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One said, "Got a new memo in a file 'bout Peru."
Another said, "Couple of old files talked about stuff down in South America."
The third just shook his head.
"You read every doc.u.ment?" al-Ha.s.san snapped. "Every file? Looked in every drawer?"
"Like you told us."
"Under everything? Behind anything that moved?"
"Hey, we ain't stupid."
Al-Ha.s.san had strong doubts about that. He found most Westerners lazy and incompetent. But from the mess in the office, he decided they had been thorough this time.
"Very well. You will now erase any indications of a search. Everything is to be as it was."
While they grumbled and returned to work, al-Ha.s.san slipped on a second, thicker pair of white rubber gloves. He took a small refrigerated metal container from a leather case, released a pressure seal, and extracted a gla.s.s vial. He carefully removed a hypodermic syringe from the case, filled it from the sealed vial, and injected Sophia in the vein of her left ankle.
At the p.r.i.c.k of the needle, she stirred and moaned.
The three men heard. They turned to look, and their faces went ashen.
"Complete your tasks," al-Ha.s.san said harshly.
The men dropped their gazes. As they finished straightening the office, al-Ha.s.san put the used syringe inside a plastic container, sealed it, and returned it to the leather case. His men indicated they were finished. Al-Ha.s.san inspected the office once more. Satisfied, he ordered them to leave. He gave one final glance at the now-motionless Sophia and saw the sweat that had beaded up on her face. When she groaned, he smiled and followed them out.
CHAPTER.
SEVEN
4:14 A.M.
Thurmont, Maryland A light wind rustled through bushes and trees, carrying the stink of apples rotting on the ground. Jon Smith's three-story, saltbox-style house was set back into the looming shoulder of Catoctin Mountain. The place was dark, not even a porch light to welcome him home, which made him think Sophia must still be at the lab. But he had to be sure.
He was a block away, crouched behind an SUV, as he studied his house, yard, and street. He saw telltale signs: The trunk of the old apple tree was too thick where someone stood behind it, watching. Farther up the block, almost hidden by two tall oak trees, the hood of a black Mercedes protruded from a driveway of neighbors Smith knew owned only a 2000 Buick Le Sabre, which they always parked in the garage.
Considering how quickly he had driven home from Georgetown on the almost-deserted highway and roads, there was no way the pair waiting here could have arrived first. Which meant this was a second surveillance team, and that alarmed him.
The sentry in front could see the driveway and garage doors. There was probably a man in back, too, to cover the rear of the house and garage. But Smith could see no reason to waste a man on the side of the garage away from the house.
He felt the familiar hollow of fear in his stomach every soldier knows, but also the hot rush of adrenaline. He slipped down an alley and sprinted behind the houses until past his street. Then he recrossed out of sight of the hunters. Beginning to sweat again, he worked through a stand of sycamores to the near side of his garage and slithered the last, five yards on his elbows and belly.
He listened. There was no sound behind the house. He raised up to peer inside the garage.
And sighed with relief. It was empty. Sophia's old green Dodge was gone. She must have been at Fort Detrick all this time. If so, she had never received his message, and that explained the lack of a porch light. He breathed deeply, instantly feeling better.
Retracing his path, he hurried back to his Triumph and drove to a phone booth a quarter mile away. He could not wait to hear her voice. He dialed her work number. After four rings, the machine picked up. "I'm out of my office or in the lab. Please leave a message. I'll return your call as soon as possible. Thank you."
The bright sound of her strong voice gave him a sharp pang and another feeling he could not explain. Loneliness?
He dialed again. The voice that answered was all business, which was rea.s.suring, particularly considering the circ.u.mstances: "United States Army, Fort Detrick. Security."
"This is Lt. Col. Jonathan Smith, USAMRIID."
"Base ID, Colonel?"
He gave his number.
There was a pause. "Thank you, Colonel. How can we help you?"
"Connect me to the desk guard at USAMRIID."
Clicks, beeps, and a new voice. "USAMRIID. Security. Gra.s.so."
"Gra.s.so, Jon Smith. Listen---"
"Hey, Colonel, you're back. Everything okay? Doc Russell's been askin'---"
"I'm fine, Gra.s.so. It's Dr. Russell I'm calling about. She's not answering her phone. You know where she is?"
"She's on the night list I got when I came on, and I ain't seen her leave."
"What time did you come on?"
"Midnight. She's probably in the lab and not hearing nothing."
Smith glanced at his watch: 4:42 A.M.
"Could you go up and check?"
"Sure, Colonel. Call you back."
Smith recited the phone number. Every second seemed like a minute, and every minute it was harder to breathe. The cool night seemed stifling. The phone booth suffocated him.
When the phone rang at last, he almost jumped. "Yes?"
"Not there, Colonel. Office and lab are both closed up."
"Any sign of trouble?"
"Nope. Everything's packed away and covered up." Gra.s.so sounded a little defensive. "d.a.m.ned if I know how I missed her. I guess she could've gone out one of the other exits. You could check with the gate guard."
"Thanks, Gra.s.so. You want to transfer me?"
"Hold on, Doc."
A different and very sleepy voice spoke: "Fort Detrick. Gate. Schroeder." "This is Lt. Col. Jonathan Smith, USAMRIID. Did Dr. Sophia Russell leave the base tonight, Schroeder?"
"Don't know, Colonel. Don't know Dr. Russell. Try the guy at USAMRIID."
Smith swore under his breath. The civilian security guards were always changing, and they worked longer shifts than MPs. It was not unknown for them to doze in the gate kiosk. The barrier would stop any cars trying to enter, and if it did not, the noise would certainly wake them up. But no barrier stopped cars leaving.
He hung up. It sounded as if she could have been too tired to drive all the way to Thurmont. Which meant she was likely at her old condo in Frederick, which she had just sold but had not yet fully moved out of. He could call the condo, but that would tell him nothing. When they worked around the clock, they always turned off their phone's ringer to get a few hours sleep.
As he sped the car away, his mind raced. She had been so tired she left the lab through one of the side doors, not wanting to run into anyone. That was logical. Just what she would have done. The gate guard had missed her, probably asleep. She would go to her condo. He would slip into bed beside her. She would sense his presence without waking up. She would smile in her sleep, murmur, and move close to touch him. Her hip would press warm against him. He would smile, kiss her shoulder lightly, watch her sleep before he fell asleep himself. He would . . .
Few guidebooks listed Fort Detrick as one of the attractions to the historic City of Frederick. With its chain-link fence and guard post at the entrance, Detrick was a medium-secure army base set in the middle of a residential area. Sophia's condo was five blocks away. Parked up the street again, Smith saw no signs of anyone watching here. He stepped from the Triumph, closed the door softly, and listened. He heard the distant coughs of sleepers. The occasional laughter or a voice raised in drunken anger. A solitary car squealing around a turn. The constant low hum that was the city itself.
But no clandestine sounds or movements he could identify as threatening.
He used his key to the lobby of the three-story condo building and strode across the exposed expanse of the tile and carpet to the elevators. All were empty at this hour.
On the third floor, the Glock in his hand, he stepped off warily. The corridor echoed to his footfalls like the empty rooms of an ancient tomb. When he reached her door, he listened again. He heard nothing from inside. He turned the key, the quiet tumblers clicking in his mind loud as explosions.
Silently he pulled open the door and dropped flat to the carpeting inside.
The apartment was dark. Nothing stirred. His hand felt a film of dust covering the side table near the door.
He stood and glided through the shadowy living room to the short corridor that led to the two bedrooms. Both were empty, the beds made, and unused. The kitchen showed no sign that anyone had eaten a meal or prepared even a cup of coffee. The sink was dry. The refrigerator was silent, turned off weeks ago.
She had not been here.
Feeling numb, Smith walked like a robot back into the living room. He turned on lights. He inspected for signs of an attack, an injury, even a search.
Nothing. The condo was as clean and undisturbed as an exhibit in a museum.
If they had killed or kidnapped her, it had not been here.
She was not at the lab. She was not at the house in Thurmont. She was not here. And he had no indications that anything had happened to her at any of those places.
He needed help, and he knew it.
The first step was to call the base and alert them to her disappearance. Then the police. FBI. He grabbed the portable telephone to dial Detrick.
His hand froze midair. Outside in the corridor, footsteps echoed along the walls.
He switched off the lights and set the phone on the table. He dropped to one knee behind the couch, the Glock in his hand trained on the door.
Someone advanced haltingly toward Sophia's condo, b.u.mping into walls, progressing in fits and starts. A drunk staggering home?
The steps stopped with a hard thump against Sophia's door. There was ragged breathing. A key probed for the lock.
He tensed. The door swung open as if flung.
In the shaft of light, Sophia swayed. Her clothes were torn and stained as if she had been crawling in a gutter.
Smith leaped forward. "Sophia!"
She staggered in, and he caught her before she collapsed. She gasped, battled for breath. Her face burned with fever.
Her black eyes stared up at him, tried to smile. "You're . . . back, darling. Where . . . where were you?"
"I'm so sorry, Soph. I had an extra day, I wanted..."
Her hand reached up to interrupt him. Her voice sounded delirious. "...lab ...at the lab ...someone ...hit ..."
She fell back in his arms, unconscious. Her skin was pasty. Two bright fevered spots glowed on her cheeks. Her beautiful face was pinched with pain. She was terribly ill. What had happened to her? This was not just simple exhaustion.
"Soph? Soph! Oh my G.o.d, Soph?"
There was no response. She was limp, unconscious.
Shaken and terrified, he fell back on his medical training. He was a doctor. He knew what to do. He laid her on the couch, grabbed the portable phone, and dialed 911 as he checked her pulse and breathing. The pulse was weak and rapid. She breathed in labored gasps. She burned. The symptoms of acute respiratory distress plus fever.
He yelled into the phone, "Acute respiratory distress. Dr. Jonathan Smith, dammit. Get here. Now!"
The unmarked van was almost invisible beneath the tree on the street outside Sophia Russell's apartment. Above, a weak streetlight hardly pierced the night, giving the van's inhabitants exactly what they wanted--- darkness and camouflage. From the interior gloom, Bill Griffin watched the paramedic van, its beacons flashing blue and red, in front of the three-story condo building that blazed with light across the street.
Nadal al-Ha.s.san's hatchet face spoke from the driver's seat, "Dr. Russell should not have been able to leave her laboratory alone. She should never have reached this far."
"But she did both." Griffin's round face was neutral. In the darkness, his brown, mid-length hair was ebony. His big shoulders and muscular body appeared relaxed. This was a different, harder, colder man than the one who had met his friend Jon Smith just hours ago in Washington's Rock Creek park.
Al-Ha.s.san said, "I did what was ordered for the woman. It was the only way she could be handled without suspicion."
Griffin's silence covered the turmoil inside him. The sudden and unforeseen involvement of Jon was something he had never imagined. He had tried to warn Jon off, but al-Ha.s.san had sent Maddux after Jon in Washington before Jon even had a chance to think about running. That would have told Jon the warning was true, but with the woman attacked, too, Jon would not back away. How in h.e.l.l was he going to save his oldest friend now?
He and al-Ha.s.san had been waiting for the others to locate Smith again when the call from their spy inside USAMRIID, fake Specialist Four Adele Schweik, came in on al-Ha.s.san's cell phone. The motion sensor she had planted in Sophia Russell's office and lab had gone off, and when she had activated the hidden video camera, she had seen Sophia staggering from her office. She had rushed to Fort Detrick, but by the time she had gotten there, Russell had vanished.
"She couldn't drive in her condition," Schweik had told al-Ha.s.san, "so I checked her file. She owns a condo close to the fort."
They had driven straight to the building only to find the paramedics already there, and the whole building awakened by the commotion. There was no way they could get inside without attracting attention.
Bill Griffin said, "Only way or not, if she can talk and tells Smith too much, the boss isn't going to be happy. And look at this."
Four paramedics pushed a gurney out through the lobby doors. Jon Smith strode alongside the gurney holding the hand of the woman on the stretcher as he bent close to talk to her. He appeared oblivious to anything else. He went on talking and talking.