when he attacked. Patricia tried to use her radio to call for help even after she was injured.â
âThey were heroes,â Ellen said.
Sarah pulled something from her pocket, a small pHŕšĎograph that Detective Briggs had retrieved from the evidence collected in the shrine room.
âIt showed Bethany Cross in her flight attendant uniform, smiling at the camera, one hand resting on her barely visible baby bump.â
âShe was so young,â Sarah whispered. âOnly 23,â
âBut she was excited about you.â Rachel told me that Bethany had already picked out nursery colors, had names selected. She couldnât wait to be a mother.
Tears slipped down Sarahâs cheeks.
âHe took that from both of us. He took everything.â
Ellen wrapped an arm around her shoulders.
âHe took the past, but we have the future. We have each other.â
Over the following weeks, Sarah began to find her footing.
She enrolled in college officially, this time under her legal name, Sarah Cross, which she had chosen to honor her mother.
She made friends cautiously, still learning how to navigate social relationships after a lifetime of isolation.
She also began volunteering with an organization that helped victims of kidnapping and long-term captivity.
Her unique perspective and hard one strength made her a powerful advocate for others who had survived similar orals.
Ellen watched her transformation with a mixture of pride and heartbreak.
Sarah would never get back the childhood that had been stolen from her.
Would never know the mother who had died trying to protect her.
But she was building something new, something her own.
In April, Ellen received a call from Captain Morrison.
âI thought you should know. Weâve been investigating whether there were other victims. We searched Geraldâs home thoroughly, looked through decades of records.â
Ellenâs stomach clenched,
âand we found evidence connecting him to three other unsolved disappearances over the years. All women who worked at the airport in various capacities. Weâre still working to confirm, but it appears your sister and her crew werenât his only victims.â
Ellen closed her eyes.
âHow many?â
âPossibly seven in total, but weâll probably never know for certain. heâs not cooperating with the investigation into the other cases.â
After the call ended, Ellen sat for a long time, thinking about all the families out there who might finally get answers, who might finally be able to lay their loved ones to rest.
The scope of Gerald Nicholsâs crimes was even worse than they had initially believed.
When July arrived and the trial began, Sarah kept her promise to testify.
The courtroom was packed with media, family members, and curious onlookers.
Gerald Nicholls sat at the defense table looking smaller and older than he had at his arrest.
He refused to look at Sarah when she took the stand.
âPlease state your name for the record,â the prosecutor said gently.
âMy name is Sarah Cross,â she said clearly, her voice steady. âI am the daughter of Bethany Cross, who was murdered on November 14th, 1992 by the defendant.â
Over the next two hours, Sarah described her life in captivity, the storage unit that had been her entire world, the isolation, the manipulation, the lies.
But she also spoke about her mother, about the strength Bethany had shown in her final moments, about the love that had allowed Sarah to survive even in the womb as her mother died.
âHe told me he loved me,â Sarah said, finally looking at Gerald. âBut love doesnât imprison. Love doesnât steal. Love doesnât murder. What he felt wasnât love. It was possession. And I refuse to be possessed by him anymore.â
Geraldâs face crumpled, tears streaming down his cheeks.
But Sarah didnât waver.
She had found her voice, and she was using it.
The jury deliberated for less than 4 hours before returning with a verdict.
Guilty on all counts.
Gerald Nichols was sentenced to four consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole, plus an additional 25 years for Sarahâs kidnapping.
As he was led from the courtroom, he turned one last time to look at Sarah.
âIâm sorry,â he mouthed.
Sarah stood, supported by Ellen on one side and Rachel on the other, and said loudly enough for the whole courtroom to hear.
âI forgive you for what you did to me, but I will never forgive you for what you took from my mother.â
Outside the courthouse, journalists clamorred for interviews, but Sarah pushed through them with help from Detective Briggs.
Later, in the quiet of Ellenâs home, the families of the victims gathered for a private dinner, a memorial to the women they had loved and lost.
Sarah raised her glá´ss.
âTo Patricia, Denise, Yolanda, and Bethany. To the mothers, daughters, sisters, and friends who were taken too soon. May they rest in peace, and may their memories be a blessing.â
âTo the vanished crew,â Ellen echoed, and everyone drank.
As the evening wore on and stories were shared, laughter mixing with tears, Sarah felt something shift inside her.
The weight she had carried since learning the truth about her origins didnât disappear, but it became more bearable, shared among people who understood.
She looked around the room at these women and men who had welcomed her into their grief, who had chosen to see her not as the daughter of their loved ones killer, but as another victim who deserved compá´ssion and family.
For the first time in her 25 years, Sarah Cross felt like she belonged.
Ellen Vance couldnât shake the feeling of being watched.
She stood at her kitchen window, coffee mug in hand, staring out at the quiet street, bathed in the pale light of dawn.
November 14th, 2018.
26 years exactly since Patricia had vanished.
Detective Briggs had called the previous evening with instructions that Ellen found both comforting and terrifying.
âWe have a suspect under surveillance. We believe you may be at risk. An officer will be stationed outside your house until this is resolved.â
Ellen had spotted the unmarked police car parked three houses down when she woke at 5 and a.m. unable to sleep.
The officer inside sat alert, occasionally scanning the street.
His presence should have made her feel safe, but instead it made the danger feel more real.
Her phone rang, startling her.
It was Rachel Hullbrook.
âYou canât sleep either,â Rachel said when Ellen answered.
âNo,â you I keep thinking about what the detective said, that heâs been watching us, that he might have been planning.
Rachelâs voice broke.
âThe police are protecting us,â Ellen said, trying to sound confident. âThey know who he is now. Theyâre going to stop him.â
âBut they havenât arrested him yet. Why havenât they arrested him?â
Ellen didnât have an answer to that.
Detective Briggs had explained something about evidence and building a case that would hold up in court, but Ellen didnât understand why they couldnât just lock him up and sort out the details later.
âIâm going to the police station today,â Ellen said. âDetective Briggs wants me to look at some pHŕšĎographs, see if I recognize anyone from Patriciaâs life back then.â
âBe careful,â Rachel said. âPlease be careful.â
After they hung up, Ellen got dressed and tried to eat breakfast, but her stomach was in knots.
The officer in the unmarked car followed her when she drove to the airport police headquarters an hour later, maintaining a discrete distance, but never letting her out of sight.
Detective Briggs met her in the lobby, looking like she hadnât slept in days.
Dark circles shadowed her eyes, and her clothes were rumpled.
âThank you for coming,â the detective said, leading Ellen to a conference room. âI know this is a difficult day for you.â
Ellen sat down at the table where several pHŕšĎo albums had been laid out.
âAre these from the tunnel?â
âSome of them,â Detective Briggs confirmed. âWeâre trying to establish connections between the suspect and your sister. Anything you can tell us might help.â
She opened the first album, revealing pHŕšĎographs that had been removed from the shrine room and individually preserved in evidence sleeves.
Ellenâs breath caught when she saw Patriciaâs face, young and vibrant, captured in surveillance pHŕšĎos she had never known existed.
âHe was following her,â Ellen whispered. âBefore she disappeared, he was already watching her.â
Detective Briggs nodded.
âThese pHŕšĎos span several weeks leading up to November 14th, 1992. We believe he was stalking all four women.â
Ellen studied each pHŕšĎograph carefully.
Patricia at a grocery store.
Patricia leaving the gym.
Patricia meeting friends for lunch.
In every image, she was unaware of the camera.
Living her life with no idea that someone was documenting her every move.
âI donât understand,â Ellen said. âWhy them? What made him choose these four women?â
âThatâs what weâre trying to determine,â Detective Briggs replied. âDid your sister ever mention feeling uncomfortable at the airport, being followed or watched?â
Ellen thought back, reaching through decades of memory.
âShe complained once about a maintenance worker who kept showing up wherever she was. She thought it was coincidence at first, but it happened several times in one week. She mentioned it to her supervisor.â
Detective Briggs leaned forward.
âDo you remember when this was?â
âMaybe a month before she disappeared. She said the supervisor talked to the worker and it stopped.â
âDid she ever tell you the workerâs name?â
Ellen shook her head.
âJust that he was older, kind of quiet. She felt bad about reporting him because she thought maybe he was just lonely and didnât mean any harm.â
Detective Briggs made notes, her expression grim, that matched the profile they were building of Gerald Nicholls, a quiet man, socially isolated, who had developed an obsession with women who showed him any kindness or attention.
âThereâs something else I need to tell you.â Detective Briggs said, âWe found more recent pHŕšĎographs in the room where we discovered the shrine. PHŕšĎographs of you.â
Ellen felt the blood drain from her face.
âof me.â
The detective pulled out a separate folder and opened it carefully.
Inside were pHŕšĎos Ellen recognized immediately.
Herself leaving her accounting office.
Herself at her motherâs funeral 6 months ago.
Herself grocery shopping just last week.
âOh god.â Ellen breathed. âHow long has he been watching me?â
âWeâre not certain. The pHŕšĎos appear to have been taken over the past year, but there could be more we havenât found yet.â
Ellenâs hands shook as she looked through the images.
The idea that someone had been following her, pHŕšĎographing her while she went about her daily life was violating in a way she couldnât fully articulate.
âWhy?â She asked. âWhat does he want with me?â
Detective Briggs chose her words carefully.
âWe believe heâs been maintaining a connection to the victims through their families. You represent Patricia to him. Youâre part of his fantasy, his ongoing relationship with the women he killed.â
Ellen pushed the pHŕšĎos away, feeling sick.
âYou said you have him under surveillance. Where is he right now?â
âHeâs at home. We have officers watching him. He wonât get near you. I promise.â
But even as Detective Briggs said it, her phone buzzed with an urgent message.
She glanced at the screen and her expression changed.
âExcuse me,â she said, standing abruptly and stepping out of the room.
Ellen sat alone with the pHŕšĎographs spread before her, trying to process everything.
Her sister had been murdered by someone who had become obsessed with her, and now that same person was obsessed with Ellen herself.
The thought made her skin crawl.
Out in the hallway, Detective Briggs was on the phone with Detective Torres.
âWhat do you mean you lost him?â
âHe left his house 20 minutes ago,â Torres said, his voice ŃΚÔĐ˝Ń with stress. âWe followed him to a shopping center, watched him go into a store, but he never came out. We checked the store, the surrounding area. Heâs gone.â
âHow is that possible? You had eyes on him the whole time.â
âThere must be a back exit we didnât know about. Weâre canvasing now, but he had at least a 15-minute head start.â
Detective Briggs cursed under her breath.
âPut out a bolo on his vehicle, alert all units, and get someone to Ellen Vanceâs house immediately. If heâs running, he might go after the families.â
She returned to the conference room, trying to keep her expression neutral.
âEllen, I need you to stay here for a while. Weâre taking some additional precautions.â
Ellen studied her face.
âSomethingâs wrong. What happened?â
âWeâve temporarily lost sight of our suspect. Itâs probably nothing, just a miscommunication, but I want you somewhere safe until we locate him again.â
Ellen stood, her fear evident.
âYou lost him. The man who killed my sister, whoâs been pHŕšĎographing me, and you lost him.â
âWe have officers searching everywhere he might go,â Detective Briggs á´ssured her. âBut I need you to trust me and stay here where we can protect you.â
Before Ellen could respond, Captain Morrison rushed into the room.
âWe found his truck abandoned in a parking garage downtown. No sign of Nicholls.â
Detective Briggs felt her stomach drop.
âHeâs running. Pull his credit cards, his bank accounts. Check traffic cameras. I want to know where he went.â
Morrison hesitated.
âThereâs something else. We got the results back on those hair samples from the shrine room. The DNA analysis is complete.â
âAnd?â
âThe hair belongs to Gerald Nicholls as expected. But thereâs another DNA profile, too. A female. We ran it through Cotus and got a familiar match.â
Detective Briggs waited, dreading what was coming.
âThe female DNA is related to Bethany Cross.â Morrison said quietly. âItâs her daughter.â
Ellen gasped.
âBethany had a daughter. Bethany was pregnant when she disappeared.â
Detective Briggs said the pieces falling into place with horrifying clarity.
âThe medical examiner mentioned she found evidence of a pregnancy in the remains early term. We á´ssumed the fetus didnât survive.â
âBut if thereâs a daughter,â Morrison said.
Detective Briggs finished the thought.
âHe kept her. Gerald Nicholls took Bethany Crossâs baby and kept her alive all these years.â
The room fell silent as the full horror of that revelation sank in.
Somewhere out there was a young woman approximately 25 years old who had no idea she was the daughter of a murdered flight attendant, a woman who had been raised by her motherâs killer.
âWe need to find her,â Ellen said urgently. âIf Nicholls is running, he might hurt her.â
Detective Briggs was already pulling up Nicholls file, looking for any information about family members or dependent.
He listed himself as single, no children on all his employment records.
âCheck property records,â Morrison suggested. âMaybe he has a second residence we donât know about.â
Torres called back.
âWe pulled his bank records. Thereâs a recurring payment every month to a storage facility in Grand Prairie. Unit 247. The accountâs been active for 23 years.â
Detective Briggs grabbed her jacket.
âGet me the address and send backup. If heâs been hiding someone there,â
She didnât finish the sentence.
They all knew what they might find in that storage unit.
Either evidence of another victim or a young woman who had lived her entire life as the captive of a serial killer.
Ellen stood.
âIâm coming with you.â
âAbsolutely not.â Detective Briggs said firmly. âYou need to stay here where youâre safe.â
âIf Bethyâs daughter is out there, she deserves to know her mother didnât abandon her. She deserves to know the truth.â
Detective Briggs wanted to argue, but she saw the determination in Ellenâs eyes.
This woman had spent 26 years searching for her sister, and now there was a chance to save someone elseâs daughter.
âYou stay in the car,â Detective Briggs finally said. âNo matter what happens, you stay in the car with an officer.â
âUnderstood.â Ellen nodded.
20 minutes later, a convoy of police vehicles pulled into the storage facility in Grand Prairie.
The manager met them at the gate, nervous and confused.
âUnit 247 thatâs been rented by the same guy for over 20 years. Never laid on a payment, never any complaints.â
âOpen it,â Detective Briggs ordered.
They made their way through the maze of storage units to number 247.
It was larger than most, a climate controlled unit at the back of the facility.
The manager unlocked the padlock and rolled up the metal door.
Inside was not the dungeon Detective Briggs had feared.
Instead, she found what looked like a small, carefully maintained living space.
There was a cot with clean bedding, a small refrigerator, bookshelves filled with novels and textbooks, a portable television.
In the corner sat a desk with a laptop, and neatly organized school supplies.
On the wall hung a bulletin board covered with pHŕšĎographs, certificates, and awards.
Detective Briggs stepped closer and felt her heart sink.
The pHŕšĎos showed a young woman at various ages, a child at a school play, a teenager accepting an academic award, a young woman in a graduation cap and gown.
âSheâs real,â Morrison breathed beside her. âHe really kept Bethyâs daughter alive.â
But the unit was empty now.
Whoever had been living here was gone, and so was Gerald Nichols.
On the desk, Detective Briggs found a note written in neat feminine handwriting.
âDad said we had to leave. He said it wasnât safe anymore. I donât understand whatâs happening. Iâm scared.â
The note was dated that morning.
The laptop sat on the evidence table at airport police headquarters, its screen glowing in the dim conference room.
The tech specialist, a young man named Kevin Park, typed rapidly while Detective Briggs, Captain Morrison, and Detective Torres watched over his shoulder.
âThe browsing history is extensive,â Kevin said. âLots of educational sites, community college course pages, job search websites. Whoever used this computer was trying to build a normal life.â
âWhat about emails?â Detective Briggs asked. âSocial media.â
Kevin shook his head.
âThatâs the strange part. No email account, no Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, nothing. Itâs like she didnât exist online beyond these educational sites.â
âHe kept her isolated,â Morrison said grimly. âNo digital footprint means no connections to the outside world.â
âWait,â Kevin said, clicking on a folder. âThereâs something here. A journal kept as word documents. entries going back years.â
He opened the most recent file dated November 13th, 2018, just yesterday.
Detective Briggs leaned in to read.
âDad has been acting strange all week. He keeps staring at me like heâs trying to memorize my face. Tonight, he told me we have to leave the storage unit tomorrow, that itâs not safe to stay here anymore. He wonât tell me why. He wonât tell me anything. Iâm 25 years old and Iâve never had a real home. Never had friends. Never been allowed to go anywhere without him watching. He says itâs because the world is dangerous because people would hurt me if they knew about me. But Iâm starting to wonder if the danger is him. I found something in his truck last week. A pHŕšĎograph of a woman who looks like me. She was wearing a uniform, a flight attendant uniform. When I asked him about it, he got angry in a way Iâve never seen before. He said I was never supposed to see that. He said I reminded him of someone he lost. What if Iâm not his daughter? What if everything heâs told me is a lie?â
The room fell silent.
Detective Briggs felt a weight settling on her chest.
This young woman had spent her entire life in captivity, never knowing her real mother, never knowing the truth.
âKeep reading,â she said quietly.
Kevin scrolled to an earlier entry from 6 months ago.
âDad got me enrolled at community college. I start next month. I canât believe it. After all these years of homeschooling in this storage unit, Iâm finally going to meet other people. Heâs nervous about it. Made me promise not to tell anyone about where we live or about him. He made me memorize a fake address in case anyone asks. I have to use the name he gave me, Sarah Nichols. But sometimes I wonder what my real name should be. Sometimes I have dreams about a woman with dark hair singing to me. When I wake up, I can almost remember the song, but then it fades away.â
Morrison touched Detective Briggsâs shoulder.
âWe need to find her before he does something drastic. if he thinks weâre closing in, if heâs panicking.â
âHe wonât hurt her,â Detective Briggs said, though she wasnât entirely sure she believed it. âHeâs kept her alive for 25 years. Sheâs important to him.â
âSheâs a liability now,â Torres countered. âSheâs evidence, and according to that journal entry, sheâs starting to ask questions.â
Detective Briggsâs phone rang.
It was the officer stationed outside Ellen Vanceâs house.
âDetective, you need to know something. Iâve been reviewing the security camera footage from Ms. Vanceâs neighborhood. Thereâs a white pickup truck thatâs driven past her house four times in the last week. Same truck we IDed as belonging to Nicholls.â
âHeâs been stalking her in person,â Detective Briggs said.
She turned to Morrison.
âWe need to find out if Sarah Nichols enrolled at any local community colleges. If she did, she might be there right now.â
Kevin was already searching.
âDallas County Community College has a Sarah Nichols enrolled. Started classes in September. Her schedule shows she has a psychology class this morning at 10:00.â
Detective Briggs checked her watch.
It was 9:15 a.m.
âWhich campus?â
âBrook Haven in North Dallas.â
They were in the car within minutes.
Torres driving while Detective Briggs called ahead to campus security.
The traffic was mercifully light and they made it to the college in 25 minutes.
The campus security director met them at the main administration building.
âSarah Nichols is listed in Dr. Marshallâs introduction to psychology class. It meets in building C, room 214. Class started 15 minutes ago.â
They made their way quickly across the campus trying not to draw attention.
Detective Briggsâs mind raced with scenarios.
If Gerald Nichols was here, if he had come to get Sarah before they could reach her, there was no telling what he might do.
Building C was a modern structure with large windows and open hallways.
They took the stairs to the second floor and approached room 214 cautiously.
Through the small window in the door, Detective Briggs could see approximately 30 students seated in rows listening to a professor lecture about behavioral psychology.
And there in the third row sat a young woman with dark hair pulled back in a ponytail.
She was taking notes diligently, completely absorbed in the lecture.
Her profile was unmistakable, the shape of her face, the set of her eyes.
She looked exactly like the pHŕšĎographs of Bethany Cross.
âThatâs her,â Detective Briggs whispered.
They waited outside the classroom, not wanting to cause a scene.
Detective Briggs positioned uniformed officers at all the building exits just in case Nicholls tried to grab her.
The hour crawled by with agonizing slowness.
When the class finally ended and students began filing out, Detective Briggs stepped forward.
âSarah Nichols.â
The young woman looked up startled.
Up close, the resemblance to Bethany Cross was even more striking.
She had the same warm brown eyes, the same delicate features.
âYes,â she said uncertainly, clutching her textbooks to her chest.
Detective Briggs showed her badge.
âIâm Detective Sandra Briggs with the airport police. I need you to come with me, please. Youâre not in trouble, but we need to talk to you about your father.â
Sarahâs face went pale.
âWhatâs happened? Is he okay?â
âLetâs go somewhere private where we can talk.â
They led her to a small office that the campus security director made available.
Sarah sat down, her hands shaking.
âPlease, you have to tell me whatâs going on. Whereâs my dad?â
Detective Briggs pulled up a chair opposite her, trying to figure out how to explain a horror that had spanned over two decades.
âSarah, what Iâm about to tell you is going to be very difficult to hear. We believe that the man you know as your father, Gerald Nicholls, is responsible for a serious crime.â
âWhat kind of crime?â Sarahâs voice was barely a whisper.
âIn November 1992, four flight attendants disappeared from Dallas Fort Worth airport. Their bodies were discovered 3 weeks ago. We have evidence that connects Gerald Nichols to their murders.â
Sarah stared at her uncomprehending.
âThatâs impossible. My dad works at the airport, but he would never. Heâs not a murderer.â
âOne of those four women was Bethany Cross.â Detective Briggs continued gently. âShe was 23 years old when she disappeared, and she was pregnant.â
Sarah went very still.
Detective Briggs could see her mind working, making connections she didnât want to make.
âWe ran DNA analysis on evidence from the crime scene.â Detective Briggs said, âYour DNA was found there, Sarah. your Bethany Crossâs daughter.â
âNo,â Sarah said, shaking her head. âNo, thatâs not possible. My mother died when I was born. Thatâs what he told me. She died and he raised me alone.â
âYour mother was murdered,â Detective Briggs said. âHating the brutality of the words, but knowing Sarah deserved the truth.â âGerald Nichols killed her and three other women. He took you from her and has been keeping you hidden all these years.â
Sarah stood abruptly, backing away.
âYouâre lying. This is some kind of mistake. Heâs my father. He raised me. He took care of me.â
âHe kept you prisoner,â Torres said from where he stood by the door. âYou lived in a storage unit,â Sarah, âYou had no friends, no real idenŃΚŃy. Thatâs not a father. Thatâs a captor.â
Tears streamed down Sarahâs face.
âBut he loved me. He taught me to read. He made sure I ate healthy food. He got me into college. Why would he do those things if he was a monster?â
âBecause you looked like your mother,â Detective Briggs said softly. âYou were his connection to Bethany. In his twisted mind, he was keeping her alive through you.â
Sarah sank back into the chair, her whole body shaking.
âThe pHŕšĎograph in his truck, the woman in the flight attendant uniform. That was her. That was my real mother.â
Detective Briggs pulled up a pHŕšĎo on her phone, one of Bethany Cross from before the murders.
âThis is Bethany, your mother.â
Sarah took the phone with trembling hands and stared at the image.
âI look just like her.â
âYou do. And your mother loved you, Sarah. She wanted you. What happened to her wasnât her choice.â
âWhere is he now?â Sarah asked. âWhereâs Gerald?â
âWe donât know. He disappeared this morning. We think he might try to contact you.â
Sarah wiped her eyes and when she looked up, something had changed in her expression.
The shock was giving way to something harder, more determined.
âHe will try to contact me. He always does when Iâm at school. He texts me every hour to check on me.â
âHe has your cell phone number?â Detective Briggs asked.
Sarah pulled out a simple flip phone from her bag.
âHe gave me this phone 2 years ago. It can only call and text him. No internet, no other contacts allowed.â
Detective Briggs looked at Torres.
âWe can use this. If he reaches out to her,â
âI can help you catch him,â Sarah said quietly. âTell me what to do.â
Over the next hour, they prepared Sarah for what might come.
The tech team set up equipment to trace any calls or texts that came to her phone.
A female officer dressed in civilian clothes would pose as a student and stay close to Sarah in case Nichols appeared in person.
As they worked, Detective Briggs learned more about Sarahâs life.
She had been raised in isolation, homeschooled using materials Nicholls purchased, allowed out only for carefully supervised trips to the library or grocery store.
He had controlled every aspect of her existence while telling her it was for her own protection.
âI tried to run away once,â Sarah admitted when I was 16. âI made it as far as a bus station before he found me. He didnât hit me or anything. He just cried. He told me that if I left, people would take me away and Iâd never see him again. He made it sound like I was the one abandoning him.â
âClassic manipulation,â Detective Briggs said, making you feel guilty for wanting freedom.
At noon, Sarahâs phone buzzed.
A text from Nicholls.
âAre you okay? Where are you?â
Sarah looked to Detective Briggs, who nodded.
Sarah typed back.
âIâm at school. Just finished psych class. Where are you? You were gone when I woke up.â
The response came quickly.
âHad to run an errand. Iâll pick you up after your next class. 2:00 p.m. Wait for me in the usual spot.â
âUsual spot?â Detective Briggs asked.
âThe parking lot behind building B.â Sarah said. âHe always picks me up there because there are fewer people around.â
Detective Briggs immediately began coordinating with her team.
They would have unmarked cars in position, plain clothes officers strategically placed.
When Nicholls arrived, they would take him.
The hours until 2:00 dragged.
Sarah attended her next class with the undercover officer, trying to act normal while knowing her whole world had been turned upside down.
Detective Briggs positioned herself with a clear view of the parking lot, watching for Nicholsâs white pickup truck.
At 1:55 p.m., the truck pulled into the lot.
5 years after the trial, on a warm November morning, Sarah Cross stood at a podium in the main terminal of Dallas Fort Worth International Airport.
Behind her, a bronze memorial had been unveiled featuring the names and pHŕšĎographs of Patricia Vance, Denise Hullbrook, Yolanda Martinez, and Bethany Cross.
The inscription read, âIn memory of four dedicated flight attendants who lost their lives in service, may their courage and kindness never be forgotten.â
Sarah, now 30 years old, had earned her degree in psychology and was working as a counselor specializing in trauma recovery.
She wore a simple blue dress and around her neck hung a gold cross that had belonged to her mother returned to her from the evidence locker.
â5 years ago,â Sarah began, her voice carrying across the crowd that had gathered. âI learned the truth about my origins. It was the most devastating and liberating moment of my life. Devastating because I discovered the depth of evil that exists in the world. liberating because I also discovered the strength of love and resilience.â
Ellen Vance sat in the front row, smiling through tears.
Beside her were Rachel Hullbrook, Captain Morrison, and Detective Briggs, all of whom had become important figures in Sarahâs life.
âMy mother, Bethany Cross, was 23 years old when she died,â Sarah continued. âShe was excited about becoming a mother. She had dreams for her future. All four of these women had dreams, had families who loved them, had so much life left to live.â
She paused, gathering her emotions.
âGerald Nichols tried to erase them. He tried to make their deaths invisible, their lives forgotten. But he failed because we remember. We honor them. We carry them forward.â
Sarah gestured to the memorial.
âThis monument stands as a reminder that evil may hide in plain sight, but truth will eventually surface. Justice may be delayed, but it will prevail. And love, even love that seems lost forever, finds a way to endure.â
As she concluded her speech, airport employees released four white doves into the terminalâs soaring atrium.
The birds circled once, then flew toward the windows and the bright Texas sky beyond.
After the ceremony, Sarah walked with Ellen to the lower levels of Terminal C to the section where the maintenance tunnel had been.
The area had been completely renovated, transformed into a bright, modern space.
A small plaque on the wall marked where the bodies had been discovered, but the darkness had been driven out by light and memory.
âDo you ever regret it?â Ellen asked. âLearning the truth? Some people might prefer not to know.â
Sarah considered the question.
âThe truth was painful. It still is, but it set me free. Iâm not living in a storage unit anymore. Not physically or emotionally. Iâm building the life my mother wanted for me.â
They stood together in silence, honoring the space where so much tragedy had unfolded, where four women had lost their lives, and one small girl had against all odds survived.
âYour mother would be proud of you,â Ellen said softly.
âSo would your sister,â Sarah replied.
As they made their way back to the terminal, Sarah thought about the long journey from that storage unit to this moment.
The therapy sessions, the nightmares, the slow process of learning to trust and to hope.
It hadnât been easy.
Some days it still wasnât, but she had survived.
And more than that, she had found purpose in her pain.
Every person she helped heal from trauma, every survivor she counseledled through their darkest moments, was a testament to her motherâs strength and the love that had sustained Sarah, even when she didnât know its source.
Gerald Nichols was serving his sentences in a maximum security prison.
Sarah had received letters from him over the years, letters she returned unopened.
She didnât need his apologies or explanations.
She had found her own truth, her own peace.
Outside the airport, Sarah paused to look up at the planes taking off into the November sky.
Each one carrying pá´ssengers to new destinations, new lives.
She thought about her motherâs love of flying, of seeing the world from above.
âIâm going to travel,â Sarah announced suddenly. âIâve spent my whole life in one place. Itâs time to see the world.â
Ellen smiled.
âWhere will you go first?â
Sarah thought about it, remembering stories she had heard about her motherâs favorite routes.
âSeattle. Thatâs where flight 447 was supposed to go. I want to complete that journey for them.â
âThen thatâs where youâll go,â Ellen said. âAnd Iâll go with you if you want company.â
âIâd like that.â
As they walked to the parking garage, Sarah felt the weight of the past settling into something she could carry.
Not forgotten. never forgotten but integrated into who she was becoming.
She was Sarah Cross, daughter of Bethany Cross, survivor, counselor, advocate.
She was the living legacy of four women who had walked into an airport one November night and never walked out.
But their story didnât end in that dark tunnel.
It continued in Sarah, in the memorial that would stand for generations, in the justice that had finally been served.
The vanished crew had been found.
The darkness had been brought to light, and life, precious and fragile and beautiful, went on.
Sarah looked back one last time at the airport terminal, at the place that held so much pain and now so much meaning.
Then she climbed into Ellenâs car, ready to move forward.
Carrying her motherâs memory like wings, the flight attendants memorial stood silent in the terminal behind them, bronze and eternal, a reminder that some stories, no matter how dark their beginning, can find their way toward hope