Fatal

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Fatal Page 27

by Michael Palmer


  Nattie pulled a tissue from a half-empty box and dabbed at some embryonic tears. She was a beautiful woman—large and expansive, with huge, expressive eyes, and ebony skin.

  “It was nearly two weeks after we got back from Africa,” she said. “We came back on a Tuesday, and I first felt the sore throat two Mondays after that. Ten days later I was in the operating room. They delivered the baby, but he was stillborn. Then they tried to save my womb, but there was just too much bleeding.”

  Eli, who was still wearing his suit and tie from work, rose and moved behind her to comfort her. It was his relatives they had been visiting in Sierra Leone, and he expressed some guilt at having talked her into staying for an extra week while he straightened out some family business—the week in which the doctors believed she became infected. Ellen sipped at her tea and reflected on the impact of her own newly acquired guilt.

  “If my questions upset you too much,” she said, “you must tell me.”

  “We’re doing okay,” Eli replied. “But it would be good if you could tell us where all this is leading.”

  Ellen set the passenger manifest on the table. During the flight from D.C. to Chicago, she had managed to curtail the attempts at conversation by the recently divorced, totally self-absorbed appliance salesman seated next to her long enough to scan all the flights, searching for matches—passengers who had been on more than one flight with a soon-to-be-victim of Lassa fever. There were at least six.

  “I have reason to be suspicious that Nattie may have gotten infected with the Lassa virus either just before or just after leaving Sierra Leone, or else on the plane ride home.”

  “But how?” Nattie asked.

  “I don’t know.”

  “Do you mean,” Eli said, “that you think somebody deliberately infected her?”

  “That’s the possibility I’m looking into. Please, both of you, I beg you not to say anything to anyone about my suspicions until I can finish my search. It’s a matter of life and death. Can you give me your word on that?”

  “Yes,” they said in unison. “Of course,” Nattie added.

  “Thank you. I’m looking into the possibility that someone on the flight home transmitted the virus to you. Nattie, this is a list of the people who were on your flight from Freetown to Ghana, and then from Ghana to the States. Do any of these names ring any bells? As you can see, there were forty-six on the first leg, including the two of you, and thirty-seven of those among the hundred and sixty on the flight to Baltimore. Do any of these names stand out as someone you remember?”

  Nattie shook her head.

  “It’s been three years,” she said. “Plus I think I lost some of my memory when I was sick. I’m afraid I can’t help you. I’m sorry.”

  “Your memory is just fine,” Eli countered. “These names mean nothing to me, either. Tell me, do you think this infection was random, or do you think my wife was singled out?”

  Ellen considered the question for a while.

  “You know, I never thought of that.”

  She searched for the words to speak about the ten cases of Lassa fever that Nattie was believed to have caused through her job as a dietary worker—including two that died. Nattie saved her the trouble.

  “If someone did want to spread the infection, someone with a job like mine would be perfect, provided they somehow knew what I did for a—”

  “What is it?” Ellen asked, noting the odd expression on the woman’s face.

  “Eli, remember that man on the flight from Sierra Leone? The big man who talked to me outside the rest room. He was on the other plane, too.”

  “The white man?”

  “Exactly. He sold something. Insurance, I think. You mentioned how scary-looking he was.”

  “I do remember him, yes.”

  “He was a smiler and a talker, that one—asked me all sorts of questions about myself. Made it a game, like he was such an experienced insurance salesman that he could guess things about me.”

  Ellen felt a little burst of adrenaline.

  “Anyone else?” she asked just in case.

  “No one that I can think of.”

  She remembered the memory exercise Rudy had done with her.

  “Okay,” she asked, “can you bring me a paper and pen?”

  “Certainly.”

  Eli brought in several sheets of typing paper.

  “Okay,” Ellen said, “I’m going to go and sit in the living room. I’d like you to put your heads together and write down every descriptive word you can remember about this man—what he looked like, what he acted like, even the things you’ve already told me. Just relax your minds and free-associate. I know it’s been a long while, but just do your best. Take as much time as you need, and if you disagree on something, write down both opinions.”

  “We’ll try our best,” Nattie said.

  Fifteen minutes later, the Serwangas were out of recollections. They called Ellen back to the dining room and apologetically handed her their description.

  Big

  Tall

  Strong

  Slick

  Smooth

  Smiling

  Glad-hander

  Thick hair

  Flat face . . . like a cartoon character hit with a frying pan

  Deep voice

  Maybe a Texas-type accent

  Scar on face

  Ellen felt her heart stop.

  “The scar,” she asked, her voice trembling. “Can you tell me about the scar?”

  “That’s Nattie’s,” Eli said. “I don’t remember any scar.”

  “Well, there was one. I’m sure of it. Right here.”

  She pointed to the space between her nose and upper lip.

  “That’s him,” Ellen said.

  “Who?”

  “A very bad man. I think we’re onto something.”

  “Well, I just thought of another word we should have put on the list—clumsy.”

  “What do you mean?”

  “I was standing waiting for the rest room. He came up the aisle, tripped, and slammed into me. The man nearly knocked me out of the plane.”

  CHAPTER 25

  MATT AND NIKKI HAD BREAKFAST AT PANCAKES ON Parade on the banks of the Susquehanna. If it was possible for a family restaurant to be romantic, this one, with a broad porch set on tall stilts out over the river, surely was. But then again, on this particular morning, the two of them would have found any McDonald’s or Burger King atmospheric. For over an hour, not a word was spoken about Bill Grimes or spongiform encephalopathy or Belinda Coal and Coke. Instead, they touched fingertips and thumb wrestled, laughed to tears at the silly or embarrassing stories of each other’s lives, and commiserated with the sad ones. Grace, their husky, gum-chewing waitress, called Matt “Slugger” and Nikki “Dearie.” After the third time she found they weren’t ready to order because they hadn’t looked at the menu, she brought them heart-shaped lollypops and a bill for two dollars for mooning at each other in public.

  “It’s been a long, long time since I mooned,” Matt said. “’Cept maybe for the time a couple of years ago when my shorts ripped while I was playing basketball.”

  “Boston men are too sophisticated to moon,” Nikki said. “Instead, they discuss lunar landings and the Hubble telescope.”

  There was a pay phone in an alcove by the rest rooms. Before their order arrived, Matt called his uncle at the hospital.

  “Hey, Unk, it’s Matt.”

  “Hey,” Hal said, “how goes it? Any word about that patient of yours?”

  “It goes not too well, actually. And yes, Nikki Solari is safe. She’s with me in Pennsylvania. Hal, something really weird and really dangerous is going on. It has to do with those odd cases.”

  “The miners?”

  “Them and the girl who died, Kathy Wilson. And Bill Grimes is right in the middle of it.”

  “My read on Grimes is that he’s slick and power hungry,” Hal said, “but he’s not evil.”

  “Unk,
he’s evil. Believe me, he is.”

  Hal Sawyer listened patiently as Matt recounted the story of Nikki’s abduction and subsequent rescue, and this morning’s revelation regarding the microscopic findings in Kathy Wilson’s brain.

  “Spongiform encephalopathy,” Hal said when Matt had finished. “Now, doesn’t missing something like that make me feel a bit sheepish.”

  “There’s no reason. The Wilson woman’s brain looked normal, just as I’m sure our two cases’ did. You wouldn’t be expected to do a microscopic on their brains. This guy in Boston only did it because Nikki Solari insisted.”

  “You still think the mine’s at fault?”

  “I’m sure of it. I don’t know the precise connection between what they’ve done and spongiform disease, but I do know that somehow they’re the cause of this, and Grimes is on the take from them. Any ideas what we should do?”

  Hal thought for a time.

  “It seems showing someone in authority that toxic dump you found is the place to start.”

  “I agree.”

  “There is a man, Fred Carabetta, at the Occupational Safety and Health Administration in Washington, who owes me a favor for some expert witness work I did for him a few years back. Maybe the way to go is to see if I can call in my marker and get him to come with us and view that dump. Once we’ve got an OSHA official believing, we can bring some legitimate pressure to bear against BC and C.”

  “If the dump is still there.”

  “Now, nephew, you know we can’t control that. That’s rule number two in your Godfather’s Lexicon—”

  “—of Youth. I know, I know. Rule number one: There’s no such word as ‘can’t.’ Rule number two: If you can’t control it, don’t let it control you.”

  “Excellent. I’m proud that you haven’t forgotten the Lexicon rules after all these years.”

  “That’s ’cause you still spout them at me every chance you get.”

  “In that case, I’m glad you’ve been paying attention. Listen, Matt, I’ll see what I can do with Fred Carabetta. How can I get ahold of you?”

  “Just call the house and leave a message on my machine. I’ll check it frequently and get back to you.”

  “And I’ll call that coroner in Boston, too. See if he can tell me about that special stain he used.”

  “Do you have any tissue left from those two miners?”

  “I suspect I do.”

  “Please don’t speak with anyone about Grimes until you and I have a chance to talk, okay? He’s more dangerous than you think.”

  “If you’re that certain about him, why don’t you just go to the police somewhere and file a complaint?”

  “Nikki wants to, but I’ve talked her out of it for now. From what I’ve heard, the police are a pretty tight fraternity. There’s no cop who’s going to listen to us and run right down to Belinda to make Grimes assume the pat-down position. And once we come out into the open, he’ll have us between his crosshairs regardless of what we allege he did. For the time being, I’d rather wait.”

  “Okay, whatever you say. Just be careful. I’ll call you later today. By the way, I visited with your mother this morning. She’s really slipping.”

  “I know. I saw her for a few minutes yesterday. It won’t be long now before she’ll need some sort of comprehensive care. I’ll look into it when I get this business settled. Listen, Hal, thanks for your help—with her and with this.”

  “You’re on the right track, Matt. I’m certain of it.”

  “Me, too, Unk,” Matt said. “Me, too.”

  Nikki gave the pancakes a solid eight. Matt claimed to have wolfed down his Spanish omelet too rapidly to grade it for taste. He left Grace a tip that was twice the cost of their meal, along with a note that thanked her for presiding over their morning mooning.

  “You know what I’m really relieved about?” he asked as they headed out to the Harley. “I’m really relieved those guys didn’t kill you.”

  “Aw, gee. You certainly know just what to say to a girl, you romantic devil you. It’s good to know we actually have something in common. I’m relieved they didn’t kill me, too.”

  She reached across the bike and kissed him intensely enough to get a honk from a passing trucker. She had just let up when they felt some tentative raindrops. Fifteen minutes later, it was drizzling steadily. Matt found a Wal-Mart outside of York and Visaed some rain gear for each of them, but for the next five hours the going was slow and not pleasant. They gave passing thought to stopping until the next morning, but Nikki was too anxious to get home. By the time the clouds broke, they were still several hours from Boston, having inched through rush-hour traffic around New York City. At nine Nikki called the office to tell Joe Keller they were running late and might not be there until eleven, but there was no answer.

  “He’s either doing a late case or out to dinner,” she said. “I shouldn’t have told him when we were arriving, so he wouldn’t wait, but now that I did, I’m sure he’ll be there.”

  Matt used the break to call his machine. There were two messages. The first was from Mae reporting that as far as she knew, there was no word about his patient, Dr. Solari, and that she was worried about not having heard from him all day, and hoped he was all right and that his absence was due to nothing more serious than the erratic behavior he had been exhibiting so much of lately. The second message was from Hal.

  “Good news, Matt. Not great, but good. Fred Carabetta won’t commit to any action regarding the mine, but he will meet with us in his office. Tomorrow at three. Two Hundred Constitution Avenue. Wherever you are, I hope you can make it. Call and confirm.”

  Matt left a message on both his uncle’s office and home machines that he would be there, and then dictated a message on his own office machine telling Mae he was all right and would be in touch. After he set the receiver down, he shared Hal’s breakthrough with Nikki.

  “I’m going to take the bike back to D.C. tomorrow,” he said. “Wanna come?”

  “Do you get frequent flyer miles on this thing?”

  “Double miles to D.C. It’s the shuttle.”

  “Well, thanks. I really want to be with you, but for the moment I think I need to stay here. For one thing, I feel like my body can’t take too much more, and for another, I have this job cutting up dead people that I get paid pretty well for doing, but only if I show up. It says so in my contract.”

  “I understand. I’ll be back up as soon as I deal with this mine thing.”

  It was nearing eleven by the time they cruised up the Southeast Expressway toward the shimmering lights of Boston. The rain had stopped, leaving the air cool and fresh.

  “Have you been back here since your residency?” Nikki asked.

  “Nope,” he called back over his shoulder. “In the beginning, after I returned to Belinda, I was working like hell in the ER, then to set up a private practice. Ginny got sick soon after that, and never really had much of a remission. Since she died, it’s been hard enough much of the time just to get up and go to the office, much less embark on a nostalgic journey to Boston. I did like the place, though. Lots.”

  The medical examiner’s office was located just off the highway. Except for some low nighttime lighting, the three-story building was dark. Nikki rang the front buzzer half a dozen times. They could hear the sound of it echoing through the empty reception area, but there was no movement inside.

  “Strange,” she said, “there’s usually a maintenance man here all night. Even if he’s not, Joe often works past midnight. Knowing we’re coming, I have trouble believing he went home.”

  “Maybe he wasn’t feeling well,” Matt offered.

  “Maybe. The front door opens with a swipe card that is back in West Virginia with my things. But there’s a security door in the back that has a keypad. Joe’s office is toward the back anyhow. Maybe he can’t hear the buzzer.”

  Matt followed her through a dimly lit alley to the rear of the building.

  “See,” she said. �
��That’s Joe’s office, that light right there on the second floor. I knew he was here.”

  “I think you’re right about him not hearing us. This is a long building—sort of like an aircraft carrier.”

  Nikki punched in the code and they stepped into the concrete rear stairway, eerily illuminated by a red EXIT sign. The air was imbued with the distinctive, though not overpowering, aroma of formaldehyde. With Matt following, Nikki quickly ascended to the second floor and opened the door onto a carpeted corridor with offices on either side.

  “Joe, it’s us,” she called out.

  She knocked on the door marked JOSEF KELLER, M.D. CHIEF MEDICAL EXAMINER, then pushed it open. The office was brightly lit by an overhead fluorescent fixture and a desk lamp. Joe Keller was at his desk, his back to them.

  “Joe,” Nikki said, “why didn’t you—?”

  Then she saw the blood on the carpet. She raced to the chair, with Matt right behind, and cried out loudly. There was dark, clotted blood all over the desk and splattered across the face and clothes of Joe Keller. His head drooped over his chest. Nikki lifted it gently, exposing a battered face with a bullet hole just above the nose. Keller’s eyes were open wide and glazed with death. His wire-rimmed spectacles dangled from one ear.

  “Look,” Matt said, gesturing to Keller’s right hand, which rested in the dead man’s lap.

  The index finger had been cleanly severed off at the middle knuckle.

  “Oh, Jesus!” Nikki cried, stumbling backward, her limbs suddenly in spasm. “Oh, Christ, how could someone do this to him?”

  Matt put his arms around her and held her closely.

  “Honey, please don’t touch anything anymore,” he begged.

  “Who would do such a thing? Why? He was such a dear, sweet man. Why? Oh, Jesus. Oh, shit! No.”

  She couldn’t stop moving, shifting from one foot to the other, pounding her fists against the sides of her thighs. Matt led her away from the body of her mentor, trying at once to comfort her, evaluate the scene, and stay alert in case the killer was still in the building. He thought about the gun in his saddlebag, and cursed himself for not bringing it along when Keller failed to answer the door. He had an inkling of trouble at that moment, but simply hadn’t paid enough attention to it. There wasn’t the slightest doubt in his mind that the ME’s torture and murder were somehow connected to Kathy Wilson. Was Grimes nearby—or his stooges?

 

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