The Pawn pbf-1

Home > Suspense > The Pawn pbf-1 > Page 23
The Pawn pbf-1 Page 23

by Steven James


  “Spies, mind control, assassins, a suicide cult, a massive government cover-up…” said Ralph. “Whew… this would make one killer video game.”

  Lien-hua and I just looked at him and shook our heads.

  “What?” he said sheepishly. “It would.”

  “So anyway,” I said to Lien-hua, “do people actually believe this stuff?”

  “Some very influential people believe this stuff.”

  “And what do you think?”

  She took a deep breath. “Truth is, no one knows how many died willingly that day. There were armed gunmen surrounding the pavilion carrying AK-47s. Jones’s followers were isolated, territorial, paranoid about the government, and, for the most part, loyal to him. You choose-do you want a bullet in the back, or do you join the rest of your family and closest friends and give your children the ‘medication’? Do you try to fight off the whole community, or let someone you love press a needle against your arm? For most of them, it was at least coerced suicide, if not murder.”

  “Wait a minute,” I said. “Does the term Q875 mean anything to you? Terry said it was a tape of some kind.”

  She tapped her fingers on the table thoughtfully. “Well, that would make sense. Jones liked to record himself. The government found hundreds of his messages-talks, sermons, whatever you want to call them. When the FBI went in to clean up the place, they collected all the tapes and archived them. Then, back in 2000 or 2001 most of them became available to the public through a Freedom of Information Act request.”

  “We need to listen to that tape,” I said to Ralph.

  “Turn on your computer,” said Lien-hua. “It’s probably on the Internet.”

  While I searched online, she continued, “Speaking of tapes and Jonestown and the CIA, Jones actually recorded his final talk as he convinced all the people to die together. It’s called the Death Tape. I listened to it when I was doing his profile. Very creepy. He called their action ‘revolutionary suicide.’ Anyway, on that tape, he tells his men to get Dwyer out of there, meaning away from the pavilion.” “Who’s Dwyer?” asked Ralph.

  “Richard Dwyer was an official in the American Embassy in the city of Georgetown, Guyana. By nearly all accounts he was a CIA operative sent to infiltrate Peoples Temple. Although when he was asked about it later during the congressional investigation, he said, ‘No comment.’”

  “Unbelievable,” I mumbled. “There’s even evidence a CIA agent was there when it all started.”

  As it turns out, we didn’t have to search far to find tape Q875. Someone had posted it online. I downloaded the audio file, hit play. It was chilling. Throughout the tape you could hear radio announcers in the background talking about Congressman Ryan’s death and the rumors of mass suicide the day before at Jonestown.

  The day before.

  Which meant Q875 had been recorded on November 19, 1978. The day after everyone at Jonestown was already dead.

  We listened to the whole thing. Twice.

  Then again.

  Static… a radio announcer talking about the tragedy… a chair squeaking… a few voices in the background, someone saying “Shh!”… the sound of people moving around, opening and closing drawers… someone sneezing… an announcer mentioning that there would be autopsies performed on Ryan and the others, and then the garbled sound of one of the people there in the cabin muttering curses… more news reports about Jonestown… someone saying “Shut up!”… a screen door slamming… static.

  “That is very, very eerie,” said Lien-hua. “Whoever made this tape did it with nearly one thousand corpses lying nearby.”

  “I wonder if they’ve ever done a voice analysis on it,” I said.

  Ralph shook his head. “Speech segments are too short.”

  “So this tape was recorded on November 19”-I was thinking aloud-“the day after everyone supposedly died. Why?”

  “What I wanna know,” said Ralph, “is if everyone at Jonestown died on the 18th, who made the tape?”

  “What tape?” asked someone in the doorway.

  We turned.

  Margaret.

  Aaron Jeffrey Kincaid, the Father, the Master, removed a black and white photograph of three smiling children from the wall. A blowing ocean of wheat fields stretched behind them and ended at the base of a lush jungle. He tilted the photograph in the gentle, dancing candlelight. These children had been waiting in line when he ran into the jungle. Even now, thirty years later, he remembered their names: Jacob and Isaiah and Emilia. He remembered seeing them giggling and teasing each other as they waited for their turn to drink from the vat, just like schoolchildren might do while waiting in line beside the drinking fountain at recess.

  “We are not committing suicide,” Kincaid remembered hearing Jim Jones say as the people lined up. “It’s a revolutionary act. To me death is not a fearful thing, it’s living that’s treacherous.”

  Living is treacherous.

  Kincaid turned to David. “We are in the business of sowing beliefs. And we must be ready for whatever fruit those beliefs produce. Both in our lives and in the lives of those we teach.” He put the picture down next to one of the candles.

  “Yes, Father.” David’s voice rang with resolve.

  Kincaid knew that David was a true believer. He had already made significant sacrifices, had already proven his devotion. Yes. Kincaid was proud of his son.

  “And do you know the rest of the verse, David? The rest of the words of the Nazarene?”

  A short pause and then, “No, Father. Forgive me.”

  “‘A good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit, neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit. Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit is hewn down, and cast into the fire.’ Matthew chapter seven.” As he said the words he stared intently at the photograph. Then he turned to look at his pupil. “We are about to cast the tree that does not bear good fruit into the fire. The corrupt tree cannot be allowed to grow any longer.”

  “Yes, Father.”

  Kincaid set the picture back on the shelf. “I’ll join the others soon, David. Tell them to begin with the children.”

  “Yes, Father.” Then, without another word, David bowed deeply and backed out of the room.

  Kincaid watched him go. Yes, beliefs bring forth fruit, and now the whole world would see the depth of his beliefs. The media elite and the United States government would taste for themselves the bitter fruit they had sown when they hunted down, harassed, and then defamed his family.

  For a few more moments he watched the candlelight flicker and reflect. Flicker and reflect. Illuminating his faces of the children.

  Then he blew out the candles so that he was once again alone in the darkness, with the stars blinking at him through the night. A family of daggers puncturing the sky. How many stars were in the sky, he did not know: to him there were 909-one of each family member who died in the jungle.

  Always 909 points of light piercing the darkness.

  Then, he reached up with his hand and felt his shoulder, the scar that had started it all.

  Some scars are meant to be caressed forever.

  53

  Ralph worked at briefing Margaret while I slipped off by myself to get some work done on the revised geo profile. We had twice as much work to do now. The case had split in half: we had the Jonestown angle and the yellow ribbon guy. It’s supposed to get easier the more you work on these things, not harder.

  I eliminated Alexis and Bethanie from the equation and reworked the numbers. The results weren’t bipolar this time. New hot spots appeared, much more focused. New names floated to the top of the tip list.

  And Grolin’s was one of them. He moved up from 113 to 8.

  I tried to remind myself that my role in this case was to help focus the investigation, not nab one specific suspect, but it didn’t really help. I wanted to get this guy. When he brought my daughter into it, he made it personal. Her life might be in danger. I hated to think what he might do to Tessa if he ever got his hand
s on her.

  Also I wasn’t too happy that he tried to blow me up.

  In addition, we still had no leads on where the rest of Jolene’s body might be. I was almost afraid to find out. I decided to follow up on the possibility that someone on the team was the copycat killer. I brought up the names of everyone who had access to the case files and medical examiner reports and found sixty-two names. Wonderful.

  Ralph stalked over to my desk.

  “How’s Margaret doing?” I asked.

  “Shell-shocked, but I didn’t say so,” said Ralph.

  “Gotcha.”

  He shook his head. “She told me she’s going to take care of investigating this cult.”

  “What?” I said. I noticed Lien-hua coming over to join us.

  “Yeah, it was kind of strange. When I told her about the tape and the connection to Bethanie and the governor, she said we would need someone running point on that part of the investigation and she wanted to do it. Told me she wants us to focus on bringing Grolin in.”

  “Doesn’t that seem a little odd to you?” asked Lien-hua.

  He shrugged. “I dunno. Pat?”

  “Hard to say. She might want some distance from the guy who put the body in her trunk. Maybe this will help her deal with it. Maybe it just seems like the right political move. Who knows.”

  “In any case,” Ralph continued, “she mentioned that earlier this afternoon Brent interviewed Grolin’s girlfriend, a nurse named”-he consulted his notepad-“Vanessa Mueller. Brent said she was acting suspicious, really jumpy. Vanessa said she has no idea where Grolin is, but Brent’s been following her all afternoon just in case.”

  “So that’s where he’s been all day,” I said.

  “Yeah. So here’s what I’m thinking. Tomorrow we can work with Margaret and see where this whole Jonestown angle takes us, but if there’s any chance we can bring Grolin in now, I think that’s where we should focus our efforts.”

  “Agreed,” I said. “He’s the immediate threat, especially if he’s going to go after the woman with the red hair.”

  “That reminds me,” said Lien-hua, “I talked to Brent earlier. They’re still working on those prints. We should have them in sometime tomorrow.”

  “That might not be soon enough,” said Ralph. “Since we don’t know who the next victim is yet, I think we should stake out the girlfriend’s place tonight. See if Grolin shows up.”

  “Good call,” I said.

  Ralph scratched at the late-day stubble on his chin. “Only problem is, Wallace’s men are stretched thin-there’s a music festival just outside of town tonight, and the Network of Concerned Evangelicals doesn’t like the bands. They’ve announced they’re going to protest and-”

  “I could do it,” said Agent Lien-hua.

  “Huh?”

  “The stakeout.”

  “You’re not here to sit around on stakeouts.”

  “Um, I could work the stakeout with Agent Jiang,” I said.

  He looked at me quizzically. “Neither are you.”

  “No, it’s all right,” I said. “It’ll give me a quiet place to think things through. Besides, I had a nap this afternoon. I’ll be fine.”

  He still looked hesitant, but then he yawned. He’d been going nonstop all day. Just the mention of a stakeout seemed to make him more tired. “Well, I guess that’ll work.”

  “Good,” I said.

  “All right. Take nine to midnight-that way you can still get a little sleep later on. I’ll get Wallace to find someone for the late shift. After all, you are driving to Charlotte tomorrow morning.”

  I nodded.

  “Coordinate it all with Tucker,” he said. “You want mic patches?” Ralph was always trying out the military’s new toys. The high-tech mic patches came from some of his friends in the army. Special ops. Each patch is nearly transparent and the size of a plastic strip bandage. You wear it just beneath your ear; it works as both a transmitter and a receiver. It also emits a long-range homing beacon. Very sleek, high-end stuff. Problem is, the digital router automatically records everything you say. And I wasn’t sure I wanted that on this particular stakeout.

  “Naw, twentieth-century walkie-talkies,” I said, “if that’s OK by you?”

  He shrugged. “Fine with me.” Yawned again. “I need some sleep.”

  “Go play some video games,” I said.

  His eyes lit up. “Yeah. I could do that.” He nodded. “All right. So Tucker can run point from here, and we’ll notify the police department to have a couple cars on standby in case anything goes down.”

  “Got it.”

  “I’ll see you two tomorrow,” he muttered and walked off.

  We had just under an hour before we needed to be at the stakeout. Lien-hua went to change and clean up. I called Tessa and left a message that I’d see her in the morning. Then I did a little more work analyzing the abduction locations, and before I knew it Lien-hua had returned and I was climbing into her car to head to Vanessa Mueller’s house.

  54

  Lien-hua pulled over to the curb, flipped off the headlights, and eased the car to a stop, leaving the keys in the ignition just in case we needed to get out of there fast. She had changed into a tailored green silk blouse. I told myself I shouldn’t be taking note of things like that, but I couldn’t help noticing that she was looking good.

  Vanessa Mueller lived in a quaint two-story house with black trim and a wide porch. The house looked like a pale yellow dream in the moonlight. We sat staring at it for a few minutes. The light in the living room was on, and I could see Vanessa sitting on the couch watching television. Thankfully her home was an older design and had only a front door, making it easier to stake out-no rear exit to cover.

  I heard the keys jangle as Lien-hua bumped them reaching for her coffee. She cleared her throat slightly. “So, you have a daughter.”

  I was momentarily confused. I couldn’t remember telling her that I had a daughter… oh yeah, Ralph had asked why I wasn’t picking her up at the airport. “Stepdaughter, actually. Yeah. She’s seventeen. Her name is Tessa.”

  “What’s she like?”

  “Well, she’s smart, street-smart. A survivor. She’s tough.”

  “Tough? Anything else?”

  “Um… she likes to wear black.”

  “Well, what does she like to do?”

  I shifted in my seat. “I don’t know. Listen to music. Hang out with her friends.” Where are you going with this?

  Lien-hua didn’t say anything for a few moments. Finally she added, “So you’re not too close then?”

  I took in a long, slow breath. Man, Pat, she can read you like a book. “No. Not really.”

  A short silence and then, “How did she handle her mother’s death?”

  I began to fidget with my pen. “OK, I guess. We don’t talk about it much. So do you think Grolin’s going to show up?”

  “Do you talk about it at all?”

  I was beginning to regret volunteering for this stakeout. “Christie’s death was hard on both of us. Truth is, Tessa and I have never been all that close, and after her mom died, it just got worse-”

  Suddenly I felt Lien-hua’s hand press gently against my left arm. It unnerved me and somehow comforted me, brought me back to the moment.

  “I’m sorry,” she said, “I didn’t mean to… We don’t have to talk about-”

  “No. It’s OK,” I said, but I wasn’t sure that it was.

  She pulled her hand back, laid it on her thigh.

  I took a slow breath. “One in every eight women in North America is diagnosed with breast cancer. Did you know that?”

  “No. I didn’t.”

  “Neither did I. A year ago.” I could feel the familiar tightening in my chest, the desperate helpless feeling you get when you look back over your shoulder at something painful from your past; something that haunts you but is also a part of you. You try to run from it, but it’s always right there, breathing down your neck. It’s not true what
they say. Time doesn’t heal all wounds. Sometimes it just throws salt on them and laughs as you squirm.

  “What about Tessa’s father?”

  I shook my head. “She never met him. Christie was in college when she got pregnant. He took off when she told him the news. Never saw the guy again.”

  I heard Lien-hua mumble a few words about him that I was surprised she knew.

  “Yeah. My sentiments exactly.” I sipped at my coffee. “What about you?”

  “What about me?”

  “Ever married?”

  “Just to my job.”

  I tried to think of something fitting to say to that but couldn’t. I sipped the really bad coffee and almost had to spit it out. It tasted like hazelnut-flavored motor oil. I set it back down and decided to change the subject. “Work many stakeouts before?”

  “Not so many.”

  “How many?”

  “Counting tonight?”

  “Yeah,” I said.

  “Well. That would make one.”

  I laughed a little. It felt nice.

  She turned to face me. “You?”

  “Lots in my early years when I was a detective in Milwaukee. I guess some people get used to them. I never really did. I’m too antsy. I hate sitting still. I always need to be doing something, solving something. I like stakeouts about as much as I like briefings.”

  “But yet you volunteered for tonight.”

  “Yes. I did.”

  I looked out the window at Vanessa’s house. No change.

  A car drove past us, and we watched its taillights shrink into the night. As they disappeared Lien-hua said, “I don’t think he’ll come.”

  “Who?”

  “Grolin. I don’t think he’s going to show.”

  “Oh,” I said. “Yeah I think you might be right.” I peered at the quiet house. “So, what about you, Lien-hua. You know all about me, what’s your story?” It was an innocent question.

  “Well, there’s not much to tell, I guess.” She tipped her coffee back, took a long, slow sip. “I graduated from Washington State University with a master’s degree in criminal science. Then I worked for a while as an officer in DC.”

 

‹ Prev