by Jonathan Lowe
First Digital Edition published by Crossroad Press
Copyright 2011 Jonathan Lowe
Copy-edited by Erin Bailey â Cover Design by David Dodd
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I felt my stomach growl.
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The early June sun hadn't visibly appeared, but was already spreading orange marmalade and butter onto the crusty horizon.
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Then, three miles from downtown Alexandria, in the middle of a field where a dairy farm had once been, the
Tactar
Pharmaceuticals plant suddenly loomed above the hill beyond the city.
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The three story glass and steel structure appeared dark, except for a few lights on the second floor.
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Its silhouette was haloed by a streak of distant clouds that caught the doomed colors of morning.
I parked in my usual spot, and surveyed the other cars already there.
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Half a dozen in the half light, not counting two plant security vehicles.
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Ominously, there were three police cruisers, flashers off since this was a private lot off a private road.
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Getting out, I looked up to tally the office lights in the administration section of the building . . .
My own office, Jeffers' office, and two others.
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So
Winsdon
had not been summonedâyet.
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Jeffers was keeping this low key, whatever it was.
I took the elevator, utilizing my security badge.
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After emitting a ping, the elevator's stainless steel doors whispered open on the second floor.
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Treading along the hallway like a burglar might, I felt my heartbeat quicken in my temples.
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Then, with unusual trepidation, I approached the open door of my own office, and stuck my head inside to see Jeffers waiting for me just outside the entrance to the lab.
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The V.P. wore a blue pullover sports shirt, and sneakers, as though late for an early round of golf at his country club.
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Two uniformed officers stood at the shattered window behind him, where a plainclothes detective took a fingerprint sample.
“Sir?” I said.
Jeffers whirled.
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Staring directly at me, as if at a recalcitrant son returning to the scene of some embarrassing indiscretion, he addressed the officers behind him.
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“He's here,” was all Jeffers said.
This time it was clearly different.
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The conference table had a towel laid across part of its mahogany surface, on top of which had been placed a tray of Danish pastries, a couple basic
Krispy
Kremes
, and a coffee urn.
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It was 7:45 a.m. now, and other employees had already begun shuffling past the slightly open door on the way to their own offices.
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Only I, Jeffers, a detective named
Schimmer
, and a sullen Kevin Connolly remained in the room.
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We served ourselves with the aid of paper napkins.
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Were we waiting for
Winsdon
?
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I dreaded asking, and so remained silent until Jeffers answered my question by shutting the door on the hallway.
We all sat.
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Jeffers took
Winsdon's
usual seat at the head of the table.
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Schimmer
took out his note pad, and clicked his pen to the ready.
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Connolly cocked his head as though detecting the high pitched sound of a dog whistle.
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Then Jeffers frowned and looked at me steadily, a peculiar light in his eyes.
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“Who knew about this on the outside, Alan?”
I found that a perplexed agitation had gripped me.
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I glanced from side to side, then down at my Danish in disbelief.
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I picked it up, wondering whether to eat it or throw it at some hidden target.
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“Well . . . no one, sir,” I muttered.
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“I did write an article, as you know, but it was short on specifics, and only hinted at what we might be doing.
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In the future, I mean.”
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I took an experimental bite of the roll, then followed it with a sip of strong, acidic coffee.
I met Jeffers' frozen gaze, and
Schimmer's
.
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The detective's pen hovered over his pad.
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Glances were exchanged between Connolly and
Schimmer
.
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Finally Jeffers lifted and then lowered his own cup.
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“Industrial espionage from a spy in our ranks, is that what you're saying?”
I chewed and swallowed, ignorant of taste but thankful for the cover of food as an interrogation aid.
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I tried to remain calm.
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“I'm not . . . saying anything, sir.
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But it is possible, isn't it?”
The others stared at me.
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They looked dubious.
Then Jeffers nodded with thoughtful deliberation.
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“Point of entry was made with a glass cutter.
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Alarm bypassed, because we're talking the second floor.
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No prints, though.
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And the guard somehow missed it all, too.
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So you think it didn't happen that way?”
I shrugged and swallowed nervously.
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“Unless someone talked.
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Doesn't seem likely to me someone would bring a ladder here in the middle of the night.
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Did you check to see if the glass was cut from the inside or not?”
Schimmer
straightened.
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“It was made from the outside,” the detective declared.
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“But the other window could have been opened to do it.”
Jeffers confirmed his assent with a nod.
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“So it's possible someone was planning to change jobs, Alan.
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Someone covering himself by stealing the data files on your gene research, and destroying all the computer backup.
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We know it's not Jim Baxter, now.”
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He paused, and leaned forward.
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His eyes narrowed painfully, as if he were undergoing a prostate exam.
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“Who else would do that, do you think?”
I grinned in shocked reflex.
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“Not me, if that's what you mean.”
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I tilted up my coffee cup slightly, my sip sounding like a slurp in the silence that followed.
After a moment, Jeffers finally leaned back, and picked up his own cup.
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“Help us to understand why you're not involved in this, would you, Alan?”
“Well, it's crazy, that's why,” I told him.
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“What would I gain?”
“How about an
up front
bonus?” Connolly suggested.
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“Preliminary patent process hadn't even begun.”
I set down my cup a little too hard, letting out what must have seemed to them like a cackle.
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“I can't believe this.
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You're accusing me?
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I couldn't get away with something like this.”
Connolly was unfazed.
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“Maybe you just sold the process to the highest bidder,” he postulated.
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“Eli Lilly or Warner-Lambert?”
I couldn't help laughing.
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“What?
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I thought the project was a failure.”
“We're not accusing you of anything, Alan,” Jeffers conceded, then examined his manicured nails.
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“It's all rather academic at this point, anyway.”
“What do you mean?”
Slowly, the three men exchanged glances, as if trying to decide who should break the news to me.
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The thing I'd obviously missed.
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Jeffers, as boss, was unanimously nominated by default.
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“There's been an . . . accident.”
I stared at them each in turn, in dumbfounded incomprehension.
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I felt as if I'd never known these men.
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Any of them.
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Like I'd just been ushered into an airport conference room, where these FBI agents and FAA investigators suspected I am the one who had checked six pounds of C4 shaped like a Grecian urn onto a plane that would carry their children across the ocean.
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“Accident?”
At lunchtime I drove Darryl out of the plant parking lot toward a restaurant downtown, so we could talk.
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On the way I was expecting Darryl to complain about having to ask his wife to drive him to work that morning.
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But he didn't.
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Instead, he wanted to know why all the secrecy about the cops leaving the plant when he arrived.
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I didn't reply at first, taking the turn roughly onto the public road fronting the
Tactar
plant.
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Then, when he persisted in asking me what was wrong, and what I knew, I finally said, “It's all for nothing.
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A year's work, down the tubes.
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And what do I get for it?
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A reassignment to
Hepker's
division.
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But hellâmaybe the world needs a better headache remedy.
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I know I do.”
Darryl stared at me dumbly.
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“How's that?”
“They call it pain management.
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Should be a blast.
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Hepker's
division is researching a less expensive non-opiate to ease the suffering of cancer patients, who might not be dying at all if the FDA wasn't twiddling its thumbs and diddling itsâ”
“You're serious?” Darryl interjected.
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“You've been reassigned?”
“That's a big ten-four, good buddy.”
“But why, for God's sake?”
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He paused, then his eyes widened with the terrible light of connection.
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“The police . . . you.
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. .”
“It wasn't me.
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But whoever it was, they had great timing.”
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I explained the theft, fumbling my way to the bitter end, although I left out the twisting climax.