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Authors: Michael Harvey

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We All Fall Down (23 page)

BOOK: We All Fall Down
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CHAPTER 63

I slipped a small cylinder from my pocket and held it up.

“What’s that?” Stoddard said, eyes shining like two headlights staring down a midnight stretch of the Dan Ryan.

“It’s one of your products, Jon. I press the button, and it disperses whatever’s inside in an aerosol form. This one’s loaded with a chemical agent. I know it works pretty fast. And I know it leaves you pretty well dead.”

“It’s murder. You won’t do it.”

“Actually, I’ve been looking forward to it.”

“They won’t let you.”

I looked around the room. “ ‘They’?”

Stoddard began to blink his eyes quickly. His face was flushed and sweating.

“It will take a few minutes,” I said. “You’ll start to cough. Feel like your throat is closing up.”

Stoddard’s hand went to his throat. Molly walked over to a small cot set up in the corner of the lab. She sat down, then lay on her side.

“Not interested, Molly?”

“I’m okay with dying if that’s what you mean.” She rolled over and faced the wall. I pushed the button on the aerosol device. Stoddard collapsed into himself and began to murmur softly.

“What’s that, Jon?”

“I’ll tell you anything you want to know.”

I took a syringe out of my pocket. “You got about twenty minutes before it shuts down your lungs. Then it’s all too late.”

Molly coughed from the corner.

“Give me the shot,” Stoddard said.

“I want to hear it first.”

Stoddard pointed a finger at the cot. “It was all her idea. From the beginning.”

“Molly?”

“She hired Gilmore. Paid him to release the pathogen once the Canary triggered. Thought it would be a classic profile for a terrorist attack.”

“What about the bug itself?”

“She started working on the modifications to Roar over a year ago. It was designed to go active for two to three days. A controlled kill, just as you described. Enough to scare the government. Then show what CDA could do to defuse the crisis. Secure our company’s future. Secure our country’s future.”

“And the five hundred dead?”

“A price worth paying. Now give me the shot.”

“You’re leaving out some of the best parts.”

“What do you want?”

“The gangs, Stoddard. I want to hear about the gangs.”

“I don’t know anything about that.”

“You grew up in K Town.”

“Everyone knows that.”

I threw down the documents I’d gotten from Northwestern. “You taught a night class at Kellogg in the fall of 2007. Ray Sampson was one of your students. Then you became his adviser.”

I wasn’t sure if Stoddard was still with me, so I pushed the paperwork closer. I slipped Ray Ray’s picture on top. “This guy ran the Fours until he was killed last week.”

“So?”

“I think he was working with you. I think you told him about the release. And gave him a stash of masks. I want to know why.”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

I checked my watch. “Can you feel your throat closing yet?”

“Please.”

“I can wait all day.”

Stoddard rolled his eyes around the room. All he saw were closed blinds on the windows and Molly’s back on the cot.

“They were part of it,” Stoddard said.

“The Fours?”

“Yes.”

“How?”

“Seed money. The seed money I used to start CDA came from the Fours.”

“So they were your partners?”

“I needed twenty million to get CDA going. Back then, it wasn’t going to happen with the banks and the few small investors I had. So, yes, they provided me with most of the venture capital.”

“And you cleaned their drug cash in the process.”

“Of course.”

“Keep going.”

“CDA was getting too big. I couldn’t have the taint of gang money in the company. Ray understood that and was willing to keep a low profile. But I knew it wouldn’t work. Not in the big picture.”

“Why pay a return to your investors when you can just kill them off?”

“The subway release was just the first, and smallest, of several Gilmore made. The rest were targeted hits on K Town, focusing especially on the Fours and their leadership. We figured nature would take its course after that.”

I thought about Ray Sampson, sprawled on the stone cobbles outside a church.

“One way or the other,” I said.

“Excuse me?”

“Never mind. What about the masks?”

“No filters in them. Useless. Actually made the poor bastards more vulnerable than ever.” Stoddard coughed into his hands and spit on the floor.

“Not much more time, Jon. What else?”

“We had nothing to do with the fires in K Town. That was the government’s thing.”

“A happy coincidence?”

“They saw a chance to control the infection. And get rid of some undesirables at the same time. Who was I to argue?”

I shoved over a pad and paper. “Write it down.”

He scribbled away for a few minutes. His throat had started to swell, and his eyes were closing.

“That’s something to do with the mucous membranes,” I said as I read what he’d written. “In some people they start to swell about three minutes before the lights go out. But you probably know all that.”

“Please.” Stoddard scratched at my arm.

“Keep writing.”

Stoddard bent over the pad again. Molly shifted on the cot. I looked up to see the compact silver-and-black gun in her hand.

“No.” I ran at her. She fired just as Jon Stoddard turned. The gun was loud for its size. The small-caliber slug caught Stoddard just under the eyebrow. America’s leading biowarrior was dead before he hit the floor.

“I was sick of listening to him.” Molly coughed and dropped her pistol. I kicked it to a corner and pulled mine off my hip again.

“How many different ways are you going to kill me, Michael?”

“You’re not going to die, Molly. Not yet, anyway.”

I took off my mask and held it down by my side. James Doll came through the door.

“What the hell happened?”

“I was about to tell Molly the stuff I sprayed in here will irritate the lining of her lungs and give her a headache. Nothing more.” I nodded toward her piece. “She shot Stoddard. Guess you can add it to her tab.”

Molly sat down again on the cot. “It needed to be done, Michael. All of it.”

“Keep talking and I won’t half mind shooting you myself.”

“I don’t think so.” Molly’s eyes reached over my shoulder. I heard Rodriguez’s warning in my head and knew what was coming next.

“Lay it down.”

I turned. James Doll had his service weapon out and pointed my way. “I can let you scare them. But I can’t let you kill them. At least not both of them.”

“Why?”

“The gun.”

I slid my piece across the floor. Doll put it in his pocket along with Molly’s.

“You ever heard of something called the Dweller, Kelly?”

“Does it have anything to do with Robert Crane?”

Doll pointed to a chair. “Sit.”

I did. Doll took a chair across from me.

“I didn’t understand why they sent Crane after you either. Then they told me about the Dweller.” Doll nodded toward the cot. “You want to explain the rest?”

Molly took her time getting up. I could hear the wheeze in her breathing as she walked over to a workstation and typed in a command. One of the monitors came to life with an annotated map of northern California. A second filled up with colored strings of DNA code. The word
DWELLER
was displayed at the top of the screen.

“Jon and I realized our company might need additional protection someday. Maybe not this soon, but someday. So four months ago, we infected almost a quarter million people in the Bay Area with a biological weapon. We call it the Dweller.”

I glanced at Doll, whose gun stared a hole right through me. Molly’s voice staggered on.

“It’s a stealth virus. No one gets sick unless and until it’s activated. Then the host dies within two days.”

“I don’t believe it,” I said.

“We’ve given Washington a piece of the Dweller’s genetic code. They’ve examined it, and they believe. They can’t afford not to.”

I turned to Doll. “So she’s blackmailing you?”

“Stoddard approached my boss when you started getting close. Told him CDA was responsible for the Chicago outbreak and why. Then he told my boss about the Dweller. And insisted you be taken care of.”

Molly hit a few more keys, and the two screens went blank. “I love my country, Michael.”

“What the hell does that mean?”

“It means I could sell my toys to the highest bidder. And there’d be plenty. But I don’t.”

“You’re a real patriot.” I took a step.

“That’s enough.” Doll moved to the middle of the room, where he could cover both of us with his gun.“We need to get you out of here, Ms. Carrolton.” He began to herd Molly toward the door.

“You won’t get her back,” I said.

Molly stopped. “Won’t get who back?”

“Ellen’s gonna know the truth about her sister.”

Molly’s features froze. For a moment, I thought they might crack and crumble right off her face. Then she turned to Doll. “What happens to him?”

“That’s not your concern, ma’am.” Doll nodded toward the door. “We need to get you out of here. Now.”

Molly looked like she might fight it. Then she erupted in a fit of coughing. Doll led her out, the door locking behind them. Five minutes later, the man from Homeland returned. He still had his gun out.

“Now what the fuck am I going to do with you?”

CHAPTER 64

I stood at the back of Holy Name Cathedral and watched the great people sort themselves out for the morning service. Pecking order was everything. No one knew that better than Mayor John Julius Wilson. If the president had shown up, Wilson would have given up pole position in the first pew. As it was, Wilson parked himself on the aisle, the vice president directly to his left. Cameras were lined up just to the right of the altar. Far enough back so they didn’t ruin the networks’ wide shot but close enough to catch the mayor beating his breast, fingering his rosary, and squeezing out another tear.

I pulled the
Trib
from under my arm. If sorrow was its morning coat, the city’s feet remained firmly planted in the muck and mire of rumor and suspicion. Some recent headlines:

ANOTHER ATTACK IMMINENT: MUTANT FORM OF PATHOGEN SEEN IN CITY’S HOSPITALS

COOK COUNTY PUTS IN EMERGENCY ORDER FOR 100,000 NBC SUITS

REPUBLICANS BEHIND RELEASE; SEEK TO ELECT A NEW PRESIDENT

And then there was today’s missive—a page one article on stealth viruses. How they worked. What they could do. Why we should be concerned. I didn’t know how many people knew about Molly Carrolton. Or her threats. But it only took one to light the fuse.

“How many lives you think you got?”

I turned. Vince Rodriguez stood just inside Holy Name’s main doors, fresh sunlight spilling around his shoulders.

“Me? Enemies?”

Rodriguez pulled close and tapped me on the chest. “I told you not to trust that prick.”

The detective was right. James Doll had been adamant that I needed to join Jon Stoddard, stretched and cold on the floor of CDA Labs. Then I showed him the cell phone pictures I’d taken inside the quarantine zone. Red paint, nailed-up windows, and dead bodies. Doll wasn’t impressed, so I took out the flash drive Ellen Brazile had given me. The one with a covert recording of the meeting where Doll and his pals in Washington had laid out various alternatives for controlling an infected population—including four different ways to burn down K Town. Doll might have been able to explain away my pictures, but there was no escaping his own words, played back in stereo. A few phone calls later, I was deemed an “acceptable risk.” At least for now.

“How did it go with Theresa’s family?” I said.

Theresa Jackson’s remains had been cremated along with the rest.

“All she had was a sister,” Rodriguez said. “Didn’t seem much interested.”

“Sorry.”

“It’s okay. I’ll keep her ashes.”

My friend’s eyes smoldered for a moment, then dulled. Above us, an organ swelled with music and a choir began to sing. When they were finished, the cardinal took the pulpit and started blessing things. Rodriguez nudged me. We walked through the massive bronze doors and into a blast of morning sunshine.

“Where’s Rita?” I said.

“Where’s Rita? Pissed off is where Rita is. She knows everything and can report none of it.”

“At least she’s alive.”

“I’ll make sure to pass that along.” Rodriguez slipped on a pair of shades and took a seat on the cathedral steps. I joined him.

“I’ll make it up to her,” I said.

“How you gonna make it up to me?”

There had never been any ballistics match from Rodriguez. Rita Alvarez had never uncovered a “money angle” worth pursuing. I’d put them through their paces in my office to make Molly Carrolton feel like she was on the inside—part of the investigation. Once she offered up a DNA match to Gilmore, there’d been only one lead to follow. Everything and everyone else became a smoke screen. A means to an end.

“You don’t like being a decoy?” I said.

“How about I don’t like supplying bangers with product?”

“Fours got a new king.”

“Marcus Robinson? He won’t last the summer.”

I shrugged. “Either way, maybe I can help.”

Rodriguez grunted and stared down the block. Police had cordoned off State and Superior with blue police barriers. Beyond that, a crowd had formed, waiting for a glimpse of someone halfway famous. A woman took our picture and waved. I waved back.

“Who was that?” Rodriguez said.

“Nobody. She just waved.”

“Fucking celebrities now.”

Holy Name’s front doors swung open and the church began to empty. Rodriguez and I moved to one side. I was half watching the faces, wondering why I’d come to this at all, when I got a nudge in the ribs. I looked at Rodriguez, then followed his eyes. Molly Carrolton floated past, hidden by a large black hat and buried in a cluster of suits. I felt for the gun that wasn’t on my hip. She turned, her eyes taking me in without absorbing a bit of it. Then she threw me back onto the cathedral’s steps and stepped right over me. Into a limo and was gone.

“Guess there’s not gonna be much of a trial,” Rodriguez said.

I was about to respond when Holy Name’s front doors swung open again and men with dark glasses and earpieces came out. The VP wasn’t far behind, Wilson hanging on his elbow. They stopped just inside the entrance to talk to the cardinal.

“How’s our mayor doing?” Rodriguez said.

“BBC News led their broadcast last night with a feature on his lifestyle.”

“I didn’t know he had a lifestyle.”

Rissman popped out of the clutter. Wilson nodded as his chief of staff leaned close and whispered. The mayor was staring at me now. A hint of something tugged at his lips. I slid a pair of sunglasses off the top of my head and felt immediately better behind them.

“What’s gonna happen with him?” Rodriguez said, nodding toward Rissman. I’d filled Rodriguez in on the mayor’s aide and his plans to undo his boss.

“Don’t know.”

“He’s been at everything the mayor’s attended,” Rodriguez said. “At least everything I’ve seen.”

“You don’t think Wilson knows what he’s doing?”

“None better. I just wonder how.”

“It’s never simple,” I said, just as Wilson’s limo pulled up. The mayor offered a final good-bye to the VP and the cardinal. Then he tucked into the back, alone, and left. My eyes tracked Rissman as he disappeared up Superior Street. I felt my feet following. Rodriguez tugged at my arm.

“Where you going?”

I didn’t know. But I went anyway. Rodriguez went with me. We walked east on Superior and turned right on Wabash, just in time to see Rissman duck into an alley.

“What’s down there?” I said.

“There’s a small lot in the back. City uses it when the big shots are at the cathedral.”

Rodriguez and I drifted past the mouth of the alley. I could see the edge of the parking lot and a second alley veering off at a diagonal to the first. Black Dumpsters lined both sides of the first alley. A small dark man had his back to us, and one of the bins open.

An engine coughed and turned over. A brown sedan pulled out of the lot just as the small dark man closed the cover on the bin and rolled it across the alley. The driver came to a stop and gave a tap on his horn. The man put his hands in the air and began to wrestle with the bin. A second, larger engine roared to life.

I couldn’t speak for the driver of the sedan, but it came together for me in that moment. The moment before it happened. A dump truck laid on its horn even as it roared down the second alley, bit into the side of the sedan, and snowplowed it into the building. There was a mad, shadowy scramble in the front seat as the sedan’s driver tried to open a door that was now pinned against a brick wall. The driver of the truck revved his engine, front wheels gaining purchase, climbing up the side of the sedan and crashing through its roof. Rodriguez ran down the alley. I stayed where I was as the driver of the truck rocked his front wheels back and forth, crushing the roof of the sedan flat. On cue, there was a flare of sirens behind me. Three police cruisers and a fire engine— a carefully selected group, no doubt—arrived on scene within thirty seconds of the crash itself. Rodriguez raised his arms, badge in one hand, gun in the other. A cop took him to one side. The rest swarmed over the wreckage.

I walked up to the sedan. A thin river of blood mixed with oil had leaked out from under the left front wheel. I could make out a patch of human hair and Rissman’s black glasses crushed and pinned awkwardly against the steering wheel. The rest of it was broken glass, twisted steel, and flesh.

The driver of the dump truck didn’t say much. And when he did, it was in Italian. The second man I’d seen in the alley was gone. I angled over to the side of the truck. The script on the door read
SILVER LINE TRUCKING
.

“Look familiar?” Rodriguez had walked up behind me.

“Vinny DeLuca.”

Rodriguez kicked at a stone in his way. “He always liked to do business with the city.”

“And wanted everyone to know it.”

A shout came from the back of the sedan. A fireman rose up and vomited against the wall. The rest of them scattered. The trunk of Rissman’s car was open. I got within ten feet and reached for a handkerchief. Then I looked in. Peter Gilmore looked back. Or what was left of him. Knees tucked in under his chin. Propped up against a spare tire. Waiting, apparently, for someone to bury him.

“Is that who I think it is?” Rodriguez said.

“Yep.” I walked back down the alley to the street. Rodriguez lingered for another minute, then joined me.

“You want one?” I offered him a cigarette.

“No, thanks.”

I lit up, hoping tobacco would wash away the death smell. Rodriguez and I walked down Wabash, then turned toward the cathedral.

“You know what will happen?” Rodriguez said.

“With what?”

The detective waved a hand vaguely behind us. “Our friends back there. The guy in the trunk will miraculously transport himself to the front seat of the car, where he will have expired from injuries suffered in the crash. The driver of the dump truck will get a citation for dangerous driving, appear in court in two months, and have his case dismissed. The whole thing will be a bit of tragic irony on page three of tomorrow’s
Trib
. Wilson will mourn the loss of his aide. Hell, Rissman might even rate his own mention at Holy Name. Either way, the whole thing will be forgotten in a week.”

“Loose ends,” I said.

“No one ties ’em up better than Chicago.”

We came to the corner of Superior and State.

“Where you headed?” I said.

Rodriguez shrugged. “Gotta date for lunch.”

“Rita?”

“Yeah.”

“She’s all right, Vince.”

“Yeah, yeah. What about you?”

I nodded toward the stone steps and the white building above it. “Got some loose ends of my own.”

“Say one for me.” Rodriguez began to walk away. Then he stopped and turned. “I almost forgot.”

“What?”

“Rachel?”

“What about her?”

“What’s going on?”

Inside the folds of my coat was a flat package. It contained a final concession from the feds: all the paperwork on Rachel’s connections to CDA and a letter promising to bury the matter forever. I’d considered giving it to her in person but decided the mailbox might be a better option.

“Kelly?”

“Yeah?”

“You want me to talk to her?”

“Be better if we leave it, Vince.”

“For now?”

“Yeah, for now.”

The detective patted me on the shoulder and started up Superior again. I sat on Holy Name’s steps and warmed myself in the sun. A couple more cruisers flashed by. Along with an ambulance and a TV truck. I finished my smoke and ground the butt under my heel.

Inside, the cathedral felt cold and massive. I took a seat in the back. Then I got on my knees and closed my eyes. The darkness was absolute. I reached out with my hands, searching for a window to open, a ray of light to follow. But there was nothing. Just darkness. Suffocating and eternal. I sunk into it. And suffered. Knowing this was how it had to be. Until it wasn’t.

BOOK: We All Fall Down
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