Deadly Lode (Trace Brandon Book 1) (28 page)

 

 

 

 

 

C
hapter
17

A
call came into FBI headquarters in Washington, DC.


FBI,
A
gent Thompson speaking.


Agent Thompson, this is Chief Constable Peter Rand with the Vancouver, BC
,
P
olice
D
epartment. Is
S
pecial
A
gent Beau Monroe available?


Hold one minute please.

Monroe punched the blinking light and picked up the receiver.

This is
S
pecial
A
gent Beau Monroe.


Agent Monroe, this is Chief Constable Peter Rand. We spoke a week or so ago with regards to a homicide here in Vancouver.


Yes,
sir
. The victim
who
was killed by exposure to VX.


We

re at pretty much of a dead end up here
. I was hoping maybe your investigation might
have
turned something up?


Well, as I mentioned in our previous conversation, your case got moved to near the top of the totem pole.
Anytime
something as deadly as
VX is involved
,
it get

s
the FBI’s
undivided attention.


Any leads
, Agent Monroe
?


Well, whoever pulled this off is a very sophisticated customer. Most likely a chemist gone
rog
u
e
, so to speak.


Our thoughts as well
,” Rand replied.


We

ve been running our databases
,
looking for a chemistry type
who might fit the profile.
Also,
we

ve got
three unsolved
homicides
,
all of which
involved sophisticated poison
s
.
We

re going back through those case files
,
looking for leads.


Any of the open cases involve VX?

Rand asked.


No
,
sir
. B
ut the
y

re
not run of the mill
,
either
. One involved
a
synthetic
replication of poison tree frog toxin,
Allopumiliotoxin
-
267A
.


Bloody hell, the name

s enough to kill you,

Rand said
,
with a chuckle.


Yes
, sir
,
it

s a mouthful
. B
ut
like VX,
it

s a form of
neurotoxin. It attacks the heart rather than causing complete muscle paralysis
,
as with VX.


Both neurotoxins, huh
?
Well,
Agent Monroe,
it

s a lead of sorts.
The killer could be
e
x-m
ilitary
with chemical weapons experience? Or
someone who
worked
at a university or research facility?


Our line of thinking
too. We

re reviewing records of
people
known to
have worked on nerve agents
,
either in the
m
ilitary
,
or in the private sector. Possibly a
disgruntled employee, someone with personal problems, history of depression, that sort of thing.


The three open cases
,
any of the victims have a criminal history?

Rand asked.


We believe the man killed by the synthetic tree frog poison had a
m
ob connection. Of the other two, one we

re
pretty sure was a KGB hit. The third looked like a drug deal gone bad. The joint the victim was smoking at the time of death was laced with
r
ic
i
n
,

Monroe said, with a chuckle.


Any of this ring any bells?

Agent Monroe asked.


Possibly the
m
ob connection
,” Rand replied
.

Our
victim was a
well-known
gambler both in the
Vancouver
penny stock market and at the
crap
tables in Vegas. I

ll have my team dig deeper into his recent stock dealings and check into his gambling situation.


What about William Thorn
ton
?

Constable Rand asked.

T
he man Rosenburg killed
during an attempted
robbery?


As Thorn
ton
was an American citizen killed in a foreign country
,
w
e checked
him out thoroughly.
Turns out h
e
was the right
-
hand man
for
one
Cyrus McSweeny
.
Cyrus
operates out of Spokane and
is well known to law enforcement
. B
ut this is way out of his league. He

s basically a penny stock promoter,
a
pump and dump artist.
He
did five years for income tax evasion
but
no
other
convictions
. Neither one of them fit the profile.
And to be frank,
Constable
Rand,
we

re
a bit skeptical of the attempted robbery alibi Rosenburg
p
ut forth.


How so?


Well, as I said, Thorn
ton
doesn

t fit the profile.
He wasn

t above using a little muscle
,
but
he wasn

t a killer.
We think it

s more likely Rosenburg was into Cyrus
for some serious
cash
,
a
nd
he
sent
Thorn
ton
to collect
.
The one common
denominator
seems to be
Montana Creek Mining Corp.


Rosenburg

s statement claimed Thorn
ton
tried to steal his shares of Montana Creek Mining before he shot him
,

Constable Rand replied
.


We did some checking
,
and it turns out
at least one company
controlled by McSweeny
i
s
also
a shareholder
in Montana Creek Mining.


What

s the name and domicile of the company?

Rand asked.


Twisp River Resou
rces, based in Vancouver. Malcolm Trueblood is the CEO
, b
ut the company is a w
holly owned subsidiary of Carib International
, a
Cayman Island company we suspect is owned by Cyrus.


So you think
there is some kind of connection between McSweeny
, Montana Creek Mining
,
and Rosenburg

s
death
?

Rand asked.


Not Montana Creek per se
,
b
ut
with some of
the
company

s
shareholders.
We haven

t put it all together yet
, but
we will.

Monroe said, firmly.


I see. Well, you

ve been a big help
,
A
gent Monroe.
We

ll dig into Mr. Trueblood and Twisp River
,
as well as Montana Creek Mining. Please keep me updated on your end
,
and
I

ll
do likewise.

 

 

A
few days later, Thorny

s PI buddy in Co
e
ur d

Alene
called
Cyrus.


Mr. McSweeny, this is Doug Masters over in Co
e
ur d

Alene, Idaho.
I worked for Bill Thorn
ton
on occasion.
Have you got a minute?


Sure, Doug. What

s up?


First off, I just wanted to thank you for taking care of Thorny and his family the way you did. He and I go way back
,
and, well, it was mighty good of you.


Thanks, Doug. As you probably know, Thorny and I were pretty tight
too,
for nearly thirty years.


Yes,
sir
, I did.


So what else is on your mind, Doug?


I am sure Thorny told you of our arrangement with the gal at Mineral Valley Labs
.

Cyrus took a deep breath
.

Y
es, is there a problem?


Oh
,
no,
sir
. It

s just with Thorny gone, she

s not sure where to send her reports.


I see.
Have her fax them to this number
,

Cyrus replied, giving
Doug
the
fax number of a Spokane mail store. One
he used for sensitive materials.


Got it. She says she has some new results. I

ll have her send them out today.

A shiver went up Cyrus

s
back
.

N
ew results?


Yes
,
sir
.

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