by John Moralee
Edge of Crime
A Collection of Crime Fiction
By
John Moralee © 2015
The moral right of John Moralee to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Design and Patents Act, 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without the permission of the author.
This book is a work of fiction. All names, characters, businesses, organisations, places and events are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or locations is entirely coincidental.
Contents
Afterburn
Diamond Pass
Distant Relatives
Pulling No Punches
Falling in Love
Hollywood Asylum
The Kidnapping
Deal Breaker
Bad Advertising
Patriotic Duty
My Cousin Shunsuke
The Abduction
The Good Samaritan
The Pledge
The Enigma of Lucy Ash
A Deadly Prelude
The New Boss
On the Road
Fever Pitch
Flash Fiction: The Vow
Flash Fiction: The Eggs
Bonus Fiction: Afterburn (alternate version)
Afterburn
She was a beautiful widow wearing a long white dress that made her look like an angel. Each time Nolan glimpsed her through the gaps in the cherry trees, her dress shone like a lighthouse beam in the hot Florida sunshine before disappearing as she moved on. The cherry trees completely surrounded and blocked off the garden, making it difficult for Nolan to find the entrance.
By the time Nolan found his way into the garden, Judy Mayer was sitting in the shade of a gazebo, drinking fresh lemonade. She was watching the butterflies and bees dancing around the orchids and bougainvillaea.
To reach her location, Nolan walked over a small footbridge above a pond, glimpsing silver and orange carp in the deep water.
There was a strong Japanese influence to the garden, a country Ken had loved. Ken’s first wife, Alice, had lived on Guam, where he met her while in the US Navy. Judy was his third wife. She was English. They’d met on a book tour of Britain in 1991. She was twenty years younger than her deceased husband - a fact Nolan found inspiring. There was still some hope he would meet a loving woman just like her; he did not consider himself too old to marry the right person, just too old to marry the wrong one. Nolan had seen Judy only once before - at the NASA reunion celebrating the thirtieth anniversary of the Apollo 11 landing on the moon. She’d had the air of a society hostess then, but now she looked like a grieving woman pretending everything was fine. Judy was wearing sunglasses that may have been necessary in the sunlight, but not in the shade. Seeing him, she waved him across and tried smiling.
“Geoff! I’m so glad to see you!”
As Nolan climbed up the stone steps into the gazebo, he wished he’d been able to attend the funeral, but he’d been in hospital having a prostate operation. He felt as if he’d betrayed his friend by not attending. Geoff Nolan and Ken Mayer had been astronauts in the Apollo programme during the early 1970s, when everyone’s dream was to walk on the moon and look back at Earth in wonder. They had experienced something a mere handful of people had; they had walked on the moon. Few people could comprehend the bond that experience created. Standing on the moon – the moon – had been a religious experience. That communal event had made Nolan and Ken the best of friends forever. And now Ken was gone, just like the shattered dreams of generations.
“I’m sorry about missing the …” He could not say the word. “I would have come faster, but …”
“You were ill,” Judy said, standing up to kiss his cheek. “There’s no need to apologise, Geoff. Ken knows how much you cared for him. Please sit down. Have some lemonade.”
Ken knows how much you cared for him. Knows. The present tense. Judy still thought of Ken as alive. He did, too, Nolan realised. The shock suddenly hit him, knocking the energy out of him. He sat down on a wicker chair and gladly accepted a glass of lemonade so he wouldn’t have to talk. Neither said anything for a long time. Butterflies fluttered around his head like puppets on strings, sudden jerky movements moving them on the cool breeze. In the distance the Gulf was streaked white and blue, rippling with waves the texture of denim. He could hear lawnmowers and sprinklers somewhere far away. It was a gloriously pretty day, so contrasting their sombre moods that he almost felt like laughing or crying or both.
Judy removed her sunglasses, revealing her dark eyes. “Geoff, I don’t believe the plane crash was an accident. Ken was too good a pilot. There’s no way he would crash into a mountain, even in bad weather, which there wasn’t. He renewed his pilot’s licence only a month ago. Besides which, he was flying a brand new Gulfstream V. Personally, I think someone killed him.”
“Murder?” Nolan could feel the sweat prickling on his neck and spine. “But the investigation stated it was an instrument failure.”
“Do you honestly believe that? Ken could land a plane even if there were no wings. He hit a mountain, for Christ’s sake. Even I wouldn’t hit a mountain and I can’t fly, instrument failure or not.”
She had a point. “You wouldn’t be saying that unless you knew something else, Judy. What is it?”
“You know how he was working for Dynamic Aeronautics Research Technologies?”
Nolan nodded. For eight years, DART had employed Ken as an executive - or something. They hadn’t talked about it much, for various reasons. Nolan had detected Ken was embarrassed about the amount of money he earned for basically doing nothing – DART mostly used his name as a PR tool – an ex-astronaut was an excellent weapon to attract new contracts, much like a sports star was good for a fashion label.
“Ken always felt like a fifth wheel around there. You know how he is. Was. So, recently, he started taking an interest in the Research Division with a greater hands-on style that really annoyed some of his employers, especially the CEO Peter Falcon. Falcon was worried Ken would over exert himself and have a heart attack on the premises. Ken ignored him. He always was a stubborn man. He loved engineering so much there wasn’t anyone who could stop him. Anyway, I think DART were developing something groundbreaking, something that would revolutionise space flight. Ken was really excited. Until a couple of days before his so-called accident, that is. Then he started acting strangely.”
“How?”
“He became sentimental, brooding. I saw him staring at the photos of Wayne he normally keeps in his study drawer ...” Wayne was Ken’s son. Wayne had died of cerebral palsy fifteen years back. Wayne was Ken’s only son. Ken had been devastated by his death. “Geoff, I heard him weeping in the bathroom. I know he didn’t want me to hear him. But I was concerned. He wasn’t sleeping. He wouldn’t make love. He wouldn’t tell me what was wrong, but I knew it had something to do with his work because everything else hadn’t changed.”
“Money problems?”
“No. Ken was always careful about his finances and insurance. This was something to do with whatever they had him doing at DART. That’s why I need you to look into it for me. DART will be looking for a new person to replace Ken. I even mentioned your name to Peter Falcon. He said he’d like to see you. You’d be perfect.”
“I don’t want another job,” Nolan said. He was quite happy to be semi-retired.
“You don’t hav
e to take it. Just go along with them. See what you can find out. Put my mind at rest one way or the other. I know you can do it.”
It was above and beyond the call of duty, but it was for Ken. Nolan reached over the table and gripped Judy’s small hand. “Okay. I’ll see what I can find out. But promise me that if I don’t learn anything new, you’ll believe it was a genuine, tragic accident.”
Judy whispered, “I promise.”
*
Peter Falcon was a big, beefy Texan with a firm handshake and a strong jaw line. He wore a Gucci suit and a somewhat incongruous DART cap, like a coach for a minor-league baseball team. He was about forty, but his physical dimensions added ten years. He was sweating profusely in the killer sunlight outside several big hangars and industrial complexes on the DART site. He led Nolan from his rented Jeep towards an office building. Falcon had to shout over the sound of rocket engines being tested half a kilometre away, the sound like thunder. “I’m real sorry we’re meeting in these circumstances, Mr Nolan. Losing Ken was like losing my goddamn brother. He talked about you a lot. It’s a real honour meeting you in the flesh, sir.”
“Please call me Geoff,” Nolan shouted back, admiring the scale of the operation DART had on this site in the Everglades. The site was fifty square kilometres of well-chosen real estate, a prime site for satellite launching. He could see several airfields and hundreds of planes, helicopters and personnel in smart green overalls. NASA would have been proud to have a site like this, even if the Green lobby groups would have dropped dead at the sight of so much marshland having being drained and built on. “What kind of thing does DART do?”
“DART makes satellite launch systems,” Falcon said. They reached the glass doors of the office building, stepping into a soundproofed lobby. Nolan’s hearing went funny at the decrease in volume. Falcon said, quietly, “We also develop new technology for the US military and commercial industries. Our engines are in thirty-two per cent of American planes. DART’s profit last year was ten billion dollars. We reinvested ninety per cent of the profit into the research, which still leaves our investors with a substantial reward ...”
The spiel was boring Nolan, but he didn’t show it. He was impressed, he had to admit. He loved NASA, but any federal government funded organisation was limited by the tax dollars it received. That figure was being cut every year, to the shame of Congress. Alas, only private companies could afford to do what he considered essential research, research NASA should have been doing itself, if the penny-pinchers didn’t keep hurting the space industry. The irony was, companies like DART were paid billions each year by the US military – with tax dollars - and much of that money went straight into the pockets of people with no interest in space, slimy Wall Street traders with no sense of honour. And when something innovative was created, they slapped patents on it that meant the inventions paid for by NASA were owned by people who could charge NASA for using them. If only the military budget was spent solely on the space industry, he thought, there would be regular flights to the moon and Mars by now. Hell, they would be bases on Pluto. It was an old debate that his NASA buddies tossed back and forth like a live grenade. Nolan asked a few innocuous questions on the way to Falcon’s office, meanwhile thinking he could really make a difference if he had this level of financing for NASA. It was depressing.
Falcon’s office was on the top floor, in a glass tower that had a panoramic view of the site. The office had a tinted glass ceiling, the effect of which was to make the office look as though the desk and chairs were in the open air. Falcon dropped his weight into his leather chair and got serious.
“Geoff, I know it might be kind of creepy to ask you to fill Ken’s shoes, but frankly I can’t see anyone else doing the same job. You could be a real asset to DART, I’m telling you. DART is where it’s at, as they say. There are projects we are working on, you won’t believe.”
“Was Ken involved?”
“He sure was. I tell you what, I’ll get Ed Jensen to show you around. He’s head of our research department. He went to Harvard, MIT and Oxford, too. He’s got more degrees than a circle. He’s brilliant, but don’t tell him that! Don’t want him asking for a raise!” He laughed at his own joke, the flesh of his double chins quivering. “Then we can talk about some kind of deal, okay?”
“Okay,” Nolan said. Anything to get away from Falcon. Falcon hit the number on his phone, said something to his secretary, then a tall man with a rusty beard and thick glasses came in, looking nervous.
“Ed, this is Geoff Nolan. He was an astro, like Ken.”
“I – I know that, Peter.” Jensen stood in the doorway for a second, then realised that he was expected to shake hands and lurched forward. He had a limp, wet handshake that left Nolan wishing he had a tissue on him to dry his hands. “P-please come with me. I’ll give you the Disney tour.”
By the time they’d got to the research building, Ed Jensen’s stutter had calmed down. Like many scientists, he had trouble communicating with normal people. He only acted comfortably when discussing what he did at DART. Nolan asked him about Ken, but Jensen changed the subject each time. They entered a large hangar filled with dozens of dismantled planes. Jensen asked Nolan to wear a hard hat while inside, for there was always the possibility of a spanner falling from somewhere high above. Jensen showed him the largest turbine Nolan had ever seen – he could not imagine the size of the plane it was intended to be used on. It looked like a perfect conch shell, only huge. There was something amazing about the geometrical perfection, as there was with all good engineering. They walked through the hangar to a different area where a sleek black craft was undergoing electronics tests beyond a glass wall. Security guards stood around the entrance. They weren’t allowed closer than twenty metres unless they had clearance and changed into sterile suits, so they just looked through the glass. “We call this the Phoenix Alpha. Looks like something from the X-Files, doesn’t it?”
“I guess,” he said. Nolan didn’t watch the X-Files. He didn’t like the pervasive cynicism; it was infectious. He liked being a dreamer. Dreamers still had hope. “I don’t see where the propulsion system is.”
“It doesn’t have one,” Jensen said.
Nolan waited for the punch line. When Jensen said nothing, he realised the man was serious. It had no propulsion system. All vehicles needed some method of propulsion. “How does it take off?”
“That,” Jensen said, “is a trade secret. Maybe if you sign on with the company I can explain it. Suffice to say, it’s top secret. This prototype could be the thing you see everywhere in ten, twenty years, if we get it to work right.”
“You haven’t had it working?”
“Yes and no. I can’t say more. I know it sounds paranoid, but there are industrial spies who would give their teeth to know what we’re doing.”
“What are you doing?”
“I can’t tell you unless you join us,” Jensen said. “I’ll introduce you to my chief engineer, Cordy Harker. Just a sec.”
Jensen wandered off to use a telephone, leaving Nolan to gawk at the Phoenix Alpha. The craft appealed to the eye like all good ones did. No pilots liked flying ugly craft. He could see why Ken would want to work here. This cutting edge engineering was where the future lay.
“Uh – this way, please.”
Nolan looked at Jensen and nodded. He was oddly reluctant to leave the Phoenix Alpha alone. He could have stared at it all day. But he followed Jensen out of the hangar and into a little buggy. Jensen drove to another building about a kilometre away. Inside, the building looked like a university. There were dozens of lecture rooms and labs and computer rooms. Jensen knocked on a door marked C. Harker, Chief Eng.
“I’m in,” said a low female voice.
Nolan and Jensen went into a large office. It was empty except for a graceful woman, with her long curly dark hair swept back so it would fit into a hard hat if the need arose. She was standing over a table covered with a schematic, studying the small print. She had the whit
est complexion of any woman in the world; she reminded Nolan of a marble statue he’d seen once in the White House. Her thin, quizzical eyebrows made her look as though she was concentrating on a game of chess against a grandmaster. She looked like someone who’d beat the grandmaster without breaking into a sweat. She wore an ID badge that had her full name imprinted over a glamorous photograph: Cordelia Belinda Harker.
“Cordy, this this is Geoff Nolan,” Jensen stammered.
“Hi,” she said, straightening up, putting her hands on her hips. “I can’t get over what happened to Ken. I still feel like I expect him to knock on my door at any moment.”
“Yeah, I feel like that,” Nolan said. Even as he talked about Ken, he thought how attractive Cordelia – Cordy – was. They talked about Ken for a few minutes with Jensen hanging around in the doorway, the poor guy looking totally lost out of the conversation. He looked increasingly impatient with the direction of the conversation, too. After all, Nolan was supposed to be asking questions about the position in the company. Nolan switched to the subject. “So you and Ken were working on the Phoenix Alpha?”
“That’s right. Is it okay if I talk about it with Geoff?” she asked Jensen. Before he could say no, she said to Nolan: “Around here, everyone’s being watched by everyone else. Sometimes it’s like Big Brother. They hire us because we’re professionals, but they don’t trust us. Isn’t that right, Ed?”
Ed looked mortified. “I don’t make make the rules. I only f-follow them.”
“Ja, mein Fuhrer!” she said, laughing as she raised her hand in a Hitler salute.
“G-Geoff, I’ll be waiting in the buggy whenever you’re ready to leave.”
“Okay,” Nolan said. “Thanks. I’ll be a few minutes.”
Jensen left; then Cordy invited him to look at the designs of the Phoenix Alpha. “I can trust you to keep this a secret?”