ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 43

Chapter 43 

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Jack woke quickly, feeling more rested than he had in months.  He was alone in his bed, so maybe his visitor had been a dream.  He smelled the pillow next to him.  The pillow smelled sweetly of his Lee.  The stretching exercises he did every morning of his life for the last sixteen years were a habit so engrained he didn’t think he could have stopped them if he wanted to.  This morning the pain and tightness seemed…less painful and tight.  He continued to stretch, his back more supple than he could ever remember it being.  He had a pain-free range of motion better than he’d had since…  He stopped at since.  He couldn’t remember when he had been in this little pain.

There was an envelope on the counter in the bathroom, and on top of that a small glass bottle with a rubber stopper.  The note was addressed to him.

The doctor said to give you this.  She said your back shouldn’t bother you much now. She said to tell you to get laid. A lot.  Soon!

LU3,

Lee

 

Jack pulled the rubber stopper from the top of the glass bottle and tapped seven pieces of metal onto his palm. Three looked like pieces of melted solder, two or three millimeters in diameter.  Three looked like Christmas tinsel, or foil ribbon, but not as shiny as they would be for Christmas, about the same size as the melted solder ones.  The biggest one, half again as big as the others, looked like the head of a medieval morning star.  He carefully poured the pieces back into the bottle.

Jack had seen pieces of metal like these before.  The doc handed them to him when he came to after his first and second back surgeries.   The third surgery had come up empty.  He turned his back to the mirror, opening the medicine cabinet door and changing position until he could see the small of his back.  All he could see were seven little butterfly bandages.  There was some bruising, a little swelling, but not much of either-yet.  He held the bottle up to the light.

He sat on the commode, staring at the bottle, until the phone rang.  It was Lee telling him he’d be late for his meeting with Kalashnikov if he didn’t hurry.  He had a thousand questions.  He didn’t ask any of them. Instead, he hurried to make the meeting.

The whole trip in the cab, he didn’t notice that he reached up to the left breast pocket of his sports coat to touch the bottle. He was enough of a cynic not to believe, but he wanted it to be true so badly.  He could get an X-ray.  Or, he could wait until the next time he went through an airport metal detector.  If it didn’t go off, he would know.  Still…

 

KALASHNIKOV was in a foul mood. The government of Hong Kong had quietly, but firmly, asked him to leave.  They’d given him until seven that evening.  They too knew of his reputation with the Russian Mafia and weren’t buying his tourist story at all.  Jack asked him why they’d let him in at all and Kalashnikov talked about the satchel of cash he had delivered to the bank in Kowloon. He answered Jack’s questions about insider trading with more questions.

“What makes you think I might know of this, Jack?”

Michael watched Jack watching him.  Jack didn’t answer him, but instead, blandly and calmly returned the look and occasionally glanced out the window to watch the ships in the harbor below.

Michael cursed, “Yob tvoiu mat!” and then translated for Jack: “Fuck your mother.”  Jack was surprised that Michael didn’t know that he knew a little Russian.  You had to know Russian history to know why “Yob tvoiu mat had a different, deeper and more powerful meaning for the Russians.  The Russians had been invaded.  A lot.  The Tatars had a habit of killing all the men and raping all the women.  The old curses worked best for them.

“Jack, I have heard there is perhaps a kind of group; rumors say they are connected politically.  I saw no way of making money so I have not pursued it.  Pay me.  Pay me enough, with half of it now, and I will find out.”

They haggled.  Kalashnikov wanted information and Jack wanted to spend cash.  They finally agreed on a quarter million in Michael’s personal account in the Grand Caymans, half up-front and the remainder when he agreed the information supplied had value.  Jack called his broker and had him wire the $125K.  Kalashnikov called his bank.

“I should have asked for more,” he said. Jack smiled.

Kalashnikov responded with another string of Russian curses.

 

LEE WAITED in the bar of the restaurant where he and Kalashnikov met.  She’d amused herself by verbally flaying a French tourist who’d tried to hit on her.

“You flew fourteen hours to have a meeting with a Russian criminal that lasted twenty minutes?” she asked as she sat upright in the chair, her knees and feet held tightly together, the black Hermes purse clutched in both hands.

Jack smiled.  She wouldn’t make eye contact, wanting to stay mad.  Finally she met his gaze, her eyes reminding him of someone else’s.  He couldn’t remember whose.  Lee’s eyes were a deep clear brown, with little flecks of gold that caught the sunlight coming through the wispy clouds.  The shape of her eyes was Chinese, from one of the southern provinces, and at the same time, it wasn’t.  When she smiled at him her eyes didn’t narrow but, instead, seemed to open wider.  Her eyes seemed to grow and then he felt himself pulled into them, as if the law of gravity had been temporarily suspended.

Lee’s eyes had been seductive searchlights on the night of the party, when the vision of her backlit against the harbor became permanently etched into his brain.  At the airport terminal her eyes had been swords to cut through the red tape.  After the meeting with Kalashnikov they were darts slamming into him.  As he stared into them, they changed.

She looked away, shaking her head, trying to deny what was happening.  Her posture softened and she let her hands fall open, palms up on the table, her shoulders dropped and, when she did look up, her eyes filled with invitation again.

“The twenty minutes with Kalashnikov were important.  I had another much more important reason for coming.”

She smiled, a sweet smile of promise, completely understanding the second reason.  She pulled his hands up to her face and kissed the knuckles of both of hands.  He felt momentarily free.  The worries about his sister, about insider trading, and about the deal in Siberia were all far away for a little while.

They decided to walk and shop. The prices were a lot higher than he remembered.  It had been more than three years since he’d given himself the time to walk these streets and enjoy this vibrant city.  He and Lee laughed and walked and teased, buying things they didn’t need and not haggling enough over price.

They invented a game called speed present-buying.  After they’d passed an area where one of them saw something they thought the other would like, they would say, “present.”  From that point they had five minutes to go buy it and get it wrapped or shipped or disguised in some way.

He bought her a set of jade chopsticks to use as an ornament when she put her hair up.  He later found a beautifully carved ironwood box. They turned a corner onto the street called Man Street because this was where you buy men’s clothes and accessories. It felt like someone had dropped a curtain on his mood.  In another few steps his danger radar started pinging away.

She held a shirt up to his chest, asking the stall keeper if they had it in a larger size.

“What’s wrong?” She asked.

“What do you mean?”

“I asked if you’d like this in pink with little yellow stars to match the cape and you said that would be fine.”

The danger signal had begun as a minor nagging feeling of discomfort. Now he felt as if he had a target painted on his back.  He pulled Lee into an alley and scanned the surging mass of people.  The crowd looked like all crowds in Hong Kong.  Here everyone moved with a sense of urgency.  Maybe it was the presence of the Chinese master’s armies a few miles away.  Maybe it was that the best and brightest had come here to improve their lives, knowing they didn’t have forever. Maybe it was habit.  He saw nothing in the crowd he hadn’t seen fifty times before.

“My intuition is yelling danger.  I don’t know why, but stay alert, okay?”

They walked on, his mood souring their love-buzz for a few minutes. Soon their enjoyment of what was to come submerged the dread.

“You’re going to have to start taking vitamins, you know.  I have to catch up on all the time I haven’t had you.  Vitamins and ginseng and naps and my herbalist will make a special potion so you will have energy for me,” Lee said.

“What makes you think I’ll need help?”

He placed his right hand on the back of Lee’s head and stroked the back of her neck with thumb and fingers.  He rubbed gently up, then with more pressure, pressing his fingers into her soft skin where it disappeared into the downy hair on the top of her neck.  She sagged against him.

He bent down to kiss her, hearing a commotion in the crowd, ignored it, looking down at her lips, the brilliant white of her teeth caressed briefly by her tongue.  The roar of the crowd grew louder.  The mental scream of danger from the crowd pierced his brain along with a mechanical roar.

He looked up in time to see the minivan only feet away, aimed right at them.  The driver stared straight at Lee.  Jack grabbed her slim hips, picked her up and threw her into the alley, seeing her head snap back, hoping he hadn’t hurt her trying to save her.

The minivan was too close to miss. The back of his left shoulder was facing the van as he used the curb to push off with both feet.  He threw himself away as loose as he knew how, hoping that whatever he hit would hurt less than the bumper. The driver swerved, jerking the wheel, trying to hit Lee.  He felt the bang of the fender and flew backwards, tumbling, rolling as his body remembered the thousands of hours on the mat.  He heard metal tear.  The van scraped against the building.  He watched the van carom back onto the street with motor roaring as it disappeared around the next corner.

He tried to roll to his feet.  Finally he moved to his knees, barely able to breathe, wondering if his left arm was broken.  He pushed himself to his feet, trying to remember when he’d gained the weight that made it so hard to stand. He weaved and lurched, dragging a thankfully numb, right leg across the cobblestones into the alley, checking his parts as he went.

Two large men kneeled over Lee, keeping the crowd away.  One held her neck and the other glared at the crowd as he shouted instructions into a cell phone. She lay more than ten feet into the ally, flat on her back, eyes closed.  He knew he couldn’t have thrown her that far.  The van must have hit her.  There was blood at the corner of her mouth and her neck looked too loose, her head at an angle to the side.

He pushed through the crowd, shaking off questions and prying hands and knelt by her bodyguards.  She opened her eyes, saw his face and smiled.

She lifted her head, stopped and cried out.  The bodyguard who had held her head let Jack take over.  He no longer had to shrug off the crowd.  The bodyguards did that for him.  He ignored the chatter; ignored everything as he held her head in place.

“Can you move your arms and legs, your fingers and toes?”

In answer she wiggled both feet and put her hands on his, gently stroking them as they waited for the ambulance.

A policeman arrived, much too young, a sergeant, confident and well trained. He asked the bodyguards what happened.  The men answered with respect, one at a time, too fast for Jack to follow.  Then the policeman asked individuals in the crowd for their versions.  Their respect was impressive.  One person at a time answered his questions and waited for him to take notes.  The cop held his hand up, stopping his questioning and walked over to where Jack held Lee’s head.

“Excuse please, English not good.  People say, driver of van try hit you?”

Lee answered in Cantonese, stretched out on the ground, flat on her back. Her voice seemed to take shape in the air, curling around the sergeant, holding him, at the same time keeping the crowd at bay.  He could see the reaction of members of the crowd close enough to hear.  They turned and chatted to those around them who in turn passed the news to those further out like a wave.  As she spoke the young police sergeant stood straighter and set his jaw as if determined to do the right thing.

She quietly explained. “I told them who I was, my family heritage, and my position in the family business.  I told him the people in the crowd were certainly mistaken.  Of course it was an accident.  Obviously the person driving the van panicked and drove off because he was afraid he had hurt someone.”

The cop moved to open the crowd for the ambulance.  The bodyguards looked like they were ready to cry.  The blessed numbness from the van’s impact was gone so quickly it felt like he’d flipped a switch.  He hurt in places he didn’t even know he had.  The first aid team from the ambulance gently took over his job of holding Lee’s head.

 

LEE HONG lay on the ground, certain Jack had saved her life, just as she had saved his.  When she saw him react, she tried to move, but couldn’t move with the force she needed.  She made a split second decision to focus all her energy on one very small thing.  She reached out with her mental touch and tried to squeeze the ignition coil in the van.  Her touch was growing stronger with practice, but she still was not adept enough to turn off such electrical power at a distance.  She did manage to interrupt the current for a small part of a second, slowing the van slightly.

Chang and Chan looked like they were going to cry. They had been her bodyguards for twenty years now.  They had never come close to letting something happen to her before.  She knew them well enough to know that they were more concerned with having let her down than the wrath they would face from grandfather.

She motioned Chan to come and he did.  “Do not worry.  I will be fine.  Did you get a picture of the van, and its driver?”

Chan said, “Yes, of course.  I am so sorry.  We had done as you had asked and kept our distance.  Perhaps if we would have kept closer I…”

“Nonsense.  If you would have been closer, then you might have been hit.”

Chan said, “I am very glad your gwai lo was with you.  He threw you out of the way.  He is a most fierce tiger.”

“Yes he is, and although Grandfather hasn’t told you this I want you to try to protect him as well.  He has very few faults for a gwai lo, but he does let his heart guide him to quick action.  Now, once again understand I am not worried and I shall tell grandfather that no one could have done better.  You know he will bluster and splutter as he does, but I will make sure he understands you are not at fault.  Now, please, send Chang over.”

She reassured Chang as well, and then concentrated on staying as relaxed as she could and watching Jack.

 

IT TOOK Jack two tries to stand.  After he was sure he wasn’t going to fall, he checked for damage again.  Somehow he’d lost his right shoe.  The left leg of his trousers was torn from hip to knee and the skin on his left hip was already turning purple.  He slipped his jacket off to check his left arm.  He’d managed to land in the only oil patch he could see on the street.  He pulled his wallet and passport out of the jacket, along with the glass bottle, unbroken, and tossed the jacket into one of the trash cans that had almost broken his fall. His shoe had landed over twenty feet away, perched on a ledge higher than his head.

He didn’t check his left shoulder until last.  He’d separated the shoulder in his teens and kept putting off the surgery.  He swung his left arm around in small circles, then bigger and bigger as it started to loosen up.

The doctor, who’d arrived minutes after the ambulance, finished checking Lee.  The doctor gently strapped a cervical collar around Lee’s neck and helped as they transferred her to a gurney. Jack walked toward the ambulance.

The young sergeant stepped in front of him and stopped, firmly standing his ground. The cop smiled politely up at him and said, “Passport please.”

Jack waited as patiently as he could while the cop leafed through his passport, taking notes in a tiny hand in his official notebook.  While the cop was still taking notes, the doctor walked over and asked him in very clear Indian accented English, “How are you feeling?”

He nearly laughed as he said, “Like I’ve been hit by a minivan and bounced off a street onto an oil slick.  How is Hong Lee?”

“She almost certainly has a sprain of her neck. It is possible that she has a slight fracture of one of the vertebrae in her neck, but I do not think so.  We will X-ray to make sure. Now let’s have a look at you.”

The doctor examined him quickly and thoroughly, with all the emotional attachment of a building inspector checking wiring. She made him stand on one leg and then the other.  He expected to hear her ask him to pat his head and rub his belly, or was it rub his head and pat his belly?

He knew he would be okay with tons of ice and a twice-a-day regimen of eight hundred milligrams of Naproxen Sodium.  In a week or so he might feel human.  Tomorrow, the day he was due to travel, would be very bad, and the next day even worse.

Two men on motorcycles pulled up in front of the ambulance.  Two more men pulled up on motorcycles and parked behind the ambulance.  The bodyguards who had shadowed Lee and Jack took the last two men’s helmets and gloves and climbed on their still-running bikes.

Jack climbed into the ambulance with Lee.  The vehicle was a lot smaller than the American version would have been.  It did the job and fit through smaller streets.

He bent down and kissed his woman gently on her lips, nuzzled her hair, and whispered the question, “Why did you lie to the policeman?”  He lowered his ear to her mouth to hear the answer.

“You have to leave tomorrow.  Once you are safely back in the States I can change my memory.  Was the driver aiming at me or you?”

He looked down at Lee strapped to the gurney.  She had become so important so quickly.

“Both of us.  When he had to make a choice, you.”

It took only ten minutes to get to the hospital and once there, they were checked and released within the hour.  Uncle Chin sent the Rolls to pick them up.

 

UNCLE Chin screamed in anger.  This was more than his weakened lungs could take.  His scream ended in a coughing fit.  Sir Ian stood over his old friend, one hand on his back, patting gently as the nurse tried to calm Uncle Chin enough to take oxygen. Sir Ian looked down at the old Chinese man as if he were surprised to see how old and sick he was.  It was as if he stared hard enough he could shave away the effects of the years and reveal the young man he thought he should see.

Jack was grateful to both of them.  He had sought them out years ago.  They rebuffed his first attempts to do business.  When they finally did agree to an initial small venture they set numerous traps.  They gave him opportunities to take the knowledge they had given him and use it to his advantage.  They hid important information, and set meetings at times that guaranteed he would be tired or hungry or both. He had fallen for none of the traps.  He had never taken advantage.  He treated them as he wished to be treated and insisted on the information he needed.  They finally let him in.  His businesses flourished with their help as theirs had with his. Now, because of them, he was with the woman he loved.

Uncle Chin finally calmed enough to talk, speaking in English, stopping often to take oxygen.  “You are certain the driver was aiming for both of you? You feel this is because of your attempts to gain information on these companies?”

He waited until Uncle Chin had the oxygen mask covering his mouth before he answered.  “I am certain of my answers to the first question, but not certain to the last.  I firmly believe the cause of the attack is our investigation into insider trading. Are you involved in anything else that would produce this kind of reaction?”

Uncle Chin sat for half a minute before he answered with a shake of his head.  He looked at Lee.  She barely shook her head before she winced in pain and from the constriction of the collar.

She said, “No, not to our knowledge. People overreact.  Should postal workers shoot their superiors over an imagined slight?  Should men walk into office buildings and shoot lawyers?” She smiled after she said that.  “Perhaps that is not such a good example. We have done nothing that should generate this kind of response, but how can we know how others might react?”

He thought about her answer as he replayed the mental motion picture of the minivan attack over in his mind and then said:

“The eyes of the driver were not those of a madman. He targeted us.  When presented with two targets, he made a mistake as to which one to choose.  His targeting error is the only reason one of us was not seriously injured or killed.”

She moved to stand near Uncle Chin, holding his withered left hand in both of hers.  Chin flapped his hand at Jack, motioning him over and pulling off the oxygen mask.

“I am so mad I forget.  Thank you for saving my granddaughter’s life.  I can never repay that.”

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Uncle Chin looked a thousand years old.  Everything about him was old except his eyes. He had the eyes of a teenage boy, a “spit in your eye, I can beat you at anything,” look in his eyes, full of piss and vinegar.  Jack saw him clearly for the first time that night.  He was more alive in his old age than most in their youth.  His tremendous will, the energy that used to surround him like a moat, was still there in those searchlight eyes.  One day those too would be still and dark.

“Uncle Chin,” he said, “I don’t know whether I’ve saved Lee’s life or not, but if my hunch is correct, we have to do something.  As I see it, we have three choices. We can do nothing and hope this goes away. We can find out who’s in charge and promise to stay out.  Or, once we find who is doing this, we kick their fucking ass.  My group has already decided on option three.”

Uncle Chin hawked and spat after the first two.  He smiled and nodded to the last.

“When we counter these short sellers, these painters of black pictures, we stop the harm they do.  And, we take their money.  When we find out who tried to kill my favorite granddaughter, I want them.  I have not swung an ax in anger in many years, but I am still strong enough to bury one in the skull of the man who tried to take my favorite child’s favorite daughter.”

Jack helped them put their part of the plan in place.  His bruises throbbed.  His joints stiffened, and in the end he had to talk standing up, trying to stay loose, twisting, swinging, and stretching.  They decided to use Chin and Sir Ian’s companies to originate the stock trades the cabal needed.  Chin and Sir Ian’s companies had holdings scattered throughout the world.  Their most important holdings for this operation were pieces of six banks.  They held majority interests in two in Hong Kong, and one in Ho Chi Minh City as well as minority interests in two banks in Shanghai and a fractional interest in one in Zurich.  Jack was most impressed by the last. The Swiss didn’t let anyone play their reindeer games.

Uncle Chin and Sir Ian looked smug.

Lee laughed and said, “Don’t let them convince you they are geniuses.  A burgher was here on a shopping trip.  His daughter ran up a tab and would have gotten into serious trouble at our casino in Macao.  We protected her.  He needed to hush the whole thing up so he let them buy a piece of the bank.”

It was agreed that his team would handle the counter-disinformation campaign in the States and Sir Ian would coordinate the campaign in Europe and Asia.

“Because we all stand to share equally in the profits, we should all share equally in the risks,” Lee said.

Jack said, “This is my fight.  It’s not right to ask you to risk your capital too. I’m not going into this thinking it’s a great investment.  I’m doing this to stop bad people from doing bad things and to protect my sister.  Even if all of the trades we suspect are bad, total capitalization needed to stop them should only be $15 million,” he said.

The argument didn’t stop there.  If it wasn’t for the pain medication he finally had to take, he might have won the argument.

 

LEE RODE with him in the back of the limo on his journey to the airport. She lowered the shade on the barrier between the driver’s and passenger compartment, unbuckled her seat belt and moved to the seat next to his and buckled back in.

“This damned neck sprain. I’d like to do more than snuggle,” she said.

He put his arm around her and sniffed her hair.  Her scent was a better painkiller than the Vicodin he’d finally had to take.  It felt right to be important to someone, to look forward to spending time with someone.  He had always enjoyed the hunt more than the relationship.  For now at least, it felt good not be on the hunt.  She smelled so damned good, despite the ointments and salves.  Maybe the theory that love was mostly pheromones was right.  Her special perfume seemed to go with anything.

“Did you design your perfume?”

Her scent smelled of flowers, faintly of roses, but was musky too. The perfume promised and teased, at the same time.  He inhaled her, not knowing when he’d see her again, and knowing it had to be soon.

“No, silly man.  I gave my input and experimented with many scents.  Something as important as a woman’s scent must be designed by experts.  When do you want me to come back?” she asked.

“How about now? Get on the plane with me.”

It wasn’t a nice thing to do.  He knew she had to stay with Uncle Chin and Sir Ian, to coordinate the counter trades and help run their business, at least initially.

“I’d pinch you if you weren’t already so beat up.  I’ll get back over in a week or two.  Once we set up the process, running the system to counter the insider trading won’t be too be hard,”

They held each other, not saying much of anything, until they got to the airport, when he turned to her and said, “Be careful…”

“I am already being more than careful,” she said.  “If you could see out of this tank, you’d know we are being followed by a panel truck and right in front of us is a group on scooters.  Grandfather has been in wars before.  He would not let anything happen to his favorite granddaughter.  Especially now I’ve caught you.”

He smiled.  He had to ask.  “How did the doctor get the little pieces of metal out of my back?”

Lee said, “I am not a doctor so I do not know the ins and outs, the details.  You can somehow tell, with your special gift, that people intend harm to people you care about.  And you can cause others to tell you things they should not. Since you can do these things, doesn’t it stand to reason that someone else could have a special gift?  Why shouldn’t someone be able to find and grab tiny metal objects and help them leave your body with her hands and mind?”

He was certain that this was a very good answer and the only one he would get.

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ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 42

Chapter 42

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“You can’t just have someone arrested in this country.  There must be proof they are guilty of some kind of criminal act.”  The voice was nasal, arrogant, and as cultured as an American could ever be.

“Make evidence,” Her Grace said.

“How do you suggest we do that?” the arrogant voice asked.

“That is not my concern.  It is yours.  The committee agreed.  This abomination must be stopped.”

Another voice said, with a rumbling low-pitched southern accent, “Son, you don’t need to arrest anybody.  With the dogs you can sick on someone, just investigate the heck out of them and the press will take care of the rest.”

Her Grace was not a fan of conference calls even though her wonderful voice and ability to listen made her a master of the medium.  She sat in her private room speaking on what was supposed to be an untraceable, throw-away cell phone.

She hated trusting people.  She had been forced to trust, with many checks and balances, after the car wreck. She did trust her security people and they had assured her of the safety of the call, using no names over the anonymous cell phones.

“I know we need to have this man arrested.  I believe he has committed many crimes against God’s will and is even now preparing to move against us.  I am asking you again to find evidence that will put him in jail, at least for a while. We cannot afford to have interference at this stage of our work.  Will you do as you have been instructed to by the committee?”

The arrogant nasal voice, with its New York accent still strong after all the years in California, said, “I don’t see how I can-especially right now.  If your people hadn’t bungled the job, we wouldn’t be in this predicament. A few weeks from now, after the two failed attempts have moved from front-page news, we might be able to do something.  It was my understanding….”

She tuned out the rest of the excuse-laden monologue, thinking the man had sealed his fate. She waited until he finished and left the conference call before she covered the rest of the projects on the agenda.

The rumbling southern voice reported.  “I have succeeded in moving most of the funds from research grants into construction funding for additional laboratories.  It was much easier to do as you suggested and give in to the suggestion that the labs be outside my district.  That way we can delay any useful progress for another few years.  We have also secured more friends and additional contributions that will insure we lock up my district.  That son-of-a-bitch Bush tied my hands on quite a bit of the money.  The current guy is much easier to deal with.  The way the grants were written before, they could only be used for pure research, not construction.”

The man with the rumbling southern accent paused.  There was the sound of liquid being poured and what might have been the sound of ice dropping into a glass. “I have succeeded in appointing loyal people to head the labs.  My place on the committee on terrorism paid the dividends we all foresaw.  Because some of the biotech research could conceivably be weaponized, I pretty much have carte blanche.  This means that it is completely reasonable for safety’s sake, to have the research proceed at a much more “measured” pace.”  Here he laughed at his own joke.

Her Grace smiled.  This system was really so easy to manipulate.  She started her own report.

“Funding SASCR, Scientists Against Stem Cell Research, has paid off much more quickly than we anticipated.  Having the scientists interview each other on news sites loyal to us is most effective. Our constituents are using the templates we provide to blog most effectively on our behalf.  The last poll shows that the percentage of the population that believes HIV causes AIDS had dropped from 74% to 65%. We managed to turn two student protests into riots after we released the virus that we claimed came out of one of the other labs on campus.” 

She received the credit she was due for her disinformation campaign. She allowed herself to relax for a moment.  Still, there was reason for worry.  If it weren’t for the brother and the Jewess abomination, her scorecard would be perfect.  That the Chinese woman was now involved as a staunch ally was troubling. The Chinese woman and her family had tremendous resources and so far their organization had proved impossible for her organization to infiltrate. Her Grace was sure she could create a plan that would take care of this new issue.  She always had.

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ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 41

Chapter 41

 

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Jack nearly shouted in frustration, as another back spasm hit.   The good old boy from Georgia two people in front of him in line was letting his frustrations out on the customs people.  This was inherently stupid.  The customs folks in Hong Kong did a better job than most.  They were just doing their job, as wasteful as it was.  The large man raised his voice and asked for a supervisor.

Patience is a virtue Jack tried to tell himself, but “Fuck this!” was what he said as he walked up on the cracker’s left.  Jack grabbed just above the man’s right elbow and drove his thumb deep into the meat of the man’s elbow joint. He felt the big nerve grate against bone.  The man turned toward him, pain washing the color from his face.

He whispered, the two men’s eyes only inches apart, “I’m tired, my back hurts, and you are making me wait.  Be quiet. Go along nice or I’ll rip your arm off and beat you to death with it.”

The man tried to pull away.  Jack applied more pressure and then let it off.  The man whimpered, quieted, and broke into a hearty laugh as beads of sweat popped on his scalp.

“My mistake,” he said.  “Sorry.  Sorry.  Don’t understand it, must be the jet lag.”

The man laughed again and smiled down at the clerk.  The young man smiled subserviently up at the good old boy and said, in a dialect Jack could barely make out.  “I understood they raised very large swine in your country.  I did not know they issued them passports.”

It wasn’t original, but it was funny.  Jack couldn’t hide his smile.  A few of the Chinese in the crowd laughed out loud.  Jack moved back to his place as the line moved smartly forward.  The clerk made a show of looking very carefully at his bags, while not checking anything. For once, everything was put very carefully back in its proper place.

The clerk asked, “What did you do to make the large swine act human?”

Jack said, “I don’t understand,” in Mandarin, shrugged, and walked through the door out into the arrivals area.  Lee stood before him in a severely tailored, gray, chalk-stripe suit.  She had done something different to her hair and he tried to figure out what it was and if he liked it.

Lee held his hands, looked up at him and asked, “How can I miss you this much so soon?”

She smelled good and felt even better.  Her lips were cool, even as a warm cloud of wonderful scent swirled around her. She hugged him fiercely, pushing away as she felt him stiffen.

“It’s your back again, isn’t it?” she asked.

He nodded as her words hammered a boy to get his bags.  Her voice had a nice drill sergeant snap to it when needed.  She turned his wrist over to check the time.

“We have time to make a little detour.”

Lee snapped more quick orders to the limousine driver.  She talked too fast for him to get all of it, but when she got through to the doctor’s office on her mobile, he caught on.

“Wait a minute.  I’m not going to see a doctor.  I’ve seen twenty doctors about my back.  I don’t need another one to tell me I need risky surgery and that it might not work.”

Lee turned to face him, marshaling her considerable powers of persuasion.  “I don’t know what twenty western doctors told you.  We are going to a Chinese doctor.  You do agree, don’t you, that five thousand years of Chinese medicine might have answers that your western doctors have yet to find?”

If he said “No” he would insult Chinese culture.  He pictured some wizened, old man feeding him a noxious porridge of eye of newt and toe of frog, with a little ginseng kicker.  The limo stopped in front of a modern high-rise. The elevator let them out on the sixteenth floor into a waiting room that could have been transplanted from any doctor’s office in San Francisco.  The reception area had the same neutral carpet and meaningless modern art on the walls.  He began to relax, thinking it would be a bland waste of time instead of the ordeal he’d pictured.

He stood with his knees bent, one leg in front of the other, much more comfortable than trying to sit, looking at the Chinese edition of Architectural Digest, when the assistant walked out.  Lee accompanied them to the exam room.  Dr. Mai Lee Phoon was no more than five feet tall and probably not much more than ten years older than he was.  As the years passed he became worse at guessing women’s ages.  The doctor had beautiful jet-black hair with a sharp streak of gray on the left.  Her eyes were gray, not brown.

Lee acted as interpreter. The doctor had no English at all and his weak Cantonese didn’t cover Chinese medical terms.  Dr. Phoon would ask a question and Lee would interpret as the doctor asked it.

“Tell me what you are eating?” Lee translated.

“And, how much sleep are you getting?”

“Take off your shirt and your shoes and socks.”

She and Lee discussed him as if he were a side of beef.  The doctor snapped off a question he didn’t catch.  Lee responded, saying she was personally taking care of that and things were definitely good in that area. Jack guessed the meaning and blushed, which made both women laugh.

The doctor took seven pulses with different fingers in multiple places on his left and right wrist.  She listened to his breathing and took pulses in his feet, then asked him, through Lee, to take off the rest of his clothes.

Lee, “The doctor wants you to lie on the exam table on your back.”

The doctor handed him a hand-towel to cover his privates.  The doctor pushed on his stomach and ribs.  She put her hand on his diaphragm. She asked him to turn onto his stomach.  She placed the little towel across his butt and ran her fingers gently down his back to the scar tissue near the base of his spine.  She probed gently until she came to the worst of the scar tissue where she pressed her thumb into his back.

He let out a lungful of air as he stifled a scream.  The doctor hissed and asked more questions through Lee.

“The doctor asks if you were shot in the back.”

“I was hit with shrapnel, hot small pieces of metal from an exploding mortar shell.  Some of them were taken out immediately, and they have tried to take out others two different times.  Some are still in there.”

Dr. Phoon called on the intercom.  Another assistant came in, carrying a mortar and pestle and acupuncture needles.  Years ago, Jack scoffed at acupuncture.  Then, two years ago, he had watched Sir Ian go into major surgery with no anesthesia except hair-thin needles running up his chest.  When he tried acupuncture, it helped his shoulder, but hadn’t touched the pain in his back.

The assistant set the needle case aside and helped the doctor prepare a potion.  Jack recognized some of the herbs and roots.  He smiled as he saw that the first ingredient was ginseng, scraped off a fresh looking root. Then skullcap, St. John’s wort and what looked like rose petals.  He watched the preparations until he saw what he thought might have been spiders being added to the mix.

When he turned his head to the left, he saw Lee’s face a few inches from his.  She had pulled a chair up next to the exam table, while his attention was distracted by the potion preparation.

“Hey you!” she said and ran the back of her hand along his cheek.

It felt good to have his woman touch him.  She brushed her palm along his other cheek and then ran her hand through his hair.

“I can’t decide if your eyes are blue or gray.  What color are they?”

She stroked him, building him up.  The doctor heated the potion and vapor floated up from it, refracting the light from the sun coming through the window of the exam room.  The doctor started talking and the room dimmed. Lee translated.

“The doctor made an elixir.  It will relax you, and leave you feeling refreshed.  She understands you have an important meeting tomorrow.  Do not worry about feeling lightheaded.  She says you will sleep better tonight than you have in many years. She will place the needles soon after you drink this.”

He drank.  The elixir tasted warm and cold at the same time.  He could taste the bite of the ginseng and there was a peppermint aftertaste.  After a few minutes his sinuses opened and his ears popped.  He lay for about twenty minutes feeling more tired and a little sleepy, like after a big meal in the middle of the day.  He watched in the mirror the doctor had set up in front of him as she inserted the first needle.

She placed the first needle near the scars at the base of his spine and gently rolled it between thumb and forefinger until the needle had gone in about half an inch.  He watched in the mirror as she did the same with needle after needle.  He had been sleepy, but as Mai Li Phoon stepped away it felt as if a small lightning bolt ran from his toes up to the base of his neck.  A cold shiver raised goose bumps on his skin and then, almost immediately, he felt warm again.  One of the assistants moved the mirror away.

The doctor chattered to Lee, too fast for him to understand, but he understood Lee’s answers.  She kept saying no to the doctor’s questions until finally she said “yes.” She bent down beside him again, her face close enough so that he could smell garlic on her breath and see the shine of unshed tears in her eyes.

Lee said, “I have to leave for a few minutes.  The doctor says to relax.  When she gives you the signal, you are to visualize the little pieces of metal leaving your back.  I will stand just outside the room.

She turned and walked out the door.

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LEE’S SHOULDERS SLUMPED after she walked out the door.  She let herself be weak for just a few seconds.  That man, that silly, sweet wonderful man had endured so much pain in his life and he was such a fierce tiger.  And, he was humble.  She melted when he touched her, became moist at the very thought of him.  She had not planned on helping him with his back until later, but why not now?  “…best it were done quickly…”

Lee wished that she had the skill along with her talent to do this thing herself, but she did know enough of the human anatomy and would be too long in learning. Jack needed help now.  She did not pray, she did not believe in it.  If it would have been any other thing she would have added her strength to the doctor’s, but this was so important.  Imagine what he would be like without the constant pain!

She sat in one of the too-modern chairs, cleared her mind and picked up a travel magazine.  When she and Jack were done with this mission to find and kill the fools who had tried to kill his sister, she would take him away.  Somewhere far from worries and phones and meetings and have that lovely, lovely man all to herself.  Hong Lee, scion to one of the wealthiest trading families in Hong Kong, educated, sophisticated and brilliant, held her hand above the page and, using a talent humans had for eons, lost and some had found again, willed the page to turn.  The page did as it was instructed.

 

THE DOCTOR smiled down at Jack.  Two more young females in lab coats walked quickly in and stood, one at his head and one to his left, near his waist.  The doctor placed a metal pan near the exam table on a dolly.  She nodded to the assistants.  They stepped closer, both gently laying hands on him.

“Now,” the doctor said, and then Mai Lee Phoon placed her warm hands on his spine, flat out fingers spread and then slowly brought her fingers together almost like gently kneading dough.  Jack did as Lee asked, visualizing pieces of shrapnel, just like the ones the surgeons gave him every time they went in, moving through his tough muscles and scar tissue and leaving his body.

Jack’s lower back throbbed, not so much with pain, but as if there were something moving around under the skin trying to get out.  He could feel the warmth of the doctor’s hands gently pressing against his skin.  A tingling started deep inside. The tingling turned to an itch and then a burn.  Again, it felt is if something was gently stirring under his skin trying to get out. The doctor’s fingers felt like warm caterpillars on his skin, somehow feeling as if they were moving through his flesh.

He heard a clink and another and another, the clinking sounds accompanying the movement of the doctor’s hands away from his skin.  He heard the clinking sound seven times until finally, there was silence.  The assistant standing near his waist patted his back with towels.  His back felt wet.  He turned his head to look. The assistant standing by his shoulders gently held his head straight ahead.

The doctor gently twirled the acupuncture needles up and out, throwing them in a slotted, black box with the symbol of interlocking pincers: The universal symbol for biological waste.

The assistant who had been standing near his waist walked out the door carrying a plastic bag.  The other assistant followed, leaving the doctor standing by him as Lee walked back into the room.  Lee looked as if she were trying very hard not to look scared.

Lee asked the doctor a question. The doctor said, “Yes,” and the look of fear left Lee’s face.  She laughed.

Lee watched as the doctor placed butterfly bandages on his back.

When the doctor finished Lee said, “Time to get up, lazy man.”

Lee and the doctor helped Jack dress.  He felt relaxed, but so weary he felt as if he could sleep standing up.  He didn’t remember much of the journey to the hotel.  He did remember being helped into bed.  He thought someone had climbed into bed with him and then he was asleep.

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ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 40

Chapter 40

 

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The young stenographer was so nervous.  She had worked with many powerful people in the Church.  Her Grace was special.  She was a legend. The first time the young woman had worked with her she had been so nervous she had made the kind of mistakes that only a novice would make.  She vowed she would never make those kinds of mistakes again. She would do the best job she could do and then she would make the long drive to see her brother.

It was so unfair.  He was a patriot, a veteran of two different campaigns in that horrible desert.  He had so much trouble finding a job.  He had been wounded and lost his right leg below the knee, and some of the use of his left hand.  The young stenographer was sure the roadside bomb had done something to his brain, even though the VA said not. Now he was so excited to work for a corporate security firm.

Her brother said almost all the men and the women in the company were veterans and most of those had been wounded. The firm did a very deep background check and insisted upon interviewing the stenographer.  Her brother said the man who ran the firm was a devout Christian and because of this her brother had reservations.  Her brother’s experience in the desert had proved to him there was no God.  He was still a Catholic, still went to Mass, but he didn’t really believe.  Now he was having problems with his wife.  He loved his children so much.  He had never been like their father before, never hit his wife, until he came back from the war.

What was really weird was that some of the highly secret information she viewed showed the Church was trying to gain access to the company where her brother worked. What she had seen left her puzzled.  The owner of the company was a good Catholic, also a wounded veteran like her brother.  She had researched the company on the web, trying to help her brother get the job.  The man who owned the company gave to charity, was a pillar in the community, and seemed a good man.  Why wouldn’t the Church simply ask for his help?

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ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 39

Chapter 39

 

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There was one person left on his list that Jack had to talk to face-to-face. Michael Andreevich Kalashnikov.  He was a bagman for one of the most powerful groups of the Russian Mafia.  Kalashnikov would have tried to get a piece of an organized plot anywhere on the planet generating large money.  Kalashnikov was scheduled to be in Hong Kong in two days.  This meant spending twenty-seven hours in the air over the next five days, not counting runway time.  The way his back felt, he’d be in traction by the time he made it home.

He had put Lee on a plane a week before.  It felt as if part of his heart had been ripped from his body and carried away with her as the plane rose into the sky.  He had to see her again.  Soon.

He first met Kalashnikov during a money manager’s conference in Zurich a day before his thirty-third birthday.  They made eye contact and nodded, Jack thinking he knew him and couldn’t connect the face to a name, Kalashnikov being polite, he thought.  They walked outside at the same time to escape the overwhelming amount of bullshit and get a little fresh air.

Kalashnikov strode back and forth in only his suit, hands clasped behind his back, chin up, head thrust forward into the wind, enjoying the blast of Arctic air down off the mountains from the east.

The man inhaled  a huge lungful of air and said, “I love the cold here.  It feels so clean.  They used to have a saying in Zona, “Cold enough to clean up the worst crime.”

Michael was about Jack’s age, his face more weathered, his frame not as big, but still broad through the shoulders, with the thick wads of muscle from a wrestling career.  His sandy-blond hair and sharp features made him look more Germanic than Slavic.

Jack said, “You look familiar, but I can’t place the face.”

Michael laughed, his English Americanized and easy.  “I wouldn’t expect you to. You might have seen me on your news.  I am Michael Andreevich Kalashnikov.  You know how your liberal press is.  They call any of the new Russian capitalists “Mafia” because they are so disappointed communism failed.”

What Michael said was partially true.  The Russians had no history of clean business. What they did now was normal to them.  They went from a totalitarian state to no rules at all in weeks. In the US there had been a rule of law and a history of at least a bastardized form of capitalism. To the Russians, a few bribes here, some extortion there, and a hit on a corporate director or two, were all normal business practices.

Michael explained he knew Jack by reputation.  After Perestroika the KGB and GRU started marketing their information-gathering abilities to anyone in the former Soviet Union who could steal hard currency.  Kalashnikov had ratted out some of the competition in exchange for files on everyone attending the conference.

They talked until Jack’s teeth chattered.  He liked Michael’s sense of humor.  His years in Zona had made him a cynic and a fatalist, but he was a raconteur with superb sense of timing, even in English.  They had kept in touch over the years, trading information and rumors.  Michael would know if anything was going on, but Jack might not be willing to pay his price.

Thinking about Kalashnikov got him through the takeoff, but he still had a fourteen-hour flight to go.  He stood up to stretch his legs, walking back to the little lounge off First Class.

            The big high-definition TV was tuned to Bloomberg.  The market had tanked again and the good ol’ boys sitting around the bar were explaining to each how they knew it was going to take a beating and what was going to happen next. He didn’t want to get sucked into the conversation.

He turned to head back to his seat and almost knocked over a flight attendant, grabbing her arm to keep her from falling.  She let out a girlish squeal and apologized.  Steadying herself, she’d managed to press much warm woman-flesh against him. She held his arm longer than needed as she smiled.

The flight attendant’s nametag said Mai.  Her eyes were huge and she got all the mileage she could out of the violet contacts.  The dry air inside the plane must kill her eyes.  She had the slim look of a runner through her hips.  The double bong of a signal sounded from another one of the First Class passengers.  She excused herself. He watched her walk away.

Mai Ling knew he was watching and put some effort into the walk.  He asked questions as he watched her walk away.  How many lunges did she have to do to get that level of firm softness in her butt?  Had she tailored the uniform skirt herself?  Did she instinctively know the real players or had she checked his D & B?  Could she deliver on the promise of the walk, or was she all show and no go?

Mai turned at the head of the stairs, making very direct eye contact.  She grasped the pole that supported the stairs and slid her hand down it, then slightly up, letting her nails brush the pole as she let go. She gave him another smile and a look.  The smile was good: not too much promise, instead a hint of what she could deliver.  The look was different.

He had seen that look before.  It had been a lifetime ago on a blast furnace of a day, mid-August, in California’s Central Valley.  His motorcycle broke down on the side of a county road that wasn’t on his map.  A turkey vulture finished checking some roadkill a quarter of a mile off. She circled high overhead, then settled on a branch high in the mostly dead cottonwood next to the live oak he was using for shade. That turkey vulture looked down at him ripening in the sun with the same hopeful, hungry look as Miss Mai the flight attendant.

Jack dove back into stock histories, hoping he could see the relationships if he just looked hard enough. He was now certain that whoever was playing the stocks was also pushing out enough disinformation to publish a sizable novel.  And, he knew there was something he just wasn’t seeing.  He went over the information for two more hours and achieved wonderful results in the way of eyestrain and a splitting headache.

There was no way to stop a disinformation campaign.  They could stop the campaign from working.  Execution would be complicated, but the idea was simple.  The cabal would watch rumors hit the wire services, news websites, blogs, high-volume tweets, LinkedIn, Facebook or any of the other myriad and unregulated ways to plant rumors.  They would fact-check, counter with a higher volume of positive information and go long the stocks.  It would be logistics from hell.  In the US it was completely illegal.  The same thing passed for standard business practice in the rest of the world, but US regulatory agencies made it a felony.

The first step would be to set up a spy network.  They would use existing computer programs for most of it, but he hated leaving information gathering to a computer.  Simply setting up a program to do the search left a path across the ether.  People screwed up, but they were flexible, some of them anyway.  An ongoing net search, a clipping service and the contacts, Bob, Alice, Lee, and Jack had would be enough to get all the information they’d need.

The next step would be to check the information, which could only be done one way. A money manager, someone with a perceived present or future stake in the stocks, had to call the companies in question and ask questions only shareholders could ask.  Jack didn’t have a candidate for that. He could pay a money manager to do it, someone already in the field, but it was going to be hard enough to keep the plan secret without adding more people. He tabled that part of the plan.

The third step would be to execute the opposing trades.  Again, execution would have to be offshore.  Alice laughed at the Feds and the FINRA, but with the volume of transactions their group would have to make, even the Feds would spot the activity quickly if it were in the States.

If he were caught and convicted, Jack would face wire fraud, securities fraud, and multiple racketeering violations.  Conservatively figured, counting plea-bargaining, he’d still be looking at a lot of years in prison.  He fell asleep thinking he’d better not get caught.

He dreamed he was a rat in a maze.  He made it to what he thought was the end of the maze and a barrier would rise in front of him, revealing even more maze off into the distance.  He was a tough, battle-scarred rat, and didn’t have the patience for the game.  Right before he woke up, he was a going-crazy kind of rat, chewing on his tail and whining in a corner.

Mai woke him as she put his seat in the upright position.  He didn’t have to worry about the-fasten-the-seat-belt part of the drill.  She did that for him, making sure the fit was comfortable, safe, and snug on his hips. This was the part of the flight he hated the most.  Usually his back hurt so badly by the time they turned in to land, he almost hoped for a crash.

Today his back felt like someone was stabbing him with sharp, white-hot branding irons and he still cared.  The plane came in from the ocean giving a view of Victoria Harbor, Hong Kong’s Islands and the Kowloon Peninsula that looked like something out of a travel video.  Parts of the harbor were polluted enough to kill, but from the air it was bright, and blue-green that day. The hills that separated the New Territories from the PRC were green.  The elderly sisters sitting across the aisle thought the view was precious. The new airport was pretty and clean, but nowhere near as exciting as the landing at the old Kai Tak airport.
 

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ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 38

Chapter 38

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Her Grace read her copy of the police report.  The man had died for his attachment to two stupid dogs he did not even know. Animals did not have souls.  Animals were put on the planet to serve man.  This battle could not be won with a soft heart.  Those who worked for their savior’s glory needed to be strong and disciplined.  At least the police hadn’t connected the two “robbery attempts.”

“You have new mail,” the computer said in its toneless voice. She used her beautiful voice to open the responses from the other members of the executive committee.  They agreed to her proposal in principal, but wanted her to make changes.  The changes were not mentioned in the email.  The specifics would only be discussed face-to-face, on flash paper in hard copy or by throwaway cell phone.  Nothing they planned would be trusted to the open book that was the Internet.

Her Grace bit back the urge to cry and steadied her breathing, praying for patience.  If her blood pressure rose too much again that meddling doctor would sedate her, wasting too much of the precious little time she had left. She tried to explain to them that God would not let her die yet. He was not done with her. The doctor professed to believe, but would not leave her life in their saviors hands.  Why did they have to meddle?  She watched the monitors until she was sure no alarms would sound

She had known the committee would not agree to her plan without major changes.  She had proposed a plan that was perfect, but more ambitious than the old men and women would approve.  She had started with her original plan that was audacious and very straightforward.  Then she had padded her plan with even more aggressive tactics knowing the old guard would line item veto them.  She proposed the plan knowing this and knowing that their more conservative changes would not work and they would be forced to come back to her.  She would then have her original plan and their failed attempts to ‘manage it’ as evidence she should be given more power.

Her Grace knew she had to apply pressure outside her chain of command. She knew where to apply this pressure.  The congressman was especially vulnerable now. The recent scandal involving a few of the boys who had applied for page positions hurt support in his district, even as carefully drawn as the district had been.  There was a chance that the congressman would not win reelection. He was a standing incumbent in a gerrymandered district!  This Tea Party movement was making it much harder to buy politicians.  They understood that the only way to keep politicians honest was to take away their power.  Because of the scandal the congressman would want to show his conservatism, whatever that meant.

The Church of the Seven Sisters supported positions that made even hard liners squeamish. Their passionate opposition to abortion was expected. The Church’s virulent, and she nearly laughed out loud when she thought what that word really meant, opposition to homosexuality, infidelity, and drug use meant the congressman could appear to be moderate while fighting the allegations.  She did laugh, a girlish symphony of joy, when she thought about how easy it had been to entice the man into the very transgressions that would make him throw his support wholeheartedly behind her proposals.

Now, how to get the information to the congressman in a way that would not reveal it was coming from the Church?  She would not trust this much communication to the electronic medium.

She forced her hand to push the button that summoned her new stenographer.  Within seconds the young girl scurried into the room, pen in hand, breathing mask covering her mouth.  Even with the mask on she really was so very pretty.

“Your Grace, it is such an honor to be able to work with you.  Forgive me my nerves!”

“You are forgiven, child.  Now, let us begin.”

 

Dear Friend,

I was so sorry to hear of your recent troubles.  Your philosophical enemies look for any hint of perceived impropriety.  I am certain, if you were given a fair hearing, you would be found guiltless.  I want to thank you again for your passionate talk to our boys’ group.  Many of them were inspired by your words and wonder if you would be able to make time to come and see them when you are in town on the 27th?

 

 

She spun her web of words, drawing the man in.  It was vital he feel the pressure.  Then he would anonymously feed the SEC, FBI, CIA, and NSA the information that sealed the brother’s fate.

 

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ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 37

Chapter 37

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Jack said, “Ms. Schacter, I need to apologize.”

“For what?”

He bowed and said, “I hadn’t really given much credence to the critics when they said you were a great actress.  Oh, I believed beautiful and world-class dancer.  I thought it was hyperbola when they talked about you as a great actress.  Now that I have seen you on stage, I bow to your skills!”

Dvora laughed, the first real laugh he had heard from her since their hysterical release in the hospital, bowed back and said, “From a consummate prevaricator like you this is indeed high praise.”

Meghan looked good, except for the black eyes.  Dvora decided not to wait to have them fix her nose.  They’d re-broken and set it.  It was straight again. The plastic surgeon had suggested a few cosmetic fixes and Dvora gave her what for.

“Imagine the gall of that bitch.  Suggesting I change her nose while she is sleeping.  I like the little bump on her nose,” Dvora said, sniffing.  She turned her head to look at him, tilting her head to the right side, red-black hair swinging down to cover her left eye, her golden-brown right eye focused on the middle of his face.

“You have it too,” she said, reaching out to run her finger gently up and down his nose.  He left Dvora watching Meghan and walked outside to call Lee.

“They found Meghan’s attacker my love. He was killed during what was supposed to look like another robbery.  The story is so crazy I will have to tell you over dinner.”

“No way I am going to wait until dinner my beloved.  Where are you now?”

“I am standing outside the main entrance to the hospital.”

“Turn around.”

He turned around to see his beautiful woman walking toward him. He marveled at her perfections and even more at his luck to have her.  He made a promise to himself not screw this one up.  She held him and he held her as he told her the story. By the time he finished, the chill of a City night crept into them.  They went inside to warm themselves and send healing vibrations into Meghan.

Dvora, Lee, and Jack sat watching Meghan until they changed shifts at eleven.  Meghan had filled in some places and lost muscle tone in others.  Enforced rest had softened her stark, anatomy-drawing figure.

He drifted off, then Dvora, and then Lee, until the nurses woke them and sent them on their way.  They walked slowly back to the hotel, Dvora deciding that she could move the six blocks for just one night.  They didn’t talk-didn’t need to. One of them would say something and the other would answer with a look or gesture or wave of hand.  They were connected by their love for Meghan, their hatred for what had been done to her, and their pity for the man who had done it.

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ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 36

Chapter 36

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The ringing of his mobile phone dragged Jack from an exhausted sleep. He awoke fully clothed, sitting in the big leather chair by the gas fireplace.  He staggered to the phone, left foot asleep and tingling.  The ringing stopped. It wasn’t until he started to take off his clothes to shower that he discovered the note from Lee pinned to his chest with a safety pin.  She had taken a short nap and gone shopping.

His eyes felt like they had been sandpapered.  His sciatic nerve felt like someone had stabbed it with a screwdriver, and his left leg was mostly numb.  He ignored the message signal on his mobile and took an icy shower, then steaming, and then icy, and hot again.

He checked messages. One was from Dvora.  Captain Yan wanted to see them immediately.  Dvora was on her way from her studio to the police station.  Message time stamped exactly eleven minutes ago.  He dressed and made it to the cab in front of the Mark in six minutes. The little-old-lady cabbie earned her twenty-dollar tip.

This time the sergeant behind the bulletproof glass carefully checked his ID and each line of the check-in sheet Sergeant Washington filled out. Voices were pitched higher, tension and fatigue shortening vocal cords.  Too many empty plastic cups cluttered desks, too much trash-filled cans.  Before, the fabric of the office had been quiet, confident and loose.  Now there were eyes past any help from Visine and one-syllable answers to incoming calls.  Dvora was already in the Captain’s office, still in her workout clothes.  The rich smell of hard-working woman wafted over him.

The change in Captain Yan frightened him.  Yan’s hand trembled when he reached into his desk to pull out a folder.  When he spoke, his voice sounded brittle, the smooth control and brilliant speaking range dulled.  At first Jack thought he was ill.  After hearing Yan’s story, he realized Yan hadn’t really slept since they’d seen him four days ago.

“Mr. McDonald, Ms. Schacter, I have news for you, vitally important news.  Before I tell you my news I am going to ask you both to promise not to reveal what I say in this room to anyone, I repeat anyone, unless I give my approval.  I know this seems quite melodramatic.  But, once you hear what I have to say I know you will understand my reasons for asking this of you and agree to my request for silence.   May I please have your solemn promise on this?”

Jack didn’t make promises lightly and hated making them on faith.

“You have my word, Captain Yan.”

Dvora, “And mine.”

Captain Yan reached into the folder and shoved two eight-by-ten color photos across the desk. The man in the mug shot looked fortyish.  The next photo was from a lineup and showed him a bit over six feet in shoes and with the kind of thickness through the shoulders that can happen only happen after years of serious weight lifting.  He was white and his buzzed blond hair grew down to a widow’s peak.

The whites of his eyes showed around the irises, almost like the flash for the picture had startled the man.  His neck was as wide as a wrestler’s.  A faded Aryan Brotherhood tattoo showed over the edge of the collar of the rough, gray work-shirt.  There was a palpable menace to the man.

“This is Albert Weise.  We are certain he is the man who attacked Ms. McDonald and Ms. Schacter.”

Dvora “What, who, why..?”

Jack said, “Do you have him in custody?  Can I see the son-of-a-bitch?  I want to see the son-of-a-bitch.”

Dvora asked, “How can you be sure?  I mean…”

Yan said, “Please, please? I know you have questions.  Let me tell you what we know and what we think and I believe many of your questions will be answered.”

Dvora said, “Yes.  Please?”

Jack nodded.

“The diamond tennis bracelet stolen from your home was sold to a coin-and-loan shop in the Castro yesterday afternoon.  The operator of the establishment had a list of merchandise missing from your home.  The gentleman who runs the establishment is on parole for felony possession of stolen merchandise.  This was his second conviction.  He was eager to help us so that he could avoid the consequences of a third such conviction.”

The Captain smiled grimly and flipped another picture on to the table.  It was a blurry picture of a young man’s gaunt face marked by Kaposi’s sarcoma.

“This is from the security camera located above and behind the cash drawer in the pawn-shop.  We know this young man.  He is a prostitute.  Or at least he was.  You can see how difficult it would be for him to find customers now.  He roomed or associated with other men in similar circumstances.  Some of the men sell drugs and some of them sell themselves or others to pay for their drug habits.  It was rumored that they or their associates perform high-end burglaries.  One of the roommates was on parole so we didn’t have to obtain a warrant.”

“Our SWAT team entered the home.  One of the men appeared to dead from an overdose.  Another was unconscious from an overdose.  We don’t know about the third.  We had a DNA match to one of the felons in the room from Ms. McDonald’s home. There was a fire upon entry to the flop.  A very hot fire.”

Yan coughed a dry cough.  “After the fire we found CDs that matched CDs taken from Ms. Schacter and Ms. McDonald.  We found the antique flatware set and a few other items that somehow, by their placement, survived the fire.  Open and shut, very straightforward, don’t you think?”

Something in Yan’s tone, something barely there, made Jack sure things were not open and shut, and were far from certain.

“My detectives were not surprised that these gentlemen committed the crime.  They had the knowledge and the skill and, with the physical evidence, we had a very strong case.  There were a few inconsistencies.  With your reward and the understanding of the importance of this case by my staff we were very surprised that we had no information on these men.”

He looked up at Yan quickly.  He thought he heard a hint of sarcasm-so much for the inscrutable Captain Yan.  He made direct eye contact with each of them in turn.

“Do either of you believe in, for want of a better word, hunches?”

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Jack believed in hunches. “I do.”

Dvora said, “I also believe in hunches.  Why the question?”

Yan stretched, “I too believe in hunches.  I could tell that my detectives didn’t like the feel of this case.  Then the young man, the former prostitute, confirmed everything the evidence pointed to. Still my detectives didn’t like the feel of this case.  It was cracked too quickly.  It was too clean, too open and shut.”

Yan paused again. “We have a superb crime scene team.  The best in the country, I believe.  They are seldom tested.  This case puzzled them.  Obvious hair and fiber matches in an apartment after a burglary was very, very sophisticated.  So they searched your home again and again.  And then they went back to look at evidence taken from the crime scene, that they hadn’t looked at because the other evidence was so clean.  They found a small piece of skin from a knuckle.  We did not run this piece of skin through our normal database.”

Yan coughed again.  “Albert Weise was shot to death in the early hours of this morning during what would have appeared, if it were successful, to have been a burglary of a home in Woodside.  The chief of police there is a friend of mine, a protégé.  He called me and said that he had a very weird burglary.  The homeowner shot the man in self-defense.  I asked him if the man had a healing small wound on one of his knuckles.  I asked my protégé if this man had a club foot.  He did.  This is important because when I looked at the evidence with an un-jaundiced eye, I determined that one man, a man who favored a foot, had kicked Ms. McDonald, not two as we previously thought.  We were provided with a piece of skin from Mr. Weise.  There is a local university genetics lab that is very appreciative of our efforts.  When they compared the piece of knuckle skin to that of Mr. Weise, there was an absolute match.”

Captain Yan coughed the dry cough again, and as if on cue, there was a knock on the office door.  Yan said, “Come in Sergeant.”

Sergeant Washington came in and placed cough drops on the edge of Yan’s desk.  Yan looked at Washington’s back as he was leaving with amused indulgence.

“Dr. David Brecht is chief scientist for Double Helix, a genetic engineering firm.  He shot Albert Weise in the chest with a nine-millimeter automatic using Glaser antipersonnel rounds.  When we tracked Albert Weise back to his rooming house we found a list of seven chief scientists, all living in the Bay Area, and all working for genetic engineering firms.”

As the story unfolded Jack knew any acquisitions editor would have rejected Yan’s tale as too fantastic to make believable fiction.  “Albert Weise was born in Seattle, thirty-four years ago.  It was a difficult birth.  He started life with a congenital defect in his right foot.  His mother was a sometime waitress and most-time prostitute.  Neither he nor his mother has any idea who his father might be.  Albert had been in trouble from the beginning, placed in juvenile custody for the first time in the state of Washington at age nine.”

“When he was nine years old he was picked up after hitting one of his mother’s many ‘boyfriends’ on the head with a cast-iron skillet.  The man had passed out on the couch. The man did not recover full use of his faculties. It was later discovered that this man had tired of waiting for Albert’s mother one night and used the boy to satisfy his needs.”

Yan coughed the painful sounding dry cough again and drank water from a Nalgene bottle.

“Albert moved from one foster home to another, becoming more and more unmanageable.  He lived for a time with a cousin in Oakland.  The cousin had been convicted of selling amphetamines to a Federal narcotics agent.  Albert was, by then, a mature, tough teenager and a ranking member of a skinhead gang.  The leader of a rival Asian gang had Albert ambushed by a gang of youths and beaten severely.  Albert eventually caught the young man alone and beat him into semi-consciousness.  He then bound him and sodomized him.”

“After the incident Albert was remanded into the custody of the California Youth Authority.  He was fifteen.  He spent time at Preston and then Chad where he became a professional career criminal.  Albert left CYA at eighteen.  Of his next sixteen years, twelve were spent in prison.  He moved up the ranks of Aryan biker gangs in California to become one of their most feared enforcers.  When he was in his last stretch at Folsom Prison his protection broke down and he was attacked and beaten by an unaffiliated group of white supremacists.”

Yan coughed again, reddening in the face.  There was a knock on the door and Sergeant Washington brought in a pot of tea. Yan thanked him, lifted the pot and arched his right brow.  They both said “No, thanks.”  Yan poured and sipped.  When he started again his voice had regained some of its old vigor.

“Albert spent four months in the prison hospital recovering from the effects of the beating.  On a follow-up visit he tested positive for AIDS and Hepatitis C.  After a suicide attempt and treatment for depression, he became a model prisoner, dividing his time evenly between the prison library, working out in his cell, and the prison chapel. Albert was paroled in January of this year.  A search of his library records indicated he concentrated on medical texts, mostly books about religion and about current treatments for AIDS and Hepatitis C, . He also checked out many other books, seemingly unrelated.  My staff reported to me forty-five minutes before this meeting.  Most of the seeming unrelated books have something in them dealing with conspiracies.”

Captain Yan continued.  “Albert became convinced of a worldwide conspiracy to suppress antiviral research. His apartment was a monument to this theory.  He had detailed biographies of over forty people involved with antiviral research. Six of the individuals were public health officials, four were politicians, and the rest were involved directly in research, most here in the Bay Area, Boston, Austin, and the Raleigh/Durham area.”

Again Yan paused for a few moments before he continued.  “He had precise work schedules, layouts of homes and offices, pictures taken in various locals, and other detailed information on seven local individuals on this list. Ms. McDonald was the first person on the list. Dr. Albert Brecht was the second.”

Yan stopped and leaned back in his chair, took off his half-glasses and rubbed his eyes. When he made eye contact again his face was grim.

“You can now see why I had to demand your vow of silence.  I love my city.  I will not have my cherished city torn apart by stories of some madman, some vigilante against an imagined conspiracy.  This city has been ravaged by the AIDS virus and has now learned to deal with it.  We are finding that Hepatitis C is even more widespread. The more yellow press of our city, and especially those ‘news’ sites on the web, would have a field day with this story.”

Yan stood and stretched, his back audibly cracking and then sat back down.  “Albert was right. There is a conspiracy.  He is part of it.  The ability to assemble the information for the burglaries and attacks is well beyond the scope of one individual, especially an individual such as Mr. Weise.  Now I am going to ask you to lie.  We do not know who is at the center of this conspiracy.  Unless my department and closest circle of friends has been suborned, whoever is masterminding this is not aware we know of their conspiracy.  Not until we do know, and maybe not even then, do I want the press trying to drum up ratings, recover circulation, or increase page views and clicks through their speculation.  I am going to quietly keep the investigation open.  And, our official internal and published position will be that we are fairly certain we know who the culprits were.  Because of a fire in the apartment where the lead suspects died, it will take longer than usual for us to confirm the physical evidence of the crime.”

Yan talked about evidence showing this dead man to be the man who had attacked his sister.  The Captain spoke giving layer upon layer of reasons why this had to be the man.  Captain Yan’s phone rang. He listened briefly and then put the phone down.

“Now, I want to make sure we are in agreement.  Are you comfortable in not talking to the press or anyone else, especially now that you understand why it is so important to keep our knowledge of the real culprit quiet?”

Dvora looked off into the distance for a few seconds and then said, “Yes.”

Jack, more quickly, “Yes.”

Yan, nearly dropping with exhaustion, pulled himself erect in his chair again and made very direct and intense eye contact with both of them.

“And now, another difficult thing.  I want both of you to think for a few moments.  Do either of you have knowledge that might help us decipher who these conspirators are?  You are both extremely well connected in a number of spheres of influence.  Ms. Schacter, you know many, many powerful and influential people from many walks of life.  And you, Mr. McDonald, with your connections in venture capital and investments and very close personal friendship with Mr. Robert E. Lee White, whose intelligence network is superb, also know many people who know many things.  Do either of you have any ideas, theories, or knowledge that could conceivably help us?”

Jack put on his pondering face, stared at a spot on the wall just above a small Japanese watercolor to the right of Captain Yan.  He put on his pondering face by pondering.  Rather than trying not to think about what he did know, he thought about other things to keep any possible thoughts from his face and body language.  He thought about things like: was it Aliens? Did the leprechauns do it?  What about mutant octopus?  As he rejected each hypothesis, he was able to keep his poker face and say, “I’m bewildered by all of this.  It sounds like something from a bad thriller.  When I have my arms around what you have told me, perhaps then I might be able to think of something useful.”

Yan nodded, acting as if he believed him.

Dvora’s face held a combination of bewilderment and shock and sorrow.  She looked up Yan and said, “This is all so strange and frustrating.  A robbery gone bad, and junkies hurting my wife in the process, this I can comprehend.  This poor man’s delusions, those of a dying man, these I might be able to forgive one day, but this…conspiracy.  I am simply bewildered.  If I can think of anything I will call.  Now, before we leave to try and process this, is there any other way we can help?”

Jack had been told that one of her strengths as a dancer was her ability to completely transform her character.  This was an Oscar-worthy performance.

Yan said, “Not at the moment.  Now if you will excuse me, I must tie up some loose ends and then I must sleep.  It has been almost three days. At my age I do not have the stamina I once did.”  With that he stood and left them.

The picture of Albert Weise was still on top of the desk.  He didn’t look evil any more.  He looked sad.  What a pitiful life he’d had, doomed from the start.  Jack wasn’t a big believer in people not being able to take control their lives.  But, Albert had about as much chance of living a normal life as a career politician had of telling the truth.

Jack could understand Albert’s belief in conspiracy.  How many billions had the government spent, how much more private industry on AIDS, and now on Hepatitis C? There were treatments for Hepatitis C, but until recently they’d only been fifty percent effective and the effective ones were expensive as hell.  AIDS, after countless billions, was still a death sentence for many. If you wanted to discover a cure for any disease all you had to do was have the politicians announce the cure’s inventor would get $10 billion.  Make that $10 billion tax-free. Then guarantee the cure wouldn’t be ‘nationalized.’ Let the inventors be assured of their right to market their cure any way they saw fit.

“That poor sad son-of-a-bitch,” Dvora said.

Jack would have said it if she hadn’t. When he looked at Dvora, tears tracked her face.

“And, I still hated him, will continue to hate him, and if I feel bad about it.  He didn’t have a fucking chance, did he?”

 

FROM THE LARGE video display in an interview room, Captain Yan watched as Sergeant Washington led Jack and Dvora out of the bay. Yan had not met two such accomplished liars in a long time.  Both of them were charming and intelligent.  He knew they knew things he could use.  He knew they suspected that he knew this.  It was a silly game, one that wasted time.  The passing of time, in any investigation, was the enemy of truth.  The more quickly he tied the threads together, the more quickly he could braid them into the rope to hang those who thought they could get away with this nonsense on his watch.

He would not normally afford people who had knowledge he needed the leeway he afforded these two.  This had nothing to do with their political power, at least not directly.  He did not fear upsetting them and having them use their political wherewithal to pressure him, even if they were the vindictive kind.  He knew these two were not, because his intelligence reports spoke very highly of their character.  He afforded them the leeway because once they learned to trust him they would became enormously valuable allies.

These two, three if you counted Hong Lee, would be the last piece of his circle.  He was given to flights of fancy on occasion and thought of the group he had assembled as his super heroes alliance-Alvin Yan’s Super Hero Alliance-AYSHA.  This acronym did not have the ring to it that Captain Alvin Yan wanted.  When he was not so very tired, he and his beautiful, brilliant bride would have a glass of brandy or two, sit in front of the fire and giggle like schoolchildren while they invented an acronym that had more of a rolling thunder.

Yan sighed as he thought of his brothers in blue.  Most cops weren’t all that smart and many were corrupt.  This was a good thing, as most criminals were stupid and lazy or his brothers would never catch them.  The problem with this came when someone of his talents and with his superb team tried to deal with people such as Dvora and Jack.  He chose to think of them as Dvora and Jack.  He knew that one day they would be friends.  These two and their friends would make such superb allies!

He knew that one way or another, by truth, guile or coercion, they were going to share what they knew and share it soon.  He just hoped that it would not be too late to stop this insanity before it claimed other lives.  The last thing he thought before he fell asleep on the couch in his napping room was that it was going to be very difficult to coerce or outsmart these two.  He smiled briefly at the challenge they presented.  Then his face turned grim.  He stopped himself thinking about the perpetrators.  He forced himself into serenity, evened his breathing, and cleared his mind.  In less than a minute he was asleep.

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ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 35

Chapter 35

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Marvin Jones kicked his new skateboard up and caught it.  He didn’t really want to hang.  This was dangerous ground.  He hadn’t claimed yet, so he wasn’t protected.  Well, he had sort of claimed.  He was a choirboy at the Church, but that was getting way old too.  The priest wasn’t paying him no never mind since he started getting hair down there, but Momma say he got to do what they tell him ‘cause she wanted to go to heaven and she was too sick to work no more.

He had done like they said and practiced with the sling shot at the old factory.  It was cake, the thing they wanted him to do.  He practiced until he knew he could get the ball through the window nine times out of ten.  That was 90%.  It was way cool that eighteen out of twenty was 90% too. He made sure he didn’t tell nobody that he liked math.  And, he was getting way better at math every day.

Life was funny.  He stole this math puzzle magazine from the old gook’s newsstand and that bastard snatched his hand in some kind of Kung Fu shit that hurt.  He was sure the old man was going to rat him out, then he done something strange.

The old man asked him, “Who you stealing this for?”

Marvin told the old man it was for him ‘cause the math books at school were too easy.  The old man made him work some of the puzzles on the first couple of pages.  He looked real surprised when Marvin did the numbers in his head.  Then the old man smiled a smile that reminded him of someone, couldn’t figure out who, and opened the puzzle book to the middle and told him to do the puzzle on page 56.  He thought at first that it was a stupid puzzle. It was mostly words, and why would anyone care when two trains going toward each other at different speeds would meet?  Once he pictured it in his head he started to puzzle it out.  The old man sharpened a brand new Ticonderoga #2 HB and handed it to him.  Marvin thought later that he could have run when the old man turned to sharpen the pencil, but once he started on a puzzle he always had to finish it.

When he wrote down two hours and twenty minutes, the old man smiled again and asked.  “What grade are you in?”

Marvin said, “Sixth.”

The old man asked him, “What school teaches Algebra in sixth grade?”

And, that’s when things got way weird.  That was his word-way.  He liked to use words that nobody else used.  He asked the old man, “What’s algebra?”

The old man looked a little sad then and stood with his arms folded looking at Marvin for a long time.  Then he smiled again and for some reason he looked like Grandpa. Only how a little old Chinese man could look like his way big, black grandpa before he died from the diabetes was way strange.  Then that old man said something totally crazy.  He said, “You take this book and finish it and come back when you are done and I will give you another one.  If you can’t finish it, get as far as you can and come back and show me what you have done.”

The puzzle book the old man gave him was way better than the ones in school.  He had gone back two days later and the old man looked through the book and smiled and gave him another one.

People was crazy, man.  Shit, I’m supposed to be watching.

Marvin skated down the ally and climbed up the drainpipe and waited.  He heard the shotgun blast, but there wasn’t no fire.  So he took the black pellet, the one that they said to be real careful with, and shot it through the window, just like he’d practiced.  Then he slid down the drainpipe.

He pulled out the towel he had stuck in his back pocket and wiped the rust off his Levi’s and tossed the towel in the trash.

He skated past the SWAT guys who were running around freaking out. He didn’t like the SWAT guys.  They were mostly assholes, even the black ones.  A block later he dropped the sling in a sewer and skated back to newsstand.  He had told the old man he didn’t feel right getting all the free puzzle books.  The old man smiled a big smile and said he would put him to work.  Today the old man was going to talk to him about inventory, whatever that was.

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ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 34

Chapter 34

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The SWAT captain knew his career was dead in the water as long as Yan was his boss.  He needed glory so Yan would let him transfer.  He was going through the door first.  His Lieutenant wasn’t happy because this was a change in plans.  Fuck him, the fucking fag. He and his “partner” had the balls to invite him to their wedding. 

Their intel said there were two people in the room and maybe three.  After the score from the dykes’ apartment, they were sure to be high.  The odds were they were doing meth and heroin, based on their history and the size of the score.  They’d never shown this tendency for violence before and never used a gun in any of their crimes.  The Captain had a piece he’d taken off a dealer back when he was in narcotics.  The dealer wouldn’t pay the price.  Idiot!  If he had to, he could plant the piece to justify any shooting.  The only real risk was the chance they were cooking meth in the room.

The SWAT Captain gave the prearranged signal to kill the power to the room at the same time his men punched the lock.  He went in low with his head up just like he’d been taught in high school football.  He moved fast and felt good. Then he saw the man on the couch, holding the shotgun aimed right at his head.  Then he tripped the ether-soaked cotton yarn that pulled the man’s finger on the shotgun that fired the load of buckshot that hit him in his face and neck. He died instantly as he fell on candles melting down to the accelerant designed to turn the building into an inferno, obliterating everything but the unconscious innocents and the planted evidence.  His fire retardant uniform and vest snuffed out the candles.

His lieutenant followed him in, watching the events unfold, not really understanding them.  He had just flipped the safety off his FN to spray the room, grabbing his Captain’s ankle with his left hand to drag him out.  He stopped and yelled out, “Freeze!”

Thanks to him and not his now-dead and no longer interfering Captain, his team was superbly trained.  They froze.  He reached down to check the pulse in his Captain’s neck when he realized it wouldn’t be necessary. The left side of his neck was missing, with much of it being on the lieutenants face shield and the door frame behind him.

The lieutenant stepped out of the room and said to his second in command, “Move everybody back to the turn in the hall.  Let no one, I repeat no one, pass unless you clear it with me.”  Then he called Yan on his cell.  “Captain Yan. Butch is dead.  Killed by a booby trap.  This place was rigged to blow.  Would you please come up here and take a look before Crime Scene gets here?”

Yan had heard the shot and fought the urge to run forward to protect his men.  He walked through the men crouching behind their armored shields, inside their helmets and body armor, thinking they looked like Roman Centurions holding ground, ready to die for Caesar.

SWAT Sergeant Bobbie Vu stood up and stepped in his way.  “Sorry, Captain.  The Lieutenant said not to let anyone pass.”

Yan said, “Well done, Bobbie.  The Lieutenant is on my phone.”  He handed the phone to Bobbie who quickly confirmed that he could pass.

Yan walked into the room and stopped.  The Lieutenant moved to the side.  Yan walked further into the room and looked around. One man lay on the sagging, stained couch, vomit down his shirt.  The shotgun had been wedged into the corner of the couch and the cushions.  A string passed around the man’s finger.  The string was now slack, its work done.  Another man lay unconscious or dead on the mattress on the floor, vomit drying on his lips, face, and stained wife beater.  A third man looked like he had passed out face first onto the kitchen table.  He was still tied off, with the works on the floor at his feet.

Yan reached into the inside jacket of his sports coat, and removed computer printouts.  He walked up to each man, leaving the man on the couch until last.  Yan walked up to the tattooed, emaciated man sprawled on couch.  He looked at the picture of the man and the mug shot picture on his printout.  He compared them again and then slipped on gloves, pulled down the incongruous-looking turtleneck the man wore, first checking to see if the man was still alive.  He was, and deeply unconscious.

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Yan looked down at the missing patch of skin on the man’s neck.  From the looks of the missing patch of skin, it had been expertly removed.  He compared the man’s picture to the picture on the mug shot with the DNA match to the skin underneath the fingernails of Meghan McDonald’s left hand.  She was still unconscious in the hospital, guarded by Mr. Robert E. Lee White’s minions under the instructions of Mr. Jack McDonald.  Captain Alvin Yan decided then and there that a uniformed policeman sitting in a chair outside that hospital room would be of benefit.

Someone, and when he found them he would be very interested in knowing who these people were, had gone to enormous trouble to make it appear as if these poor men had broken into Ms. McDonald’s apartment and nearly killed her in a robbery attempt.  Alvin Yan was certain he would find property taken from the robbery in this flop.  He was certain he would find cash money paid by a fence for property taken from the apartment.  Alvin Yan was absolutely certain the only way this sham could work would be if the flop burned down. What Captain Alvin Yan was not certain of was whether or not he would let the apartment burn.

He called the lieutenant in.  “Roberto, I must commend you on your quick thinking.  If you had gone in firing there is a very good chance your Captain would have lost his life in vain.  There is an even better chance we would have convicted these poor men of a crime they did not commit.  The man, or men who actually committed the burglary would go free.  They would be guilty of four murders, that of your Captain and the three men in this room.  Now…”

Just before Yan asked the question of the lieutenant he most wanted to ask there was a tinkling of breaking glass and the whoosh of fire.  The lieutenant and Captain Yan leaped to the left of the door, diving as far as they could as the accelerant in the room ignited in a near firestorm as any physical evidence that might contradict the lie was obliterated forever.

The lieutenant, his fire-retardant clothing protecting him, did two things at once, “Clear the building now,” he yelled.  The other thing he did was to put out the fire on Captain Yan’s favorite wool sports coat and his brand new gray slacks.  While he was doing this the lieutenant heard Yan calmly talking on his cell phone, “I want a five-block perimeter around this building sealed. Now.  Look especially for bicycle and motorcycle couriers.  Have the men search every trash can in that radius.  Look for a sling or sling shot.”

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