Seth walked through the door and approached her, holding out a digital camera. “You want to take a look? It ain’t pretty.”
Silver paged through the photos, her face betraying nothing.
“What’s HQ saying about the financial connection?” Seth asked.
All four victims had been involved in the financial industry – the first had been an investment advisor; the second and third, partners in a hedge fund; and their current object of interest, the president of a software company whose clients were brokerage houses and exchanges.
Silver frowned. “They agree that’s the link, but we’re still at a dead end for now. Knowing of the connection doesn’t help us predict who’s next, or when. And let’s face it – these days, half the country would like to strangle Wall Street…”
“Shall I add that to the suspect list? Couple of hundred million disgruntled Americans?”
“Ha.”
“What about the regulatory angle? The SEC?” Seth asked.
“That appears to be the only other connection, but they were unrelated investigations.”
The first and second victims had faced SEC charges and had settled with the agency, as in all such cases, without admitting or denying guilt. That was how the system worked – the wording of the settlements was carefully crafted so it wouldn’t open the door to lawsuits from the victims of the scams.
“True. But there has to be something there,” Seth persisted.
“No argument,” Silver agreed. “The question is what? The investment advisor was slapped for funneling clients into unapproved financial vehicles, and the hedge fund manager was accused of insider trading. Both happened years ago. You couldn’t invent two more dissimilar cases.”
“I know. But come on. The killer is calling himself The Regulator, and two of the victims faced regulatory sanctions. Seems pretty clear to me.”
“The younger of the two in the house fire – victim number three – didn’t. If our latest victim also never got into trouble with the SEC that hypothesis is all wet. That’s why I try not to go down a road based on one connection.”
“Can’t argue that,” Seth conceded, then pulled a notebook out of his windbreaker pocket and flipped through it. “Oh – and I forgot to tell you. Yesterday, after you left the office, a supervisory special agent by the name of Richard Gale called for you. Said he was from Financial Crimes.”
“That must be the resource I asked for. I want someone who is focused on the industry. We’re out of our depth if it’s something esoteric connecting the victims. I’m hoping a specialist will see something we don’t.” Silver glanced at her watch. “A supervisory special agent, huh? That’s positive – I was afraid we would get someone two years out of training.” She paused, looking around. “Have you got control of this? Looks like all the excitement is over for moi.”
“Sure. I’ll stick around for the duration. Go do what you need to do. Nothing to see here,” Seth said, eyeing the men by the bedroom.
“Thanks, Seth. I’ll be on the cell or the radio.”
~ ~ ~
Two New Jersey state troopers stood chatting by their cars, watching the local Newark cops write up the crime scene.
A patrolman had noticed a broken window by one of the chained doors and had radioed it in. Half an hour later, two squad cars were parked in the circular drive with the uniformed officers taking haphazard notes.
The security guard had been on the other side of the complex when they had appeared, and had been puzzled by their arrival until they’d pointed out the window. Frowning, he unlocked the entry, and together they moved through the opaque glass doors, noting that the plywood mounted across each panel to keep vandals out was covered with graffiti – as were whole swatches of the tired-looking building. The pair of cops stopped once inside, waiting for their eyes to adjust to the dark.
The power was off so they flicked on their flashlights. They passed room after empty room in the musty gloom, finding no signs of intrusion. They arrived at the end of the main hall, where a locked metal gate blocked the stairwell leading to the upper floors, and the elevator shafts were boarded up.
One of the cops shone his beam at the open stairs leading to the basement. “What’s down there?” he asked the guard.
“The radiology departments.”
“Is there anything worth stealing?”
“Not unless you can back up a semi-rig. All the small stuff got sold by an auction company, and they came last week and removed everything. But the big pieces of equipment are still down there. I heard one of the guys saying they sell those separate ’cause they’re so huge.”
“Let’s go take a look.”
The three men cautiously descended the stairs; the temperature dropped ten degrees by the time they were standing in the drab corridor. Brightly painted arrows on the floor directed them to various departments – yellow for X-ray, red for nuclear medicine, blue for cancer therapy.
“Bobby. You take that side, I’ll take this one. We should be in and out within a few minutes,” the heavier of the two officers said.
“I hope so. Don’t know why, but this place gives me the creeps.”
“I know what you mean. I don’t even like hospitals when I need one, much less when they’re abandoned. And the place kinda stinks.” He turned to the security guard. “You staying here?”
“Yeah. Nuthin’ to see for me.”
The pair pushed open the steel doors to the various rooms, noting the film of dust on the floors. There hadn’t been anyone in them for months.
From down the hall, Bobby’s voice sounded a few pitches higher than it had a couple of minutes earlier.
“Hey, Mike. I think you need to take a look at this. I think someone’s been in here recently.”
Mike followed the sound of Bobby’s voice to an open door. A distinctive radiation warning logo was embossed on the wall next to the words Radiation Therapy.
“Where you at?” Mike asked, noting the dust had been trampled leading to the three different rooms.
“In here.”
Mike’s flashlight played along the hall, and then he saw Bobby’s light in the third vault. He approached the heavy door, at least eight inches thick, which was propped open with a wooden wedge.
Bobby was standing in the twenty by twenty-five foot room, shining his beam on a massive treatment machine that appeared to be from the Fifties. The fiberglass casing had been removed, and it looked like someone had been trying to filch parts from it.
“How we gonna know if this was left this way, or someone tried to steal something?” Mike asked.
“Beats the crap outta me. I say we write it up, take a statement from the guard, and get the hell outta here. If they were trying to rip the place off, they picked the wrong area to work in. That piece of iron looks older than you. What the hell is it, anyway?”
Mike swiveled and cupped his hands, facing the way they’d entered. “Yo. Buddy. Come down here. We need your help,” he called to the guard. They saw the man’s light bouncing off the hallway walls, and then he was standing in the doorway.
“This look like it’s from when they closed the place down?” Bobby asked him.
“I don’t know. I don’t come down here hardly ever. Maybe the auction guys were in here inspecting the equipment?”
“Yeah. That could be. All right. Is there anything more to see?” Mike asked.
“Some more machines over in the far rooms.”
“Okay. Let’s wrap this up, then. Hey, buddy, what do they call these things, anyway? For the report?”
The guard shone his light up at the wall sign in the area’s foyer.
“Says ‘Linear Accelerators’.”
“I better write that down. No way I’m gonna remember.”
~ ~ ~
Silver’s phone rang as she negotiated the late morning New York City traffic. She stabbed the speakerphone button on as she pulled to a red light.
“Cassidy.”
“Silver. It’s
Eric. Did I get you at a bad time?”
Silver counted to three…slowly. She fought to keep her tone neutral.
“Don’t you dare flake on her tonight,” she warned.
“Why do you always assume the worst about me?” Eric demanded, offended.
“Because it’s usually right. Now tell me that you’re going to honor your commitment to your daughter and spend the time you promised to with her.”
A pause settled over the line.
“I think you may reconsider when I tell you the reason for my call,” Eric said.
“Spit it out. I’m knee deep in alligators on this investigation.” The light changed, and she goosed the gas.
“Of course. Because the job always comes first.”
Silver realized that he was being even more abrasive than usual but said nothing, wondering why her ex was calling. He never got in touch with her unless he wanted something.
“I’ve filed for custody of Kennedy,” Eric said.
She almost slammed into the car next to her.
“You miserable piece of shit. What’s going on in your head? You’ve never done a thing that wasn’t self-interested. You don’t have a moment for your daughter most of the time, anyway. Why would you want to fight me for custody of her, especially given your track record…?” Silver seethed.
“I’m concerned that her mother isn’t providing the sort of home environment that is optimal for her development,” he stated, somewhat smoother than had been rehearsed.
“Over my dead body. This discussion is over.”
“Silv–”
She punched the off button. Seconds later, it rang again, and she let it go to voicemail. Whatever had she been thinking when she’d married this bastard?
Silver paged through her phone numbers and placed a call.
A receptionist answered. “Renkin, Larrabee and Winters.”
“Is Ben there?” she asked.
“One moment, please. May I ask who is calling?”
“Silver Cassidy.”
Music on hold jangled her nerves before a deep baritone voice came on the line.
“Silver. Long time no talk. Do you need another divorce?” Ben had handled the parting of ways between Eric and her.
“No. I’m afraid I’ve got a real problem, Ben.”
The attorney’s voice became instantly serious. “What happened?”
Two minutes later, Ben had agreed to meet Silver whenever she had time over the next day, and in the meantime would check on recent filings to get a running start on whatever her ex had cooked up. Ben remembered Eric. Smooth talker, highly intelligent, a corporate turnaround expert wholly lacking in empathy, who treated Silver like a possession rather than a loved mate. Their story hadn’t been an uncommon one – once the baby came, Silver was juggling her duties between the Bureau, her new child and her spouse; something had to give.
Eric had adapted to her workload and the challenges of raising a family by having an affair with one of his young assistants. When Silver put two and two together on why he was increasingly distant and unavailable, it had been child’s play for an agent with her skills to catch him in the act.
The only good news had been that Eric had deep pockets and was willing to be generous to keep matters civil, although she’d always smelled a rat in how easily he’d given in. His capitulation had surprised her – Eric played hardball in all negotiations regardless of the stakes; it was just his nature. But his admission that he’d been unfaithful, which Silver had the presence of mind to capture on tape, painted an ugly picture, so it had been prudent for him not to contest anything and simply give her what she wanted, which in the end had only been what she’d needed to provide for her daughter.
Now, five years later, he was going in for the kill. Any infidelity in the marriage would be ancient history, and he’d waited long enough so that he could frame concerns over her lifestyle as a hard-charging FBI agent without having his past conduct examined too closely.
Silver knew this was his way of getting back at her. He’d never gotten over being made a fool of with the tape – he’d stammered out four different lies before admitting his infidelity, his pretense of civility momentarily slipping to reveal raw hatred.
He’d successfully hidden his true colors for their first three years together, but after that, following a difficult pregnancy, his real personality had emerged little by little. Silver had initially attributed it to stress from work, but he grew increasingly dismissive and cold as time went by, except when he wanted sex. Towards the end of the relationship, Silver came to believe that being around his family was a concession he’d made in order to appear to have a respectable home life, for display at the frequent business-related events he took them to – and later, when he was making the preparatory moves to enter the political arena.
Perhaps that was the other part of what this was all about. Being a devoted father who was raising a daughter under his custody would be a surefire winner at the polls.
She was still shaking from fury when she pulled into the lower East Side parking structure adjacent to her office at 26 Federal Plaza.
If it was a fight Eric wanted, he had grossly underestimated her.
There was no way he was getting Kennedy.
No way in hell.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Go back to Contents
Table of Contents
About the Author
Author’s Note
Maps of Featured Locations
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
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Afterword
Excerpts from JET IV – Reckoning and Silver Justice
JET IV – Reckoning
Prologue
Silver Justice
Chapter 1
Jet 03: Vengeance Page 28