“He’s not moving. You hit him.”
Gorevitch took his position, raised the rifle, just in time to see a dark shape come plummeting downward. It was the orang, falling straight down from the canopy more than 150 feet above them.
The animal crashed to the ground at Gorevitch’s feet, splattering mud. The orang didn’t move. Hagar swung a flashlight.
Three darts protruded from the body. One in the leg, two in the chest. The orang was not moving. The animal’s eyes were open, staring upward.
“Great,” Hagar said. “Great work.”
Gorevitch dropped to his knees in the mud, put his mouth over the orang’s big lips, and blew air into his lungs, to resuscitate him.
CH052
Six attorneyssat at the long table, all shuffling through papers. It sounded like a windstorm. Rick Diehl waited impatiently, biting his lip. Finally Albert Rodriguez, his head attorney, looked up.
“The situation is this,” Rodriguez said. “You have good reason—sufficient reason, anyway—to believe that Frank Burnet conspired to destroy the cell lines in your possession, so that he could sell them again to some other company.”
“Right,” Rick said. “Fucking right.”
“Three courts have ruled that Burnet’s cells are your property. You therefore have a right to take them.”
“You mean, take themagain. ”
“Correct.”
“Except the guy has gone into hiding.”
“That is inconvenient. But it does not change the material facts of the situation. You are the owner of the Burnet cell line,” Rodriguez said. “Wherever those cells may occur.”
“Meaning…”
“His children. His grandchildren. They probably have the same cells.”
“You mean, I can take cells from the kids?”
“The cells are your property,” Rodriguez said.
“What if the kids don’t agree to let me take them?”
“They may very well not agree. But since the cells are your property, the children don’t have any say in the matter.”
“We’re talking punch biopsies of liver and spleen, here,” Diehl said. “They’re not exactly minor procedures.”
“They’re not exactly major, either,” Rodriguez said. “I believe they are ordinary outpatient procedures. Of course, you would have a duty to make sure that the cell extractions were performed by a competent physician. I assume you would.”
Diehl frowned. “Let me see if I understand. You’re telling me I can just grab his kids off the street and haul them to a doctor and remove their cells? Whether they like it or not?”
“I am. Yes.”
“And how,” Rick Diehl said, “can that be legal?”
“Because they are walking around with cells that are legally yours, hence with stolen property. That’s felony two. Under the law, if you witness a felony being committed, you are entitled to perform a citizen’s arrest, and take the offender into custody. So if you were to see Burnet’s children walking on the street, you could legally arrest them.”
“Me, personally?”
“No, no,” Rodriguez said. “In these circumstances one avails oneself of a trained professional—a fugitive-recovery agent.”
“You mean a bounty hunter?”
“They don’t like that term, and neither do we.”
“All right. Do you know of a good fugitive-recovery agent?”
“We do,” Rodriguez said.
“Then get him on the phone,” Diehl said. “Right now.”
CH053
Vasco Bordenfaced the mirror and reviewed his appearance with a professional eye, while he brushed mascara into the graying edges of his goatee. Vasco was a big man, six-feet-four and two-forty, all muscle, nine percent body fat. His shaved head and his trimmed, black goatee made him look like the devil. One big mother of a devil. He meant to appear intimidating, and he did.
He turned to the suitcase on the bed. In it he had neatly packed a set of coveralls with a Con Ed logo on the breast; a loud plaid sport coat; a sharp black Italian suit; a motorcycle jacket that readDIE IN HELL on the back; a velour tracksuit; a breakaway plaster leg cast; a short-barrel Mossberg 590 and two black Para .45s. For today, he was dressed in a tweed sport coat, casual slacks, and brown lace-up shoes.
Finally, he laid three photos out on the bed.
First, the guy, Frank Burnet. Fifty-one, fit, ex-Marine.
The guy’s daughter, Alex, early thirties, a lawyer.
The guy’s grandson, Jamie, now eight.
The old guy had vanished, and Vasco saw no reason to bother finding him. Burnet could be anywhere in the world—Mexico, Costa Rica, Australia. Much easier to get the cells directly from other family members.
He looked at the photo of the daughter, Alex. A lawyer—never good, as a target. Even if you handled them perfect, you still got sued. This gal was blond, looked to be in decent physical shape. Attractive enough, if you liked the type. She was too skinny for Vasco’s taste. And she probably took some Israeli defense class on weekends. You never knew. Anyway, she spelled potential trouble.
That left the kid.
Jamie. Eight years old, second grade, local school. Vasco could get down there, pick him up, collect the samples, and be done with this whole thing by the afternoon. Which was fine with him. Vasco had a fifty-thousand-dollar completion bonus if he recovered in the first week. That declined to ten thousand after four weeks. So he had plenty of reason to get it over with.
Do the kid, he thought. Simple and to the point.
Dolly came in, the paper in her hand. Today she was wearing a navy blue suit, low shoes, white shirt. She had a brown leather briefcase. As usual, her bland looks enabled her to move about without attracting notice. “How does this look?” she said, and handed him the paper.
He scanned it quickly. It was a “To Whom It May Concern,” signed by Alex Burnet. Allowing the bearer to pick up her son, Jamie, from school and take him to the family doctor for his exam.
“You called the doctor’s office?” Vasco said.
“Yeah. Said Jamie had a fever and sore throat, and they said bring him in.”
“So if the school calls the doctor…”
“We’re covered.”
“And you’re sent from the mother’s office?”
“Right.”
“Got your card?”
She pulled out a business card, with the logo of the law firm.
“And if they call the mother?”
“Her cell number is listed on the paper, as you see.”
“And that’s Cindy?”
“Yes.” Cindy was their office dispatcher, in Playa del Rey.
“Okay, let’s get it done,” Vasco said. He put his arm around her shoulder. “You going to be okay, doing this?”
“Sure, why not?”
“You know why not.” Dolly had a weakness for kids. Whenever she looked in their eyes she melted. They’d had a fugitive in Canada, ran him down in Vancouver, the kid answered the door and Dolly asked if her father was home. The kid was a little girl about eight, she said no, not there. Dolly said okay and left. Meanwhile the guy was driving up the street, on his way home. His darling kid shut the door, went to the phone, called her old man, and told him to keep going. The kid was experienced. They’d been on the run since she was five. They never got close to the guy again.
“That was just one time,” Dolly said.
“There’s been more than one.”
“Vasco,” she said. “Everything’s going to be fine today.”
“Okay,” he said. And he let her kiss him on the cheek.
Out in the driveway,the ambulance was parked, rear doors open. Vasco smelled cigarette smoke. He went around to the back. Nick was sitting there in a white lab coat, smoking.
“Jesus, Nick. What’re you doing?”
“Just one,” Nick said.
“Put it out,” Vasco said. “We’re heading off now. You got the stuff?”
“I do.” Nic
k Ramsey was the doc they used on jobs when they needed a doc. He’d worked in emergency rooms until his drug-and-alcohol habit took over. He was out of rehab now, but steady employment was hard to come by.
“They want liver and spleen punch biopsies, and they want blood—”
“I read it. Fine-needle aspirations. I’m ready.”
Vasco paused. “You been drinking, Nick?”
“No. Shit no.”
“I smell something on your breath.”
“No, no. Come on, Vasco, you know I wouldn’t—”
“I got a good nose, Nick.”
“No.”
“Open your mouth.” Vasco leaned forward and sniffed.
“I just had a taste is all,” Nick said.
Vasco held out his hand. “Bottle.”
Nick reached under the gurney, handed him a pint bottle of Jack Daniel’s.
“That’s great.” Vasco moved close, got in his face. “Now listen to me,” he said quietly. “You pull any more stunts today, and I’ll personally throw you out the back of this ambulance onto the 405. You want to make a tragedy of your life, I’ll see that it happens. You got me?”
“Yeah, Vasco.”
“Good. I’m glad we have an understanding.” He stepped back. “Hold out your hands.”
“I’m fine—”
“Hold out your hands.” Vasco never raised his voice in moments of tension. He lowered it. Make them listen. Make them worry. “Hold your hands out now, Nick.”
Nick Ramsey held out his hands. They weren’t shaking.
“Okay. Get in the car.”
“I just—”
“Get in the car, Nick. I’m through talking.”
Vasco got in the front with Dolly, and started driving. Dolly said, “He okay back there?”
“More or less.”
“He won’t hurt the kid, right?”
“Nah,” Vasco said. “It’s just a couple of needles. Few seconds is all.”
“He better not hurt that kid.”
“Hey,” Vasco said. “Are you fine about this, or what?”
“Yeah, I’m fine.”
“Okay then. Let’s do it.”
He drove down the road.
CH054
Brad Gordonhad a bad feeling as he walked into the Border Café on Ventura Boulevard and looked at the booths. The place was a greasy spoon, filled with actors. A guy waved from a rear booth. Brad walked back to him.
The guy was wearing a light gray suit. He was short and balding and looked unsure of himself. His handshake was weak. “Willy Johnson,” he said, “I’m your new attorney for the upcoming trial.”
“I thought my uncle, Jack Watson, was providing the attorney.”
“He is,” Johnson said. “I’m he. Pederasty is my specialty.”
“What’s that mean?”
“Sex with a boy. But I have experience with any underage partner.”
“I didn’t have sex with anybody,” Brad said. “Underage or not.”
“I’ve reviewed your file and the police reports,” Johnson said, pulling out a legal pad. “I think we have several avenues for your defense.”
“What about the girl?”
“She is not available; she left the country. Her mother is ill in the Philippines. But I am told she will return for the trial.”
“I thought there wasn’t going to be a trial,” Brad said. The waitress came over. He waved her away. “Why are we meeting here?”
“I have to be in court in Van Nuys at ten. I thought this would be convenient.”
Brad looked around uneasily. “Place is full of people. Actors. They talk a lot.”
“We won’t discuss the details of the case,” Johnson said. “But I want to lay out the structure of your defense. In your case, I am proposing a genetic defense.”
“Genetic defense? What’s that mean?”
“People with various genetic abnormalities find themselves helpless to suppress certain impulses,” Johnson said. “That makes them, in technical terms, not guilty. We will be proposing that as the explanation in your case.”
“What genetic disorder? I don’t have any genetic disorder.”
“Hey, it’s not a bad thing,” Johnson said. “Think of it as a type of diabetes. You’re not responsible for it. You were born that way. In your case, you have an irresistible impulse to engage in sex with attractive young women.” He smiled. “It’s an impulse that’s shared by about ninety percent of the adult male population.”
“What kind of a fucking defense is that?” Brad Gordon said.
“A very effective one.” Johnson shuffled through papers in a folder. “There have been several recent newspaper reports—”
“You mean to tell me,” Brad said, “that there’s a gene for sex with young girls?”
Johnson sighed. “I wish it were that simple. Unfortunately, no.”
“Then what’s the defense?”
“D4DR.”
“Which is?”
“It’s called the novelty gene. It’s the gene that drives us to take risks, engage in thrill-seeking behavior. We will argue that the novelty gene inside your body drove you to risky behavior.”
“Sounds like bullshit to me.”
“Is it? Let’s see. Ever jump out of an airplane?”
“Yeah, in the army. Hated it.”
“Scuba diving?”
“Couple of times. Had a hot girlfriend who liked it.”
“Mountain climbing?”
“Nope.”
“Really? Didn’t your high school class climb Mount Rainer?”
“Yeah, but that was—”
“You climbed a major American peak,” Johnson said, nodding. “Driving sports cars fast?”
“Not really, no.”
“You have five tickets for speeding in your Porsche in the last three years. Under California law, you have been at risk for losing your license all that time.”
“Just normal speeding…”
“I think not. How about sex with the boss’s girlfriend?”
“Well…”
“And sex with the boss’s wife?”
“Just once, a couple of jobs back. But she was the one who came on to—”
“Those are risky sex partners, Mr. Gordon. Any jury would agree. How about unprotected sex? Venereal diseases?”
“Just a minute, here,” Brad said, “I don’t want to get into—”
“I’m sure you don’t,” Johnson said, “and that’s not surprising, considering three cases ofpediculosis pubis— crabs. Two episodes of gonorrhea, one of chlamydia, two episodes of condyloma—or genital warts—including…hmm, one near the anus. And that’s just the last five years, according to the records of your doctor in Southern California.”
“How’d you get those?”
Johnson shrugged. “Sky diving, scuba diving, mountain climbing, reckless driving, high-risk sex partners, unprotected sex. If that doesn’t comprise a pattern of high-risk, thrill-seeking behavior, I don’t know what does.”
Brad Gordonwas silent. He had to admit the little guy knew how to make a case. He’d never thought of his life that way before. Like when he was screwing the boss’s wife, his uncle just gave him hell about it. Why, his uncle had said, did you make that kind of fucked-up decision? Keep it in your pants, jerkoff! Brad had had no answer at the time. Under his uncle’s glare, his actions did seem pretty stupid. The broad wasn’t even that good-looking. But now it seemed Brad had an answer to his uncle’s question: He couldn’t help it. It was his genetic inheritance that was controlling his behavior.
Johnson explained further, giving a lot of detail. According to him, Brad was at the mercy of thisD 4DRgene, which controlled the chemical levels in the brain. Something called dopamine was driving Brad to take risks, and to enjoy the experience, to crave it. Brain scans and other tests proved that people like Brad could not control the desire to take risks.
“It’s the novelty gene,” Johnson said, “and it has been named by the most impo
rtant geneticist in America, Dr. Robert Bellarmino. Dr. Bellarmino is the biggest genetics researcher at the National Institutes of Health. He has a huge lab. He publishes fifty papers a year. No jury can ignore his research.”
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