The First Patient
Page 17
Over the years, Gabe had encountered enough examples of the power of the mind-body connection not to be surprised by anything in that regard. But that was the mind-body connection within a person. The notion that there were individuals who could read the auras or minds of others still had not taken root for him. Now a man he respected to the point of reverence was claiming to be something of a living polygraph—a psychic of sorts.
Shingan.
"What does this ability have to do with the person in question here?" Gabe managed, finally.
"Well," Blackthorn said, "I am not sure I can completely answer your question. But I can tell you that the subject is lying about something, or withholding information."
"Lying about what?"
"I don't know. But whatever it is, is powerful. I felt it almost every time he spoke, regardless of the subject. There is more to your man than we know or he lets on. Perhaps much more."
"But—"
"It may be that in decoding and interpreting the tests I administered something will become clearer. For the moment, what I have told you is all there is."
"And you feel pretty strongly about this shingan . . . this ability of yours?"
Kyle Blackthorn lifted his head so that he was facing Gabe directly. The lights behind Gabe reflected eerily off Blackthorn's dark glasses.
"I feel as strongly about my ability," he said, "as I do about the fact that you have chosen not to tell me that the blood samples you drew on our patient have disappeared."
CHAPTER 29
The attractive woman and her striking young companion wandered down Beechtree Road in no particular hurry, speaking nonstop and animatedly, often punctuating their conversation with laughter. Alison had grown up around both Spanish and Creole French and was competent, if not fluent, in both. From a distance, unable to hear distinctly even through the open car window, she sensed that they were speaking Spanish.
At the fourth or fifth cross street, Foster, the pair turned right. Alison cruised past them for two blocks, checking their progress through the rearview mirror, then turned onto a side street, drove half a block down, and waited. If she had blundered by assuming the pair were going to stay on Foster, she would have to decide whether it was worth driving around to find them again. Perhaps she should call off the stakeout for the time being, determine the owner of the Porsche and of the elegant Victorian home on Beechtree, and try again another time. Two tense minutes later, the women crossed the side street where Alison was parked and continued down Foster. She left her notes and field glasses on the floor of her Camry and headed after them.
Foster was a busy commercial street, though still with a small-neighborhood feel. The facades of the bistros, specialty stores, and other merchants had been refurbished for a number of blocks, giving the area a surprisingly quaint charm. Walking briskly, Alison followed the pair from across the street until they turned into A Place for Nails, a small salon, one door from the corner of Foster and Coulter.
Half an hour for the manicure and polish, Alison figured, followed by fifteen or twenty minutes in the drying chair or whatever they used. Fifty minutes—an eternity for someone like her, cursed with the patience of a gnat. It was doubtful the two would go anyplace that would shed light on who they were and how they were connected to the president's number-one protector. The only option seemed to be to speak to them directly.
WALK-INS WELCOME, a sign in the window encouraged. Alison examined her nails, which she kept in decent shape for work but did not feel comfortable covering with any color.
As she approached the girl at the counter—Southeast Asian, as were all the manicurists in the salon Alison had gone to shortly after her arrival in D.C.—she realized that she had caught a huge break. There were four manicurists in A Place for Nails. Two were starting work on the woman and the girl, and one was chattering in badly broken English with a blue-haired woman in her eighties. The fourth was at the counter, welcoming Alison with a cheery smile.
"You have time for me?" Alison asked, holding out her nails.
"Oh, bad, very bad," the woman said, her speech nearly identical to that of the girls at the salon in D.C. "What you do? Wash dishes? Build houses?"
From her spot in the first chair, the girl from Beechtree Road peered up to check out the newcomer. Clearly Hispanic, she was even more stunning than Alison had appreciated through the binoculars. It was difficult to tell if she wore any makeup, but there was certainly no need. Her light mocha face was smooth and stress free, with dark, doelike eyes, long lashes, and full, sensual lips. Beneath her ochre tank top, her breasts were already diverting, though not, Alison guessed, nearly as exciting to men as they would be in another year or so.
The girl's older companion was seated with her back to the counter and so missed the brief connection that was taking place. Her charge, if, in fact, that was their relation, smiled somewhat demurely, then lowered her wonderful eyes and turned her attention back to the manicure.
"Actually," Alison said to the manicurist, still totally uncertain as to what was going to follow the word, "I run a day care. Children."
Alison could tell by the woman's expression that she was not the least bit interested.
"Choose color," the woman said, motioning to a rack of perhaps eighty small bottles. "Choose, then come."
Alison noted that the chair in which she would be done was catty-corner from the older of Griswold's females. Funny, she mused, that she should think of them that way, even though she had absolutely no clue as to how they and the legendary agent were connected. She hurried over to the rack and quickly selected Marooned on a Desert Isle. She had only a limited time to insert herself into the lives of the two women, and if she made a poor choice in colors, there was always the salon back in D.C.
"Soak. . . . Soak here," the waiflike but clearly controlling manicurist ordered. "What you do to nails?" she mumbled to herself, shaking her head in utter dismay. "What you do?"
Alison risked a glance over at the woman across from her. She had probably been too lost in the girl to notice, but this woman, probably in her early twenties, was, by anyone's standards, nearly as striking. Thin and open in her manner and expression, she was a bit darker skinned than the girl. The woman's eyes were wide and innocent, and her high cheekbones and sensuous mouth were the stuff of cover girls.
Okay, Alison thought to herself. Be careful, but not too careful. . . . It's showtime.
"What color did you choose?" she ventured as the icebreaker.
The woman was clearly used to people starting conversations with her and didn't seem to mind.
"I always use Red Anything Good Lately?"
Her English was excellent, with just enough of a Latino edge to make clear that Spanish had once been her primary language. Alison checked the bottle.
"Great name. Great color. I work with kids, so I'm happy when my nails make it for a week."
"Nails bad," the manicurist muttered. "Very bad."
"You run a day-care center. I heard when you were at the counter. Is it near here?"
"No. Actually, it's outside of Fredericksburg. I came down to meet some friends for dinner, but I'm early."
Actually. Alison decided that as often as not, the word introduced a lie—at least in her world it seemed to.
Actually, I'm an astronaut. . . . Yeah, that's it, an astronaut.
Lying had never been pleasant for her and, in fact, she had never been very good at it, but in preparing to go undercover she had been trained in the art and had proven to be quite educable. She wondered if, when this assignment was done, she would be able to undergo some sort of debriefing to reconnect with the honesty she had packed away.
"Oh, I love children," the woman said. "I look forward to having some, myself, one day."
"I'm sure you will. My name's Suzanne."
Error! Alison realized. Fredericksburg . . . child care . . . Suzanne. She had already offered way too much information. As facile as she had become at bending and even mauling the trut
h, she had lost sight of the fact that if the woman reported on their adventure at A Place for Nails, Griswold had all the resources he needed to assure himself that, in all probability, no such combination existed. Having established that fact, he might be much more alert than he otherwise had reason to be. If nothing else, from now on he would be paying much more attention to his rearview mirror.
"And I am Constanza . . . Connie."
"Pleased to meet you, Connie. You two are together?"
She nodded toward the girl.
"Yes."
"Is she your sister?"
The smallest cloud passed over the woman's upbeat expression, then vanished.
"No," she said benignly. "Beatriz is . . . just a friend. I am her . . ." She paused, searching for the right word. "Tutor."
She hadn't prefaced her explanation with the word actually, but she might as well have.
Alison decided to push things just a bit.
"Hello, Beatriz," she said to the girl. "I'm Suzanne."
The remarkable beauty smiled over at her.
"Hello, pleased to meet you," she said, her English densely accented. Then she lowered her eyes again to focus on her nails. Her response was packaged, as if she had learned it from a tape . . . or from her tutor.
Hello.
Hello, pleased to meet you.
"Goodness, but she is very beautiful," Alison commented.
"I know," Connie said. "Her English is improving, but she is still embarrassed by it."
"Yours is nearly perfect. Are you both from the same place?"
Keep digging! Alison exhorted herself. Keep searching for some sort of opening you can begin to probe.
"Yes, Mexico," Connie said, "but not the same city."
"Oh, I should have been able to tell. I spent years as a child living with my grandmother in Chihuahua. Beatriz, ¿dónde vas a clase?"
Where do you go to school?
The girl looked up, nonplussed.
"She is tutored at home," Connie said, quickly and somewhat uncomfortably.
The blue-haired lady had repaired to the small drying area, and the pair were nearing the end of their manicures. They might choose to sit in the drying area as well, or they might simply leave. They didn't seem like the type who would risk smudging, but Alison worried that her question about school may have made the tutor willing to take the risk. She could back off and hope to learn more another time through surveillance, or she could push on and risk further alerting the woman or, worse, having her inadvertently alert Griswold. As things were, Alison's manicurist was in overdrive, and she had nearly caught up with the others.
A young mother wheeled her sleeping infant into the salon and entered into an animated discussion with the available manicurist. Alison decided to risk a little more probing.
"¿Vives con familia?" she asked, hoping that Beatriz might perk up and join the conversation. Do you live with relatives?
"No, well, yes," the woman replied in terse English. "An uncle."
Beatriz stood up at that moment, extending her glistening, wet nails in front of her and turning toward the dryers. She was surprisingly tall, Alison realized—and unselfconsciously regal in her bearing. Her lithe body, highlighted by her designer jeans and tank top, was absolutely arresting. A surpassingly lovely pubescent Mexican girl . . . a beautiful, young tutor . . . no relatives in Richmond except a probably bogus uncle . . . residence in a magnificent old home that almost certainly belonged to some secret incarnation of Treat Griswold. Alison felt queasy as her mind spun through the possibilities.
More information, she thought. Try for more.
"What does her uncle do here in Richmond?" she asked in English.
"Beatriz, just a few minutes of drying, then we leave," Connie said in Spanish, gingerly carrying her cell phone to the seat next to the girl. "He is a salesman," she said over her shoulder to Alison.
"There, nails were ugly, now perfect," the bellicose manicurist announced. "Now, go dry."
The drying stations were three opposite three. Alison took one across from Beatriz and Connie, trying to frame a question that would further elucidate Griswold's relationship to the two of them while also gauging when she could ask it without seeming too curious.
"I just broke up with my boyfriend," she tried, in English. "He turned out to be a real jerk—you know, all he cared about was himself. Your uncle wouldn't by any chance be single, would he?"
Beatriz clearly understood, because she looked down and was unable to fully stifle an impish grin.
"He is single," Connie said, "but he works very hard and has no time for any women . . . except for his niece."
Again, the sly smile from Beatriz.
Alison's queasiness intensified. Something was going on between Griswold and the girl. The deepest parts of Alison's intuition were telling her so.
"Ah, well," Alison said. "A man wrapped up in his work is not exactly what I had in mind. I want one who will be all wrapped up in me."
It was time to stop. She had been luckier than she could have ever anticipated being. Now she could drive back to D.C. and ponder the big question: Was there any possible connection between what she had learned about the man today and his misuse of the president's inhaler?
The ring of Connie's cell phone—"La Vida Loca"—burst in on Alison's thoughts.
Expertly careful of her nails, Connie answered it, speaking in a polite half whisper that it was still impossible for Alison not to hear.
"Yes? . . . We are doing fine. . . . She's perfect. Very happy. . . . She chose Scarlet O'Hara, your favorite. . . . Yes, she misses you. . . . Well, we'll be home soon. . . . It is still early. If you wish to go for a ride in the country with her, that would be fine. You know how she loves riding with the top down. . . ."
Again, a restrained smile from Beatriz.
"Dígale que venga a buscarme," the girl said softly.
Tell him to pick me up.
CHAPTER 30
Shingan.
Blackthorn was registering at the front desk of the airport hotel when he first became aware of the man, standing not far away to his right. It was his heartbeat that first caught Blackthorn's attention—less than forty a minute, with startling power in every contraction. The man was standing virtually motionless, taking eight or ten deep, even breaths each minute.
Power, Blackthorn thought. Power and danger.
Blackthorn picked up his overnight bag and briefcase and headed toward the elevator. The man followed but stopped as Blackthorn knelt and fumbled with the latch on his briefcase until an overweight man and his equally overweight wife moved past him, both breathing heavily from just the simple act of moving.
"How're you doing?" the large man muttered to the dangerous one, who grunted irritably in reply.
The four of them entered the car, with the man taking a position far enough to Blackthorn's right not to make contact. He was five-foot-ten and wore no cologne or other scent. Blackthorn's mind's eye conjured an image of dark hair and dark eyes that were constantly focused on him.
On the third floor, the doors glided open to let the large couple out. Blackthorn waited until the last instant and followed, even though his room was 419—a floor above. The doors closed completely and didn't reopen. Eschewing his cane, Blackthorn followed the couple to where their room was and then passed them and found the staircase at the end of the hall. Perhaps he had misread the man and the situation, he was thinking. His instincts weren't always perfect.
Trying to envision where his room might be located, he entered the corridor of the fourth floor and felt the numbers on the first two rooms—430 . . . 428. He took his electronic key from his pocket and crossed the hall. 425 . . . 423 . . . 421.
"One more," the man's voice said quietly and calmly, in a pronounced southern drawl. "Four-nineteen, that's what the registration girl said. Four-nineteen. Move naturally or you're dead. You know I'll do that, don't you."
"I do."
The soul of the man was as cold as d
eath.
Blackthorn felt the muzzle of a gun press into his side. He felt stunned that he hadn't detected the man in some way when he opened the stairway door. It was as if he were made of ice.
"Slip the key in the lock, open the door, and go on in. Quickly now."
The man's smooth speech belied his power. Blackthorn sensed that unless he took action, he was not going to live through this encounter.
He set his briefcase down, widened his stance, and began nervously attempting to insert the key in its slot. The man was a professional; he felt certain of that. Not a professional thief—a professional killer.
"Please, please," Blackthorn whimpered as he positioned the key. "I don't have much money, but you can just take what I have. And . . . and my watch. Take my watch."
"The door, open it!"
Blackthorn knew that in the cluttered hotel room he would be totally at the gunman's mercy. Whatever he did had to be now, right here, in the corridor. He had taken years of martial arts—karate for a time, then aikido, the way of spiritual harmony. He had the skill to reverse the situation against most men, but this one, this man of ice, was different.
The only advantage he felt certain of was that the man with the slow, measured speech couldn't know Blackthorn had no intention of allowing them both to enter the room. Before he engaged the key, the psychologist stiffened his body. Then, as he felt the muzzle of the gun move slightly away from his side, he spun, swinging his overnight bag in a sharp, vicious arc against where he knew the gunman's hand and wrist had to be. The gun clattered against the wall, and Blackthorn sensed the man diving for it.
In one movement, Blackthorn jammed the key down into the lock, opened the door, and pulled it closed behind him. Two bullets snapped through the wood next to the door handle, but the bolt held.
"Hey, what's going on?" a man's voice called out from down the hallway. "Barbara, the guy's got a fucking gun! Get back inside and call the desk!"