'Let me.' Orlando reached for the towel, then nodded toward the door that led back into the living room. 'Your friend out there probably has a few questions,' she said, her voice flat.
Reluctantly, he nodded, then let her take the towel.
He found Sophie sitting at her kitchen table, an open bottle of wine and a tumbler, half full, keeping her company. Her hands were clasped in front of her, almost like she was praying. But her eyes were wide open, staring at them, or, rather, staring through them.
He pulled out the chair opposite her and sat down. A closer inspection of the glass revealed the rim was dry. She had yet to take a drink.
She lifted her eyes to meet his. 'What's going on, Jonathan? Who is he?'
'I told you. He's a friend. A colleague.'
'And the woman?'
'The same.'
'Colleagues both? People you work with?'
He hesitated. 'Yes.'
'This doesn't seem like bank business.' She was referring to his cover. 'Sophie –' He was interrupted by a loud, short buzz coming
from the living room. Sophie looked over her shoulder toward the sound, then turned back to Quinn. 'Someone's at the front door,' she said, surprised.
'It's okay.' Quinn rose and headed for the door that opened to the landing at the top of the stairwell.
'Who is it?' Sophie asked.
'Help,' Quinn said.
Dr. Garber was Quinn's medical contact in Berlin. He had been in the business for a long time and was a specialist at this type of work. A late-night call for immediate assistance at some out-of-theway location. No notes taken, no records kept. Only the care of the patient, and the exchange of cash. Quinn had called him on the drive over to Sophie's.
The doctor spent half an hour with Nate while Quinn, Orlando, and Sophie sat in the living room, the only noise coming from the TV Sophie had turned on. The two women didn't even look at each other. They seemed to be lost in their own thoughts. As for Orlando, Quinn could almost feel her nervous tension. He knew she wanted to keep moving, keep looking for Garrett. Sophie was not only tense, but seemed confused and scared as well. There were several times Quinn wanted to say something to her, but he always stopped himself. His words would be meaningless, and liable to provoke Sophie more than comfort her. Instead he listened idly to the droning voice of a newscaster reciting the day's news: concerns over a proposed industrial facility in Dresden, preparation for an EU conference in Berlin, and an update on a story about a German tourist killed while on vacation to Central America.
When Dr. Garber finally came out of the guest bedroom, Quinn stood quickly.
'Without doing any real tests, I don't know exactly what they gave him,' the doctor said. 'Something to keep him under control, I'd guess. Not for the pain.'
'Will he be all right?' Quinn asked.
'With some rest,' Garber said, 'he should be able to get around soon. But I wouldn't count on him being one hundred percent for quite a while.
Along with the facial lacerations, one of his ribs is broken. At some point he dislocated his shoulder, too. It's been reset, but there's much tenderness and inflammation around the joint. I have left some medication on the table next to his bed.'
'When can we move him?' Quinn asked. 'Two days,' Garber said. 'Two days?' Sophie shot up. 'He's not staying
here two days. Take him to the hospital if he needs so much help.' 'Sophie,' Quinn said evenly, 'I told you that's not possible. I know I'm asking a lot.' 'I don't understand. No hospital? If he's your
friend, you would take him there.' 'He's safer here,' Orlando said. Sophie glared at Orlando. 'You, I don't know
who you are. Don't tell me what's safe or not. Don't
even talk to me.' 'Sophie –' Quinn started. 'Who is she?' Sophie pointed at Orlando. 'Is she
your lover? Is that what this is?' Quinn took a breath. 'She's not my lover. She's
my colleague.' 'I don't believe you.' 'I swear, Sophie. We work together.' 'And your friend in there? You work with him,
too?' 'Yes.' 'What kind of work that someone beats your
friend up? That you can't take him to the hospital?' Quinn sighed. 'You have to trust me. I need your help. This is the safest place I could take him.'
Sophie took several deep breaths, each a little longer than the last. Her shoulders started to sag slightly.
'He is really your friend?' she asked, her voice now quiet, almost defeated.
'Yes,' Quinn said.
A pause. 'Two days?' Sophie asked, looking at the doctor. 'No more than that,' he replied. She was silent for a moment. 'All right. Two days. Then you take him away.'
'Thank you,' Quinn said.
Dr. Garber headed toward the door. 'I'll be back in the afternoon,' he said to Sophie. 'Quinn will give you my number if you need me sooner.' Sophie looked at Quinn. 'What about you two? Are you leaving, too?' 'Orlando will,' Quinn said. 'I'll stay until morning. But then I have something to do.'
Sophie was silent for several moments. 'Fine,' she said, then turned and walked into her own bedroom, shutting the door behind her.
Chapter 33
The night had been a restless one. Quinn had spent most of it in a wooden chair next to Nate's bed. He wanted to be there if his apprentice woke, but Nate barely stirred. In the morning he reluctantly returned to their makeshift base on Karl Marx Strasse.
'How is he?' Orlando asked. She was sitting on one of the chairs, the monitor on the floor beside her.
Quinn unfolded the other chair and joined her. 'The same.'
She looked at Quinn. There were dark circles around her eyes. 'They're not going to be happy we found him.'
'You're right,' he agreed. 'Did you sleep at all?' 'What if Piper or Borko does something to Garrett now?' she asked, ignoring his question. 'That's the last thing they'll do,' Quinn said. 'He's the only leverage they have over us.' She took a few deep breaths, then said, 'There's something you should see.' 'What?'
'When I got back here after I left you last night,
I checked the cameras in the plant again.' 'And?' 'At some point, someone put a bunch of boxes
in the basement. It had to have been while we were following Borko. The boxes weren't there before.' 'Something from the delivery van that was parked
at the door?' Quinn asked. 'Could be.' 'Show me.' She picked the monitor up off the floor and
turned it on. The screen flashed to life. There was a view of one of the rooms in the basement.
'Those the boxes?' Quinn asked. There were several of them, some sitting on the worktable and several more on the floor.
'Yeah,' she said. There was hesitation in her voice. 'What?' Quinn asked. Orlando stared at the monitor. 'What?' Quinn repeated. 'There are only fourteen boxes,' she said. 'So?' 'Last night there were twenty.' Quinn looked at the monitor. Silently, he counted
the boxes. She was right. There were fourteen. 'Are those labels on the boxes?' Quinn asked. 'Yes. But I wasn't able to get in close enough to
one to read it.' 'The sphere,' Quinn said. Orlando switched to a live view inside the
containment room. Quinn's eyes grew wide in surprise at the new image. 'I don't think this is good,' Orlando said.
There were four people in the room. All were dressed in bio-containment suits. Two were at the worktable against the wall on the right. On the table was a box that matched those still in the basement, its top open. On the floor were three more boxes, stacked. They looked like they were still sealed. Near the door, almost out of the camera's range, were the last two boxes. These were open and empty.
The other two men were positioned in front of the safety cabinets in the center of the room. One of the men had his arms and hands shoved into the cabinet nearest the door, while the other man looked on.
'What are they doing?' Orlando asked, pointing at the men standing at the worktable.
They were removing the contents of the open box. What they took out looked to be smaller metal boxes in groups of ten, stacked double-wide a
nd held together by shrink-wrap.
Each man lifted a stack out and set it on the table. They then removed the wrapping and placed the smaller boxes side by side on a tray, popping each of them open as they did so. When the tray was full, two stacks' worth of tins, one of the men carried the tray to the center workspace and slipped it through a slot at the bottom end of one of the safety cabinets.
As the man was carrying the tray to the cabinet, Quinn was able to get a glimpse inside the tins. They were empty.
The hatch on the safety cabinet was now closed. The man who had brought the tray over had returned to the boxes at the other table. The man who was at the cabinet had removed his hands from the protective sleeves that allowed him to work inside the unit.
There were several buttons across the bottom of the cabinet. The man pushed one of them, and something in the cabinet moved.
As Quinn and Orlando watched, the bottom of the cabinet slid open. The tray that had been slipped in underneath it rose up. The man put his hands back into the sleeves. On the inside wall of the cabinet was a small shelf, and on the shelf was a container holding what appeared to be dozens of penny-size white pellets. They were rounded so that the middle was thicker than the ends. Quinn knew they had to have been the same ones he'd seen the men stowing in the small refrigerators earlier. The man at the cabinet removed the pellets one by one and placed them in the tins. Each box held six.
'Mints?' Quinn said.
'What?' Orlando asked, but Quinn's attention was fully on the monitor.
It took a while, but when all the tins were full, the man closed the tops on each box. That done, he removed his hands from the sleeves and pushed another button on the case. The tray dropped downward, and the bottom of the cabinet closed above it.
The man then pushed another button. Up from the bottom of the second cabinet came the same tray of tins. When they were securely in place, the second man turned a dial on the cabinet. The entire cabinet instantly filled with a fine mist.
'Is that. . . ?' Orlando left the question hanging.
'Disinfectant?' Quinn asked.
She nodded.
'Something like that, probably,' Quinn said. 'Only a lot stronger than what you can pick up at the market, I'd guess.'
'So the stuff inside the tins . . . ?'
'Is hot,' Quinn finished for her.
Quinn now knew what the delivery device was going to be. An innocent tin of candy. Brilliant. The agent had either been applied to the outside of the mint, or contained inside somehow. Quinn guessed the latter was the more likely. He was also able to surmise something about the biological agent itself. If it was fast-acting, the convention would be shut down and all the participants quarantined, so it couldn't be anything that would show up right away. It had to be something with a long incubation period. Could that have had something to do with the 'tailoring'Taggert had told Burroughs about? And how did it relate to the IOMP convention? That had been Duke's tip.
Quinn paused.
Duke.
'Son of a bitch,' Quinn said.
'What?' Orlando asked.
'I think I know how they're planning on distributing everything.' 'How?' 'Grob Promotions,' Quinn said. 'I should have seen it before.'
'What's Grob Promotions?' she asked.
'Duke owned a company called Grob Promotions,' Quinn said. 'It was one of the stops he made that morning I followed him. At the time I didn't care what they did, because I didn't think it mattered. But it does. When I went online to find out more information about the convention, there was something I read, only it didn't hit me at the time.'
'What?'
'Something like "IOMP Berlin managed by Grob Promotions."' Quinn began pacing the floor in thought. 'If so, that means Grob is handling all the promotion and running of the convention. Including,' he said, looking at Orlando, 'the preparation of gift bags.'
'Gift bags?'
'All of the registered attendees receive complimentary gift bags when they check in. It was on the website. Inside there'll be brochures, convention information, pencils, pens, buttons, and, if I'm right, a tin of mints.'
'You said the convention doesn't start for nearly a week,' she said. 'Why would Borko's deadline be tomorrow? It's too soon.'
She was right, Quinn knew.
'Maybe we're wrong. Maybe the convention isn't ground zero,' she said. 'If that's the case, they could be targeting almost anything.'
Right again.
Quinn looked back at the screen. Work continued in the containment room, but he wasn't really watching anymore. He had a decision to make. A decision, he quickly realized, with only one answer.
'It doesn't matter what the target is,' he said, sounding far more sure of himself than he actually was.
'You're going to try and stop them, aren't you?' she asked.
'I'm going to get Garrett back,' he said. 'And at the moment, the only way I can figure out how to get to Dahl. . . to Piper, is to steal something that's valuable to him.'
'The mints,' she said, her face brightening as she realized his plan. 'We get them, we can trade them for Garrett.'
'Something like that,' he said. It was leverage they sorely needed. He didn't even want to think about what would happen if the candy was distributed.
'We're still going to have to do this alone,' he said. 'If we call anyone in, Piper will find out and he won't hesitate to kill Garrett.' He paused. 'We're it.'
She smiled. 'Good by me.'
From outside, Quinn heard a loud truck pass by the front of the store. There were people on the sidewalk, too. Laughing, talking, arguing. Sharing just another moment in the day. People who, if Quinn did nothing, might not make it to the end of the year.
Orlando's voice suddenly cut through the noisy silence. 'The Mole called right before you came in. He wants you to call him back.'
'Did he say what he wanted?'
'He wouldn't tell me,' she said, an angry tremor in her voice. 'I tried but he said he'd only talk to you.'
Chapter 34
Quinn left the store and headed southeast on Karl Marx Strasse toward Neukölln station. On the way over, he used the number Orlando had given him and called the Mole.
'I received . . . your payment . . . it was more than . . . expected.'
'Consider it an advance on future requests,' Quinn said. 'Orlando said you have some information for me.'
'Something has actually come . . . to us in the last . . . hour . . . concerning the location of. . . Orlando's son.'
'The picture?'
'Not. . . the picture . . . Garrett left. . . Vietnam the day after Orlando did . . . he was with a man . . . Caucasian . . . they flew to Hong Kong . . . but from there no more trace.'
'That's the whole description?'
'The man . . . may have had an . . . accent . . . Australian.' Tucker, Quinn thought. Of course. 'How did he get him out of the country?'
'He claimed he had . . . adopted Garrett . . . he presented all the . . . correct paperwork.' 'Son of a bitch,' Quinn said. Piper had planned things well. 'As for the picture,' the Mole went on. 'There is nothing . . . to tell yet.'
'It is faked, then,' Quinn said.
'No . . . we don't. . . believe so.'
Quinn paused, digesting the information. 'But you don't think you can place the location.'
'It is . . . possible . . . there are . . . some geological markers . . . that may help us . . . but I don't think . . . very likely.'
Quinn couldn't remember seeing any markers, geological or otherwise, but if there were, that was something anyway. A chance.
'This isn't why you called me earlier, though, is it?' 'I think perhaps . . . you have . . . made a misjudgment . . . concerning the situation.'
'What misjudgment?'
'The bio-agent,' the Mole said.
'The IOMP convention isn't the target, is it?'
'Then . . . you already know.'
'I wasn't even sure of that,' Quinn said. 'If you know more, tell me.' There was a lo
ng silence. 'It is very. . . ambitious,' the Mole began.
'Remember . . . we only had the . . . damaged tissue . . . sample to work . . . with . . . nerve tissue it . . . turns out. . . still . . . we could only . . . guess.'
'But you know what it is, don't you?'
'We were able . . . to download . . . the documents from the . . . address . . . on the bracelet.' 'You figured out the password?' Quinn said, surprised.
There was a pause. 'Yes.'
'What did you find?'
'Two files . . . a document. . . and a video clip.'
'And?'
'The document. . . contains a breakdown . . . of the virus . . . it helped us to . . . understand why it was . . . not easily categorized . . . it has been tailored.'
'Tailored?'
'The document . . . had a brief note from Jansen . . . shall I read it . . . to you?'
'Okay,' Quinn said, unsure he really wanted to hear.
'"The attached breakdown is what. . . the people paying. . . the bills have . . . dubbed an act of. . . purification,"' the Mole read. '"What they believe . . . their scientists have created is basically . . . a genocide bug . . . designed specifically to . . . affect a targeted . . . population . . . what they could not. . . achieve in war . . . they think they . . . can achieve with this . . . new form of. . . ethnic cleansing."'
The world around Quinn seemed to disappear. The cars, the trucks, the people. He could hear none of them, see none of them.
'These are individuals . . . who . . . think in old ways,' the Mole said, no longer reading. 'Some ancestral fights . . . never seem to end . . . particularly when the . . . objects of their anger . . . share the same land . . . the same water . . . the same air . . .
I would say by the . . . identity of the virus . . .
base . . . the level of hatred . . . is extremely harsh.' 'So you do know what the base is?' 'It was difficult to . . . determine that at. . . first
because . . . of the alterations . . . but Jansen's documents told us . . . what . . . to look for . . . call it. . .
a . . . supervirus . . . resistant to treatment. . . including previous . . . inoculations . . . easy to spread.'
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