ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 63

Chapter 63

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Jack knew that if he didn’t do something constructive he’d go crazy.  Dvora felt the same way and drove them into the City.  He wanted to take the ferry and a cab to the office, but she enjoyed driving and was way better at it than Jack was.  She drove at least thirty percent faster than he did and it scared the hell out of him.  He couldn’t help stomping his foot on the imaginary brake pedal on the passenger’s side.  One particularly assertive move to pass a taxi had him shrinking back in the seat and sucking air.

Dvora finally had enough and said, “If you are going to tense up every time I make a lane change you are going to have a stroke.  I graduated first in my class at Bob Bondurant’s.  Just because you can’t drive this way safely doesn’t mean I can’t.”

Dvora needed a potion to keep her arthritis at bay.  She dropped him at the office and headed into China Town to her herbalist.  He made sure the blinds were closed tight in the conference room and laid out the history of the stocks again.  Something nagged.  He knew something and didn’t know what he knew or how he knew it.  He’d been born in time to be part of the computer revolution, but he was still more comfortable with the slow speed of paper held in his hands than computer text scrolling across a screen.

He had asked one of his US brokers to send him forty-six annual reports and 10-K’s.  He was only interested in eight of them, but he needed the smoke screen of interest in the other thirty-eight.  He picked up the annual reports for ReWire, Genotopian, Double Helix, ReGenatronics, and Ecoplan, all genetic engineering firms.  He had looked through a dozen other annual reports for companies in the same business and they didn’t have even a hint of questionable stock activity.

Of the suspect companies, three were headquartered in the Bay Area. One wasn’t.  Two were old companies who’d moved into genetic engineering recently.  Two were small capitalization stocks and three were medium capitalization stocks.  Genotopian and Ecoplan had three out of seventeen total directors in common, but no other company even had one.  He threw the annual reports on the floor in disgust and paced back and forth in front of the now clean dry-erase board.

He walked back and forth, eight paces and quick turn each way, eight paces and turn, not looking at reports, not thinking about them, knowing he’d get the hit by trying easy.

He walked back and forth, then jogged and finally sprinted, turning the conference room into a cone drill from football fields long ago.  Something tickled at his oxygenated brain.  He walked over to the pile and bent to pick them up and restack the dead trees.  He stopped.  Sweat dripped onto a couple of the reports.  Two of the three reports weren’t standard eight-and-a-half-by-eleven.  One looked to be about ten-by-fourteen and the other could have been a seven-by-seven.  When he had thrown them on the floor, two had landed open.

Genotopian’s was on the top.  It was the smallest and he could see the blue highlighted paragraph.  “…cutting-edge research into the Hepatitis C problem, concentrating on the area which has shown the most promise…”

Double Helix was right below in and the section said.  “…at the front lines of the battle against Hepatitis C, the…”

He knew he’d seen something similar in the two others.  He knew his sister worked in antiviral research so he didn’t need to check. He picked up Ecoplan’s annual report and thumbed through it, knowing it would be there: “…very proud of our leadership in Hepatitis C research, offering real hope for a viable cure for…”

That couldn’t be the common thread but when he asked the database to look for it in the rest of the companies listed, it was.  All of the companies that were being played were doing antiviral research.  But so many others were, too, and were bigger players.  What was different about these?

Because all the companies were working in the same area someone who was an expert in that area would have an inside edge on their performance and would be able to play them.  That inside knowledge, combined with the disinformation plan his group detected, would give a stock trader a decided advantage over the market.  It was a long forced march from disinformation to the attempted murder of his sister.

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He stood up and stretched and walked back over to the eraser thinking he had the answer pegged.  He put stock activity back up on the white board.  He’d done it so often he could almost do it by memory.  He stepped back after half an hour and looked at it, again disappointed.  Eleven of the short sale periods did not coincide with a period of time before a press release or a disinformation campaign, yet the stocks had tanked shortly after the short activity.

Unless the people playing these stocks had precognition or divine guidance, there was no way they could be playing the stocks the way they were playing them.  Maybe they had ESP like him?

The hunger cramps finally got him.  He walked down stairs to the kitchen to whip up a thousand calories. He was washing down the last of his snack with filtered water when the idea came up and nibbled at him. He was missing something and it was because of the search parameters his group used. He ran back up the steep stairs, taking them three at a time, careful to plant his feet in the middle of the steps.  He had a hell of time finding the guidelines Alice used when she wrote the program.  When he did he had to read her notes three times.

 

“…incidents or events which would be interpreted by a reasonable person as matching the legal definition of ‘acts of God’ are not included in the program parameters.  All such events, their dates and background information have been included in the original database. All movements of share price, calls, puts, or short interest above the thirty day moving average are also included. The above information may be included in the program parameters by rerunning the program at the prompt and running the version of the program labeled ‘With Acts of God’ If you wish to view the data that has been interpreted as acts of God, pull up the file labeled ‘Acts of God’.

 

Jack ran the program with “Acts of God” and immediately matched the acts of god against the incidences of heavy short activity in the stocks. His stomach churned.  He nearly dropped his laptop when he turned to throw up in the wastebasket.

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ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 62

Chapter 62

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The priest shuddered and held his hand over the young boy’s mouth and thrust as much as his huge belly would allow.  The boy tried to cry in pain and the priest paused to whisper in his ear. “Quiet, I’ll be done soon.”

The priest thought about how weak these boys were.  Why, when the bishop first took the priest he was only ten and small and bled for days.  This boy had already been used. He had been promised an untouched boy if he could get the couple to do his bidding.  The thought of the pretty young boy’s bee stung lips on him for the first time brought him to climax.

When he could regain his breath he rolled off the boy and told him to quit whining and clean him up.  Then he went to his safe and opened the folder.  His eyes gleamed with pride and the glory of his faith.  His plan had been approved and there was talk of a promotion!  Her Grace said that his ability to marshal the troops was an example for the other priests in the inner circle. He wondered if he dared visit one of the sites?  No, not yet.  He must be strong.  He had been squirreling money away from the collection plate.  He almost had enough saved.  He was scheduled to attend the symposium in Ho Chi Minh City.  From there it would not be difficult to visit the retreat in Thailand.

He must not let himself get distracted again.  He pored over his notes.

 

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ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 61

Chapter 61

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Judge Lionel Thomas Jefferson listened to Jack’s ridiculous story without interrupting.  Then, Lionel asked him if he had been drinking.  When Jack told him he wasn’t, hadn’t and wouldn’t, the Judge said to hold on.  Jack held for ten minutes.  He wondered if the Judge was calling the nut house on the other line or calling the bad guys.

The Judge came back on and said, “The boy’s still alive and they are moving him to a holding cell pending my written order to remand him to the jail here in Sacramento for protective custody.”

He coughed again, worse than even three weeks ago. Jack waited him out, hoping to God he wouldn’t die any time soon.  They’d quit making men like him some time ago.

“Jack, Captain Yan is a good man.  He will ferret out the truth.  Put your trust in him completely.”

A CAR pulled up to the gate at 9:00 AM.  The van with Bob’s men in it, the ones who had swept the house for bugs and left even more monitoring equipment, waited for the other car to make the turn.  Jack could tell it was Yan’s car, even from a distance, because the shocks on the driver’s side couldn’t completely compensate for the sergeant’s weight.  Margaret headed home alone. He couldn’t ask anyone to risk going with her to make sure she was all right.  And, he had to trust that she wouldn’t rat them out to save her son.

Sergeant Washington bounded out of the car and seemed to float across the driveway as he moved around to open the door for the Captain.  Yan followed his Sergeant up the steps. Jerome and Zelda were down below working out.  Angelo Mangusta was back on duty.  Jack and Dvora welcomed the Captain and the Sergeant into the same sitting room that, hours earlier, had entertained the two Feds. He hadn’t told the Captain the tall tale over the phone, simply asked him, as a favor, to come as quickly as he could.

The Captain sat on the edge of the couch, the Sergeant choosing to sit in the kitchen on one of the hard wooden chairs, saying that, with his bulk, getting up and down from couches was too much work.  He didn’t buy Washington’s reason.  Jack’s theory was the Captain wanted deniability.  If Yan had a witness and Jack told him the story, he might feel compelled to make his listening official.

Jack launched in.  He showed the Captain the pictures, their trading records and research, the copies of the news stories about the stocks, and everything else he knew.  An hour later his throat was parched.  The Captain stood, stretched his back, walked to the window, and looked out to the Bay.  The day had dawned clear and cold, the strong wind from the previous day seemingly long gone.  Yan looked out the window for minutes, turned back and sat down with a gentle smile on his face.  Yan interrogated Jack for the next hour.

When Yan was done, Jack agreed to meet the Captain in his office at six that evening. Yan was chief witness for the prosecution in a capital crime and had to be in court all afternoon. 

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ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 60

Chapter 60

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At 11:57 Zelda came bounding into the room.  Jack ran for the stairs, thinking the worst.  Zelda stopped him and said, “Meghan’s okay, I caught the fucking bitch in time.  Jerome is watching her, but you need to get another nurse here, fast.”

Margaret Linden-Smith, RN, BSN, sat in the straight-backed wooden chair in Jerome and Zelda’s room. She was a small woman, and hunched over crying softly, she seemed no bigger than a child of ten.  Her blonde hair was bleached almost white and the blue of her eyes so pale it was hard to tell the color.  Her too-dark skin didn’t look good colored by real emotion.  He had asked her about the tan and the cigarettes the second night she’d watched Meghan.

She laughed and said, “Nurses are like that, either all-the-way healthy or unhealthy. There is no correlation between how we take care of ourselves and how we take care of other people.”

He had almost become used to Jerome’s size.  Seeing the man standing in front of Margaret, his muscles pumped full of blood from his workout in Jack’s iron room, it didn’t seem possible that he and Margaret were of the same species. Jerome’s massive back faced him and his latissimus dorsi stood out so wide it seemed as if he was a gargoyle come to life, ready to wrap Margaret in his wings and fly off with her.

Zelda said, “We just went over this in class.  The contents will have to be tested to be sure, but I know; fat embolism.  I watched her from the door.  She was so nervous.  I knew it.  She was going to inject this into the IV.”

Zelda carefully held up a wad of Kleenex, holding the tissue as if she held a particularly brittle and precious figurine.  She held the device up to the light.  He could see the thick, oily contents, like something from inside a lava lamp.

Jack had more than a passing knowledge of syringes.  The needle looked big, maybe a fourteen-gauge.  This needle and syringe were a throwback: Glass, not plastic, with a rubber stopper and ring.  The stainless steel at the base of the needle gleamed in the light, its mirror-bright surface reflecting a madman’s eyes.  It was too easy to picture himself grabbing the syringe, pulling in a load of air and jamming the needle into the carotid artery in the side of Margaret’s neck.

Zelda continued.  “I stayed, trying to talk to her, about how to study for the boards, which cram course to buy.  Margaret was so uptight she could hardly talk.  I left the room, pretending I had to study.  I got a mirror; the only thing I could find was a compact.  I didn’t know I still had it in my bag.  I used it to spy on her over the transom.  She waited and waited.  I wanted to run in and open her purse.  I’m sorry I took the chance.  I guess she could have had a gun.  Then I saw the bitch get ready.  I ran in.  She heard me and tried to shove it back into her clothes.  She tried to keep it from me.”  The last she said in amazement, that anyone, other than the mighty Jerome, would try and keep something from the fierce and strong Zelda.

“Margaret?  Why?”  Jack asked.

She wouldn’t look up, wouldn’t answer. He couldn’t torture it out of her.  He pulled the matching wooden chair up close to hers, close enough to reach out and touch her without straightening his arm.

“Margaret, it wasn’t for money, was it?”

The question shocked her enough to get her to look up and shake her head.  He couldn’t get inside her head as far as some, but he had a feel for her.  She hadn’t been a killer the night when they’d had their heart-to-heart.  Something happened since.  He knew it wasn’t money.

“Margaret. What did they threaten to do to your boy?”

She jerked as if he’d hit her with a cattle prod, looking at him with eyes wide.  Then she looked away again.  Her eyes wouldn’t meet his, but focused everywhere, except on him.  And, she didn’t focus on the corner of the room.  In the corner were the coat rack and a couch table he used as a temporary resting place for crap he hadn’t put away yet.  Margaret’s plain, black leather purse sat near the right edge of the table, partially covered by her sweater. Her purse was as big as an attaché case.

He picked up the purse and dumped the contents on the table. It was a very clean purse and smelled faintly of saddle soap.  No half-empty packs of breath mints, no used Kleenex, no lip-liner stubs.  What she did have was a wallet with checkbook attachment, two sets of keys, an iPhone in an OtterBox case, a new packet of Kleenex, and two flexible zippered plastic cases.

One of the zippered plastic cases was pink and neatly filled with Playtex Lite-Day Pads and Tampax brand tampons.  The larger one, covered in daisies, was filled with a Phillips Sonicare toothbrush, Rembrandt paste, and Johnson & Johnson floss. Mint.

There was a small, flat, black, felt-covered case.  The black case looked like the container for a precision instrument like a good micrometer.  He knew it would be empty even before he opened it, the perfect cutout ready to take the syringe and keep it safe.  There were too many months after he got out of the hospital the first time that he’d been way to familiar with a syringe much like it.

There was also a thin nine-by-twelve manila envelope. He picked up the envelope knowing what it had to contain.  He didn’t want to open it, but he had to see what forced a good, loving woman to think seriously about killing another human being.  He opened the envelope and slid the pictures out, face down, onto the slightly rough finish of the table.  One of them caught on an unseen blemish on the table’s surface and flipped over.

The photo was a color eight-by-ten.  Margaret’s son Raymond faced away from the camera.  He had turned to look back over his shoulder. He was easy to recognize. The boy had gained weight since the other pictures she’d showed him and it looked like he’d been working out.

It was easy to see the muscle tone because he was naked.  The additional muscle wasn’t going to help him.  He was bent over a table, his legs spread and taped to the legs of the table, his arms stretched out, the white nylon rope that tied his arms to the front table legs biting into his wrists.

He wasn’t alone in the picture.  There was a group of boys in the picture with him.  One stood behind Raymond, with his left hand on a massive hard-on.  The young man’s right hand pulled Raymond’s right butt cheek out to the side.  There were other boys, equally hard, ready to use Raymond.  He flipped through the other pictures.  They were all the same sort, all of near-professional quality.  The only unprofessional things were the boys mugging for the camera.

Jack turned the last picture over.  It was a final variant on the rest.  Her boy’s mouth was forced open.  Again the young men were ready and, from their expressions, eager, to use the open mouth.  Margaret still couldn’t look up.

“Margaret I don’t claim to understand how you feel.  I don’t have children.  I think if I did and my child was threatened with the same thing, I would consider doing anything to keep them safe. I know this sounds crazy, but this could turn out all right for both of us, maybe a huge opportunity for all of us. I can help you get your son out of CYA and you can help me find the scum who did this.  Tell me how it started.”

Once she opened up it was all the way, as if she had been waiting to tell someone.  “There is no way anyone could help anyone now.  They will know I failed.  Raymond will be, will be…” She broke down again.

She just kept going and didn’t seem to notice that Dvora placed her iPhone on the table in front of Margaret.  Dvora recorded the confession as a voice memo.

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“I don’t know who it is.  I’ve never seen anyone.  Oh I saw them, but they were all in masks and tied me to the chair so I couldn’t get away until they left.  The pictures aren’t the worst.  There was a DVD.  They know everything about me.  Where I bank, what I do with my money, the kind of deodorant I buy.  They say they have people everywhere.  They say they will know if I don’t do what I have to do.”

“How long before you have to do it?”  He asked.

Margaret looked at him as if he were speaking a foreign language.  Her speech had been a monologue, an act of confession, the act itself having drained her, not really thinking about what she was saying, simply confessing.

“How much time did they give you before they hurt your son?”

“I was supposed to have done it on my last shift.  I told them I didn’t know how to do it and make it look like an accident.  They gave me the syringe and told me the fat was very similar to your sister’s.  They said no one would suspect a thing.  They said injuries as serious as your sister’s, especially the broken hip, often resulted in fat embolisms.  I have two more days.  I had to try tonight because the video showed them, it showed…”

He understood her motives.  He couldn’t condone or forgive her. He didn’t try to comfort her because he couldn’t, no matter what her suffering.  Zelda pulled another chair up next to Margaret and put her arm around Margaret’s shoulder, stroking her hair, and patting her.  Jerome stood next to Zelda, knowing the threat to Meghan was now gone, at least for a little while. Jack had to have someone care for his sister and he couldn’t replace Margaret without dooming her son.

“Zelda, could you care for Meghan until we figure out how to get another nurse here without getting Margaret’s son killed?”

Zelda looked to Jerome for support.  She looked smaller, as if the idea of being responsible for another human’s life deflated her.

She said, “You have to understand.  I don’t have the experience.  A good nurse with all that experience is ten times better than I am.  Book learning and study and all the rest can’t replace it.”

Dvora had been sitting silently, taking it all in.

“I have an idea,” she said.

She had more than an idea.  She had a plan.  They would put everything together and go to Captain Yan.  Trusting his sister’s life to a cop, any cop, wasn’t what Jack wanted, but what the hell else could they do?  They couldn’t trust the Feds, and even if they could, their story was so fantastic it would probably get them hauled in for observation.  They couldn’t fake Meghan’s death; that only happened in bad movies.

“What about my Raymond? What about my son?”  Margaret asked quietly.

He looked at her, thinking her son had decided to end his own life a long time ago and just didn’t realize it or forgot to tell her.  Trying to save him was only prolonging the inevitable.

“I have a call to make to a judge.”

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ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 59

Chapter 59

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His accent was unusual in the States.  The young black man asked, “Hey man, you Australian?”

The South African looked at the young black man, thinking how arrogant these young men were, and how much in need of the lash.

“No, I am from South Africa. The accent you hear is because my native language is Afrikaans, which is derived from Dutch.”

The young man shrugged, his curiosity sated. He waited with the patience of someone who had spent too much of his young life incarcerated.

The South African asked, “Do you understand what it is you are to do?”

“Yeah, you want my boys to mess with the fish, take pictures, but not fuck him up too bad, that right?”

The South African smiled.  “Almost right.”

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ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 58

Chapter 58

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Dvora raced down the stairs taking them faster than a professional dancer should.  She beat Jack to the stairs and he could move like lightning for such a big, powerful man.  She leaped and planted, feeling the mastery of her body, trying not to hope, and failing. She came to the last step and slowed to a measured pace.  Trying to compose herself, she smoothed her face, posture and breathing into the calm serenity she used to approach center stage after an arduous performance. She squared her shoulders and walked purposefully into the room.

Angelo sat in his chair smiling.

Jack asked from slightly behind her, “What is it?”

Angelo smiled even more broadly.  “This!  Okay Meghan, they are here.”

The love of her life and the most beautiful, smartest, most determined, exasperating, sexy woman she ever met, opened her eyes and smiled at them.  Her eyes are the same!  She thought as she blubbered and laughed, hearing Jack’s laugh, like a leopard would laugh if leopards laughed.

“Step back for a second, you two, give her space.  There is more. ” Angelo said.

She and Jack stepped back.

Angelo moved the glass of water with the straw near her lips and she took the straw in her mouth and drank.  Then she said, much more quietly and slowly than she would normally deliver a punch line, “You two look like… crap.”

Dvora cried for happy.  Her precious girl was back-maybe not all the way.  Looks of confusion, looks she would normally hide, fled across her face, chased away by that brilliant mind, even slowed down, moving faster than anyone else she knew.  At least, Dvora hoped that’s what was going on.

Jack said, “Welcome back, lazy.  Did you have a nice nap?”

Meghan said, “Punch him for me…Don’t break your…hand.”

She could talk!  She could talk!

Meghan said, “My brain seems…okay.  I have…gaps in my…memory.  And…talking comes…slowly.  I…need…to…rest…” With that she closed her eyes and went to sleep.

They sat, she holding one hand and Jack another, and as they talked quietly.

He said, “I want to keep this quiet.  And I want more troops here to protect her.  Someone did this to her to keep her quiet and as long as she is in a coma, or thought to be in a coma, she might be safer.  Are you okay with that?”

She thought that with this lion of a man to protect her, that her baby would be safe, but his sixth sense, or ESP, or magic, or whatever in the hell it was, had proved accurate in the past.  And, he was very objective about his skills.

“I agree, and I want to get her concierge doctor in here right away to help put together her rehabilitation team.”

“Agreed, and I want Bob to make sure that all of the team are most thoroughly vetted,” he said.

“Agreed,” she said as they put together the rest of the plan.

 

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ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 57

Chapter 57

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Jack walked up California and down to the wharf. The last rays of sun broke through clouds to cast his shadow sharp on the street in front of him as he walked down the steep hill.  His seldom-used briefcase felt a hundred pounds heavier with the extra pound of paper. Bob had to be right. Captain Yan was sure someone had been financing Albert Weise.  Otherwise there wouldn’t be a reason for Yan to make an end run around the Feds.

The line for the ferry was short for a change.  The wind turned again, now westerly.  Twenty-knot winds whipped through the Gate, knocking the tops off the four-foot waves and pushing a fine spray sideways like rain.  When the ferry moved out from the protection of the quay, the boat hit a wall of wind and listed hard to starboard.  The Captain turned into the wind.  The move startled some of the French tourists standing near him.

The men stood looking down their Gallic noses at the squeals from their women. He watched them, trying to occupy his mind with anything but the thought of someone financing a man to kill his sister.

All the French women were pretty.  One was lovely, Eurasian, with features similar to Lee’s.  Her eyes were huge and she wore just enough makeup to call attention to them.  She wore dark blue tights tucked into well-broken-in hiking boots.  Her green parka, hanging open, showed the white turtleneck that barely covered her hips and accentuated her breasts.  They were firm and high and her nipples hardened in fear as the squall hit.

Her man was in his late fifties, and with a little work, managed to look fortyish. He was the oldest in the group.  He had the look, with his silver-black hair sprayed firmly in place.  He was shorter than the woman even in his fashion cowboy boots. He wore no jewelry other than a huge gold watch.  European women weren’t as proud of their wedding rings as their American counterparts so it was tough to tell if they were married, but he had the ownership stance down.

Jack wasn’t sneaky enough.  The short Frenchman caught him looking. The man turned his woman away from the rest of the crowd and reached up a hairy left hand and massaged her right breast.  She didn’t object, but stood with her head down, waiting for him to be done.

Jack turned toward the rail, embarrassed for her, thinking of Lee.  Lee would never let herself be treated like property.  If you liked the Playboy Playmate look, Lee wasn’t as pretty as this woman, yet she was exponentially more attractive.  Lee placed a high value on herself and expected others to do the same.  Not arrogance, instead a confidence saying, “I know what I have done and what I’m capable of.  I deserve appreciation, admiration, and respect.”

Jack wandered away from the French group, finding a place to think.  His mind hunted in his head like a beagle trying to find the freshest scent.  His intuition pinged away like active sonar and his brain wouldn’t let the signal through.  His spinning mind settled on a conversation he had with one of Meghan’s nurses.

Margaret was thirty-eight years old, mother of one, and a widow. She needed the shift differential so she covered Meghan from seven PM to seven AM, Tuesday through Thursday.  That’s how she got the tan so dark, laying out by the pool at her condo in Napa, and driving over the top every day to care for Meghan. In the small hours of the morning, less than a week ago, she had stepped outside for a smoke break, and they talked.

“My life turned bad two years ago,” she said.  She turned her iPhone to show Jack pictures of her boy.  She was so proud of him.  From the surly look on the boy’s face, Jack thought if they ever met his first instinct would be to slap the boy.

“With me working long hours and my husband being overseas and all, he got away from me. He joined a gang. At first I didn’t think anything of it, just a way to feel like he fit in.  He’d always had trouble making friends.”  She took another deep drag off the cigarette.

“Then he started doing things, shoplifting, and once a burglary.  Then he screwed up big time.  Armed robbery.  He was just along for the ride and didn’t know what they were doing.  He got off light with a stint in CYA.”

Her husband had been a reservist.  They sent him to Afghanistan to keep track of all the aid.  He’d walked into a minefield.  Margaret and he had mostly talked about luck that night.  They talked until dawn about the goddess of chance.

Jack stayed in his reverie until the ferry slowed for the dock in Sausalito. By then it was black-dark, the night so far moonless.  He walked down the gangplank trying to remember where he’d parked the car.  The days blended together.

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Jack was not a good driver.  This was somehow not manly.  He barely avoided two wrecks and been in a fender bender in the month before he bought this car.  He’d bought the two-year-old pearl-white GTR from the woman after she told him how the car had saved her life-twice.  He figured maybe the car liked saving people.

It started effortlessly, but once it got going the engine seemed to run rough because of the race tuning.  The clear sound of Lou Gramm’s voice singing, “I want to know what love is, I want you to show me,” came through the speakers. He checked all the gauges and telltales: A habit left over from buying an English car when he was a boy, not smart enough to know better.

He reached into the glove box and pulled out the scanner Bob had given him. Bob, knowing him better than he knew himself, gave him the scanner on his 37th birthday.  Jack justified his constant snooping with it by saying he didn’t want to get stuck in any government messes, like fires or surveillance or such.

“Subject is pulling out of parking lot and turning left onto Paradise Drive.”

It sounded like police surveillance, unusual for this part of town, and not the kind of thing he usually found appealing, but the chatter was on the Federal frequency.  He would have kept scanning, looking for something juicier, but was just turning onto Paradise himself.  He normally stayed on Paradise for a while watching the water before he turned toward his house.  He didn’t want to be in the middle of an arrest.

“Subject is passing Mar West.”

He looked in the mirror.  There were two cars behind him. He must be right in front of the suspect.  He made a left on Centro to get away from them.

“Subject has turned left on Centro.”

Neither of the cars behind him had turned on the street yet and there were no cars in front of him. The lights behind him turned on to the street.  He slowed as he tried to figure out what in the hell was going on.

“Subject is slowing: chase cars leap-frog-now.”

The car immediately behind him made a right, letting the other one move in front.  Jack was more pissed off than worried.  Who in the fuck were they to assume it was their right to follow him? The voices coming out of the speaker were middle-class and bored.  He held to a speedy twenty-five.  His mind raced while the car crept along at the speed limit imposed long ago by people who had time on their hands.  His mind didn’t race ahead, but instead around in circles as the car inched through one of the most laid-back towns in the world.

He opened his mouth to tell Siri to call Bob. It was supposed to be nearly impossible for someone to crack the encryption on his phone, but they could have bugged the car.  If they’d done that then they could be listening in at his house. They could have bugged his work and all his friends.

“Who in the fuck are they?” he yelled at the top of his lungs.  The sound of his own voice startled him.  He sounded hysterical, even to himself.

Jack turned off the street, on to his circle and then he was at his gate.  The following car kept going when he turned onto the court.  He was thinking that as pissed off as he was, it was a good thing no one had the balls to follow him to his doorstep.  There was a strange car parked in the driveway with federal government plates.  He walked up the field stone path to the kitchen entrance and let himself in.  He grabbed a bottle of water and took the back stairs down to avoid using the elevator off the sitting room.  Angelo Mangusta was nurse on duty.

Angelo was small enough to have been a jockey, twenty years older than Jack was, and looked more like a Sicilian Don than a nurse.  Angelo didn’t need the work.  He specialized in home health care as soon as he had enough experience to demand a good wage.  He had taken care of an AIDS patient in the eighties who’d left him a thousand shares of Microsoft.  He’d kept it.  It was now worth over $6 million and paid him an annual dividend income around $160K. Angelo looked up from his freshwater fly-fishing magazine and smiled.  He glanced at the gauges above the hospital bed.

“I think she was very close today, Mr. McDonald.  Right after I came on, I sang the part of Carmina Burana to Meghan that Ms. Schacter said she liked. I’m sure she was trying to smile and hum along.”

Angelo had a sweet, boyish tenor, his pipes still pure and clear, even at his age.  “Should I try again?”

Jack nodded.  The piece was from the “Cours d’amour:  Dies, nox et omnia.”  Jack straddled the chair, watching his sister’s face intently and listening to the opera.  The bawdy Latin was at odds with the purity of Angelo’s voice.  The piece almost sounded like a prayer.  Jack guessed it was, in a way-a prayer to love. Jack sat swaying gently to the notes, willing Meghan to move.  Breath trembled in her throat and her face twisted, the hint of a brief smile crossing her face before it was gone as she lapsed back into stillness.

He closed his eyes for a few seconds, squeezing them shut as hard as he could.  He looked deep inside himself for the strength to go on and, not finding it, went on anyway. He reached out with his inside touch to check on Meghan.

Are you there?

Jack!  I’m here and getting better and I’m sure I’m going to wake up soon.  Hug Dvora and let me lay here and get well.

It wasn’t really words.  He’d tried to explain it to Bob once.  Bob was one of the most religious men he’d ever met and in all other things one of the least self-deceptive.  He didn’t try to change Bob or argue with him or reason with him about his religion.  Bob always said religion was like pretty girls.  One person thought one kind of girl was pretty and another one thought she was ugly.  And, people could be head-over-heels in love with someone that made another person’s skin crawl.

Jack didn’t begrudge his best friend his religion.  When Jack had first talked to Bob about his gift, Bob had just smiled and said, “God works in mysterious ways.  He has given one of the best men I know a gift he can use to keep other people safe. Hallelujah!”  Jack knew other religious types who would call it the curse of the devil, skip the exorcism and go right to burning him at the stake.

Jack let the tears flow and kissed his sister on the forehead and took the elevator up, smoothing his face and breathing into clarity and calm, clinging to the flowery, clean smell of Meghan’s freshly shampooed hair.  It seemed like her hair was growing in straighter.  She’d like it if it were more manageable. He hoped with all the hope he had that she would never be more manageable.  He wanted his wild, rule-breaking, brilliant, funny sister back.

The elevator door opened and he walked down the hall into the sitting room.  Dvora started to rise.  He waved her back into her favorite chair, the one that was way too firm.  The two men sitting on his couch, in his house, on his land, made no attempt to stand. Both of the men had the same sort of look-self-satisfied and at the same time defensive look that too many government employees have.  When had the public servants become the masters?

Jack walked into the dining room and grabbed one of the hard, stiff chairs they stuck guests in who wouldn’t take the hint to leave.  He carried the chair into the sitting room, spun the chair and straddled it.  He moved at almost a run.  He folded his arms along the back of the chair and dropped his chin down on to the platform his arms made.  Then he stared at the bigger of the two men.  He’d pulled the chair too close, forcing the bigger one to pull in his feet.  Both of the men now had to look up at him.

The taller, younger one was tall even sitting, so he was used to towering over people. He was maybe thirty-five, white and thin, with a very red face. He wore an off-the-rack suit, a bad shade of brown for his shade of redhead.  The tie didn’t go well with the striped shirt and his sort-of-brown penny loafers needed a good cleaning before they would take a shine.

Tall man had small, even, sort of white teeth over a weak chin and under a mustache that needed closer trimming.  His eyes were pale blue, large, but set too close together.  He met Jack’s gaze well for the first few seconds, then his eyes wandered, first going to Dvora for support, then finding none, he looked to his partner.  Tall man reached into the inside left pocket of his suit, fumbled with a black card case and extended a card to Jack, clearing his throat.

“W. Samuel Rogers, field investigations, Treasury Department. My associate is Alfred Barton, with the Securities and Exchange Commission.”

Jack took W’s card, not bothering to look at it and then turned and took his partner’s card, giving the other man the same attention he’d given his partner.  The shorter man was harder to pigeonhole.  He looked more like an Achmed than an Alfred.  When the man stood later, Jack found out he was about five-seven.  He wore Bally shoes at the bottom and a hundred-dollar haircut on the other end. His conservative suit looked like a Hart-Marx and went with the rep tie.  Not dressed first cabin, but better than a mid-level government employee should be able to afford. Alfred had one of those heavy black-beard shadows that are dark within four or five hours of shaving, a deep cleft in his strong chin, and a nose as hooked as Jack’s Blackfoot grandmother’s.

Alfred met Jack’s gaze with more confidence than his partner, almost as if amused.  The cards looked real, but anyone can get business cards printed anywhere in a few hours for a couple of bucks.

Turning to smile at Dvora, Jack asked, “Did you check their IDs?”

Meghan’s continued coma was taking a heavy toll on Dvora.  Her cheeks were sunken, the lines bracketing her mouth growing deeper. She tried to smile, gave it up as requiring too much effort, and shook her head no, dropping her gaze down to the brandy snifter.  She had a brandy glass in her hand a lot lately.  He glanced at the decanter.  It was visibly lower than when he left.  He turned his attention back to the two public servants.

“What can I do for you?”

Rogers spoke.  “We are part of a team investigating rumors of insider trading and stock manipulation.  We are concentrating our current investigations on five genetic engineering stocks-ReWire, Genotopian, Life Force, Double Helix, and Med-Gene.  There has been talk in the brokerage community, and elsewhere, that you might be able to provide us with information.”

Jack said, “I have been looking into ReWire.  It is my fiduciary responsibility to do so.  My sister’s medical condition forces me to examine her portfolio.  There is a chance, albeit a small one, she will not be contributing additional capital to her holdings.  Her holdings in ReWire are by far the largest part of her portfolio. I am not happy with the company’s performance, but I have certainly not seen any evidence of stock manipulation.  Who says I might have such information?”

The question didn’t get an answer.  Alfred/Achmed cleared his throat and said, in the self-satisfied and obnoxious tone that only a true career bureaucrat can muster, “Mr. McDonald, Ms. Schacter, let me be candid with you.  The only reason we have not been here before in a more official way is because of your, how shall I say this, ‘friendship’ with certain people.  Our resources are immense.  Being cooperative now would be a good thing.”

Alfred sat back almost languidly. Alfred sat on his couch, in his house, on his property, and told him he should cooperate.  Jack pictured himself picking Alfred up and, with a wind-up like a hammer thrower, slinging him right through the window and, if his form was good enough, bouncing him off the deck and into the bay.

He smiled blandly down at Alfred and said, “Mr. Rogers, Mr. Barton, I would certainly cooperate with the authorities, if I had anything to cooperate with.  If, in any of my business dealings, I happen to stumble across information that might be of use to you, of course I will give it to you.  Now that I know you are concerned about a stock that is so important to my sister’s financial well-being, I will be even more attentive.”

He stood up keeping the neutral smile on his face.

“If there is nothing else?”

They eventually got the hint and stood.  Rogers, now able to look down at him, relaxed a little.  Both of them waited until Dvora stood before turning to go, Rogers staring hard at her butt in tights as she walked back to the bar to top off her drink.

Alfred smiled and held out his hand and tried the squeeze.  He was an extremely strong man.  Jack debated whether to crush his hand, breaking all the little bones he could, give him a false sense of security by pretending to be weaker, or just respond with enough of a squeeze to let Alfred know he could kill him.  He chose the last option.  As he watched the arrogant look leave Alfred’s face to be replaced by hatred, he knew he had chosen the wrong option.  He had made an enemy of a proud and petty man.  He herded the men out the front door.

Dvora stared out of the window onto the bay.  A small boat fought the wind no more than a quarter of a mile off his dock.  They were fools to be out on a night like tonight, no matter what their skill. He moved closer to Dvora, took the brandy glass from her and picked her up in a bear hug.  She fought the hug for a few seconds and then fiercely returned it, the need to be held overwhelming worry.

“I was followed on the way home,” he whispered into her ear.

Dvora tried to pull away.

“I have the house swept every day, but I didn’t check the car.  I want us to act like nothing is happening.  Tomorrow we need to have a council of war.  I want Bob, Lee, Alice, Sir Ian, and Uncle Chin in on this.”

He tried to move away and she dug her fingers into his shoulder blades, holding him tight.  He disentangled and led her over to the couch, to her favorite corner, guiding her in to it and turning to hold her face in both of his hands.

“I’m worried about the booze.”

She stared down at her lap, cheeks coloring.  Then she slowly lifted her gaze to meet his.  The tears were there, unshed but ready.

“I hate it when you’re right.  I know I shouldn’t be drinking this much but it’s so damn frustrating, waiting, hoping, nothing happening.  If Meghan knew I was drinking this much, she’d hammer me.  She’d been going back to counseling, you know. Do you think it affected you as much as her?”

He knew what ‘it’ was without any explanation. How much had having lunatic, alcoholic parents affected him?  He was obsessive, unsure, suspicious, grasping, brilliant, paranoid, sensitive, obtuse, intuitive, unfeeling, passionate and cold.  In other words, his parent’s craziness left him like most people, with some good and some bad, and some he hadn’t figured out yet.  He couldn’t answer the question and didn’t fall for the diversion.

They sat watching the weather on the bay, talking about what their lives were like as kids until almost midnight when Jack’s mobile buzzed with the tone from the phone in Meghan’s sick room. He yelled into the phone as he and Dvora he ran for the stairs.

“What’s wrong, Angelo?”

“Nothing at all,” came the confident radio voice.  “There’s something I think you’d both like to see.”

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ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 56

Chapter 56

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The congressman’s Southeastern accent was, if you had been forced to listen to his speeches over the years, getting stronger.  This was despite spending most of his time in DC or on junkets.  The accent affected the assistant director of the FBI the way fingernails on a blackboard affected other people, if there were still such things as blackboards.  Because assistant director Alexander Reed had to talk to him right after his speech, he figured that he might was well listen to it.

“…why this legislation is so important.  We have passed the fourteen-year anniversary of 9/11.  The innocent men and women killed in the twin towers, the scars on our nation, the economic hardships we have suffered since, are all terrible, terrible things.  My son-in-law died in Afghanistan trying to bring the very people who did this evil to justice.”  Here the congressman paused, having to collect himself, with real tears in his eyes.  He set his lantern jaw, and leaned forward, staring directly in to the camera, his famous blue eyes piercing under the bushy brows.

“I can tell you with absolute faith that the horrors of that attack pale in comparison to what would happen if some of the biotech research in the private sector and in our universities was to be weaponized by our enemies.  This is why it is absolutely necessary for Homeland Security to have oversight over viral research in this country.  We are in conversations with responsible governments around the world about this.  Many of them feel strongly, as we do, that they should adopt a similar process.  Bill 2015, the Freedom from Bio-Terror Act, would give us the power we need to make sure these biological horrors don’t happen.  Please write and email your congressman and tell them that you support this bill.  I know that the freedom to pursue research in these areas is vital to our economic well-being as a nation.  I can assure you with all the faith I have in our divine savior that we would not interfere with this research in any way, simply make sure that it is not perverted to our enemies’ use, just like our own airplanes were used on 9/11.”

“How many of you would have liked to have avoided the problems in the laboratory that resulted in hundreds of poor beagles being killed?  While euthanizing these poor animals was absolutely necessary to keep our population safe, wouldn’t it be better to prevent things like this?  Imagine if one of those animals had made it on to a school ground.  Imagine children trying to care for one of the poor beasts, not knowing of the horrors it carried.  Imagine that it was the school where your child played.  We can prevent things like this from happening in the future.  I could go on with example after example where luck has been on our side.  Let’s not rely on luck any more.  Support HR Bill 2015, The Freedom From Bio-Terror Attack Bill and we can all sleep more soundly at night. Thank you for your support.”

With that the congressman left the stage to thunderous applause.  A few minutes later his staffer walked into the room, checking to make sure it was empty.  A tech followed and swept the room for bugs.  Only then did the congressman stride in.  Without the usual pleasantries, the congressman dove in.

“All you got to do boy, is just dig a little deeper.  You fellows know he’s doing business with them Chinese in Hong Kong.  And you know them Chinese in Hong Kong are doing business with them Chinese in China.  You know he is one slick con man.  Heck, you know there is no way he could have been smart enough to pick them stocks like he did years ago, without some kind of advanced knowledge, but your friends over at the SEC couldn’t prove it.  Now you got way more tools.  You got the Patriot Act, which means you can investigate the heck out of him and don’t even have to tell him a darn thing about it, darn it!”

“Sir, I agree that he is a very smart man.  I haven’t ever heard anyone call him a con man.  The words I hear used to describe him are-honest to a fault, fair, hard-working, brilliant, a trusted friend, pillar of the community…”

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“Hold on right there, boy.  You are talking like he is some gosh darned paragon of virtue.  He doesn’t even go to church, darn it.  What kind of person doesn’t go to church?  I haven’t missed a Sunday Mass in thirty years.”

This assistant director of the FBI thought about the rumors he had heard, wondering if they were true.  If they were, this particular congressman should live in the confessional.  Maybe then the congressman would keep his dick in his pants and not stick it in underage girls and boys.  Now that would be something that would be worth surveillance hours.  The assistant director of the FBI had an eleven-year-old nephew who was molested at a church camp.

“Sir, I agree that he is probably breaking some securities or tax laws.  It is almost impossible not to.  I also know he is a twice-wounded veteran and a decorated war hero.  He does business with other wounded and decorated war heroes.  He gives heavily to charity and, may I remind you, to our President’s library.  If anyone finds out about us spending precious resources on him when we have genuine terrorist threats…”

The assistant director didn’t get a chance to finish.

“Darn it boy!  I am telling you he’s dirty.  You know I have been right before.  Treasury and the SEC are playing ball with me here.  Do you want them to get all the glory?”

Assistant director Alexander Reed of the FBI did not want someone else to get all the glory.  His career was stalled and ”glory” of the right kind could jump-start it.  He also knew that the current Acting Director of the FBI did not give a flying fuck about glory.  The assistant director knew that the current acting, and he hoped, future permanent director of the FBI, had only one ambition.  That was to restore the FBI to its former high standards and make it as incorruptible and non-political as legend had wrongly painted it to be in the past. The assistant director knew he smelled an opportunity.  He smiled as subserviently as he could, moved his bionic leg out of the way and leaned forward.

“No Senator, I do not want people in the Treasury Department and The SEC to get all the glory. I would like some of that glory too.  If you could just give me a few facts, some specifics that I could take to my boss, then I would be more than happy to pursue this,” the assistant director said.  While he said it he thought how much ‘glory’ he would get if he gave his boss a dirty congressman.  It would be icing on the cake if he could also give the Acting Director officials in the Treasury Department and SEC who were using their official positions to illegally pressure a war hero and patriot to curry political favor.

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ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 55

Chapter 55

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Jack tried not to read as he copied.  He was nosy to the point of embarrassment.  His friends knew better than to leave anything private uncovered on their desks.  He read upside down very well.  Captain Yan had edited heavily when he read the report on Albert Weise to them in his office.  This report contained much more detail about Albert’s time in Folsom Prison and a stack of bank records, deposit and withdrawal, savings, checking and money market-which was probably what he was supposed to look into.

He had just finished copying, carefully rearranging his messenger bag to accommodate the two inch stack of paper, when Sergeant Washington coughed loudly from outside the door.  He briefly opened the door a crack and then closed it again.  A few minutes later Washington entered with the Captain following.  Sergeant Washington moved very lightly for such a big man.  Perhaps this was part of his secret of sneaking up on people, but Jack was sure not all of it.  Moving softly and lightly didn’t make people disappear.  Washington sat opposite him, on the right side of the Captain, pulling his chair back and to the side so he could watch Jack, the Captain, and the door without having to move his head.

He wondered if the Captain had indeed gone to the can and if he had, did the Sergeant go in and check the stalls for gangsters before he let the Captain go in?  As he sat he tried to match Sergeant Washington’s patience. The Sergeant was more than a secretary, more than a bodyguard.  He almost seemed as if he were some medieval vassal.  He could imagine Washington standing in front of the Captain, his sword dulled from the swath he’d cut through the Captain’s enemies, a collection of ears from past battles hanging dried and shriveled around his neck.

While he waited he discovered another of the sergeant’s traits-the skill of stillness.  Washington sat quietly watching, absorbing what was going on around him at a level below what was required to contribute to the conversation.  It was a level where he could judge; is this action a threat? Is this word a threat? If the answers were no, he didn’t react.  But if he perceived any kind of threat, as when Jack raised his voice in excitement a little too much in answer to the Captain’s question about his military record, Washington was instantly alert and moving toward action.

Jack was tempted to make a sudden move at the Captain, just to see how fast both of them could react.  The thought frightened him. He had always considered his judgment to be good-until now.

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The Captain glanced down at his watch and stood, saying apologetically, “Mr. McDonald, I am very sorry.  I was very much enjoying our chat.  You must bring the delightful Ms. Schacter by my home.  Bring your sister also, as soon as she is ready to socialize.  And the next time your Hong Lee is in town, please do arrange to stop by.”

With that, Jack was dismissed.  The Sergeant motioned him to lead the way.  The crowd of Chinese businessmen who stood waiting for the use of the room they’d just vacated bristled when they saw him.  He had felt their enmity before he left the room.  When they saw what was coming behind him they carefully changed their expressions.  The anger that had washed over him turned to respect, and with it a good dose of fear.

Just before he walked out the front door of the restaurant, he turned to watch the Captain glad-handing two of the most prominent men in the waiting crowd.  He was not seeking favor with them.  Quite the contrary, he was accepting the praise that was his due.

BOB WHITE straightened his leg, letting go of his stiff-necked composure long enough to wince and say, “Dang.”

Bob never cussed.  Well, hardly ever.

Alice and Bob played hard.  There were nights out-theater, concerts, ballet, and day trips to wine country.  Alice slept little, and loved to go and do.  When she was home, she was on-line until after midnight, then up at dawn to work out.  This was followed by another large day, then an evening out again.  Keeping up with her took a toll on Bob.

Bob grinned.  “That Alice is something, isn’t she?  A gal with her spirit and drive is wearing on a body.  Remember when you told me about those fellows in Sweden a few years ago who were taking healthy cartilage out of a man’s knee, growing it up big and strong in a sort of Petrie dish, then putting it back in?”

“I remember, Bob.  We looked at it back then and they were only getting about a fifteen percent success rate. Why?”

“Looks like they are a whole lot better at the process now.  I got bone rubbing on bone in my good leg.  I need some kind of shock absorber in there.  The idea of more plastic and screws and such inside me gets me to aching.  What do you think?”

Bob had asked him for his opinion, already having made up his mind and simply wanted his friend to support him.

“I think it’s great.  Go for it!”  He hated to think of Bob under the knife again, but he’d vote for anything that would take away part of Bob’s pain.  Bob had been depressed over the last six months as his good leg degenerated.  He was sad because he had accepted limitations on his mobility as permanent.  Even though he was only nine years older than Jack, he had begun to think of himself as old.  Alice had given him reason to care again.

He placed the stack of papers on the desk in front of Bob.  Bob reached across, picked up the stack and thumbed through it. “Yan?”

Jack nodded and Bob started reading in earnest.  Bob was a slow reader.  He said it was a mild case of dyslexia. He thought his friend Bob read slowly because he was more thorough than anyone else he had ever met.

Jack wandered around Bob’s office, knowing he could have been playing congas and it wouldn’t have bothered Bob.  His friend had changed a few his pictures.  When he was in the VA hospital the first time, Bob thought long and hard about the skills that made him a superb Ranger.  He wanted to take those skills and use them to do something fun that took him outside. Bob took up photography.  Nature photography.  He would research and plan and then sit, observe, and wait for the right opportunity better than anybody.

Bob had started with black and white, gone to color and now he was back to black and white.  The new picture was of what looked like an Egret or some such.  It was stalking in a fallow rice paddy.  He thought it could have been somewhere in the Euphrates Valley, but when he looked at the tag on the frame it said Egret Stalking in Fallow Rice Fields near Yuba City.  Bob was creative with his titles.

Jack sat in the tufted leather wingback chair that gave a good view of the Golden Gate and the picture and leaned back.  He hadn’t realized he’d fallen asleep until he had the nightmare.  This time it was a bad one.  He went out the door with his ‘chute wrapped tightly with bailing wire.  After the chute didn’t open he stabilized his body position and pulled the reserve handle.  The handle came off in his hand just like it was supposed to, but instead of a reserve, out came eight-by-ten pictures of all the people he had killed.  He fell to terminal velocity. Still the pictures turned and paused right in front of his face.

The first one was the man whose throat he’d slit to stop the screaming, then the boy, the one who hadn’t even reached puberty, and then all the terribly long list of the rest.  Bob woke him. Having seen this before, Bob stood back out of range and gently said his name until he woke up.  He didn’t have to say anything to Bob about it.  Bob’s scars were on the outside. Except for his back, most of Jack’s scars were on the inside.  He didn’t know if Bob would trade with him if he could.

“Did you read the papers?” Bob asked.

He had, twice, before he came to see Bob.  He told Bob how he’d acquired them and what the Captain said, almost word for word.

“I think the Captain is stuck and he’s asking me in to help.  He knows if he asks the Feds for help, they’ll leak like a sieve.  He’s deathly afraid someone will leak the conspiracy theory to the press.  Yan knows the City would explode if the story came out.  He figures he can trust me to find the information.  If I look like I’m going to talk to the Feds, he blackmails me with the information I shouldn’t have.”

Bob rubbed his chin in a gesture he had seen a thousand times before.  “What aren’t you saying?”

He walked over to the window, unable to face even his best friend while saying what he said.  He stared at the Golden Gate, lit brightly by the setting sun.  The world seemed a lot darker now.

“He knows someone financed Albert Weise and he wants us to find out who it is.”

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ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 54

Chapter 54

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The young man who worked at the range now prayed a lot.  He hadn’t prayed much before he took the bullet in the head.  The young man didn’t remember why he hadn’t thought it important to pray then.  The young man was an orphan.  When the inquiry into the shooting during the hold-up showed the bullet he had taken in the head came from one of the responding officer’s guns, the young man had still been in rehabilitation.  The priests had not started to visit until after his lawyer was in serious negotiations with the City of San Francisco for an out-of-court settlement.

Then the priests had come to pray with him.  He had been so alone and welcomed the company.  Then his court appointed advocate, who was very religious, suggested that some of his considerable wealth, as a result of the out of court settlement, should be donated to the Church.  And, they had helped him learn how to pray.  The young man did not understand many of the words and when he tried to read the Bible he became very confused.

The priests became very upset when the young man told them he was equally moved by his comic books.  They had tried to take his comic books away and the young man had become very angry so they stopped.

The young man left the Church and all the new friends he had made since the shooting. He was on his way back to his job at the pistol range. One of the priests, the one he had seen kneeling in front of the young boy and helping with his clothes in the bathroom, approached him.

“Charles.  Do you have a moment?”  The priest asked him.

Charles did not understand the question.  Why would he have moments?  Moments were small pieces of time, he thought.  Charles had shoes and shirts and sometimes he would have cheeseburger.  Charles really liked In-N-Out Burger.  They didn’t upset his stomach like other burgers.  Sometimes he would walk down to the wharf and….

“Charles, there is something the Church would like you to do for us.”

“I can’t give you any more money now. I have to wait until my next check from the trust fund,” Charles said as he turned to walk out through the door of the Church.

The priest laughed, a laugh like on the cartoons, and said, “No Charles, that is not what we need.  We want you to help us.  We need you to borrow something from the range for a day and then put it back.  You would be helping God’s work and it would mean so much to the Church.”

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