Authors: Michael Palmer
Tags: #Fiction, #Suspense, #Mystery, #Mystery & Detective - General, #Fiction - Espionage, #Thriller, #Medical
"Arlen, Arlen," Redding said warmly, "welcome home." He was in his wheelchair behind his desk and was dressed in the only outfit Paquette could remember him wearing at work, a lightweight blue-gray suit, white shirt, and string tie, fastened with a turquoise thunderbird ring.
"So," Redding said, when they had moved to the sitting area with coffee and a sugary pastry, "you look a bit drawn. This Boston business has not been so easy, has it?" "You told me it might not be," Paquette said. "Do you remember when we decided to move the mailing address of the Ashburton Foundation?"
"Of course. A few months after you started working here. Six, no, seven years ago, right?" Paquette nodded.
"It was an excellent suggestion and the first time I fully appreciated what a winning decision it was to hire you." Paquette smiled a weak thank you. "Well," he said, "it was my feeling at that time that with the foundation registered as a tax-exempt philanthropic organization and located in DC, there was no way Redding Pharmaceuticals could ever be connected to it."
"And yet our tenacious friend Dr. Bennett has done so." "Yes, although as I told you last night, I'm not certain she has put it all together."
"But she will," the Warlock said with certainty.
"She called twice yesterday trying to reach me--that is, trying to reach Dr. Thompson, the foundation director.
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I couldn't even call her back for fear of having her recognize my voice."
"It was a wise decision not to."
"She's got to hear from someone today."
"She will," Redding said. He glanced at his watch.
"At this moment, our persuasive legislative liaison, Charlie Wilson, is on his way to the foundation office to become Dr. James Thompson."
"Office?"
"Of course. We wouldn't want Dr. Bennett to try and locate the Ashburton Foundation only to find a desk, phone and secretary, would we?" Paquette shook his head.
The man was absolutely incredible, and efficient in a way that he found quite frightening. "By eleven o'clock this morning, the office, its staff, photographic essays describing its good works, testimonial letters, and a decade or so of documented service will be in place, along with Charlie Wilson, who is, I think you'll agree, as smooth and self confident as they come."
"Amazing," Paquette said.
"Are you feeling a bit more relaxed about things now?"
"Yes, Mr. Redding. Yes, I am."
"Good. You'll be pleased to know that the company will be taking care of that mirror at the Ritz." Paquette froze. He had gone to great pains to pay for the damage himself and to insure that in no way would Redding find out about what had happened. Instability under fire was hardly the sort of trait the man rewarded in his platoon leaders. "I ... I'm sorry about that, sir. I really am." Redding gestured to the coffee table before them.
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Sealed under thick glass was the emblem of Redding Pharmaceuticals: a sky-blue background with white hands opening to release a pure, white dove. Below the dove was the name of the company; above it, in a rainbow arc, the motto: The Greatest Good for the Most People at the Least Cost. "Arlen, ever since the day I took over this company, I have tried to chart a course that would lead to exactly what this motto says. In this business--in any business--there are always choices to be made, always decisions that cannot be avoided. In the thirty-five years since I first came to Darlington, I've made more gut wrenching decisions and smashed more glasses and more mirrors in anguish than I care to count. But always, when I needed direction, when I needed advice or council, it was right in front of me." He tapped the motto with his finger. "The legislators, state and federal, the competition, and especially the goddamn PDA are all doing their best to cloud the issue, but in the end it always boils down to this." Again, he tapped the glass.
If the pep talk was meant to buoy Paquette's flagging morale, it failed miserably. The greatest good for the most people at the highest profit was all he could think of. The shortcuts and the human testing, the clinics in Denver and Boston, the bribery and extortion involving PDA officials--all had been tolerable for him because all were abstractions. Kate Bennett was flesh and blood, a voice, a face, a reality; and worse than that, a reality he was growing to admire. Paquette snapped out of his reverie, wondering how long it had lasted. A second? A minute?
Then he realized that Redding's eyes were fixed on him.
"I understand, sir," he said, clearing away the phlegm in his throat, "and I assure you, you have nothing to worry about." How did the man know about the stinking mirror?
Spies in Boston? A bug in the room? Damn him, Paquette thought viciously. Damn him to hell.
"Fine, Arlen," Redding said. "Now, you have a flight back to Boston this afternoon?"
"Two o'clock."
"I suspect that our meddlesome pathologist is on the ropes. However, her father-in-law assures me that she is far from out on her feet. Her discovery regarding the Ashburton Foundation suggests that he is quite correct."
"I believe Norton Reese is arranging a surprise for her that may help," Paquette said, vividly recalling the glee in Reese's voice as he announced that something was set to fall heavily on Kate Bennett.
"Excellent," Redding said. "Her father-in-law has promised to do what he can to help us as well. One final thing."
"Yes?"
"Has anything further surfaced on the cause of the ovary and blood problems in those three women?" Paquette shook his head. "Strange," Redding said, more to himself than to the other man. "Very strange
..." For several seconds, he remained lost in thought, his eyes closed, his head turning from side to side as if he were internally speedreading a page. "Well, Arlen," he said suddenly, opening his eyes, "thank you for the excellent job you are doing. I know at times your duties are not easy for you, but continue to carry them out the way you have, and your rewards will be great." "Yes, sir," Paquette said. He sat for nearly half a minute before realizing that the Warlock had said all he was going to. Sheepishly, he rose and hurried from the room.
Cyrus Redding studied the man as he left. The Boston business seemed to be having some untoward effects on him, particularly in the area of his drinking. As he motored from the sitting area to his desk, Redding made a mental note to arrange a vacation of some sort for Paquette and his wife as soon as Boston was over. That done, he put the issue and the man out of his head. There was more important business needing attention.
Stephen Stein, the enigmatic, remarkably resourceful investigator, had made a discovery that he suspected would unlock the mystery of John Ferguson.
"Mr. Nunes," Redding said through the intercom of his desk, "would you bring that package to me now." At the far end of the office, a perfectly camouflaged panel and one-way mirror slid open. The man Nunes emerged from the small, soundproof room from which he kept vigil, revolver at hand, whenever Redding was not alone in his office. The package, containing a book, several typewritten pages, and an explanatory letter from Stein, had arrived by messenger only minutes before Arlen Paquette.
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"If you have errands to run, Mr. Nunes, this would be a good time. When you return in, say, an hour, we could well have a new slant on our friend, Dr. Ferguson."
He smiled, nearly beside himself at the prospect. "I think this occasion might call for a pint of that mint chip ice cream I have forbidden you to let me talk you into buying." The taciturn bodyguard nodded. "I can't let you talk me into it," he said, "but perhaps I could purchase some on my own."
Redding waited until his office door had clicked shut; then he locked it electronically and spread the contents of the package on his desk.
"My apologies," Stein wrote, "for missing this volume during the course of earlier efforts to tie our mysterious Dr. Ferguson's background in with the war. I borrowed it from the Holocaust Library at the university here with assurances of its return, along with some token of our gratitude. Its title, according to the German professor who did the enclosed translation for us, is Doctors of the Reich; The Story of Hitler's Monster Kings. The work is the product of painstaking research and countless interviews by a Jewish journalist named Sachs, himself a death camp survivor, and is believed by my source to be accurate within the limits of the author's prejudices. Only the chapters dealing with the experiments at the Ravensbruck concentration camp for women have been translated. The photographs on pages three sixty-seven and three sixty eight will, I believe, be of special interest to you." For most of the next hour, Cyrus Redding sat transfixed, moving only to turn the pages of the translation or to refer to specific photographs in the worn, yellowed text.
John Ferguson was a physician and scientist named Dr. Wilhelm Becker. The photographs, though slightly blurred and taken nearly forty years before, left no doubt whatsoever.
"Amazing," Redding murmured as he read and reread the biography of his associate. "Absolutely amazing."
There were two snapshots of Wilhelm Becker, one a full-face identification photo and one a group shot with other physicians at the Ravensbriick Camp. There was also a shot of what remained of the laboratory in which Becker was purported to have died, with the bodies of the man and his staff sergeant still curled amidst the debris on the floor. Redding withdrew a large, ivory-handled magnifying glass from his desk and for several minutes studied the detail of the scene. The body identified as Willi Becker was little more than an ill-defined, charred lump.
"Nicely done, my friend," Redding said softly. "Nicely done." Familiar now with the man and with his spurious death, Redding turned to the page and a half dealing with Becker's research, specifically, with his research on a substance called Estronate 250. Much of the information presented was gleaned from transcripts of the war-crimes trial of a physician named Muller and another named Rendl, both of whom were sentenced to Nuremberg Prison in large measure because of their association with the supposedly late Wilhelm Becker. Redding found the men in the Ravensbriick group photo. Muller had served five years at hard labor before certain Ravensbriick survivors were able to document his acts of heroism on their behalf and get his sentence commuted. For Rendl, the revelations of his humanitarianism came too late. Three years after his incarceration, he hanged himself in his cell.
Redding read the Estronate material word by word, taking careful notes. By the time he had finished, he was absolutely certain that neither Wilhelm Becker nor the notebook containing his work on the hormone had perished in the Ravensbruck fire.
A substance, harmless in every other way, that could render a woman sterile without her knowledge. Redding was staggered by the potential of such a drug. China, India, the African nations, the Arabs. What would governments be willing to pay for a secret that might selectively se thin their populations and thereby solve so many of their gt economic and political woes? What would certain govern-as ments pay for a weapon which, if delivered properly, i.
could decimate their enemies in a single generation with .
out the violent loss of one life? cjj
Redding's thoughts were soaring through the possibili ej]
ties of Estronate 250 when, with a soft knock, Nunes u
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entered the office, set a package on the desk, and retired W( to his observation room. For another hour, Redding sat alone, savoring his mint chip ice cream and deciding how p(
he might best break the news to Dr. John Ferguson that ' t their fifteen-year-old collaboration was about to take on a sn new dimension.
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"I love you, I miss you, and I don't want to not live with you anymore." w(
Kate read Jared's note again and then again, drawing jjt strength and confidence from it each time. She had returned to her office following two distressing and frightening visits. One was to Ellen, who was, for the first time, receiving a transfusion of packed red blood cells. The yo second was to Norton Reese. If the connection between Metropolitan Hospital of Boston, the Ashburton Foundation, i jj, and Redding Pharmaceuticals was as intimate as Reese's clumsy evasions were leading her to believe, she would need all the strength and confidence she could muster. q.
Thank you, Jared, she thought. Thank you for pulling me out from under the biggest pressure of all. vo Her meeting with Reese had started off cordially ^u enough. In fact, the man had seemed at times to be
^s inappropriately jovial and at ease. Ever since their confrontation before the board of trustees over his diversion of ~u budgeted pathology department funds to the cardiac surgical program, Reese had dealt with her with the gingerli-pc ness of an apprentice handling high explosives. Now, suddenly, he was all smiles. His congeniality lasted through jo veral minutes of conversation about her department and an Willoughby's recommendation that she succeed him chief, and ended abruptly with mention of the Ashburn Foundation. Whatever fortes the man might have, ite mused at that moment, they certainly did not in ude poker faces. His eyes narrowed fractionally, but tough to deepen the fleshy crow's feet at their corners, is lips whitened, as did the tips of his fingers where they jre touching one another.
"I'm afraid I'm not at liberty to open the Ashburton >> undation files to you," he had said, his eyes struggling maintain contact with hers and failing. "However, I all be happy to answer what questions I can." "Okay," Kate said, shrugging. "My first question is ly aren't you at liberty to open the Ashburton Founda>> n files to me?"
"It's ... it's part of the agreement we signed when ; accepted a grant from them." It was bizarre. In a very eral sense, the man was squirming in his seat.