“Yes! Yes, we did,” said the red-flannelled man, glancing at his scalded, whimpering partner.
“That wasn’t so hard, now, was it?” He could feel his instincts taking over and felt like he could predict every move, as if he had done this before in another lifetime. The way it happened at the gun range, what he needed for each moment came to him like a sixth sense.
“Question number two. Did you make a bomb, then have the kid put it in the Super Mart?” Mark backed away from the table, shotgun raised.
The leader spit at Mark. “Screw you!”
Red Flannel reached for a pistol.
Mark pulled the trigger just as the man’s fingers touched the barrel of the gun.
The heavyset man screamed and pulled his hand back, clutching the bloody stump. Blood spurted from his wrist like a ruptured pipe. He stared at it in horror.
“I told you not to push me!” Mark pumped another round into the chamber and stared down the barrel at the leader of the group. “You want to die?”
He shook his head, staring at his friend, who was fumbling to make a tourniquet with his belt. “Yes, we had him plant the bomb.” His voice quivered as he gaped at the blood pooling on the table.
“Last question, and we’ll be done.” Mark walked behind the men, leaned down and whispered, “Who detonated the bomb?”
The room went silent. Even the panting from the handless fat man stilled, as the full weight of what was happening to them sunk in.
No one spoke.
Mark placed the cold steel against the back of the handless man’s head. “Was it you?”
He moaned and shook his head no.
Mark slid the barrel over to the driver of the gray pickup and asked again, “Was it you?”
The man’s neck had already blistered in great white boils. One broke open as Mark shoved the shotgun against his scalded neck. He shook his head no and hunched over, trying to pull away from the still-warm barrel.
Mark grinned as he put the barrel of the shotgun to the back of the black-bearded leader’s head. “So… it was you.” Leaning down, he whispering into his ear, “You killed my wife. You murdered my daughter.”
The room fell silent once again as Mark stood up. He turned the gun over and slammed the stock on the back of the leader’s head.
The bearded man slumped over, and his face hit the table with a thud.
Mark returned to the front of the table and pulled zip-ties from his coat pocket. “Tie your hands, one to each of his.” He pointed to the unconscious man.
They each tied one of their hands to the man sitting next to him, one to the right, and one to the left. The fat man had a hard time zipping the tie tight on his good hand without fingers on the other. The driver reached over to help him.
When they finished, they stared defiantly at Mark, hatred flashing in their eyes. The fat one, pale from loss of blood, was gritting his teeth in pain. One of the driver’s eyes had swollen shut, and his messy hair hung in wet clumps over his blistered face.
Mark walked to the kitchen stove and ripped the gas line from the wall. A hissing sound came from the gas line as it filled the air with toxic fumes. He picked up the almost-finished bomb they been working on. Placing it on the stove, he looked over at the wide-eyed men.
“Justice will prevail.”
He turned his back to the two conscious men and started for the front door, but caught a glimmer of steel out of the corner of his eye.
A third truck!
Through the shattered doorway, he saw the shadow of a man crouched on the porch. Dropping to the floor, he rolled across the rubble and grabbed the man’s ankles. Pulling with everything in him, he wrenched him to the porch, sending a pistol flying into a snowbank.
The man grunted as he hit the ground. Mark leaped on top of him and punched him in the throat. He stood up as the man gasped for breath and clutched his neck, kicking his legs to get a lungful of air.
But it was no use. His muscles stiffened and his eyes bulged as a final wheeze escaped his lungs. He collapsed, eyes wide and lifeless. One leg twitched. Then nothing.
Dead.
Picking up his shotgun, Mark raced toward his car.
* * *
MARK FELT THE FAMILIAR heat on his back as the sound of the explosion pummeled his eardrums. The force of the blast nearly pushed him to the ground, even though he was a good hundred yards from the cabin, but he managed to stay on his feet. He turned to see a ball of fire roll out the front door and consume the three trucks. One by one, they exploded with a thunderous crescendo.
Panic overcame him as he raced for the BMW, fearing what he’d find. His lungs felt like they would burst, but he kept running.
He stopped when he saw the open passenger door and the blood stain in the snow. Pat’s pale hand dangling from the open door like a white flag.
Falling to the ground, his head in his hands, Mark began to sob, so overcome with emotion, he didn’t know what do. Relief and rage tangled in his head like the snarls in his daughter’s hair. His mind reeled and his body trembled as he cried—cried for his family, cried for what he’d done, cried for his future. He even cried for Pat, whose stupidity had cost him his life.
The thought of what he had done began to creep into his mind but he pushed them back, not willing to take a look at who he was becoming. If he shoved it down, even if temporary, he could deal with it later. Emotions buried will always rise to the surface.
Struggling to his feet, he wiped his eyes and walked over to his car. Inside, he could see the gunshot wound oozing blood across the boy’s chest. He was slumped over, almost falling out onto the snow, but held back by the zip-tie attached to the steering wheel.
Mark took a long breath. He had to get it together.
After he cut Pat loose, he dragged his body out of the car and onto the side of the road, where he covered it with snow. With any luck, wild animals would devour the body before the snow melted.
Cold and weary, he crawled into the car, started the engine and backed it out of the trees, then turned toward the main road.
CHAPTER 15
THE TINY BELL ON the door rang as Kirk and Geoff left the barbershop. The air felt extra cold on Kirk’s now-bald head and smooth face. He ran his hand over his head, then reached inside his coat and pulled out an old beanie. He pulled it low over his ears and hunched his shoulders against the bitter winter’s frigid breath.
“What now, boss?” Geoff asked.
“We head back to the crime lab to see what Cassy found out. I think she might be able to tell us something about our mystery lady, as well.”
The day looked warm, with the sun shining in the cloudless sky, but it was deceiving. A cold, knife-like wind cut through the boxed-in city streets as if barreling through a tunnel, snatching the breath from anyone who dared step out into its path. On a day like today, Kirk liked the rental car better than his open motorcycle, but he still grumbled about all the gas it guzzled.
The receptionist told them Cassy was in the basement. Once again, they traversed the long, dingy stairs downward.
Cassy had her eye glued to a microscope and did not look up when Kirk and Geoff walked into the lab.
Kirk glanced around the room, which contained several tables covered with test tubes, blood-sample testers and other objects he couldn’t identify. Several white tables were lit from underneath, apparently illuminating objects of study. The place was jammed with boxes, file cabinets and plastic bins, but everything was in order—not messy, just in dire need of more space.
Kirk leaned over Cassy’s shoulder.
She looked up. “Wow, when you get a haircut, you get a haircut! Feel better?”
He nodded.
She grinned. “You guys won’t believe what I discovered.” Her smile lit the room, which was noteworthy in the midst of the clutter and dim, blinking lights.
“Please tell me you have good news.” Kirk said.
“I think you’ll be pleased,” she said, a twinkle in her eye.
“The cloth sample had no poison or any other substance in it, but I looked closer and found that this string isn’t cloth at all.” She motioned to the single white strand that lay in a round dish on the slide under the microscope lens.
“Really? What is it?” Geoff leaned over to look in the microscope.
Cassy pointed at a stool for Kirk to sit on and placed an open book in front of him. “See this description here? It’s a form of plastic mixed with an acid that eats away at cloth. When the material in the pillows started to deteriorate, it put off a gas that the inmates breathed as they slept.”
Kirk frowned. “So this gas stuff is what killed them?”
“No. By itself, it’s nontoxic, but I ran a few more tests. Guess what could be mixed with it to make it lethal?”
He shook his head.
“Botconie.” She looked expectantly at the men, but they just shrugged. “Okay. I’ll back up. Remember that theory we talked about last year, about how every drug has its partner opposite?”
He nodded.
“Well, Botconie is the partner to the anti-drug that was found in all the guards. It acts like a repellent to Dypethline.
Geoff looked confused. “I don’t get it.”
“I’ll tell you what I think happened. The pillows somehow had this patch of material placed in them. Over time, it filled the prison with a gas that could not be smelled or otherwise detected. Then the antidote was administered to the guards through their coffee, if you will, seeing as the guards had their own coffee pot in a private break room that was inaccessible to the inmates. The food was injected with Botconie, and when it mixed with the gas, it caused anyone who had it in their system to go into instant cardiac arrest.”
Kirk grinned. “You’re one smart cookie, Cassy. How did you come up with all this?”
“Easy. I tested the note against all the food samples and nothing happened until I got to the samples of coffee. I found traces of Dypethline in the coffee.”
“So the gas had been pumped into their systems, and the coffee drinkers were saved. I guess coffee does have its advantages.” Kirk said.
“Yeah, and lucky for them, all the guards drink coffee or we would have a few dead guards too. Whoever did this did their homework. Not one guard, or any other staff member, was hurt. I do have some bad news, though. With all the tests I had to run, I don’t have anything left of the fabric, which leaves us without any hard evidence outside of our own testimony.”
Kirk scratched his head, trying to figure out a way to get something hard to nail the case shut. “What we need is a witness and to find out who is behind all this. That’s the only way we’ll get this to stick. Without something concrete, we’re still standing with nothing more than a fancy story.”
He pulled the photo of the mystery woman from his jacket and handed it to Cassy. “Could you check your computer files to search for a match?”
She nodded. “It’s worth a shot.” She scanned the picture it into the computer. “NCIC will pull up anyone who has any kind of criminal record. It matches facial structure and bone lines, so even if a person changes their looks, the program can tell with a ninety-four percent accuracy rate who they are—or were.”
The original picture appeared on the left side of her screen, while others scrolled across the right side. The photos flipped onto the screen for almost an hour as the three watched, hoping for a hit. Kirk drank the last cup of coffee, so Cassy made another pot while they waited.
Kirk was reviewing the details of the case in his head for the third time, when a beeping sound jerked his attention to the flashing sign on the screen, which read No Matches Found. “Bah! That’s not what I wanted to see.”
Cassy sighed. “Sorry. Anything else you want me to look up?”
He drummed his fingers on the table. “Can you access all past and present government employees?”
She nodded. “Sure, hold on. I’ll pull up everyone in the CIA, FBI or any other government program.”
Geoff asked, “You think she might work for the FBI?”
“Well, the file was given to the FBI,” Kirk said, “who did nothing about it, even though the evidence was clear that David’s Island was no accident. Somewhere along the line, the investigation was compromised.” He looked at Cassy. “Who did you give the file to, exactly?”
“I gave it to Jenkins. He works for me and delivered all our files to the FBI, but it couldn’t be him. He’s the last person in the world who would be in on some sort of cover-up.”
“Why are you so sure?” Geoff asked.
“I’ve known him for at least ten years. I’d trust him with my life.”
Kirk rubbed his chin. “Okay, but I still want to talk to him. I’d like to ask who he delivered that file to. I’d also like to get the names of everyone who had access to it in the FBI.” He paused. “Is Jenkins here now?”
“No. He’ll be in tomorrow. He had to go to the dentist today, so I gave him the day off.”
A beep sounded. They all turned to stare at the screen, which flashed the same message as before: No Matches Found.
Kirk tried not to show his mounting frustration. “What else can we try? She has to be there somewhere.”
Cassy bit her lip and stared at her keyboard. “I could try one other thing, but it is a little on the—well, how do I put this—risky side.”
Kirk perked up. “I can do risky. What do you got?”
“There’s a top-secret project database we can run it against that will pull up any active or underground programs the government is running or has run in the past. But if they find out I hacked in, I’m dead meat!”
Geoff’s forehead wrinkled. “It isn’t worth it, Cassy. You could lose your job, whether we get a hit or not.”
Kirk glared at Geoff then bent to look Cassy dead in the eye. “Please, I need to find this woman. She’s our only lead left. Without her, we’re finished.”
Cassy straightened. “Okay, I’ll do it, but you’d better cover me if the fur hits the fan.”
Kirk nodded and sat on the stool beside her. “Absolutely.”
Typing in a series of commands, she pulled up a page filled with file names and a search box and started running the list against the photo. As before, pictures flipped past the screen, but they suddenly stopped, and a green message flashed: Positive Match.
“Yes!” Kirk jumped to his feet to peer at the screen. “Isis Kanika—that’s her. I’m sure it’s the same woman!”
Cassy read the bio. “Looks like she used to work for the FIA, which is an intelligence agency based in foreign countries, mainly in Europe. They were disbanded about ten years ago. She was killed in action on a mission in Paris, but her body was never recovered.” She lifted an eyebrow. “My bet is she went rogue, and no one knows who she’s working for now.”
Geoff kept reading. “This says she was an assassin with over thirty-five confirmed kills, that she has trained in hand-to-hand combat as well as heavy weapons. Boy, I’d hate to be on her bad side.”
The list went on for twenty more pages, noting her assignments and the missions she completed. Kirk shook his head. “So we have a professional on our hands, who obviously isn’t working alone.” He frowned and stopped the scrolling. “It looks like she was born in Egypt and moved here to the States after she entered the program.”
“What is the FIA supposed to do—what was it doing?” Geoff asked.
“As far as I know,” Cassy said, “its agents would go in under the radar and carry out hits for the US military.” She switched to another screen. “Let’s see what else I can find.” After a couple clicks, she read for a moment, then said, “The most unnerving thing about the FIA is that it was shut down for doing some sort of experimentation on soldiers.”
Kirk leaned back on his stool. The FIA must have set her off somehow. Something must have gone wrong. “Can you print off Kanika’s information for me?”
“Sure, and if you know a good hacker, you might want to have them research this so-called ag
ency. According to the file, her code name is Black Widow. I’m not sure if that will help you, but it’s a start.”
Geoff shook her hand. “You’ve been a great help, Cassy.”
Kirk took the papers from the printer. “Thanks for everything. I’ll keep in touch. If you find out anything more, give me a call.”
Cassy walked up the stairs with them to the front door. “No problem. I just hope you find out who’s responsible for all those deaths. I hate to think what else they are capable of.”
* * *
THE FIREPLACE FLAMES ROARED as they consumed Mark’s clothing, his coat, his boots—and anything else that could contain blood or DNA to trace him to the cabin and the explosion. The heat drifted over his body as he lay crumpled on the floor in front of the fire thinking about absolutely nothing.
He had driven straight home and run the stairs up to his apartment to grab a bottle of carpet cleaner from under the kitchen sink. The blood came out with ease from the leather seats, but the floor mats were a different story. They ended up in the fireplace along with his clothes.
After thoroughly scrubbing his car, he dragged himself to the elevator and returned to his apartment exhausted and drained. But his mind raced, repeatedly replaying the explosion. What have I done? He tried to feel guilty, but couldn’t. Though his retaliation was the only justice his family would ever see, somehow, he did not feel better. Yet, at the same time, he felt like a huge weight had been lifted from his shoulders.
Finally, he passed out in front of the fireplace and didn’t wake up until the next morning. He looked around, trying to pull out of the nightmare, but it was not in his head. It was real.
Making his way to the kitchen, he started the coffee pot then headed for the bathroom to jump in the shower. The water seemed to clear his mind. As he thought about his uncharacteristic behavior and the things he’d done, he realized something about himself.
He stooped under the showerhead to rinse out the shampoo. How did I take out those guys without training? And where did he learn to turn on and shut off his emotions at will, as if he had an internal switch. His reactions had been quick and precise, like at the gun range. His movements had come to him like they’d been imprinted on his brain.
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