The Delta Factor

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The Delta Factor Page 1

by Thomas Locke




  A Thomas Locke Mystery

  The Delta Factor

  Thomas Locke

  © 1994 by Thomas Locke

  Published by Bethany House Publishers

  11400 Hampshire Avenue South

  Bloomington, Minnesota 55438

  www.bethanyhouse.com

  Bethany House Publishers is a division of

  Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan.

  www.bakerpublishinggroup.com

  Ebook edition created 2012

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

  ISBN 978-1-4412-7065-8

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.

  All scripture quotations, unless indicated, are taken from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION.® Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan Publishing House. All rights reserved. The “NIV” and “New International Version” trademarks are registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office by International Bible Society. Use of either trademark requires the permission of International Bible Society.

  This story is entirely a creation of the author’s imagination. No parallel between any persons, living or dead, is intended.

  Cover illustration by Joe Nordstrom

  “Man cannot play God and still stay sane. And the progress of biology is inescapably placing in man’s hands the power to play God. . . . The risks of recombinant DNA technology are historically unparalleled because the consequences of letting a new living creature loose in the world may be irreversible.”

  Dr. Freeman Dyson

  Disturbing the Universe

  This book is dedicated to

  Nicholas Pediaditakis—

  a friend for life.

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Endorsement

  Dedication

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Epilogue

  About the Author

  Other Books by Author

  Back Cover

  Prologue

  If Hank Aaron Jones’s daddy could see his land now, he would keel over and die a second time. For certain and for sure.

  The thought gave Hank pause from time to time, but not for very long. As far as Hank Aaron Jones was concerned, the best thing that had ever happened to his family’s land was having Pharmacon move in as a neighbor.

  Hank Aaron Jones had been named after his daddy’s number one hero, and he hated his name almost as much as he loved his farm. The Jones family had toiled their land for eleven generations, through three colonial governors and every president since Washington refused to become king of the new United States. They had lost family to every war except the one with Mexico. They had even known the misery of losing great-great uncles to both sides of the War Between the States. The Jones family was American to the core, and they had bought the right to stand tall through the sweat of their brow and the blood of their kin.

  News of Hank Aaron Jones’s new neighbor, the ones who had purchased the derelict farm on the other side of the forest, the one between him and the new bypass, had come by way of a stranger. The man in his city suit and big polished car had pulled up unannounced three years ago, and offered Hank so much money for his east forty that Hank’s wife, Mildred, had been forced to go lie down. Hank had figured the man for a big talker with more mouth than sense, until another group had showed up three days later and doubled the first offer.

  Hank Aaron Jones was not selling. Not then, not now. His boy was up studying modern agriculture at the state university in Raleigh, preparing for a future that fair boggled Hank’s mind. There was not a thing Hank Aaron Jones wanted doing, nor a place he wanted seeing, that lay outside Chowan County, North Carolina. But Hank was a forward-looking fellow, and he felt in his bones that Pharmacon’s arrival was good for the area and good for the farm.

  Not that it had all been easy street. Pharmacon’s arrival had meant a revaluation of his property. That had brought on higher taxes, right when the federal government had looked ready to slice a chunk out of tobacco price subsidies. But before Hank Aaron Jones had reached the point where he needed to approach the bank for another loan, Pharmacon had come to his rescue. In a very big way.

  Two scientists had stopped by and asked if he would be willing to set aside some of his acreage and grow some plants for them. That would depend, Hank had replied, on what they were willing to pay. They asked, how much was he making from his tobacco and soybean crops? Hank Aaron Jones’s daddy hadn’t raised no fool for a son. Hank had picked the amount he’d made from his very finest year, set his face in rock-solid lines, and lofted the sum skyward. Without even batting an eye, the scientists had offered him twice again as much.

  Now Hank Aaron Jones stood on his back porch, looked out over his fields, and respectfully asked his daddy’s memory to shut up. If those scientists were willing to pay good money for him to grow weeds, then so be it.

  Mildred was busy in the kitchen with the breakfast dishes. Through the window over the sink, she spotted a plume of dust rising from their dirt road and said, “Trouble’s a’comin’.”

  “Naw it ain’t,” Hank replied. The only person who’d come by that early was their neighbor to the southwest, Jude Taylor. Jude wasn’t more trouble than any other neighbor. Jude was just Jude.

  The old Ford pickup did a four-point turn in their swept front yard, scattering chickens and dust in every direction. Through the open window a beefy, red-faced man called, “What you know, Hank?”

  “Mornin’, Jude.”

  “Got to run into town for some feed. I swear I got me a heap of prize hogs in the makin’. You need anything?”

  Hank swiveled about and called back, “We need anything from town, Mildred?”

  His wife answered by clattering the dishes as hard as she could without breaking them. She would just as soon have walked around the block than given Jude Taylor the time of day.

  Hank hid his smile behind a swig of coffee. Jude was a buddy from high school, and goodness knows there weren’t many of those still around. He was lazy and he drank and word was he wasn’t any easier on his wife than he was on his truck. But Hank found reason to forgive Jude much by remembering the good old days. “Looks like we’re set, Jude. Thanks for stopping by.”

  “Ain’t no problem. What you been up to?”

  “Been goin’ like a ten-mule team in a mudhole since spring.”

  “That a fact?”

  Hank nodded. “Them scientists fellers, they got me runnin’ in seventeen directions at once. Come by three weeks ago, told me to plow back thirty acres of soybeans I’ve been sweatin’ over since April. Want me to put in some more weeds. You believe that?”

  “They figure on havin’ a crop come up, plantin’ in July?”

  “Ain’t interested in holding to the seaso
n,” Hank answered. “They say it’s a perennial, brought it all the way from Hungary, I think I got that right. This is the second crop of it I put in for them. All they want is the roots.”

  “Roots?”

  “That’s what they said. Aim on makin’ a potion from the roots. Strange thing, too. Them new plants are already bigger’n the ones I planted back in June.” Hank stretched and looked out to where Jude’s distant fields blazed yellow, like an earthbound sunrise. “How’re your crops doin’?”

  Jude’s gaze turned shifty. “Don’t hardly know. Ain’t been down there in almost two weeks.”

  “How’s that?”

  Jude started to say something, then stopped. There was a moment where his mind seemed bent on following two different tracks, then he said, “Aw, ain’t much to it. Stick the seed in and stand back is all I gotta do.”

  Hank knew that for a fact. One of the local seed-oil companies had contracted with Jude to raise a crop of rapeweed, which didn’t hardly seem like farming at all. This suited Jude down to the ground, as it left him with enough time on his hands to hang around pestering his neighbors. Hank asked, “You like a coffee?”

  “Naw. Gotta get goin’.” But Jude stayed as he was, beady eyes peering through fleshy folds like deeply embedded marbles. “Them scientists pay good money, I hear.”

  Hank flipped the dregs of his cup over Mildred’s rose bed. “I get by.”

  “Think maybe you could mention my name to them folks?” A dirt-encrusted forearm emerged from the truck’s interior to lean on the sill. “I got all kinds of acres I’d be willin’ to plow over, they give me the right price.”

  “You already asked me that, Jude.” The man had been pestering him all year. “And I done told you, I’ve talked to them until I’m blue in the face.”

  “And?”

  “And nothin’.” Hank set his face in no-nonsense lines. There was nothing to be gained from telling his neighbor that the scientists had looked over his land and decided they wouldn’t touch him with a cane pole. Them scientists were nothing if not cautious. They checked things out real careful and were always hanging around, taking soil samples and just generally being nosy. They gave him pages and pages of instructions and expected them to be followed to the letter. If they said irrigate thoroughly and use only their special fertilizers and weed by hand, that was exactly what they meant. They paid good, but they expected him to keep his side of the bargain. “It’s their decision, not mine.”

  Jude started his motor. “Yeah, well, you get a chance, you just remember your old buddy Jude.”

  “You got it,” Hank said and waved with his coffee cup as the truck belched smoke and roared back down the drive.

  Only then did Mildred emerge. “I declare, that man is nine-tenths lazy and five parts fool.”

  “Jude’s all right.”

  Mildred humphed her disagreement. “His land’s so weary it’s amazin’ it don’t snore.”

  Hank handed her his cup. “I ain’t got time to listen to this.”

  “We’d all be a lot better off if that man didn’t ever set foot on our land again.”

  Hank did the only thing he could to stop that conversation, which was walk over and start his tractor. He swung the heavy machine around and waved down at his wife, who was still going on at him.

  He started down through his southern acreage, all of which was growing strange-looking crops for the scientists at Pharmacon. A faint breeze was blowing straight from the south, and there wasn’t a cloud in the sky. The day was going to be a scorcher.

  He followed the track on a ways, it being his habit to start each day by circling the fields he would work, just checking things over, getting the tasks straight in his mind. He paused where his fields met the road, which was little more than a gravel track and used only by the two families. Hank looked across to Jude’s rapeweed fields. The golden blossoms stretched out as far as he could see, a truly glorious sight. Their smell was captivating this early in the morning. Hank took a deep breath, then started back up to where he had unhooked the fertilizer tank the evening before.

  It was just about then that the first plant opened its eyes and waved up at him.

  Hank Aaron Jones yanked on the hand brake, held on tight as the tractor shuddered to a stop, then rubbed his eyes. Hard.

  Tendrils the color of a neon rainbow suddenly popped from the earth and started winding their way up both sides of his tractor. But Hank found it hard to be afraid. More and more of the little plants were opening their eyes, and they all looked so friendly.

  The tendrils were fanning out, completely enveloping the tractor. The most beautiful flowers he had ever seen began to emerge, all rose-tinted, with long graceful stems of deepest violet. Bright yellow butterflies gushed forth as each flower opened its face, their wings brushing his face as they formed a cloud over his head.

  Hank fumbled for the switch to cut the motor. He could scarcely see his hands, there were so many of those glorious little butterflies. Then a parting formed, and he looked down. The flowers were pulling up their roots, walking over, gathering around the tractor.

  And they were singing the most beautiful song.

  * * *

  Mildred Jones came back out on her porch, drawn by the strangest sound. Yes, there it was again.

  She pushed through the screen door, and realized the tractor had stopped halfway through the fields. The motor was no longer running.

  She called out, “Hank?”

  She watched her husband clamber down from the tractor, his gait unsteady. Then she heard the sound again. He was laughing.

  “Hank Aaron Jones,” she yelled shrilly. “If you are fooling around with me, I’m going to give you what for!”

  Her husband replied by falling down and disappearing amidst the wavering plants.

  “Hank!” Mildred scrambled across the yard and down the path as fast as her legs would carry her. In her panic, she failed to notice Jude Taylor’s truck parked at the end of their drive.

  The big man watched her race toward her husband. He waited until she had half-walked, half-carried Hank back into the house before driving slowly away.

  1

  Dr. Deborah Givens stepped from her specially fitted Jeep Cherokee, opened the back door, and pulled out her collapsible wheelchair. She was feeling all right at the moment, but there had been little warning twinges that morning, so she decided to use the chair and harbor what strength she had. But because she was nervous, and excited, and in a hurry, the wheelchair refused to unfold. It looked like it was going to be one of those days.

  “Here, Debs, let me do that.” A grizzled survivor of Iwo Jima shuffled up and bent over with a stifled groan.

  “Thanks, Tom.” She stepped back and leaned on the jeep. “I swear that thing has a mind of its own.”

  “All machinery does. That’s the first thing they teach us in gunnery school. You scientists oughtta know that by now.”

  She watched him clamp the latches into place. “Good of you to help.”

  “Shoot. This is the only chance I get to push anybody round anymore.” He held the handles while she eased herself down. “Bad day?”

  “On a scale of one to ten,” she replied, “I’d give it a minus five.”

  Tom wheezed a chuckle. “Know just how you feel, gal. The old pins just give out, and it don’t matter that you still feel twenty upstairs.”

  “Twenty wasn’t such a good year,” Deborah said. “I’d prefer sixteen.”

  Tom wheeled her up the side entrance ramp. “You folks’re about done around here, aren’t you?”

  Normally Deborah hated to have her chair pushed by anyone, even a hospital orderly. But Tom was different. No matter how early she arrived, he was always sitting on the front porch. He would rush down the stairs before she cut the motor. If she was walking that day, he shuffled alongside her. If she reached for the chair, Tom’s age-spotted hands were usually there first. He had sort of adopted her on the first day, and Deborah had long sinc
e accepted that helping her gave definition to his lonely days. She answered, “It’s a little hard to say.”

  “Reason I ask,” Tom went on. “That young feller and the Injun, they were cooped up in there all night.”

  The faint tingle of excitement jangling her nerves since the early morning telephone call strengthened. “That a fact?”

  “Wouldn’t say it if it weren’t. Took ’em a cup of coffee when the cafeteria opened. Both of ’em looked like they was sorta running on reserve. But excited just the same.”

  They pushed through the entrance. The halls were already filling with patients, mostly old, mostly men. The only feature Dr. Deborah Givens had in common with these patients was her wheelchair. That and the clinical trials which had brought her here twenty-two days ago.

  It was a typical veterans hospital, a rundown building in a grim inner-city Norfolk neighborhood. The cheerless architecture was worsened by coils of razor-wire crowning the chain link fence. The interior was no better. Walls were plastered with government-issue green paint. The patients wore identical striped bathrobes, which left them looking like prisoners. The air conditioning was a feeble, smelly joke. Old-fashioned metal-frame beds lined long wards like weary soldiers on parade. Sounds echoed back from miles and years away.

  The majority of patients were old and male and poor and lonely. Many bore the scars of a rough life. Almost half of those Deborah had selected for her clinical study were cachectic—overly thin, anemic, sunken eyes and cheeks—signs that often indicated long-term alcohol abuse.

  Yet despite it all, they possessed a burning gleam of patriotic pride and rock-hard dignity, the result of having fought wars for a country they loved. The fact that the country had long since forgotten the battles was accepted along with all of life’s other injustices.

  After twenty-two days of working with the patients at the Norfolk Veterans Hospital, Deborah Givens thought them to be some of the finest men on earth.

  Tom stopped at the lab entrance, walked around, and pushed open the doors. “Promise you’ll come back when you find a cure for old age?”

 

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