Bear stood, hoisting his pants in a manner that wouldn't have looked out of place in a western. "I think whatever Tess had on her computer got her killed. As far as I'm concerned, the case turns on that missing hard drive. Guerrera, how are you making out with her phone records?"
"Whole lotta nada. But me and Haines found a red flag in her financials. Her bank statement shows she retained a lawyer on May twenty-eighth."
Eleven days before her murder.
Tim snatched the bank statement across the table. The buzz of conversation in the room stopped at once.
Guerrera held up his hands. "But we don't know what for."
"May twenty-eighth is the same day she bought folic acid pills for the pregnancy," Tim said. "Maybe she'd just found out."
"And hired an attorney," Bear mused.
"We just got off with the lawyer, and he won't budge on discussing it," Guerrera said. "Client-attorney privilege, no way around it."
"We gotta pay him a visit," Bear said.
Haines said, "You'd be wasting your time. I promise. We have no legal standing here, and the guy knows it."
Bear said, "Get him on the phone for me."
"I'm telling you-"
"Just get him for me."
Guerrera muttered something in Spanish, dialed, and flopped his wrist, offering Bear the cordless and a smart-ass introduction: "Esteban Martinez, Esquire."
Bear introduced himself as a deputy marshal and fellow attorney-at-law. Tim joined Guerrera in slipping on a headset, just in time to hear Martinez express his exasperation.
"I just explained to your colleague, I will not under any circumstances divulge the nature of confidential conversations I had with my client." His English was clipped slightly by the cadence of his accent.
Bear asked, "Even if she may have been murdered as a result of them?"
"Yes. Even if that. What would it mean to the security of future clients? To my reputation? I'm sorry, sir, and believe me I'm sorry about what happened to Ms. Jameson, but it simply is not an option." The regret in his voice was palpable, but also his resolve.
"Will you at least tell me how many times you met?" Bear asked. A long pause, during which Tim could hear Martinez tapping his pencil against his desk. "As far as I know," Bear added, "there's nothing confidential about dates."
"Only twice."
"May twenty-eighth when she retained you. When was the second?"
"June one."
"That Friday? Seems like a quick job…?" Bear waited, hoping to get something back. Guerrera flicked his chin, his youthful features pulled tight in a told-you-so scowl. Keeping the phone pressed to his ear, Bear resisted additional prodding, sensing, as did Tim, that Martinez was not the kind of man who responded well to pressure. They listened to the sound of Martinez's breathing, banking on that note of regret that had found its way into Martinez's voice. A full minute passed-an eternity of silence.
Finally Martinez said, "If you must know, she discharged me."
"She spent two hundred and fifty dollars to fire you?"
"It was a decision we arrived at together."
"Why?"
"Don't push your luck, Deputy."
Bear rolled his lips over his teeth, then popped them back out. "Might I ask if the subject discussed wasn't…General Foods?"
"I can assure you it wasn't."
"Was it not…Hughes Aircraft?"
"It was not."
"Was it not…Vector Biogenics?"
"I'll neither confirm nor deny that," Martinez said, leaving them with a click and the hum of the dial tone.
Chapter 39
The churning of the roller bottles in combination with the moist warmth of the incubator augmented Dolan's stress hangover. He sped his pace through the passage, his skin reflecting back the red tint thrown from the hundreds of quarts of gently spinning growth fluid. The events of last night, from the party to the explosion's aftermath to the hum of the crime-scene cleaners' machinery, had left him so wired and rattled that he'd lain in bed agitated for hours after Chase disappeared out the window. He'd awakened with a sourness in his mouth to match the toxic thoughts that had pervaded his broken sleep.
He passed through the airlock into the test suite, the screeches of the monkeys making him smile for the first time in days. Huang wasn't at his desk, but on his chair, as promised, were the PowerPoint slides that Dolan needed for his talk at Friday's pre-IPO presentation. The magnifications depicted the stages of poxvirus's transformation into Xedral. Always a crowd pleaser.
The macaques settled from the excitement of Dolan's entrance, emphasizing the emptiness of the suite. Tuesday morning's departmental stratcom had drawn Huang's team into the conference room on the south corridor.
Grabbing the slides and turning to go, Dolan extended his arm to receive Grizabella's high five. His hand whiffed through air.
The cage was gone.
Dolan stood dumbly, regarding the blank space.
Across the suite the storage-closet door sucked open from an unfelt breeze, the latch bolt tapping back against the plate. Before the door a janitor's mop protruded from an abandoned rolling bucket.
Uneasy from the sudden calm of the monkeys, Dolan set down the slides. He crossed the lab and toed the bucket. It rolled to the side on squeaky wheels. He gripped the door handle and pulled.
An empty cage sat centered on the closet floor, Grizabella's name and ID number rendered on the affixed plaque.
Two men in generic Beacon-Kagan lab coats entered. They nodded, and then the burlier of the two breezed past Dolan, claiming Grizabella's cage.
"Where is this test subject?" Dolan asked.
"We don't know. We were just told to clean up."
"What do you mean? What happened to the test subject?" The men didn't slow, so Dolan followed them. "Was she in the cage when you started?"
The other said, "She was removed from the study." They were maddeningly uninterested, unhalting in their progress toward the doors.
"This is part of my experiment," Dolan said. "Who gave you permission to remove this test subject?"
"I'm sorry, Dr. Kagan. We're just following instructions. Isn't this Dr. Huang's section of the lab?"
The sliding doors opened with a hiss, and they passed through.
"Who authorized this?" Dolan shouted after them.
The doors sealed with a vacuum slurp. A few of the monkeys tittered, in on a private joke. Dolan fell into Huang's chair, rolled a few inches.
Huang's screen saver bounced around. A monkey striking the pose of Rodin's Thinker. Witty.
Dolan allowed his pinkie to graze the keyboard. The screen saver vanished, revealing a Windows desktop. Huang was still logged in.
Alone in the suite, no approaching footsteps on the hallway tile.
Dolan did a search/find using Grizabella's subject ID number, calling up a number of documents. The most recently changed was a spreadsheet titled Subject log-X3-AAT thru X5-AAT.
He stared at the Excel icon for a very long time, the chatter of monkeys echoing around the sterile walls.
Then he double-clicked on it.
Chapter 40
I said no lime." The paunchy gentleman waved off the waiter with a flare of his manicured fingers.
"I'm sorry. Let me bring you a new glass."
"Why don't you bring me a new bottle."
The kid backed up, cheeks flushed, bottle of Pellegrino tilted in both hands, still on display. Below his server's apron protruded scuffed Converse low-tops, an Ohio State Buckeye tattooed on the bare strip of ankle. "Right away."
The lingering patrons awaiting the maitre d's nod made it easy for Walker to loiter as he inventoried the waiters. He didn't exactly blend in in his father's suit jacket and a T-shirt, but a few Armenians going Miami Vice casual put him more at ease. On its framed menu, The Ivy announced itself as country cottage, but Walker thought it was to a cottage what Restoration Hardware was to Home Depot. A white picket fence hugged the perimeter of a raised patio framed with ivy. Someone had put a lot of time into the wood to make it look distressed. It wasn't too distressed, though; it looked pretty content watching the slender European types slither past in tight dresses to eat scallops among the so-called rustic antiques.