Last shot tr-4 Read online

Page 39


  Thomas came back on the line and told them to hold while he and Frisk sourced the call's origin. His voice jarred them back into the present.

  "The kid's circling the drain," Freed said. "How's Walker think he's gonna make it right?"

  "Just comforting him, maybe," Bear said.

  "Not his style." Tim worked the inside of his cheek between molars.

  Call-waiting beeped. Tim clicked over, catching Dray on the tail end of a vicious yawn.

  When she recovered, she said, "I went out to a three-mile radius from the airport parking lot. There was only one car stolen that night. A red 2004 Honda Accord, registered to Brehanda De LaSalle, license number three-Nora-Charles-Sam-six-eight-four."

  Tim thanked her and switched lines just as Thomas picked back up.

  Thomas said, "He's still fucking with us. He routed the call through the Vector switchboard, like before."

  Tim felt a stab of excitement. "No, he's at Vector this time. He's getting Sam the Xedral shots."

  Freed was already dialing. He racked the cordless on its base so he could use speakerphone and keep his hands free. He maneuvered through Vector's automated phone system, reaching the ranking security guard on duty. The guard reported no breaches. Freed gave him the Honda's identifiers and asked him to radio his men and ask if anyone had spotted it.

  "There's a red Accord parked right across the street here. Got a bigass Cal State Northridge sticker on the back window?"

  Freed grabbed his laptop from the kitchen counter. "Can you check the plate numbers?"

  The guard huffed outside.

  Bear said, "Walker would've switched the plates out."

  With Tim peering over his shoulder, Freed Googled Brehanda Delasalle. The search engine delicately inquired, Did you mean: Brehanda De LaSalle? Indeed he did.

  The guard said, "Nope, it's got dealer tags. Keyes Toyota Van Nuys."

  Bear said, "What's an Accord doing with new-car plates from a Toyota dealer?"

  Brehanda's search page loaded. The top entry read classof04. alumni. csun. edu.

  As Freed scrambled back to throw on clothes and Bear ran to the door, keys jingling in his hand, Tim alternated between Thomas and the Vector guard. "Lock down the building. Call all local units. Assemble ART. Have LAPD set up a perimeter. I want the whole block flooded."

  Freed jogged from his bedroom, ducking into the sling of his MP5. He called back over his shoulder, "Be back in a few, babe."

  The elevator operator shrank against the back wall, so Freed knuckled the button himself. Tim flicked open the wheel of his. 357 and gave it a spin, his ritual ammo check. As the elevator doors opened, Bear skidded to the front of the building, one tire popping up on the curb.

  They hopped in, and he took off. They were a half block up the street before Tim managed to get the door closed.

  Chapter 76

  Timing his approach to dodge overlapping security patrols, Dolan arrived short of breath at the proximity reader guarding the back entrance above the parking-lot ramp. His own access-control card had been disabled as he'd predicted, and so had Chase's, but not Chase's generic guest pass, which he'd pulled from the G-Wagen's glove box. Just as the guard's footsteps rounded the corner, Dolan eased the door shut behind him and stood quietly inside the Beacon-Kagan Building, breathing in the darkness.

  The rear of the floor was unfamiliar to him. He waited for his eyes to adjust to the dark, then eased slowly down the corridor. His sneakers padding quietly on the tile, he moved through the sliding glass doors into the test suite, passing beneath the oil portrait of his father. Agitated at the movement, the monkeys rattled their cages, flailing and screaming, the sound reaching a madhouse pitch. Dolan jogged through the heated production room, roller bottles filled with Xedral grinding all around him, and to his own bench. One of the junior researchers had left a champagne bottle, bow around the neck, on Dolan's chair. The attached card hung open, the note reading Congrats on the IPO! Your hard work finally paid off!

  Working rapidly, he logged in to the system as his brother, using the code he'd pulled from Chase's cell phone. The monkeys' continued shrieking did little to settle his heartbeat. He waited, a held breath burning in his chest.

  The log-in screen blipped away, leaving him with unrestricted access.

  He searched the drives for key words, clicking past the reports teed up for public consumption and locating the data he was looking for-a set of files buried three folders deep on the C drive. Trial data, study databases, and finally, Lentidra's raw data. The true data. Most damning were interoffice memoranda circulated by Dean himself. Dolan gathered up an assemblage of key documents, compressed them into a neat packet, and attached them to an e-mail. He found Deputy Rackley's business card in his wallet and typed in the e-mail address.

  His finger hovered above the mouse for maybe a full minute.

  Lentidra had been ready for Phase I human trials months ago, but Dolan had slept through the backstage machinations that had removed it from the production line and sealed it behind a wall of secrecy. The cost of its delay was paid in human lives, as would be the cost of its continued captivity. All because Dolan had acted feebly, even in the face of his own suspicions.

  He thought about Tess Jameson, with so much less to her name and more on the line. Up against vastly more powerful corporate muscle, she'd done everything to orchestrate her son's survival. And just when she'd gotten it within reach, her conscience wouldn't let her seize it. She'd fought to bring a cure to others, even knowing that Sam could die as a result. And now here Dolan was, Vector's principal investigator following the case laid out by a mother with limited resources, education, and opportunity.

  The monkeys still hadn't calmed in the test suite, jungle cries echoing around the hard lab surfaces. The din ringing in his ears, Dolan clicked the mouse, sending the e-mail.

  The icon spun as the data uploaded. Biting his thumbnail and waiting for the chime, he heard instead the sound of glass shattering in one of the accompanying suites.

  A jumble of fears coalesced. Likely Dean had installed cameras inside the lab. So either Dolan had been spotted or soon would be. Maybe Chase's guest access card had called up an alert on some remote security computer.

  Slowly, he eased away from his bench, passing back through the production room, the heat of the incubator making his neck sweat. He groped around on the wall, finding the light-switch panel and disabling the motion-sensor feature before stepping fully into the test suite. The monkeys hopped around, their cages banging on the lab counters, but there was no sign of any guards. And no shattered beakers to explain the noise he'd heard.

  The access card failed to open the exit in the back of the test suite. Numb with disbelief, Dolan tried again. The proximity reader gave him another flashing red light. Security had locked down the building.

  The fire-escape door toward the end of the corridor was by law manually operated. Guards might be waiting for him outside, but he'd rather risk a public confrontation than wait in the dark for whoever broke the glass and was likely stalking him. He now had concrete evidence of what he'd sensed all along-his father was capable of anything.

  Dean's painted face stared down as Dolan slipped through the sliding glass doors. Before proceeding up the corridor toward the exit, he turned off the motion sensor on the overheads. The window at the end of the corridor, normally lit by passing headlights, was a black square. Plotting each footstep, he crept along the tile. The monkeys had finally silenced, but the quiet was proving equally sinister.

  A faint rustling in the vector-storage room stopped him dead. Through the vast internal window, he caught a partial view of the room. A refrigerator door hung open, casting a faint light across the floor. The freeze-dried Xedral vials, normally neatly lined on the shelves, had been pulled down. A few lay shattered on the concrete. A number of Styrofoam shipping containers had been knocked over, dry ice misting up from the floor.

  Why would a guard ransack the vector-storage room?

/>   Before he could flatten to the wall, the door kicked open and Walker solidified from the dark, shrouded in wisps of vapor.

  The gunmetal, when pressed to Dolan's neck, felt like ice.

  Chapter 77

  Using his left arm to cradle twenty or so vials of Xedral against his stomach, Walker pressed the Redhawk to Dolan's throat. Calmly, he stuffed the vials and needle kit into his pockets.

  Dolan said, "Listen-"

  "Turn around."

  Dolan pivoted haltingly. His spread fingers trembled.

  "What did Tess get on you?" Walker said.

  "She found out about a second viral vector I designed for AAT. More effective but less profitable, so my father and brother buried it. They lied to me about it, told me it was less viable than Xedral, and covered the trail with false data."

  "Get on your knees."

  "I just figured out-"

  From behind, Walker kicked out Dolan's leg, and he hit the floor hard, his kneecaps knocking tile. Walker pressed the gun to the back of his head. He expected Dolan to cry, to plead, but he didn't. He just sat there, sagged over his folded legs, shoulders slumped.

  Walker thought about Kaitlin in the apartment, steering his gun to her own belly so he couldn't aim at the deputy pounding on the door. He summoned his anger. "You were there. When Tess was raped."

  "Yes." Dolan didn't move. His voice was quiet, resigned, almost peaceful. "And I did nothing to help her. I'm sorry."

  Walker's finger tightened on the trigger, but then a spotlight struck the window at the corridor's end. Squinting through the glare, he made out a row of incoming flashing blue lights.

  He hit the floor.

  The Dodge actually caught air flying off the 405 at Wilshire. Tim's Nextel vibrated, and he snapped it off his belt. "Almost there."

  Miller said, "Jameson's inside with an unidentified hostage. The perimeter's airtight, and a traffic-control team's locked down the surrounding blocks. We've got men at all the exits and windows and up on the second floor at the stairwells. The command team and negotiating team are en route, but we got the LAPD crisis negotiator in place already. We blocked the phone lines from the building, so if Walker calls out, he's talking to us. The negotiator's on with him now, obtaining proof that the hostage is okay. Guerrera's rounding up Jameson's mother and father and getting no cooperation. His platoon-mate-guy in the VA? — is too sick to be moved."

  As Bear swept around the exit loop, a blanket of parked cop cars drew into view, the strobing reds and blues projecting false movement all around. The desolate run of street beyond the vehicle barricade looked bizarre; Tim had never seen Wilshire devoid of traffic. Freed whistled through his teeth. A spotlight blazed off the closed venetian blinds blotting out a window on the ground floor of the Beacon-Kagan Building.

  Tim said, "Contact Kaitlin Jameson-she's three blocks over at the UCLA Med Center. And find Dolan Kagan."

  Bear slowed at the sawhorses, flashing his badge to the cop. Up the block, in the eye of the spotlight, the venetian blinds flashed open, revealing a silhouette bound to an office chair, an arm reaching into view to press a gun to his temple. The blinds snapped shut again.

  Miller said, "Unfortunately, I think we just did."

  Bear steered slowly, threading through the parked cars.

  "Walker said he won't talk to the negotiator anymore," Miller said. "Only to you."

  Tim said, "We're here. Look west. Bear's rig? Have someone meet me with a cordless."

  Bear slant-parked beside a fire engine, and Tim hopped out. A guy in a SWAT windbreaker trotted over and tossed Tim a cordless. Tim headed to the front of the barricade, pressing the phone to his ear. "Rackley."

  Acrylic packing tape secured Dolan at the forearms, ankles, chest, and thighs, adhering him to the office chair. Gripping the back of his neck, Walker rolled him down the corridor on well-greased casters. He spoke into the cordless phone he'd swiped from one of the lab benches. "Bring Sam here now, or this fuck dies."

  Through the phone Tim sounded slightly winded; he was jogging. "We can't move Sam. He's in full liver failure."

  "Full liver failure? Then you'd better get him here quick."

  "We can't do that," Tim said. "He's in bad shape."

  "I have the Xedral shot. It'll make him better. Send Sam in to me. I give him the shot, then I let Dolan go free."

  "There's a better vector. That's what Tess found out. That's why they had her killed."

  Walker halted, Dolan grunting as his grip tightened. "That's what my hostage told me. You think we should believe him?"

  "Tess got ahold of evidence. I've seen it."

  "So there's another shot. A better shot." Walker pressed the Redhawk to the hollow of Dolan's eye. "Do you have it here?"

  Dolan tried to recoil but had little room to move. The chair slid a little, and Walker moved with it, applying pressure to Dolan's face. The glass sliding doors hissed open, and they drifted into the test suite, the monkeys sending up a racket.

  "Lentidra," Dolan said. "Yes, it's here. But it's too late."

  "What do you mean it's too late?" Walker said.

  "He's in liver failure? Sam?"

  "So we give him the good shot. We fix it."

  "Viral vectors can't work if the target organ is in failure. The administration of the transgene'll just damage the liver further. Gene therapy has to start earlier-it's not a late-stage cure."

  A long pause. At the end of the line, Tim was silent; he'd been listening, too.

  Walker tensed his mouth, scratched his head with the barrel of his gun. He said, into the phone and to Dolan, "I don't believe you. Put me through to Sam's room."

  Tim said, "I can't do that."

  Walker fired a shot across the suite-a computer monitor jumped, the bullet embedding in its side. The monkeys, bizarrely, silenced.

  Tim said, reasonably, "Everyone okay in there?"

  "Put me through to Kaitlin at the hospital, or so help me God I'll kill this motherfucker."

  "I'll see what I can do."

  A few seconds later, Walker got a ring, and then Kaitlin's voice. He said, "Kaitlin, it's very important you answer me straight right now. Did Sam's liver give out?"

  "He's in a coma, Walk." She sounded deadened, on the far side of a sobbing jag. "I want to hear his voice. Just one more time. But they said I'm not gonna get to."

  Walker felt his forehead crinkle. "How long's he have?"

  "Morning. Maybe."

  He waited until whatever was fucking with his throat subsided. "I'm sorry."

  An indelicate nose blow. "You didn't do it."

  "No," he said. "For being a coward. Like you said."

  Her voice took on a note of suspicion. "Where are you? What's going on?"

  "Are you high up? In the building?"

  "Third floor."

  "Get to a south window."

  Sounds of Kaitlin running. She jerked in a breath. "Oh, honey."

  "When the kid comes to, tell him I said he did good."

  "Walker, they don't think he's gonna come to."

  He hung up, crouched, and lowered his head, palming the back of his skull. Dolan started to say something, and Walker raised the Redhawk so it aimed at his face. His voice came low, gruff. "Do not say anything right now."

  Between his feet the cordless rang. He picked it up.

  Tim said, "You're a straight shooter, Walker. Here's how it is: We don't have anything to give you. You don't have anything to get. Dolan can't do anything for you anymore."

  Walker started pulling Xedral vials from his pocket and throwing them against the far wall, one after another. A few of the monkeys reacted with anxious little calls. "How do you know I won't just kill this motherfucker anyway?"

  "I don't. But you'd be killing the wrong guy. He wasn't in on Tess's murder."

  "He was in on the rape."

  "He was there."

  "Being a coward don't buy you a pass."

  "Sounds like Kaitlin just gave you one."

&
nbsp; Walker threw another vial, finding the tinkle of breaking glass oddly pleasing.

  "You're boxed," Tim said. "There's no way out that doesn't wind up at a dead end."

  Walker said, "Dead ends don't scare me."

  "You've got one move left. You let Dolan live, you walk out of there, we sit down with the AUSA and have a long talk about extenuating circumstances."

  "Like they did for you."

  "Like they did for me."

  Walker laughed. "Somehow I don't think I'll get the same treatment." He set down the phone and turned to Dolan. "All you fucking people. When the chips are down, you hide behind them."

  Dolan said, "You're right. But I had nothing to do with killing your sister. And I never would have. Stop and think what your sister put her life on the line for. I didn't see it until I came in here tonight. Sam was going downhill fast. She risked everything that mattered to her to give him something to die for. This drug my father and brother were trying to bury, she was gonna ransom with her own blood. For three hundred thousand people. This could be what Sam did with his life. Which is a lot more than my brother did with his. Or my father's doing with his fucking companies. With my company. Tess died trying to get the right AAT vector to the market. Now I'm the one who knows what it is and how to do it." His jacket had fallen open, and a few wet splotches appeared on his T-shirt at the stomach. He bucked his head to wipe his nose against his shoulder. "Just give me a chance to set things right. Give me a second chance."