Transparency: Bio-Tech Cavern Secrets Untold

TRANSPARENCY
BioTech Secrets Untold
By
D.K. Matthews

 

Second Edition

Copyright@ 2015 by D.K. Matthews

ISBN 978-0-9893313-0-2

All rights reserved.

 

Internet: www.dkmatthews.com

E-mail: [email protected]

 

No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the author.

 

The characters and incidents depicted in this story are products of the author’s imagination. The use of names of actual persons, living or dead, and actual places, organizations and events is incidental to the purposes of the plot.

 

“Table of Contents”

Prologue

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty One

Chapter Twenty Two

Chapter Twenty Three

Chapter Twenty Four

Chapter Twenty Five

Chapter Twenty Six

Chapter Twenty Seven

Chapter Twenty Eight

Chapter Twenty Nine

Chapter Thirty

Chapter Thirty One

Chapter Thirty Two

Chapter Thirty Three

Chapter Thirty Four

Chapter Thirty Five

Chapter Thirty Six

Chapter Thirty Seven

Chapter Thirty Eight

Chapter Thirty Nine

Chapter Forty

Chapter Forty One

Chapter Forty Two

Chapter Forty Three

Chapter Forty Four

Chapter Forty Five

Chapter Forty Six

Chapter Forty Seven

Chapter Forty Eight

Chapter Forty Nine

Chapter Fifty

Chapter Fifty One

Chapter Fifty Two

Epilogue

Santa Reina Welcomes Genevive Labs

 

SANTA REINA, CALIFORNIA.
Santa Reina Tribune
—after months of negotiations, court battles, and a construction project that rivaled the building of Disneyland, Genevive Labs opened its doors today to the citizens of Santa Reina.

The company’s bus fleet shuttled over two thousand citizens to the campus built on fifty acres of pristine forest northeast of town. Tours were held into the rustic but hi-tech facilities. Afterwards, free hot dogs and hamburgers were served on the campus mall.

The master of ceremonies, Genevive Labs’ Brad Palmier, conducted the event. The executive supervised a raffle at the end of the day that included an array of prizes. CEO Robert Gartner awarded first prize, a new Ford Mustang, to local resident Fred Wilkerson. Mr. Gartner gave a speech afterwards commending the citizens of Santa Reina for allowing Genevive Labs to be their neighbor.

The biotech giant would officially open for business next Monday, after the Fourth of July holidays. The addition of a world class firm such as Genevive Labs to the small community of Santa Reina is bound to bring changes. The management team has vowed to work with the mayor, the city council, the Santa Reina Police Department and other arms of local government to maintain the town’s values.

Only time will tell what lasting effects Genevive Labs would have on Santa Reina. All parties involved say they hoped for a long and mutually rewarding relationship.

Part One

 

Under the Radar

Three years later…

 

Standing alone in the grassy clearance, Detective John Halliday felt like he had been brushed into the huge Sierra Nevada oil painting that hung above the bar at the Santa Reina Inn. The sky, so blue, made the surrounding greenery jealous. Unlike the mural, the High Sierras he saw in the distance stood like sentries guarding over a well kept secret.

He reached for his phone, but the ring wasn’t coming from his iPhone. Halliday, dumfounded, gazed up into the sky and listened. He groped for an explanation of why bells chimed fifteen miles from civilization.

“Lamar Fetus, are you out there?” he yelled at the empty meadow.

A pine cone smacked the ground.

“Come on out Lamar. I’m alone, as promised.”

He raised his binoculars. A hawk descended into the meadow that sloped up to a stand of young redwood trees along a ridge. In the distance, verdant rolling hills progressed into foothills. Far beyond them stood the sierras.

“Shit.” Halliday grew angry at himself for getting duped by a vagrant.

Halliday lowered the binocs. He turned to leave. A movement behind a clump of shrubs off to his left caught his eye.

“Is that you Lamar?”

An old man walked into the clearing. The distrust in his face looked all too familiar. He gazed beyond Halliday, to the unmarked police vehicle. “You sure you are alone detective? Don’t lie to me.”

If nothing else, he had learned to be patient during his three year assignment in the Central California town of Santa Reina. “I have no reason to lie to you, Lamar. We work in teams. My partner will arrive in a few minutes. Tell me why you called me out here.”

Festus approached as if the forest held his enemy.

Up close, Halliday saw a rawboned man with hollow cheeks. Tired eyes begged for understanding. The vagrant pointed at the smoky emissions from the biotech facility on the other side of the ridge. The gray gunk dissolved into the sky like a ship’s sewage dumped into a Pacific Ocean archipelago.

“Genevive Lab’s security,” Festus said. He searched Halliday’s eyes before he moaned, “Those Nazi’s abducted Shack.”

“Who is Shack?”

The old man blinked, like a five-year-old trying not to cry. Halliday deliberated at the sorrow in the old man’s eyes.

“Shack was my companion for twelve years, my best friend.”

Halliday had no patience for another “significant other” story. He believed that marriage existed solely for men and women. He couldn’t ignore Festus’s eyes or the despair in the old man’s voice. “Tell me more, Lamar.”

Festus sniffled. He wiped spittle from the edge of his mouth before he said, “Shack’s body is up there on the ridge.” He pointed. “Under that big Sequoia tree.”

Halliday grew skeptical. Festus hadn’t mentioned a body during their phone conversation. Nevertheless, a possible homicide had to be taken seriously, especially if it involved Genevive Labs. “Did you witness the murder?”

Festus eyed the ground as if searching for blood stains. “No, I saw them stop the van up on the hill. They tossed Shack’s body out.”

“When was this?”

“About an hour ago. Detective, Genevive did terrible things to Shack. I’m ashamed to talk about it. You’re going to have to see for yourself.”

Halliday gazed up to the rise where the Sequoia stood. If Genevive was involved the implications were dicey. His boss, Chief Brayden, treated the biotech company like they were Santa Reina’s only salvation.

The drifter hunkered. He peered up from a body twisted like a corkscrew. Halliday had once been surprised by a Hispanic youth who had uncoiled from a similar posture that brandished a knife. He couldn’t bring himself to think of this seventy-some year old frail vagrant as a threat. Either the man was lying or one of the better actors he had come across.

“We shouldn’t stay here long. They’ll be back.”

“Who are they, Lamar?”

“Genevive security.”

Halliday inhaled the musky scent. The scrub brush and the pines failed to mask Festus’s body odor. Up in the sky, he saw no winged scavengers. There had been no tire tracks on the dirt road leading in. A battalion of pine trees along the perimeter of the meadow stood mute, like petrified soldiers.

“You hesitate too much, detective,” Festus said, his tired eyes searching the area for phantoms.

“You wouldn’t be making up the part about the body, would you Lamar?”

The old man’s face flushed a darker shade of crimson. “Hell no, detective. I’m no liar. You’ve got to… ”

Festus’s speech sputtered like an engine that had blown a piston. Then he caught a big breath and said, “I swear I’m telling you the truth, detective. Come on, I’ll show you.”

“Hold on, Lamar. What’s that in your hand?”

Festus held up a new Blackberry phone. “I took it from a Genevive security truck. The bastards won’t miss it.”

Surprised that the old man had breached Genevive Labs’ security, Halliday held out his hand. “It’s evidence.”

Halliday removed a plastic bag from his inside coat pocket. He slipped the phone into it. “I’ll get you another phone, but it’ll have to be a Go-Phone from Target.”

Festus showed no reaction to losing the expensive high tech phone or to Halliday’s offer.

Where the hell was Gladstone? After working alone for the past three years Halliday had been baffled when out of the blue the chief had saddled him with his nephew, an ex-beat cop.

“What are we waiting for, detective? You’re not in cahoots with Genevive security, are you?”

“Dammit, Lamar, I’m not in cahoots with anyone. Get that out of your head.”

Halliday kicked at the brush. His intuition told him that something up on the hill had happened, despite the old man’s paranoia. That didn’t mean he had to explain why he had to wait for Gladstone like he promised the chief. “My partner will be here in a minute.”

After some moments, Halliday responded to Festus’s fidgeting around by saying, “Procedure, Lamar. We wait.”

“I haven’t eaten since yesterday morning.”

Halliday reached into his pocket for a Clif Bar he had been saving for lunch. The old man accepted it with a hand that shook like a rattler’s tail.

Festus ripped open the power bar.

“How did you end up out here, Lamar?”

Festus lowered the Clif bar at Halliday’s question. Fear replaced sorrow in his eyes. “I hid in the bed of one of Genevive’s trucks.”

“Genevive security?”

“Yeah, they have a fleet of white pickup trucks. But the big bosses—the ones from Washington, DC—they wear black suits and sunglasses. You know, like in the movie
Men in Black.
They drive black suburbans.

“Official government vehicles?”

“You tell me, detective. SIERRA CONTRACTORS was stenciled in white on the doors.”

Halliday heard the sound of Gladstone’s vehicle.

Department of Defense? “Are you sure, Lamar? Did you notice the letters DOD on the doors?”

“I saw SIERRA CONTRACTORS in capital letters. There could have been DOD, too. I don’t know. Shack didn’t deserve what they did to him.”

Tears leaked out of the old man’s eyes.

“What did they do to Shack?”

The oncoming vehicle had Festus performing a dance. He said, “Detective, I’ve got to go pee.”

Halliday nodded at the brush a few yards away. “Don’t wander off.”

Instead of slowing down, Gladstone, driving a black RAM Charger, his personal vehicle, roared down the last fifty yards. He slammed on the brakes, stirring up a red cloud at the end of the dirt road.

Halliday brushed cinnamon dust from his face while Gladstone got out of the truck. The young detective held up his DROID. “The GPS app saved my ass.”

“You’re twenty minutes late.”

Gladstone had a habit of smoothing back his yellow locks. Leo Bergman, a fellow detective, said it resulted from his high school days. The kid who starred at quarterback for the Santa Reina Cougars, lost the Central State High School championship game. In the final seconds Gladstone had stepped over the line of scrimmage before tossing the apparent winning touchdown. That didn’t surprise Halliday. The kid never paid attention.

Gladstone read the defense. He said, “Where’s the perp?”

“He’s a witness, not a perpetrator. Name’s Lamar Festus. The vagrant’s over there taking a leak.”

“Where?”

Halliday jerked around.

“Shit.”

Lamar Festus had bolted.

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