Dead of Night (35 page)

Read Dead of Night Online

Authors: Randy Wayne White

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General

Biologist, my ass.
The woman still had connections in Russia; former KGB people, black ops specialists. She looked at her watch—a little after 8:00 A.M. in Moscow. Just for the hell of it, she wrote an e-mail asking if anyone had additional information on Ford. She sent it to several addresses, not expecting much.
Surprise.
An hour later, after showering yet again, Dasha checked her e-mail before heading for bed in the guest room. She’d already received three responses.
Two wrote that there was no data available—“suggestive,” one noted, in a typically understated Russian way.
The third reply was written in Chechen. Excellent intel; better than she’d hoped.
... only match for Marion D. Ford is from compromised Mossad files, data not verifiable. Tropics; Biologist; Born South Florida—suspected nightshift operator, never confirmed. Assets: Unknown. Affiliated agency: Unknown; possibly illegal deep-cover black ops group. Designation: W.
MDF’s geo-transects are too numerous to be coincidental with the deaths or disappearances listed here in reverse order: Islamic cleric Hada Salharra, Detroit; Ricardo Palmera (aka Simon Trinidad), FARC leader, Colombia; Omar Muhammad, head of Abul Nidal....
Dasha was smiling, energized. The targets, the organizations—in the world of covert operations, this was big-time. It took the breath out of her. She had Ford’s photo enlarged on the screen as she skipped ahead; she wanted to see how the man got started.
... while in secondary school, MDF was suspect in the disappearance and presumed murder of a man rumored to have had an affair with subject’s mother just prior to her own death. According to sealed records, a juvenile court judge (and friend of subject’s Masonic uncle) strongly suggested MDF leave Florida and enlist in the military ...
The final paragraph read:
... subject was employed by a CIA front corporation, Air America, during operations Phoenix and Blue Light. MDF is also suspected of infiltrating political activist organizations on U.S. college campuses, Colorado, Wisconsin, Berkeley, and Harvard, in operations called Purple Haze and Bad Moon Rising. Several deaths and disappearances associated with same ...
“Nightshift.” KGB slang.
This man was a professional, like herself. An operator.
With someone like this, she’d have to be very, very careful.
The woman was imagining various scenarios. Letting it play out in her head.
Her guess was right:
A killer.
A man like Ford she might be able to use ...
29
The phone message Jason Reynolds left on my cell phone bothered me, set off warning gongs.
“Dr. Ford, it might be smart if you drive back to the canal, win yourself some points. The cops can’t find the damn phone for some reason, and they’re sorta freaked-out suspicious. Either way, give me a call from the hospital, and tell me how our friend’s doing.”
I saved the message as I stepped through the
whoosh
of automatic doors, into the hospital.
His voice sounded strained, the sentences rehearsed. Too many oddities.
I checked my watch again: 7:31 P.M.
If the sheriff’s department couldn’t find the phone, why hadn’t they contacted me? The detective from the special crimes division had my number. He had already threatened to come looking for me if I’d given him bad info.
Instead, I hear it first from some imitation hipster?
Something else: There were only two plausible reasons why they hadn’t found the phone. They were searching the wrong place, or someone had removed it before they got there.
...
drive back to the canal, win some points ...
A deserted road. Only one way in or out. A perfect little ambush point if someone wanted to get me alone and ask about Applebee’s computer files—files that several people now knew I possessed.
My boat shoes squeaked on sterile hallway floors, medical staff in scrubs streaming past, as I listened to the message a second time.
...
give me a call from the hospital ...
How did Reynolds know we were still at the hospital?
He was either guessing, or someone was doing drive-bys, keeping an eye on the Magic Bus, which I’d parked in the rear lot, near the ER entrance.
The waiting room was separated from the main hall by hydraulic double doors, shatterproof glass. Lake was inside with a magazine—it looked like
Scientific American
—slumped in the plastic chair, bored but dealing with it. I stood and stared for a moment, feeling pleasure in the shape of his face, wanting the image to stick with me, enjoying an awareness of heritable bonds.
When I stepped through the doorway, he looked up, grinned, raised an index finger—his characteristic greeting.
“Any word on Tomlinson?”
“Naw. Doctor said it’d be about an hour. She’s funny. I like her. We had a pretty good talk.”
“In her business, I guess a sense of humor’s required.”
I noticed that when the boy grinned, his eyes glittered, familiar as my own. “Know what she told me? She said, ‘When adults tell you that adolescence is the best time of your life, they’re full of shit.’” He lost it for a moment, chest bouncing as he laughed.
Hilarious.
“Said she didn’t really start feeling comfortable, having fun, until she was in her late twenties. Hated her teens.”
“A smart woman; she’s right. I was a little older. Early thirties.”
“No shit?” Lake had been experimenting with profanity. I had to force myself not to smile.
“I shit you not. Early thirties.”
There was something else on his mind. A sly look. He was about to share a secret. “Dr. Shepherd told me she’s single, made a point of it. The only reason I can think of, she wants you to know.”
I said, “Really? I must have missed something.”
My son said, “I’m the same way with girls. I can’t ever tell, either. She asked me some questions about you, then told me she’d lived alone since doing her residency. I think she’s really pretty for a woman her age.”
“Very attractive. She’s got character—it’s in her eyes.” A passing observation said without real interest. The conversation with Dewey had congealed as a knot in my chest. I felt it there now; pain that would last.
The leather-bound log book Lake had given me was on the table next to his backpack—he carried the thing everywhere—and near to the keys to the van.
I sat, opened the log, noted date and time, as I told my son where I was going and why. I added, “I don’t have a choice,” as I wrote:
Tomlinson, I’m driving your van to the canal where you found Frieda’s phone. If I’m not back by morning, call a guy named Hal Harrington at the number below. Tell him to have your new pal, Jason Reynolds, questioned. Here are other names he should check...
“You seem to enjoy that. Keeping a journal.”
Still writing, I said, “Yeah, my memory’s getting so bad, it helps.”
“I know better.”
“The book’s from you. There’s the main reason I like it.”
That made the kid smile. Nice.
... there’s a fireproof locker under my bed. You’ll find an envelope addressed to you. It contains information that’ll keep you safe for a long, long time. If I don’t make it back, keep a weather eye on Lake ...
My son asked, “You think there’s a chance you’ll get down to Central America after the holidays? Tomlinson says the surfing on the Pacific Coast of Panama is unbelievable.”
My turn to smile. “I’ll make a point of it. Lake Nicaragua—you need to see that place. We’ll go together.”
I tore the page out, folded it. I’d leave it for Tomlinson with the receptionist on the way out. I told Lake, “I called the limo guy. He’s under way. You’ll be back on Sanibel by ten-thirty. Still time to get something to eat, then pack. Jeth’ll take you to the airport tomorrow.”
I hate good-byes. I saw that my son was no different; both of us not eager to part but eager to get this process over with. He stood facing me, holding the magazine.
“In the lab, I printed out a couple of sample pages from Dr. Applebee’s documents. Six pages, paper-clipped, next to the computer. Take them to Central America, work on the code. But do
not
copy the files. And don’t tell anyone you have those pages. Understand?”
Lake nodded.
“I’ll talk to the hospital security people. They’ll let you know when the car’s here. I’ll make sure they check out the driver.”
“You don’t have to do that, Dad. I can take care of myself.”
“I know. But you’re valuable property.” He stuck out his hand but I pushed it aside. Gave him a hug; my cheek tight against his head. “Crack the code, son, and I’ll buy you something very cool. You’re one of the few people smart enough to figure it out.”
As I picked up the keys, Lake said, “You don’t have to buy me anything. I’ll do it because it’s what you want me to do.”
 
 
I exited at the front of the hospital, not the ER entrance, which was closer to where I’d left the Magic Bus. I walked through the parking lot to a side street, then began to jog, using tree shadows as cover when I had the chance.
An adult male walking alone at night, or sprinting, draws attention. But joggers are part of the landscape—local jocks who own the street no matter the time of day or night.
My fishing shorts and T-shirt weren’t a perfect disguise, but close enough.
I circled the hospital, crossing the street to avoid the brighter lights of a strip mall, then crossed again to a sidewalk that fronted low-income ranch houses in a subdivision that was once middle class. Ficus and oak trees, probably planted in the fifties, had outgrown their domino lots. They hung dense over concrete that was in slow upheaval because of the roots beneath.
There was an ambulance sitting at the ER entrance, lighted sign above—EMERGENCY ONLY—and I began to slow in the gloom of trees, scanning the parking lot. I spotted a wedge of the Magic Bus beneath security lights. Could see its camper top, plus surfboards, above nearby cars. Could see its VW logo on the blunt front end, a peace sign painted there; white paint that became strawberry in the sodium haze.
The parking lot was half full, but felt deserted because of the absence of activity. There were EMTs in their blue coverall uniforms busy at the back of the ambulance, floodlights there, three people in scrubs watching, but no other movement. No security people in gold carts, which was unexpected.
I stopped, keys to the VW in my hand. I stood alert to anomalies—a car parked on a nearby side street, an inhabited vehicle, people waiting in shadows. Maybe Reynolds’s Tropicane truck, but that was unlikely. If this was a setup, he wouldn’t be that obvious. Or stupid.
A block away, a car turned the corner, lights panning. I knelt to tie my shoes, hiding my face until it’d passed.
A white sedan with black antenna, dorsal-like, on the trunk.
An unmarked squad car? It had that look.
I waited, feeling the quarter moon brighten, then sail behind clouds. Waited until the car turned in the distance, and I began to jog again.
I made one more lap around the block. Stopped briefly near the hospital’s front entrance and watched two security guards escort my son to a black Lincoln Town Car. I felt an uncharacteristic surge of emotion as one of the guards held the rear door open for Lake. The other chatted with the driver while also inspecting what I assumed to be his chauffeur’s license.
Good men. It explained the absence of security in the rear parking lot.
My son was getting his ride in a limo. A small surprise from his father. A parting gift.
At a faster pace, I jogged past the strip mall a final time, cut through the parking lot, and approached the Magic Bus from behind. Curtains covered the side windows of the VW, so I peeked in the rear. It was impossible to be certain, but it looked empty.
I touched fingertips to metal, sensitive to any slight movement, a shifting of weight.
Nothing.
Nearby cars also looked empty. I decided that if this was a setup, the
X
spot—where they’d hit me—would be somewhere on the dirt road that led to the canal.
More likely, though, I’d overanalyzed Reynolds’s phone message. I’d probably find the cops still searching for the cell phone, suspicious of my motives, just like he’d said.
I unlocked the driver’s-side door, then started to slide in behind the wheel when I realized the dome light had not come on.
Uh-oh.
In the same instant, I heard a car start a few spaces to my left, and was simultaneously aware of someone running—light-footed, on asphalt—before the car’s engine grew louder, audibly thumping into gear.
Trouble.
I turned to see the silhouette of a woman closing on me, as a pale-colored car appeared, lights off. It was timed to let the woman pass before the car pulled in tight behind the Volkswagen, shielding my view of the EMTs at the ER entrance, and also any chance of anyone seeing what was happening to me.

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