You Can Run

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You Can Run Page 1

by Karen Cleveland




  You Can Run is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2021 by Karen Cleveland

  All rights reserved.

  Published in the United States by Random House, an imprint and division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.

  Ballantine and the House colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Cleveland, Karen, author.

  Title: You can run: a novel / Karen Cleveland.

  Description: New York: Ballantine Books, [2021] |

  Identifiers: LCCN 2020056068 (print) | LCCN 2020056069 (ebook) |

  ISBN 9780593357798 (hardcover) | ISBN 9780593357804 (ebook)

  Classification: LCC PS3603.L484 Y68 2021 (print) |

  LCC PS3603.L484 (ebook) | DDC 813/.6—dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/​2020056068

  LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/​2020056069

  Ebook ISBN 9780593357804

  randomhousebooks.com

  Title-page art: © iStockphoto.com

  Book design by Dana Leigh Blanchette, adapted for ebook

  Cover design: Carlos Beltrán

  Cover photograph: iStock/Getty Images (woman)

  ep_prh_5.7.1_c0_r0

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Epigraph

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Four Years Later

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  One Week Earlier

  Chapter Seven: Alex

  Chapter Eight: Alex

  Chapter Nine: Jill

  Chapter Ten: Jill

  Chapter Eleven: Alex

  Chapter Twelve: Alex

  Chapter Thirteen: Jill

  Chapter Fourteen: Jill

  Chapter Fifteen: Alex

  Chapter Sixteen: Jill

  Chapter Seventeen: Jill

  Chapter Eighteen: Jill

  Chapter Nineteen: Alex

  Chapter Twenty: Alex

  Chapter Twenty-one: Alex

  Chapter Twenty-two: Jill

  Chapter Twenty-three: Jill

  Chapter Twenty-four: Alex

  Chapter Twenty-five: Alex

  Chapter Twenty-six: Jill

  Chapter Twenty-seven: Alex

  Chapter Twenty-eight: Jill

  Chapter Twenty-nine: Jill

  Chapter Thirty: Alex

  Chapter Thirty-one: Alex

  Chapter Thirty-two: Jill

  Chapter Thirty-three: Alex

  Chapter Thirty-four: Jill

  Chapter Thirty-five: Jill

  Chapter Thirty-six: Jill

  Chapter Thirty-seven: Jill

  Chapter Thirty-eight: Jill

  Chapter Thirty-nine: Alex

  Epilogue

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  By Karen Cleveland

  About the Author

  The secret to creativity is knowing how to hide your sources.

  —Unknown

  Always go too far, because that’s where you’ll find the truth.

  —Albert Camus

  CHAPTER ONE

  The clock in the corner of my screen reads 10:59 A.M. I stare at the digits, willing them to change, and for time to pass a little bit quicker. The minutes just after eleven will pass at warp speed; they always do. But the ones before are endless, interminable.

  A muted chime dings, the familiar sound of a new cable hitting my queue. My gaze shifts from the clock in the corner to the browser window, open to the cable-tracking system, Fortress. A list of cables arrayed like an email inbox, the new one at the top, in bold type.

  From Damascus Station. Request for Encryption of New Source, FALCON.

  I knew the cable was coming, just didn’t know it’d be today. It’s a quick recruitment, for sure. But this guy—the one we’re now calling Falcon—he’s been on the fast track since day one, no doubt about that. He’s set to be the CIA’s newest source, once I vet him and send the cable up the chain. Something I’ll start working on in exactly thirty-one minutes.

  I shift my gaze back down to the clock just in time to see it hit 11:00.

  Control-Alt-Delete. The cable system disappears, replaced with a small version of the Agency seal set against a black background. I catch sight of my reflection in the screen, and it catches me off guard, how little it looks like me. Hair in desperate need of a cut—and a style. Dark circles that no amount of makeup or coffee can fade.

  Not the way I always imagined I’d look at this point in my life, for sure. But I wouldn’t trade it for anything. It took three years of hopes and tears and injections—and all our savings—to get here.

  “Eleven o’clock already?” Jeremy asks from the cubicle across from mine, right on cue. Same question every day. Creatures of habit, both of us.

  I stand and grab my tote bag, sling it over my arm. “Sure is.”

  “Enjoy your lunch, Jill.” He smiles awkwardly, pushing his glasses up the bridge of his nose. From anyone else it might seem like a dig, a why-on-earth-are-you-taking-a-lunch-break-at-eleven, but not from Jeremy. From him it’s just conversation.

  Besides, eleven’s lunchtime, no doubt about it. Four hours of work, half-hour lunch, four more hours until the end of the day. The perfect midpoint. And more important, the thirty-minute window during which I’m guaranteed to catch sight of Owen. After his morning nap, before the afternoon one. Eleven’s the scheduled time for his second bottle of the day, and now a container of pureed veggies, too.

  If you’d have told me six months ago I’d see a cable like that in my queue and skip out at precisely eleven to watch an infant eat mashed peas, I’d have laughed. A baby won’t change anything, I’d have said. Turns out, he changed everything.

  Fact of the matter is, this is the kind of cable a reports officer like me lives for. The chance to vet a source like Falcon, at a time like this.

  He’s a Syrian defense official attached to a covert biowarfare program, working deep in one of our darkest black holes. And biowarfare’s the new hot topic, like terrorism after 9/11. We’ve seen the fear a pandemic sows, the hit it takes on an economy.

  Our adversaries have seen it, too. And quite frankly, that terrifies us.

  By all accounts, everyone’s ramping up their biowarfare programs. But penetrations of these covert programs are sorely lacking. And we at the CIA are desperate for sources.

  A. J. Graham’s the one who’s behind this recruitment. Our best case officer in Damascus. It’s my job to double-check his work, make sure he didn’t miss anything, that he hasn’t been compromised, blackmailed. I’m a trained case officer myself, but I traded life in the field for a desk at headquarters when Drew and I learned we’d have to start IVF.

  I wade through the sea of cubicles and out of the windowless vault, with its stark, bare walls and too-bright fluorescent lighting. Down the
narrow hall now, my pace quick, and up two flights of stairs to ground level. I badge out through an electronic turnstile, passing the host of armed guards. Into the lobby, then out into the sunshine.

  A blast of warm air hits me, magnified by having left the frigid AC. It’s June, and it’s got to be close to ninety already. I wonder if they took Owen out for a stroller ride before it got too hot; I hope so. I can probably squeeze in another before dinner.

  The path leading to the parking garage is perfectly landscaped, flanked on either side by vibrant blooms, and right now it’s almost empty. No one else is leaving at this hour, and I pass only a single person heading toward the building: a woman in a suit, an impenetrable briefcase clutched tight at her side. A briefer, no doubt, heading back from downtown.

  My RAV4’s on the top level of the parking garage, which, oddly enough, is at ground level; the lower levels are built into a hill. I’m halfway down one of the middle rows, like always. I slide into the car and start the engine, crank the AC. Then I open my laptop on the seat next to me, power it on. While it’s booting up, I turn on my cellphone, then take my lunch bag out of my tote, open it up. Looks like Drew packed us salads today, topped with leftover grilled chicken from last night. I take out the plastic containers and arrange them on the center console.

  I have this process down by now, know the exact order to maximize these thirty precious minutes. As soon as the phone’s ready, I switch on the mobile hotspot. Then I open up a browser on the laptop, navigate to Favorites, click on the one saved link. A flashy homepage appears almost instantly.

  All Children’s Learning Academy. Learning Through Play. Ages 6 weeks to 6 years. I use the touchpad to move the cursor to the upper right corner. Parent Login. Type in my username, password, hit return, and a new screen appears. Infant Room. I click the link below—Live View—and wait for the video feed to load.

  It’s a little strange, I know, eating lunch in my car. But personal electronic devices are prohibited inside the building, and I’d never access something personal like this from my work computer. And it’s not like I’m missing out on much social interaction. Before maternity leave I ate lunch at my desk every day, worked straight through. Most everyone in the vault does. I do feel a bit guilty for actually taking my lunch break, but eight hours—ten with the commute—is too long not to see Owen. If there’s one thing I’ve learned since he was born, it’s that guilt is inescapable.

  Black-and-white footage appears on the screen, a trio of boxes, three separate camera angles. The main play area, littered with toys; the cribs lined up in the napping section; the kitchen, with a row of identical high chairs. Everything except the diaper-changing station.

  I focus on the kitchen. There are two babies side by side in the row of high chairs, but neither is Owen. I look in his crib—empty—and scan the others, but there’s just a single baby still sleeping, one with a thick head of dark hair, completely unlike Owen’s blond fuzz.

  Play area next. A handful of babies crawling around, one mouthing a plastic toy, another two strapped into low bouncy chairs. No sign of Owen. He must be getting a diaper change.

  I glance at the clock in the corner of the screen. 11:07. Still plenty of time. I reach for the salad container on the console, pry off the lid, pour on the vinaigrette that Drew carefully packed in a separate little container—

  A shrill ring from my phone startles me. I reach for it, check the illuminated screen. Unknown. Probably some sort of spam—

  I press the green button and hold the phone to my ear. “Hello?”

  “We have your son.”

  The voice is deep, robotic, devoid of inflection. An electronically altered voice, the kind I’ve heard in horror films.

  We have your son.

  Panic grips me. This isn’t real. This can’t be real.

  Everything’s calm in that room. Normal. Not like someone burst in there and nabbed a child—

  “Who are you?” I ask.

  “Breathe a word of this to anyone and you’ll never see your son again.”

  It’s a scam. It has to be. I’ve read about this, seen it on the news. A parent receives a call like this, their child’s abducted or in trouble, and they panic, clear out their bank accounts, hand over everything. And all the while, the kid’s going about his day, safe at school or home or whatever.

  I get it now. I get why they run straight to the bank. Because this is terrifying.

  I stare at the video feed, the side of the play area that leads to the diaper-changing station. He’s going to be in that frame any minute now, clean diaper, ready for his bottle. He has to be.

  “You have three minutes to verify this information.”

  I hear a mechanical click, followed by a string of short beeps. I pull the phone from my ear and glance at the screen. Call ended.

  I focus on the laptop again, the video feed. Still no Owen.

  The clock in the corner of the screen reads 11:08.

  I unlock my phone with shaking hands, pull up the speed dial, find the entry. Daycare.

  One ring—

  “All Children’s Learning Academy, this is Mackenzie speaking.”

  Mackenzie. The maddeningly peppy, eager-to-please receptionist.

  “I’m—uh…” What do I say? “I’m calling to check on my son. Owen Smith, in the infant room.” I eye the clock in the corner of the screen. 11:09.

  “Mrs. Smith, hello!”

  I’ve told her numerous times it’s still Jill Bailey, that I don’t plan to join the hordes of Jill Smiths of the world, but it goes in one ear and out the other.

  “What can I help you with?”

  “I don’t see him. On the video feed. I just…I want to make sure…” What can I say? Can I say I want to make sure he’s there? Or is that “breathing a word,” saying too much?

  “Don’t worry, Mrs. Smith. Your brother picked him up.”

  My heart feels like someone’s squeezing it, like I can’t breathe. “What?”

  “Your brother, Ty. He’s bringing Owen to his six-month checkup. Remember? You called this morning. Told us about that meeting you couldn’t get out of—”

  Oh my God. This isn’t happening.

  “Mrs. Smith?”

  Her voice sounds distant.

  Ty’s in Singapore this week. And he’s never picked up Owen, not once. He’s listed as an emergency contact because the daycare center required five, but surely they should have asked for photo ID before handing my infant son to a stranger, shouldn’t they? Isn’t that what the policy says? Wasn’t it one of the features they touted when Drew and I toured the center, the ones that assured us our son would be safe here?

  “Mrs. Smith, is everything all right?”

  11:10.

  Breathe a word of this to anyone and you’ll never see your son again.

  “Yes, thank you.”

  I press end and stare at the phone. My background’s a picture of Owen, a huge grin on his face, two tiny teeth visible.

  Someone has my son.

  I don’t know whether to cry or scream. I stare at his picture, that smile—

  Another shrill ring, and Owen’s face disappears, replaced with a single word. Unknown.

  I press the green button, and I’m met with silence.

  “Is he okay?” I ask, my voice sounding choked.

  “He’s fine, now. And he will continue to be, if you do as we say.” The voice is the same, heavy and flat and mechanical. Chilling.

  How is this happening?

  Why is this happening?

  “What do you want?”

  Money? Oh God, we don’t have enough, do we? Three rounds of IVF left us completely broke. Worse than broke, with that second mortgage—

  But it is not about money, is it? The fact that I work at the CIA, that I’m sitting in my car in the Lang
ley parking garage at this very moment, it’s not a coincidence.

  They want something from me. They’re going to ask me to do something horrible. Treasonous. Something that will irreparably harm our country, or get someone killed—

  “There’s a new report in your queue. About Falcon. You’re going to approve it.”

  I wait, heart thumping. “And?”

  “And your son will be returned.”

  That’s it? That can’t be it.

  “Do it now, Jill.”

  “Okay.” I fumble for my bag, knocking over the salad container, scattering lettuce leaves and chicken on the front passenger seat.

  “I’m going to disconnect. Come back to your car when you’re done.”

  “Okay.”

  As soon as I’m in that building, I’ll go to security, get help—

  “One last thing. Put the phone in your pocket, bring it with you. If you say anything you shouldn’t, if you do anything you shouldn’t, we’ll know. And Owen will be gone, forever.”

  CHAPTER TWO

  The call disconnects, and for a moment I just sit there, phone in my hand, staring at the image of my son’s smiling face.

  This is a nightmare, isn’t it? I’m going to wake up, and he’s going to be safe in his crib, fast asleep. This isn’t real.

  But it is.

  They have my baby.

  Do it now, Jill.

  I push open the car door and step out into the warm humid air, phone clenched tight in my fist. I sling my tote over my shoulder, slam the door shut, start walking down the row of cars, sliding the phone into the front pocket of my pants—

 

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