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Anne Stuart's Out-of-Print Gems

Page 41

by Anne Stuart


  She whipped around the corner, breathing a sigh of relief. It had been difficult enough getting past the security guards in the first place. One would have thought BBCSI harked back to cold-war technology, given the almost hysterical level of protection the fortresslike complex boasted. Fortunately she had friends in low places: the picture ID with its computer scan code was meticulous enough to avoid detection, and the blueprint of the building would enable her to make her way to Crompton’s fortified third-story lab without any betraying hesitation.

  Once she got there, it would be up to her to get inside. She had no illusions. The place would have security that would make Fort Knox seem like a public park, but she wasn’t about to give up if she got that far. She had in the capacious pocket of her lab coat a handy-dandy device that would take care of any computer-coded lock. She’d only be in trouble if they went in for something as archaic as a dead bolt and key.

  She’d chosen her time well. Even the most dedicated security freaks and scientific geniuses liked to get home to a hot meal, and it was just after five-thirty. Most of the employees were too intent on getting the hell out of the place to notice another white-coated employee, and BBCSI was vast enough for her to simply blend in.

  When she reached the third floor, she found it deserted. Crompton must have already gone home, and the computerized lock on his unmarked lab door would be child’s play for the circumventor one of her friends at the paper had set up for her. Taking a deep breath, she walked to the door of the lab, listening for a moment. Not a sound within, and if she could trust her instincts, which she usually could, the place was empty. Doubtless, there were security cameras all over the place, and she moved closer to the door, the white coat shielding her actions as she quickly, efficiently tripped the lock and then stepped inside, closing the heavy door silently behind her.

  DR. DANIEL CROMPTON stood inside Henry Osborn’s plush inner office, impatient as always.

  “For heaven’s sake, Dan, have a seat,” Osborn said, using his usual boisterous charm, something he’d perfected during his twenty years in the corporate high life.

  Daniel was immune to charm. And he hated being called Dan. “I’ll stand,” he said in his deep voice. “I won’t be here long.”

  Osborn didn’t let his irritation show, but Daniel knew he was feeling it. “Hell, Dan, you make me feel like a principal calling a recalcitrant schoolboy onto the carpet.”

  “That’s your problem,” Daniel replied with exquisite rudeness.

  This time he did manage to ruffle Osborn’s cheer. The older man’s small eyes darkened for a moment, and then he showed his teeth in a semblance of a smile. “We need results, Dan.”

  “When I accepted your funding, I did so on my terms.” Daniel found this all quite tedious, but then, most of his life outside his lab involved wasting his time with fools like Osborn, and he’d grown inured to it. “You provide the money and leave me alone.”

  “Yes, but we need something. A sign of progress, of good faith. You know, if it were simply up to me, you’d be left to your own timetable. But we’ve got a board of directors, stockholders, demanding results. General Armstead has been on my tail for a week now, about you.”

  Daniel simply shrugged.

  Osborn got up and came around the desk. He was a trim man in his early sixties, impeccably dressed, impeccably mannered. He was also a snake and a liar.

  He put his hand on Daniel’s shoulder and stared up at him earnestly. “You know what we’re after. And you’re the man to do it. Half the scientists in the world are trying to create cold fusion, but our money’s on you. If anyone’s going to do it, you will.”

  Daniel stared at him. “At this point I’m not particularly interested in cold fusion.”

  “Damn it, how could you not be! I’d heard you’ve been concentrating your efforts on physical chemistry, and that’s going to get you nowhere. The only way you’re going to create cold fusion is with lasers, with—”

  “If you want to create cold fusion, Osborn, I’m sure you can find space for a lab,” Daniel said.

  Osborn’s hands clenched for a moment, then relaxed. “You know, you’re damned annoying, Dan. If you weren’t so brilliant, someone would probably wring your neck.”

  Daniel looked down at him. “They could try.”

  “We need some results, Dan. At least a preliminary report. I trust you—”

  “If you trust me, why do you need a preliminary report?”

  “I said I trust you. I’m just the lowly CEO. Armstead’s head of the board of directors, and after spending thirty years in the army, he’s used to having his orders obeyed. Just give us something. Anything.”

  Daniel considered him for a long moment. He didn’t trust him, but then, he didn’t trust anyone. Trust was a human emotion and a waste of time, and Daniel Crompton never wasted time. It was too precious a commodity.

  He’d already wasted more than enough with this man. “I’ll have one of my lab assistants write you a report.”

  “Your lab assistants don’t know diddly. You don’t let them anywhere near your experiments, you just keep them glued to computers, running theoretical tests.”

  “It keeps them busy,” he said. “I’ll have Jackson do it.”

  Osborn didn’t even blink, something Daniel could respect. Robert Jackson was Osborn’s spy and stooge, and they all thought Daniel was too involved in his work to realize it. Daniel didn’t trust anyone, but Jackson’s yuppie friendliness had made him more suspect than most.

  “You know what the stakes are, Dan,” Osborn said. “You know what cold fusion could do, I don’t need to remind you. Don’t you care about providing unlimited, safe energy for the world? Don’t you care about ending our reliance on oil-producing nations? Don’t you want to help make the world a better place?”

  “Not particularly,” Daniel said with complete honesty. “I’m only interested in my work.”

  “Danny—” Osborn began.

  “My name is Daniel,” he said, ruthlessly interrupting Osborn. Dan he could barely tolerate; Danny was going beyond the pale. “Or Dr. Crompton, if you prefer. And ask Jackson what I’m doing. I’m sure he can come up with a reasonable guess. For a spy, he’s quite intelligent.” He turned on his heel and started toward the door.

  “I’m not finished,” Osborn said, sounding petulant.

  Daniel didn’t pause. “I am,” he said. And he closed the door quietly behind him.

  The whole thing was incredibly tedious, he thought as he let himself back into the lab. He was so damned tired of dealing with the corporate mentality. He’d accepted Beebe’s offer several years ago for a number of reasons, including the fact that they seemed to have more money and fewer restrictions than anyone else making an offer for his services, and the offers had been plentiful. The government had wanted him, of course, but he’d never been fond of bureaucrats. The defense industry’s offer had been tempting, but in the end he decided he disliked generals even more than bureaucrats. Private industry gave him the hives; academia was impoverished. BBCSI had seemed the perfect solution, a young multicorporation whose right hand didn’t seem to know what its left hand was doing. Apart from Osborn and the deceptively avuncular General Armstead, they were an innocuous bunch. The corporation was large enough to hand over all its vast resources and leave him alone.

  Until the last few months. They searched his lab at least every other day. It was usually Jackson, but sometimes it was one of the other brilliant but completely uncreative research assistants Daniel had been given. He wasn’t particularly concerned—there was no way they were going to find what he was working on. They were still convinced he was working on cold fusion, and as long as they were looking in that direction it would take more than all their puny intellects put together to figure out what he was up to.

  He’d present his results to Osborn, Armstead and their confederates sooner or later. After all, they’d paid for it. But not before he’d finished with his obsessive checking and recheck
ing. He’d been able to duplicate the results a half-dozen times. He wasn’t about to make his discoveries public until he was convinced, and he needed at least a half-dozen more trials.

  He’d been at the computer when Osborn had issued his summons. He headed back in that direction, then stopped. Something wasn’t right.

  He turned around slowly, surveying the sterile, obsessively neat confines of his spacious lab. He hadn’t been working at the hood—that section of the physical lab used for dangerous experiments—for days now, and yet it looked different. There was a definite odor, something burning, and he started toward it, then halted.

  “Who the hell are you?”

  The intruder had been in the middle of sneaking toward the door. He turned and glared at her as she stood like a deer pinned by a set of headlights. Except there was no fear in her steady gaze.

  “Er—I’m new here,” she said, sounding embarrassed and innocent. Except that he didn’t believe her. “I’m looking for Dr. Smith’s lab, and I thought this was it.”

  “There is no Dr. Smith at BBCSI,” he said flatly.

  “There has to be. Do you know how many Smiths there are in this country?” she asked.

  “No, and I don’t care. And you’re no lab assistant. I recognize you. You’re that reporter. How did you get in here?”

  She straightened her shoulders, meeting him glare for glare. He couldn’t remember her name—it was something like Samantha—but he remembered that look. He supposed she was pretty enough, if she weren’t so damned interfering. He didn’t like interfering women. He liked them plump, passive and silent, content to feed him and stroke him and leave him alone when he was working.

  Unfortunately he had yet to meet such a paragon, but Samantha or whatever her name was had to be one of the worst.

  “I’m not that reporter,” she said, her voice as cool as his. “I’m Suzanna Molloy. And if you ever agreed to an interview, Dr. Crompton, I wouldn’t be forced to go to such extremes to find out exactly what it is you’re doing.”

  “Your curiosity justifies breaking and entering, Ms. Molloy? And just how did you get into Beebe in the first place? Someone must have been helping you.”

  “I’m not about to reveal my sources, to you or to anyone. I’ve heard rumors that you’re working on cold fusion, Dr. Crompton.”

  “Just about everyone in my field is working on cold fusion. That isn’t news.” He moved to the telephone, picking up the receiver and pushing a button.

  “What are you doing?”

  “Calling security.”

  “Wait.” She moved quickly—gracefully, he had to admit—and disconnected him before the call was made. “Just a few answers, Dr. Crompton. I’ve heard that there’s something very wrong going on here at Beebe. That you’re working on something extraordinary, something well beyond cold fusion, and that there’s a good chance it might fall into the wrong hands.”

  He stared down at her. She was tall for a woman, taller than Osborn, and her eyes behind her wire-rimmed glasses were a clear, intelligent brown. Intelligence. He hated that in a woman.

  “Where did you get your information?”

  “Is it true?” she persisted. “Are you working on cold fusion?”

  “No,” he said flatly.

  “Then it’s something even more important. Though I can’t imagine what.”

  “That’s the problem with people nowadays, Ms. Molloy,” he said. “Not enough imagination.”

  She had a wide mouth, one that curved in a reluctant smile that he found oddly fascinating. “People usually say reporters have too much imagination.”

  “Don’t try to charm me, Molloy,” he snapped. “I’m immune.”

  Her smile vanished as she stared at him in shock. “Charm you?” she echoed. “No one’s ever accused me of having charm before.”

  “Don’t expect flattery from me. What were you doing in here?”

  “I’m certain you’re incapable of flattery, Dr. Crompton,” she shot back. “And I was simply observing. I didn’t touch anything. Though if I were you, I wouldn’t go off and leave an experiment like that.”

  “What experiment?” The burning smell was stronger now, and all his instincts were on the alert.

  “In the hood. I couldn’t tell what you were doing—you didn’t leave your lab notebook out—but I would think—”

  “I wasn’t working on anything,” he said, whirling around and starting toward the hood, just as smoke began pouring out. It was thick, oily and green, accompanied by a noxious odor.

  “Where’s the fire extinguisher?” Suzanna Molloy shouted through the fumes. Within seconds, they began to engulf her figure and the room itself.

  “Get the hell out of here!” he said, slamming the hood down over the bubbling, roiling mass.

  “Where’s the fire extinguisher?” she shouted again.

  There was no way he could stop the heavy fumes from escaping, no way he could even begin to guess what concoction had been brewed on his bench during his absence. All he could do was get out of there and take Suzanna Molloy with him.

  He could barely find her through the swirling darkness. Her body was warm, strong, solid when he bumped up against her, and though she struggled for a moment, he was a great deal stronger than she was, and he simply dragged her over to the door. Only to find it inexplicably locked.

  The only other exit to the lab was dangerously near the hood. He heard a sudden roaring sound. “Get down,” he shouted, shoving her.

  She had the gall to slap him, something he could almost admire, but he shoved her down on the floor, anyway, covering her with his larger body, shielding her, as the force of the explosion rocked the room, shattering the windows and showering them with broken glass and something warm and fetid. For a moment he absorbed the feel of her body beneath him. And then the hot gluey substance began to leak through his clothes, burning his flesh, and he let out a muffled howl of pain.

  SUZANNA WAS FLOATING. It was dark, hot and choking, the stink all around her, yet somehow she was safe. His body was pressed down on hers, covering hers, and he was strong, large, keeping her from the evil that surrounded them. She could feel something hot and wet begin to ooze through her clothing, through the jeans and the lab coat, small patches of burning fire, but she couldn’t move to brush it away. Crompton was pinning her down.

  She put her arms up, to push him away, then drew them back in horror when she realized they were covered with a greenish slime. He was moaning quietly, and through the greasy smoke and darkness she could see that his eyes were closed. He had a cut on his forehead, probably from the flying glass, and blood was pouring down the side of his face.

  Distantly she became aware of other things. The brightness of the emergency lights filling the darkness, the sounds of alarms echoing through the complex, the pounding on the locked door. Their bodies were blocking it, and Crompton was too big for her to move, too big for her to crawl out from under him.

  She reached up and caught his shoulders, grimacing at the slime that coated her fingers. “Dr. Crompton,” she shouted, but her voice came out hoarse and strained from the smoke. “Daniel.” She shook him.

  He opened his eyes and stared down at her. He looked dazed, almost innocent, and she was suddenly very much aware that he was a man, an attractive man, even bleeding and covered in green slime. Then his eyes focused, his mouth curled in disgust, and he scrambled off her, staggering slightly.

  And then he reached down and hauled her to her feet, out of the way, just as the door slammed open.

  A moment later they stumbled out into the hallway, assaulted by noise, by voices. Hands were touching her, poking at her, trying to make her lie down, but she wasn’t about to lie anywhere, not with all these people milling around, shouting at her. She’d be trampled. She searched through the crowds for Crompton, and for a moment she couldn’t spot him. Then she saw him, towering over the others, swaying slightly, his lab coat coated with the same green slime that was burning her skin.
r />   She slapped the restraining hands away and started toward him, through the crowds of people, coming up behind him just as he caught a young man by the lapels of his spotless lab coat and slammed him against the wall. “Jackson,” he said, his voice raw with smoke and fury. “What the hell did you do to my lab?”

  The man caught in his grip was white-faced with terror and babbling something incoherent. Crompton bounced him off the wall again, and the man collapsed in what appeared to be a faint, just as Suzanna reached him.

  “Leave him alone,” she said hoarsely. “You’ve been burned.”

  He turned to glare down at her, the blood oozing down his face. With his smoke-streaked face, his long hair, the absolute rage in his expression, he looked more like a pirate than a research scientist. “I’m not absolving you,” he snarled. “You probably helped set this up, and then it backfired on you. You’re in it with them, and it was a damned lucky thing you weren’t killed.”

  “You’re crazy,” she gasped, rubbing her slime-coated hands down her legs, trying to get some of the burning ooze off her skin.

  “Am I?” He reached out for her. His hands were coated with the stuff, as well, and for some reason she thought of old science-fiction movies, and bad colds, and all sorts of other disgusting notions.

  She didn’t know what he was going to do to her, not with all those witnesses surrounding them. Daniel Crompton didn’t seem the type who gave a damn about witnesses, and he was in a truly towering rage. She stared up at him, trying to look pugnacious and failing entirely, as his hands caught her shoulders. Surprisingly enough, they were gentle, not painful.

  “Who sent you here?” he demanded. “What were you doing in my lab?” He gave her a small, impatient shake, enough to rattle her already impaired equilibrium. “Are you going to answer my questions?” he demanded, ignoring the BBCSI employees that crowded around him and the paramedics who’d arrived on the scene.

 

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