Read The Chosen Dead (Jenny Cooper 5) Online
Authors: M. R. Hall
They arrived at a numbered door that might have been the entrance to a supplies cupboard, but which in fact led to a beamline control cabin. Leyton’s knock was answered by an edgy, slender-limbed man in his early thirties whose name Jenny had already been told was Dr Jason Kwan. According to Leyton’s records, it was he who had requested Sonia Blake’s visitor pass.
Leyton made cursory introductions and waited, as if expecting Jenny to hold her conversation in the corridor.
‘We’ll need to have a moment alone,’ Jenny said.
Leyton glanced at Kwan, then nodded – satisfied, Jenny assumed, that she would get full particulars of the conversation one way or the other.
‘You’ll see Mrs Cooper out of the building when you’re finished?’
Kwan gave a nod and Leyton turned and walked away, with solid jailer’s footsteps.
The control room was cramped and stuffy, and cluttered with computer equipment. A bin overflowed with empty coffee cups and food wrappers, and to pass the dull moments its occupants had built a pyramid of soft-drinks cans in a corner of the floor.
‘You’re part of a team?’ Jenny asked, trying to put him at his ease.
‘My colleagues are at lunch,’ Kwan replied. ‘What would you like to know?’
Jenny helped herself to one of the three swivel chairs while Kwan perched nervously against a desk.
‘The reason I’m here, Dr Kwan, is to ask you what you know about Mrs Sonia Blake. I believe she visited you here.’
He nodded.
‘Unfortunately she died yesterday.’
‘I heard.’
‘Oh?’ Jenny tried to conceal her surprise. ‘How did you find out?’
‘I saw it online. One of her colleagues I’m friends with must have posted it.’
‘
Friends?
You mean someone on a social network, not an actual friend?’
‘Yes.’ He seemed to tolerate her old-fashioned distinction.
‘Do you mind telling me what she was doing here?’
‘She contacted me. She said she was interested to see how the beamline worked. I said sure, and arranged for her to come over.’
‘Do you remember when that was?’
He drummed his fingers on the table as he tried to recall. ‘She emailed me in about May and came here at the beginning of June. A Friday, I expect – that’s my maintenance day. You can check the visitor log.’
‘I will,’ Jenny said. ‘What did she want to see, exactly?’
‘How the equipment works. She told me her father was a geneticist – back in the seventies and eighties – she said she wanted to understand how the applied science worked now.’
‘Did she talk about her own work at all?’
‘Not much. She mentioned she was writing about Africa. She said there’s a lot of politics around disease prevention there. I think maybe that’s what she was interested in – how researchers try, say, to develop a vaccine.’
‘Any particular kind?’
He shook his head.
‘She didn’t mention meningitis?’
He thought for a moment – or at least, gave the impression of doing so. ‘No. I don’t remember meningitis.’
‘What did you show her?’
‘Just some regular crystallography work.’
‘Crystallography? I’m sorry. I’m afraid this is all new to me.’
Now on more comfortable territory, Kwan gave her a potted explanation of how he spent his days. He was a fulltime beamline scientist whose job was to assist the various research teams who came to use the equipment. His particular beamline was tuned to the highest possible X-ray frequency and used to examine biological molecules. For the purposes of the experiment, these were arranged in a crystalline array using a number of sophisticated, but standard, laboratory techniques. In a typical project, he might be assisting a team developing a vaccine to study the chemical make-up of a protein molecule. If, for example, they could determine the make-up of a protein that acted as a receptor on the surface of a bacterium, they could engineer a corresponding chemical bond that could be incorporated into a drug designed to attack it.
This form of microbiology, it seemed, was like peering inside a lock in order to build a key to fit it. The secrets revealed by the beamlines were starting to turn the raw data of the human genome into the medicine of the future. Smart drugs engineered to attack or rebuild only specific cells would all owe a debt to the synchrotron.
Jenny did her best to follow. It was fascinating, but none of it answered her question: why had Sonia Blake wanted to see the technology in operation?
‘Why wouldn’t she?’ Dr Kwan said. ‘She was an academic. She was curious.’
‘Did you see her or speak to her again?’
Kwan shook his head. ‘It was just the one time.’
‘Have you ever heard of a man named Adam Jordan?’
‘No.’
Jenny decided she found him more convincing when he was being vague. She tried him with one more. ‘What about Professor Roman Slavsky?’
Kwan shuffled his weight from one foot to another. ‘Sure. I’ve heard of him. He’s a famous microbiologist.’
‘Famous for what? Excuse my ignorance.’
‘It’s a long time since I read about him, but as far as I remember, he’d got a long way with recombinant techniques during the eighties. He came from Russia with a large section of the human genome already decoded. He’d been made to work on a biological weapons programme, but when he was here he turned his skills as a geneticist to therapeutic medicine.’
Jenny said, ‘Did Sonia Blake mention him?’
Kwan said no, she hadn’t. She had been too busy asking him questions to talk about anything else. She was a bright lady. She picked things up quickly.
Jenny glanced up and ran her eyes across the pristine tiles on the suspended ceiling.
‘Is there any recording equipment in here?’
‘No way,’ Kwan answered hurriedly. ‘No cameras. Nothing. We often do commercially sensitive work here – not today, this project is public domain – but some of our data could be worth millions, billions even.’
The perfect place to speak in confidence, Jenny thought, as long as you trusted whoever you were talking to. ‘Thank you, Dr Kwan. I’ll take your contact details, if I may.’
Kwan walked her back to reception at a brisk pace, eager not to continue their conversation in public. Everybody they passed seemed to nod or say hello, and they all noticed Jenny. She got an impression of a tight-knit community in which rumour would spread fast. Kwan would probably spend much of his afternoon explaining her visit to inquisitive colleagues. This was just what Leyton intended, Jenny suspected: Kwan’s punishment for bringing her here was to be cast under a cloud of suspicion.
Jenny found herself feeling a pang of sympathy for him. The strain of conjuring half-answers to her questions had taken a visible toll. Whatever he had failed to tell her seemed to weigh heavily.
Before he left her, Jenny said quietly, ‘I suspect you haven’t been entirely truthful, Dr Kwan, but if I’m honest, nor have I. Why don’t we talk again – somewhere you’ll feel more comfortable, and when you’ve had time to think?’
He looked at her for a moment with eyes wide open in astonishment, as if she had given voice to his most intimate secrets.
‘I’ll be in touch,’ Jenny said, and handed him her business card.
He stuttered a goodbye and hurried away across the atrium.
Passing through the security barrier, Jenny fleetingly caught the eye of a man waiting at the reception desk. He wore a well-cut suit with an open-necked shirt, and had a square military jaw. He didn’t look like a scientist. As she exited the building, she thought she could feel his eyes following her. From beyond the door she shot a glance back through the plate glass, but he was now looking the other way. If she had studied him for a moment longer, she would have seen him reach into his pocket and retrieve his phone.
‘I’
VE BEEN WONDERING WHEN
you’d be back,’ Karen Jordan said. She lowered herself onto the sofa in her sitting room, holding her body stiffly, any sudden movement causing her to screw up her eyes in pain.
‘I thought you might like to know what I’ve found,’ Jenny said. She sat on a straight-backed wooden chair made from dark, rich-smelling African teak.
‘I’m sure you’ll tell me, whether I like it or not.’
‘I went to visit Harry Thorn at his offices,’ Jenny said. ‘He wasn’t exactly helpful.’
‘He never is,’ Karen said. ‘He’s a misanthrope.’
‘He did say two things that interested me. He mentioned that people he called “spooks” imagine his organization to be criminal because he refuses to work for them.’
Karen Jordan gazed off into space, seeming to distance herself even further from their conversation. ‘That sounds like Harry.’
‘When you came to see me in my office you mentioned that there had been rumours of arms shipments hidden in aid cargoes. Is that what he’s suspected of being involved with?’
‘Probably. I wouldn’t know. He would have kept that sort of thing from Adam. Harry’s got broad shoulders.’
‘I get the impression part of you admires this misanthrope,’ Jenny said, curious to understand Karen’s evident mixed feelings towards him.
‘He’s a survivor. That’s got to be worthy of some respect.’
Jenny detected judgement of her late husband in Karen’s remark. She had seen it often in the partner of a man who had taken his own life. Disbelief turned to anger, then rapidly to condemnation before emotions finally resolved to a level of acceptance. Primal laws dictated that a man was meant to fight to his last breath in defence of wife and children. Desertion through suicide was one of the worst forms of violation.
‘He also said that your husband’s trouble was that he took things to heart.’
‘Evidently.’
‘He didn’t tell me what precisely.’
The corners of Karen’s mouth curled into an ironic smile. ‘If I knew, don’t you think I would have told you?’
‘Have you spoken with Harry Thorn recently?’
‘Of course I have,’ she snapped. ‘He doesn’t know why Adam killed himself any more than I do. Anyone can speculate, but that’s all it can be. None of us can know what was in his mind.’ The effort of her outburst had caused a sharp pain in her bruised ribs. She sat for a moment with her eyes shut tight against it.
‘I didn’t mean to go over old ground,’ Jenny said. ‘I was just anxious to know if you had any insights into what your husband might have become involved with?’
‘What do you mean –
involved
with? He wasn’t involved with anything.’
Jenny trod carefully. ‘I told you about his visit to Great Shefford earlier in the evening before he died. I went there – to the filling station he visited. The girl behind the till remembered a man with a young child at about that time, but he had a young African woman with him, too, who she wasn’t sure spoke English. And then another car drew up alongside Adam’s driven by a man in his thirties. The African girl noticed him, and then apparently alerted Adam to his presence. He went out to meet him, shook hands, and then it seems they both drove their cars around to a lay-by at the back of the garage. For what purpose, I don’t know.’
Karen looked at Jenny, her mask slipping to reveal her shock. ‘A girl? Who is she?’
‘I thought you might have an idea.’
‘No. What happened to her – did she go with Adam or the other man?’
‘I don’t know. But the cashier did say she behaved more like an employee than a girlfriend. It seems she was carrying your son.’
Karen blinked, as if trying to banish the disturbing image from her mind: her child clinging to a woman she had never met.
‘I shouldn’t jump to the obvious conclusion,’ Jenny said quickly. ‘There’s a lot more. Would you like to hear?’
She nodded.
Her look of disbelief gradually turned to one of bewilderment as Jenny explained that the filling station was only a short drive from the Diamond Light Source, a facility used by the country’s leading scientists, not least by micro-biologists. This could have been dismissed as a coincidence, except that Adam’s other secret meeting had been with Sonia Blake, who had visited the building only weeks before. Although she was an academic whose expertise was in African politics, she also happened to be the daughter of a pioneering geneticist who had been mysteriously murdered in 1982. Adam had clearly been interested in the Soviet biologist, Slavsky, but the coincidences didn’t end there. Sonia Blake had died, seemingly of natural causes, but papers relating to Slavsky had been taken from her university room.
Jenny paused, giving Karen an opportunity to assimilate what she had heard.
‘There’s more?’ Karen said.
‘I’m afraid so.’
Finding it hard to countenance the facts herself, Jenny explained as gently as she could that her husband’s brain tissue and cerebral fluid had been removed, and that the same thing had happened to the body of Sophie Freeman, a thirteen-year-old girl who had died of drug-resistant meningitis.
‘Does any of this make any sense to you?’
‘No,’ Karen whispered. ‘Nothing.’