by Opal Carew
Once they were there, he scrubbed his face with his hands, glad for the physical distance so he could master the emotions she roused in him. Emotions that were making this assignment much harder than it needed to be.
When he had gotten his guards back up into place, he headed toward the kitchen, but as he entered and Caterina met his gaze, those protections crumbled faster than a house of cards.
Fuck, he thought. Of all the times to actually give a shit about someone, this was the worst possible time.
He needed to get her out of his life and fast, before unwanted emotion made it impossible to do so.
* * *
Mick had been expecting the call from Edwards. It came while he was on his way down to the Wardwell facilities. He held the phone in his hand, tempted to answer and rattle Edwards’ cage, but he held back.
He needed to save any shock and awe tactics with Edwards for when they would be most effective. Luckily the call had reminded him of one thing – to silence his phone.
Half an hour later he reached his destination.
Caterina had traveled for miles after escaping the Wardwell labs and finding refuge at the Music Academy. He guesstimated it was only about a mile from the roadside rest area where he had stopped to the woods nestled against the Wardwell complex. The woods were one of the farthest most edges of the Pinelands. Because of the complex’s location close to that National Park and on top of the state’s largest natural aquifer, the construction of the Wardwell facilities had generated a bit of controversy amongst local environmentalists.
The protests had resulted in quite a number of public meetings which in turn had created lots of information about Wardwell, including various iterations of the physical layout of the facilities in relation to the nearby Pine Barrens, making it easy for him to find a back way toward the labs through the woods.
The ground was muddy.
Not good. It would provide too much evidence that someone had been there.
Not that I should be here, Mick thought. He should have ignored the responsible side of him – the honorable side of him – that said he had no choice but to go back to Wardwell for the inhibitor drug.
He was about two hundred feet away from the first Wardwell building when he noticed tracks in the soil. Booted footprints. They were all the same type and size so luckily that meant only one person had been there, possibly reconnoitering the area.
Given Franklin’s warning, he had an idea who it was.
Mad Dog might be keeping an eye on those places connected to Caterina until he had a better lead on where she might have gone. He might even have guessed that Mick was now possibly working for the other team and would need information from the lab to clear Caterina.
Easing on the night vision goggles, Mick perused the perimeter of the buildings.
Nothing registered, although he picked up the faint signature of a night watchman in the guard booth at the gate to the complex.
Turning his attention to the woods, he caught a sign of motion close to the edge of the broad manicured lawn that formed a barrier between the woods and the edge of the building holding the medical complex where Caterina and the other patients had been kept.
He hunkered down, training his attention on the area. Another short rush of movement came, confirming that someone else was out there in the woods.
A telling flash erupted in the darkness only a second before chips of wood flew off the trunk of the tree beside his head.
Shit, he thought and hit the ground hard. He pulled his Glock from the holster tucked into the small of his back, but he suspected he was out-gunned. The shooter had a rifle with a silencer. A weapon with much greater range than his pistol.
The shooter had also clearly been waiting for him. Maybe he had even known that he had already paid a visit to the Wardwell facilities since he had positioned himself close to where Mick had been checking the area the afternoon before.
He crawled forward hand-over-hand, cautiously propelling himself toward his attacker. The soil was wet and cool against his body. The soft ping of another rifle shot traveled across the night, but the harder thunk against wood which followed sounded far from his current position.
Whoever it was had lost track of him, but that wouldn’t last for long.
He pushed ahead more quickly, his night vision focused on the blob before him that was a person, kneeling in a sniper’s practiced stance. When he was about fifteen feet away, it was time to act.
He dragged off his goggles and reached into his satchel where he pulled out a flare, ignited it, and immediately tossed it forward and away from him.
The shooter rose, clearly following the movement in order to squeeze off a shot, his back to Mick.
Mick charged, plowing forward like a fullback, body low. He connected with the shooter mid-spine at full force and the man flew forward hard, losing his grip on the rifle. The weapon skittered off into the underbrush.
Mick jerked his gun toward the man, but his opponent half-rolled to his side and snapped off a quick chop to his wrist that deadened Mick’s hand. He lost his grip on the weapon and his opponent took advantage to sweep his one arm across and send Mick’s gun flying away.
Exerting force, he once again got the man lying flat beneath him, but the man followed up with a sharp jab toward his face.
Mick avoided it by rolling off and coming to his feet, but so did the sniper, who rose slowly from the ground, hands outstretched in a sign of surrender.
“Should’ve known you wouldn’t be an easy kill, Carrera,” Mad Dog said and took a step toward him.
Mick did a quick look for his gun. It was a few feet away and out-of-reach.
“No need for bloodshed, Mad Dog. I just have to get something from the lab.”
“Guess you found Shaw. She must be really good in the sack if you’re willing to sacrifice the bonus to bag her.”
Bonus? The original check had possessed enough zeroes to tempt a saint and now there was a bonus?
Neither he nor Mad Dog were saints.
“Haven’t found her yet, but thanks for the heads up about the bonus,” he lied, but Mad Dog clearly wasn’t buying it.
“You want something from the lab don’t you?” he said and with a slow careful motion, Mad Dog reached into his pocket. Just as cautiously, he pulled out some kind of card. As the moonlight illuminated the plastic, Mick realized it was a key card like the one he had used the day before to enter the facilities.
“What do you want, Mad Dog?”
A cold smile crept across his face. “What I’ve always wanted, Mick – a piece of you, but I’ll settle for splitting the bonus with you.”
“A piece of me? Some other time Mad Dog. As for the bonus, I have no intention of turning over Shaw until I know what’s really going on.” Besides, considering how many mercenaries Edwards had sent out on this job, Mick suspected that none of them would ever live long enough to get the bonus after returning Caterina to Wardwell.
“You always were too honorable,” Mad Dog replied and with a quick snap of his wrist, he suddenly held a small knife in his hand.
Mad Dog had cut him off from reaching his gun, the knife held out in front of him. With the repetitiveness of a pendulum swing, Mad Dog slashed back and forth, but Mick avoided the razor fine point of the knife, his steps quick-footed and sure. Dodging each feint of the knife as he sought an opening to reach Mad Dog.
Finally Mad Dog pushed him back toward the edge of the lawn with a swift lunge and Mick stumbled on a tangle of roots, but quickly got his feet back under him.
But Mad Dog immediately seized on that minute slip, swinging his hand in a wide arc that caught Mick on the forearm with the knife.
Heat erupted where the blade skimmed across his skin, but he didn’t let that deter him.
As Mad Dog’s arm swept by and he reversed the blade for another swipe, Mick moved in closer and grabbed hold of his opponent’s wrist. He jerked it against his knee and the blow loosened Mad Dog’s grip on the kni
fe.
Mad Dog slapped out with his free hand, trying to get a hold on Mick’s head, but he yanked away. Slipping beneath Mad Dog’s arm, he delivered a punishing blow to his ribs.
His ex-colleague grunted and doubled over.
Mick drove up with his knee, connecting with Mad Dog’s face. Immense satisfaction filled him at the crunch of bone which followed.
The satisfaction was short-lived.
Mad Dog retaliated with an elbow that caught him close to his liver, driving his breath from him. He stepped back to avoid the blow he knew would come next.
He wasn’t fast enough.
A hard jab connected with the side of his face and Mad Dog followed with an upper-cut that had him staggering backward.
“Slowing down in your old age,” Mad Dog taunted and assumed a traditional fighting stance, bouncing on the toes of his feet, his fists upraised. Clearly ready for action despite the blows Mick had landed.
But he was ready as well.
Mick assumed a similar position and when Mad Dog charged, he easily dodged the attack and engaged him in earnest.
The night became peppered with their grunts as fists or legs connected. With the slap of a deflected blow and the scuffling sounds of their boots along the underbrush and fallen leaves in the woods and along the edge of the lawn.
Mick bided his time, waiting for the perfect opportunity. He would have to win the battle to get the key. He knew Mad Dog would only consider it a win if Mick ended up dead.
The moment came sooner than Mick expected.
Chapter 19
Mad Dog lashed out with a high roundhouse kick, but missed badly and lost his balance on some slick leaves.
Mick took advantage.
He drove an elbow sharply into Mad Dog’s kidney as the missed kick sent him stumbling by.
Mad Dog groaned and dropped to the ground, grabbing at his side. Mick seized that arm, twisted it upward and Mad Dog sagged even further.
With that opportunity, he drove his knee into the middle of his opponent’s back and flattened him against the ground.
“Ready to say uncle, Mad Dog,” he asked, leaning close to the other man.
Mad Dog glanced up at him sideways, one part of his face plastered against the wet leaves and mud. “You know me better than that, Carrera.”
Sadly Mick did know him that well. Some day he would have to kill Mad Dog if was ever going to have any peace of mind.
But not tonight.
With two quick punishing blows to the side of Mad Dog’s head, he knocked him out, and then trussed him up with the cable ties in his jacket pocket. Whipping the key card out of Mad Dog’s front pocket, he retrieved his gun, and headed for the Wardwell facility.
* * *
With Caterina’s permission, Liliana had taken a second sample of blood for a two-fold purpose.
The first was to find out if the abnormally speedy gene replication was still ongoing.
The second was to determine if they could somehow recreate the parameters that her medical file indicated for the plasmapheresis. With that information, they could prepare the cell separator so that they could filter Caterina’s blood.
As Liliana hurried down to the pathology lab during her break, she hoped the latter could be delayed until they had the time to prepare it properly. That Mick would come through as he always did by getting the inhibitor drug.
At the door to the pathology lab, she paused, peering through the glass in the door to see who was inside.
Only Carmen once again, pulling another late shift, head bent over the microscope at the back of the lab.
She walked in and her friend’s head popped up. A welcoming smile blossomed on her face as she approached.
“Girlfriend! Are you going to make my day again?” she asked excitedly.
Liliana shot her a puzzled look. “What did I do?”
“That last blood specimen – major league interesting. High tech stuff. Those GFPs, or should I say, YFPs and other amazing stuff.”
Liliana sat on the lab stool next to her friend, peered back around the lab to make sure they were alone and whispered, “You didn’t say anything to anyone, did you?”
Carmen emphatically shook her head. “You asked me not to, but I couldn’t resist doing further analysis based on the results from the electropherogram.”
She tucked her hand into her lab jacket pocket and fingered the test tube there, worried that she maybe had made a wrong choice to involve Carmen. “Please tell me you didn’t involve anyone else.”
“I didn’t,” her friend reiterated. “But I will tell you that what I found was a mix of human gene fragments spliced together with those from squamates and amphibians.”
“Squamates and amphibians?”
“Lizards. Frogs,” Carmen quickly supplied and then added, “Probably because some amphibians have the ability regenerate the tissues in their bodies in a way that’s identical to the original tissue.”
“So if someone had harm to a particular kind of tissue it could be replaced?”
“You join a little piece of the tissue before it was damaged with the right kind of amphibious genes and you could conceivably regenerate mounds of new injury-free tissue,” Carmen said.
Which might explain why Caterina was now able to see, Liliana thought. If the cancer had left behind even a small part of her optic nerve, it could have been regenerated to possibly restore her eyesight. But that didn’t explain the skin thing or the weird auras that Caterina claimed to have experienced.
“Earth to Liliana,” Carmen said and snapped her fingers in front of her face.
“Sorry. I was just thinking about the possibilities.”
“Revolutionary,” Carmen said in awed tones.
She tightened her hand on the test tube, but then relented and pulled it out of her pocket. As she held it out to her friend, Liliana wondered if it was glowing a little more than it had the last time.
“May I?” Carmen asked as her hand hovered over the sample.
“Would you check this out? See if the replication is still as fast as you thought?”
“That’s easy. Ask me to do something hard,” Carmen quipped, clearly unaware of the importance of what was happening, much less of the real reason behind the request.
Something hard?
“Can you find out exactly what kind of lizard or frog? Let me know what might happen if those non-human genes keep on replicating.”
For the first time, Carmen grew serious. “This is more than some science experiment for you, isn’t it?”
Liliana narrowed her eyes and examined her friend, trying to decide just how much Carmen needed to know. After a hesitation, she finally said, “It’s much more than that. Life and death more than that.”
Carmen leaned against the edge of the lab bench and cautiously placed the test tube on its surface. Leaning forward, she took hold of Liliana’s hands. Carmen’s were smooth and slightly cold from the temperature in the lab, which explained why Carmen always wore a sweater – usually a funky one -- beneath her white jacket.
“I’m sorry, Liliana. I didn’t realize it was something personal. Of course I can try to find out, although it may be a little beyond my expertise,” her friend said.
“I’d appreciate it.”
Liliana hugged Carmen, hard and quick, and then made a hurried escape from the lab, only as she walked out it was right into Harrison.
His presence surprised her since he normally had little to do with the pathology department. He snared her upper arms in a cruel grasp and jerked her to the side.
“Is that why you haven’t been around? Playing both sides of the field now?” he whispered through clenched teeth and shook her hard, rattling her teeth.
“Stop it, Harrison.” She pushed against his chest, trying to break free.
Her actions didn’t deter him. He shook her roughly again. Moved forward until her back was against the wall and he had boxed her in, preventing her escape.
“But that
’s where you’ve been. With Carmen.”
She forced her forearms up between them and shoved him back, regaining her space. Recapturing a piece of herself.
It surprised him that she was fighting back. He stepped away and stared at her as if seeing her for the first time. Strange considering they had been involved for two years. Engaged for the last six months.
Engaged until right now.
She pulled the ring off her finger and held it out to him. “This is over, Harrison. I won’t be your punching bag anymore.”
He stared at the ring in her hand, then returned his gaze to her face. He placed his hand over the ring, but grasped both the ring and her hand in his much larger one and squeezed painfully. The pressure forced the ring against her palm and as the strength of his grip increased, the sharp prongs of the elaborate diamond ring cut into the flesh of her hand.
She tugged to escape, but he only held on tighter.
With another sharp tug, she finally broke free and the ring dropped to the floor, pinging against the tiles until it came to rest.
Harrison only shot it a sideways glance as he drove her up against the wall once again. Bending down from his greater height, he warned, “I will not let you do this to me, Liliana.”
He surged away from her, gracefully swooped down to recover the ring from the ground, and then head toward the elevator bank. As the door opened and one of the other doctors stepped out, he offered them an engaging smile and warm greeting.
He received a genial response which grew confused when the doctor noticed her standing down the hall.
She forced her own smile at the female physician as Harrison swept by her and into the elevator.
After a steadying breath, she took her first hesitant step to return to her rounds.
Her second step was more certain. Stronger. Imbued with the knowledge that it was a very important step.
It was the first step toward her new life.