Bitter Waters (18 page)

Read Bitter Waters Online

Authors: Wen Spencer

Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #General

“Fine.” Max said. He looked up at the ceiling.

“Well?”

“I'm counting.” Max said. “I told you that I don't have easy numbers to hand out.

“Rough estimate, I'd say a hundred million dollars—”

“Shit!” Sam said. “Why do you even work?”

“What would I do otherwise? Sit at home and listen to the clock?” Max asked.

They listened to the grandfather clock tick out ten seconds before Sam said, “Then travel around the world. Go snorkeling in Hawaii. Visit Russia.”

“Go to a place where I don't know a single soul for thousands of miles? Where I won't even understand what the people around me are saying?”

“It just seems insane that you do something so dangerous for work.”

“By risking my life, I'm reminded that I still have it.” Max swept the briefcase off the desk. “Besides, I get to help people that desperately need it.”

CHAPTER NINE

Bennett Detective Agency, Shadyside, Pennsylvania
Wednesday, September 15, 2004

It was the end of Rennie's half an hour, so Ukiah called Indigo and told her that the kidnappers had sent a ransom note by messenger.

“Ransom?” she repeated as if stunned.

He told her the amount. “Max is going to pay it. I've got the ransom note here, but we're heading out to the bank to collect the rest of the money. Bear went off with the messenger to talk to his dispatcher . . .”

“What?” It was more an exclamation than a question. “You called the Pack first?”

“They were here when the package arrived. Kittanning's finger was included in the ransom note.”

Indigo made a hurt noise, like someone had struck her. “The lab will want it to test—oh, oh!” Realization had hit her. “What is it now?”

“A wooly bear caterpillar. I've got to figure out what it will eat. It's hungry.”

“They eat weeds: grasses and broadleaf plants and wildflowers. The plants are called herbaceous. I did a paper on wooly bears in a college biology class. When I was taking care of Kitt, I—I found one and let it crawl on his fingers and told him all about them!”

He managed to swallow down the comment of “Thankfully you hadn't shown him a house fly.” The thought was far
too macabre to deal with. “The ransom note says they'll call at three.”

“I'll meet you to get the ransom note and then arrange to have a trace set up on the office line. Tell the Pack to stay off the phones. I really wish you hadn't gotten them involved. Hmmm?” The sound muted for a moment as she covered the receiver. “We've got a match on the fingerprints! The perp is Adam Rudolph Goodman. He did time in San Quentin Prison for convictions of sex with minors. The last known address for him is California though.”

“Do you have a social security number for him?”

She read it off. “I'll make a copy of the file. We're putting an APB on him.”

Ukiah told her which bank to meet them at, and hung up. He was writing down the info on Goodman when Max came to his door.

“Ready?”

“Indigo has a name and soc on the perp.” He held out the note to Max. “They don't know where to find him, though.”

“We can run a background check on him, see what we can pull up,” Max said.

“How about I do it while you're gone,” Sam said. “It still hurts to walk and two is already an overkill.”

“Okay.” Max took out his PDA, noted the information into it, and then passed the note on to Sam. “Alicia is good with this type of search, and she knows how to get hold of Chino and Janey. They follow orders well, but they need to be shoved in the right direction occasionally.”

Max did a quick pocket pat and came up with his key ring. “Here's keys to the Volvo if you need to go someplace. Alicia knows where we keep the spare office keys, and she can show you how to work the security system.”

“Okay, okay, okay. Go!”

 

While most of the mansion's grounds were kept immaculate by a landscaping firm, a narrow strip of land behind the garage fell into a no-man's-land. Since the weeds stayed low from lack of sun and rain, no one cared. As Max maneuvered the Hummer out of the narrow parking bay, Ukiah plucked a
handful of various leaves, making sure that none had been treated with poison.

At the first red light, Max watched Ukiah offer up the leaves to Kittanning's wooly bear. “If we had to, can we grow Kittanning back with just that? We can just feed it like crazy, and demand that it grows.”

Ukiah winced; more than once he had shared Kittanning's memories of being tortured until he changed from a mouse into a baby. Hex had simply supplied food, a desired goal, and lots of pain. Sealed in a box, there had been no escape except through compliance. Perhaps if Kittanning had been more than a fistful of cells, he could have resisted. In the end, Kittanning refocused the same mechanics of their extraordinary healing abilities into increasing body mass just to escape the agony.

“Even if it was that simple,” Ukiah said, “I'm not sure I could stand hurting Kittanning like that.”

Max shifted uncomfortably at that thought, but pressed on. “But can we? Or did the Pack destroy the machine that Hex used?”

“I'm not sure what happened to Hex's machine,” Ukiah admitted. “But it wouldn't be hard to duplicate the effects. We could grow a baby from the caterpillar, inducing it to change to a larger life-form when the current form reached its limit, and probably in as few as three steps: caterpillar, octopus, baby.”

“Octopus?”

“Bones slow growth down. Soft tissue is less structured, and thus faster growing.”

“Ahhh.” Max made a sound of enlightenment, and then confusion clouded his features again. “So why isn't it simple?”

“We'd never really get
Kittanning
back,” Ukiah warned. “Even if we broke this caterpillar down to two smaller creatures, say two ladybugs, and used one as a memory holder while we pushed the other to grow and change. Even then, it would be like Little Slow Magic and I. We were Magic Boy together; but now that we're combined, I'm still Ukiah with Little Slow Magic's saved memories from Magic Boy.”

“Because of Prime's mutation?”

What set Prime apart from all the rest of the Ontongard was that Prime remained an individual after being infected by the Ontongard viral code. It wasn't clear if the mutation had been a result of the host's biology, or the Ontongard that infected him, but the resulting being seemed unique in the long history of the Ontongard. As far as the Pack could determine, the individuality was an expression of how Prime's cells stored genetic memories. While the Ontongard basically suffixed all memories directly to their sole memory base, unable to determine where they began and someone else ended, the Pack stored “borrowed” memories separately from those they experienced firsthand. Because he and Little Slow Magic had once been one creature, Ukiah needed to stop and think which memories were his, but he could tell. With Rennie's memories, the difference was much more distinct.

“Yes. What we would have is a baby with memories from Kittanning, but wasn't him.”

“Would it matter that much?” Max asked. “I can see it being different with you and Little Slow Magic. Both of you had ninety years of memories built up, separate from one another. Kittanning was only three months old.”

“The mouse that Hex used to make Kittanning had my hyper-condensed memories and the fresh Pack memories Rennie gave me. Even though Kittanning has forgotten much of those memory sets in the last three months, he still had his personality formed by it. He's so headstrong that Hex probably couldn't have used him for breeding, even after he'd forgotten everything about me and the Pack.”

Max followed the logic. “So the new baby wouldn't have the same scope to build on.”

“Scope.” Ukiah nodded. “Kittanning knew Hex had made him and more importantly, because of those condensed memories, why. Nor did he forget any of that; by snarling in Hex's face the day we found him, he changed those borrowed memories to his own. The new Kittanning would lose those memories as we forced him through shapes, and only know that we tormented him until he was the shape we wanted him to be.”

“We'd be his torturers, not his rescuers.”

“Yes,” Ukiah said bleakly.

 

They arrived at the main office of Citizens Bank downtown minutes after it opened. Max asked for the manager and after his name had been passed on, the manager Fred Gross came out to greet them warmly.

“What can I do for you, Max?”

“My godson has been kidnapped.”

“Oh, dear God, I'm so sorry.”

“The ransom is two hundred thousand. I've got forty thousand here.” He tapped his briefcase. “I need a hundred and sixty thousand in twenties.”

“Good thing you came here and early,” Fred said. “Most of our branches have a currency limit of two hundred and fifty thousand, and that includes coins, ones, fives, tens, and so forth.”

“We only have a few hours to get this together.”

“Well, luckily, we have four ATMs. Normally our currency limit isn't much higher than the branches, but the ATMs are allocated up to eighty thousand each, half of which is twenties. We can raid those.”

Max took out his laptop, sat it on Fred's desk, and pulled up a spreadsheet. “The next question is, where am I going to pull it from?”

“Let me get a Currency Transaction Report form.” Fred stood up. “And have Susie start pulling together the money. A hundred and sixty thousand, right?”

Fred left them alone, Max working through his spreadsheets. Ukiah took out Kittanning's memory and made sure it was getting enough air.

“The trick is going to be liquidating things that Citizens will let me tap today,” Max murmured. “I could write a check from any number of places, but they'll want a couple days to let something that big clear through.”

“Do you think the reason the ransom was two hundred thousand was because the kidnappers knew that was about the limit we'll be able to get, currency-wise, from a bank in a day?”

“Maybe.” Max leaned back and looked out the open door, where Fred recruited a second teller to help gather the ransom. “This always makes me feel like Jed Clampett.”

“Who?”

“A character on a TV show about rich hillbillies. It was supposed to be funny, as if somehow someone not born to wealth couldn't learn to adapt. It's not hard at all—people come out of the woodwork to show you how to spend your money.”

 

Indigo met them in the bank lobby, the lack of sleep showing on her face.

Ukiah folded her into a hug. “You okay?”

Indigo nodded her head. “But if Rennie Shaw messes up this investigation, I'm going to nail him to the nearest wall.”

“I'm sorry,” Ukiah said because he couldn't promise that Rennie wouldn't. “The Dogs thought it might be a trap to lure us to the Oliver Building.”

“What?”

“Well, it seemed sensible at the moment. The more I've thought about it, the more it doesn't make sense. I was so angry this morning that I could barely think.”

Her annoyance drained away, and she whispered, “Where is Kittanning's memory?”

He took the small box out of his breast pocket and lifted off the lid. She pressed a trembling hand to her mouth and held it there as she blinked away a shimmer of tears.

“I suppose it could be worse,” she finally whispered. “At least he'll grow that finger back.”

He agreed to that, but, privately, he worried that it would get worse. Certainly, if Kittanning grew the finger back too quickly, he was bound to weird out his kidnappers. Unless, of course, they had maimed him knowing that he'd recover. That in itself led to horrific thoughts.

He made sure that the memory was healthy, if not totally happy, and slipped it back into his pocket.

“I've copied the files.” Indigo forced herself back to being just business. She handed him a thick folder. He gave her the ransom note, tucked in a Ziploc bag. She held it up to the
light. “This is going to have fingerprints all over it, but if Goodman's sidekick doesn't have a record, we're not going to have her prints on file.”

“I'm the only one that handled it on our end. My gun permit has my prints.”

She nodded and tucked away the bag. “I did some digging into Hutchinson, to see if he was telling you the truth.” She hesitated, obviously torn between loyalties. “The Temple of New Reason is a classic for why Homeland Security was created in the first place. The central files have reports from nearly every intelligence agency. The FBI is investigating them because of the possible kidnapping and brainwashing of their wealthier members. The ATF has files on their known weapons purchases, which are substantial. From the purchase of certain equipment, the NSA suspects that they're carrying on wiretapping. The DEA is looking for them in cases linked to the sale of a new designer drug. There are files flagged
NEED TO KNOW ONLY
which seems to indicate that they've hacked into classified military systems.”

“But there's something he's lying about?”

“The most recent file is the John Doe, alias Zip, stopped on the turnpike. Hutchinson isn't the agent on the report, a Glenn Chambers is. Chambers obviously saw the case as a dead end: a man dead of natural causes in a car obviously borrowed from another cult member.”

“What about the photographs?”

“He notes them, but states that there's no way to identify the subjects. Apparently the photograph with Ari Johnson was the key to establishing your identity, but there's no report on Hutchinson talking to Johnson or you. I honestly think he's gone rogue; I've got a query in to his superiors to see if they know what he's doing up here.”

 

There was no sign of the Dewey Cheatum and Howe law firm at the Oliver Building. The suite listed was empty. Amazingly, the Dog Warriors had scouted the offices without unduly manhandling anyone. They had verified that the Ontongard were nowhere to be found and left the actual questioning to the FBI.

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