Текст книги "Taken"
Автор книги: Chris Jordan
Жанры:
Триллеры
,сообщить о нарушении
Текущая страница: 17 (всего у книги 19 страниц)
42 ask dr. google
Sherona looks like a very plump and very serious cat who has succeeded in swallowing a somewhat difficult canary.
“They all know the boy,” she announces moments after sliding into the passenger seat, displacing an aggrieved Mr. Yap. “Nurses, janitors, everybody. He’s a sweet boy and they love him.”
“How sick is he?”
“Sick as they get,” she says. “Been in a vegetative state for six weeks. Feeding him through a tube, like they do.”
“Vegetative state?”
“He’s there and he’s not there. Nurses say he’ll look right at you and smile, but it’s just a reflex. Some habit of the muscles and brain. He can breathe on his own, but that’s about it. Mostly likely, he’ll never improve.”
“Oh, my God.”
Dead but not dead, I’m thinking. The ultimate nightmare.
“He’s on a heart pump,” Sherona continues. “I asked about a new heart for the poor boy, the nurses look all hurtful and say he’s not a candidate for transplant. They think his daddy’s taking him home to die.”
“That’s the destination he gave? New London?”
Sherona nods. “You think that’s where he’s at?” she asks doubtfully.
“No chance,” I say. “The guy is a technical whiz, but he’s not a heart surgeon. He’s got a plan, a destination.”
At that moment Connie returns and I have to get out and move into the back seat with the nervous Pekingese.
“Hope you did better than me,” she says to Sherona, sounding sheepish. Looking into the rearview mirror to make eye contact, she adds, “Sorry, Kate, the records are in the business office and the office is locked and this security guy threatened to have me arrested if I didn’t quit messing with the doors.”
“Tommy’s brother is in a coma,” I tell her. “He’s dying.”
“It sounds so strange, that Tomas has a brother,” she says almost wistfully. “I can’t get used to the idea. Coma, huh?”
“You want to know where the ambulance took the boy, right?” Sherona interrupts, no patience for chitchat or lame excuses.
“More than anything,” I tell her.
“Best get back on the road,” she suggests firmly. “Ambulance service has a dispatcher. Let’s see what he says.”
She directs us to a chain-fenced parking facility several miles from the hospital. A district of freight warehouses and trucking firms. We park in the street, but even before we get out, the dogs are barking. Attack dogs inside the perimeter of the chain-link fence that encloses a number of boxy, orange-and-white-striped medical transport vehicles. The dogs are showing a lot of teeth. Not what you’d call a friendly location. As we approach the main gate—Sherona in the lead, all business—motion detectors set off bright lights and an armed security guard emerges from a metal shack, yawning.
As it happens, the guard is Caucasian, but ethnicity is no immunity to Sherona’s persuasive charms. Within three minutes he’s apologizing for the barking dogs—he does not control the animals—and explaining that the heavy security is necessary because, as he puts it, “the junkies think an ambulance is a drugstore on wheels.”
“We never leave narcotics in the unattended vehicles, but that don’t stop ’em from breaking in,” he adds. “Now, what can I do you ladies for?”
Out of politeness he’s addressing all three of us, but it’s Sherona who has his undivided attention. I’d been aware of our pastry chef’s impressive skills in the kitchen, but this is my first experience watching her mind-meld with males. It’s uncanny, and Connie and I look at each other and shake our heads. Not so much a sexual allure on Sherona’s part, more a way of presenting herself that makes men want to please and protect her. This from a woman almost as wide as she is tall. Makes me realize that her shyness around me on the job, and with Connie, as well, apparently has more to do with the racial divide and class distinctions than any lack of confidence on her part. Out here in the big bad, black-and-white world, Sherona is Oprah and Dr. Phil all rolled into one, and I’m fortunate to have her on my side.
Sherona gives the guard an abbreviated version of what’s going on, and asks may she please confer with the dispatcher. It’s three in the morning, but the guard affects to find this reasonable and makes a phone call from the shack.
“Hank’s waiting for you,” he says, and seems more than a little disappointed that our charismatic colleague will be passing out of his orbit.
The building that contains the dispatching center for Hale Medical Response is directly across the street, behind an iron-barred door. Sherona lets it be known that it might be better if she approached the dispatcher on her own.
“That’s fine,” I say. “That’s great.” And refrain from adding, “You go, girl,” only because I don’t want to come across like some sort of wannabe to the sisterhood.
Connie and I wait in the car, fretting while Sherona does her thing.
“Who knew?” Connie says. “Is this the same woman who spent six months in a shelter for the abused?”
“Amazing, huh? I wish Shane could see her in action—he’d probably offer her a job. If we’re still in business after this is over, she gets a raise. You, too.”
“Oh, we’ll be in business,” Connie says confidently, reaching over to pat my hand.
Mr. Yap, no doubt jealous, climbs into her lap and nuzzles at her chin. Connie coos at him softly, eyes keen for the door to the dispatcher’s office.
Fifteen minutes pass. More than enough time for the strange fit of giddiness to be displaced by another heavy dose of dread. My very blood feels heavy, turgid. It’s true that tremendous progress has been made in the last eight or nine hours. The man in the mask has been identified and his motive revealed. But he’s still out there in the wind, heading for an unknown rendezvous where, I am absolutely convinced, my son will die. It’s all happening now, today, in the dog hours of the night, and every minute we idle here, our quarry is another minute farther on down the road. Another minute closer to taking Tommy’s life.
My mind supplies the next phrase—if he hasn’t already done so—but I force that terrible possibility out of my thoughts. No room for doubt. Doubt is fatal. Watching Tommy’s teammates taught me that, if nothing else did. The kids who doubted they could hit the ball never made contact. At best they closed their eyes and swung just to get it over with. Whereas the better players like my son never doubted they’d make contact, never stepped into the batter’s box anticipating failure. Each swing was a stroke of confidence, even if the result was a whiff or a pop-up.
Connie and I both inhale sharply as Sherona exits the barred door and strides purposefully to the car. Her strong arms pumping like a majorette leading a parade. The determined expression on her face letting us know that something is up, facts have been learned.
“All kinda things going on,” she announces, panting just a little as she settles into the passenger seat. “Best get you back on the highway. Go south.”
She doesn’t have to tell Connie twice. As we glide through the deserted streets of the freight district, Sherona fills us in. “Silly kind of man,” she says. “Keep sayin’ how I’d make a good wife for somebody like him, when he means exactly like him. But he knows about the missing ride, that’s what counts, right?”
“Missing ride?”
“That’s what they call the vehicle, the ambulance. Call it a ‘ride.’ Four rides on the street, six more in the lot on standby. Upstairs, above where the dispatcher works? They’ve got a bunk room, like for firefighters. I ask do they slide down a pole, he says no. Never mind about that. The ride that picks up the Cutter boy, he’s a driver name of Tim. Tim’s real reliable, always calls in, keeps in touch, like they do. Only he doesn’t keep in touch. I ask can the radio break, he tells me sure, the radio can break but they also got the cell phone.”
“So they think the ambulance has been hijacked?”
“Something like that. When Tim doesn’t call, Beavis checks him out on the locator.”
“Beavis?”
Sherona looks slightly embarrassed. “The dispatcher. Beavis isn’t his real name, his real name is J.D. or some kind of initial name, but I’m callin’ him Beavis cause he’s a butt head. Okay?”
“Okay.”
“Beavis, he’s got this satellite thing going. Look on the computer screen, all his rides are showing. Knows exactly where they are at all times. Driver stops to pee, Beavis knows about it.”
A GPS locator. It makes sense an ambulance service would use the latest technology to monitor its fleet of vehicles. It’s all I can do not to rub my hands with glee. We’ve got him.
“Beavis sees Tim driving south on the highway instead of north to New London, he tries to get him on the squawk. That what the fool calls his radio, a squawk. Minute later the ride stops at the Route 90 exit, at a rest area, and the locator stops working. Ride disappears from the screen.”
My spirit plummets. What was I thinking? The man in the mask—Cutter, Kate, his name is Cutter—he knows about GPS locators. He used one on my minivan, the day I transferred the money. The query from the dispatcher confirmed that the diverted ambulance had a locator, and Cutter silenced it.
“Beavis, he calls the cops, reports a stolen ride. Say they’ll get right on it. Beavis say, ‘Don’t hold your breath.’”
“But the last known location was 287. Heading into Westchester.”
“From 287 you can go south, hook into the Sawmill, get you into the city,” Sherona points out.
“Or go north, up along the Hudson, all the way to the Tappan Zee,” Connie adds. “Face it, 287 could be just one road on the way to anywhere.”
“What do we know?” I ask them. “We know he has his comatose son in a stolen ambulance. We know the boy needs a heart transplant. How many places can do that, in Westchester, or in the metropolitan area? A few, a dozen?”
“No idea,” says Connie. “But I can find out.”
“How?” I ask eagerly. “You know a heart surgeon we can call up at this hour?”
“Sort of,” Connie says, grinning at me in the rearview mirror. “We’ll make a pit stop at my place and ask Dr. Google.”
While Connie boots up her home computer, I make another call to Maria Savalo, expecting the usual dump to voice mail. Amazingly enough, the real deal answers, bright and chipper at four in the morning.
“Once again, don’t give me your location,” is her first admonition.
“I’m in the company of friends,” I tell her. “What’s the word on the FBI? Any positive response?”
The cell connection isn’t that great, but good enough to transmit her sigh. “Had to call in a favor and get home listings for a couple of the special agents who work out of the New Haven bureau, because, of course, the office won’t officially reopen until 8:00 a.m. Figured I’d try some of the working stiffs in addition to the agent in charge. Kind of stir things up.”
“How’d that go?”
“Not well. Threatened to prosecute me for harassment. Apparently there’s an obscure statute forbidding the transmission of an agent’s home number.”
“So they’re not going to do anything?”
“I didn’t say that,” Maria says. “As a matter of fact, I get the distinct impression they’ve opened an active investigation. But these are guys who keep their lips zipped for a living. They’ll never admit to anything, even when they’re doing the right thing.”
Exasperated, I say, “Got a pen? I’m going to give you the tag numbers for the ambulance Stephen Cutter hijacked. My guess is he’s swapped the plates already, disguised the vehicle somehow, but it’s all we’ve got to go on. Last located on 287, heading west. Route 90 exit. Give the highway patrol a heads-up.”
“I’ll be darned,” Maria says with a chuckle. “You sound like Randall Shane.”
Ignoring that, I continue, “Hale Medical Response has already notified state police in the tristate area. What they’ll do about it is anybody’s guess. They may assume it’s just another hijacking for drugs.”
“I’ll make a few calls, see what I can find out.”
“Have you spoken to Jared Nichols?”
“I got him out of bed,” Maria admits.
“So you’ve got his home phone number. Is that a violation of the law, too?” I add caustically.
My lawyer mumbles something. I ask her to repeat.
“Didn’t have to use the phone,” she says. “Jared and I are engaged. We’ve, um, been living together for the last six months.”
The mind boggles—my lawyer and the prosecutor in bed, literally. “Isn’t that a conflict of interest or something?” I ask lamely.
“We’re pretty careful about that,” Maria says somewhat defensively. “If anything, it’s to my client’s advantage. I never tell Jared about a case, not one word, but I sort of know what he’s up to, depending on who he’s scheduled a meeting with on any given day.”
“Whatever.” The fact is, there’s no room in my fevered brain for worrying about my lawyer’s domestic and professional entanglements. “We’re checking hospitals and transplant centers and so on,” I tell her. “Seeing if we can determine a likely destination. I’ll let you know.”
“Kate, if you find the guy, call the locals, okay? Let the cops handle it.”
I feel my face growing hot. “Like they’ve handled it so far? My son is going to die in the next few hours if I don’t find him. So far the cops haven’t done anything but screw this up. Last I heard, they didn’t even believe there was a kidnapper.”
“I’m sure that’s changed, thanks to you and Shane.”
“Maybe. I hope so. But I have to assume nothing has changed, that I’m the only one searching for Tommy. If they prove me wrong, great. But I’m not stopping until I have that little boy in my arms, do you understand?”
“Perfectly.”
I end the call just before the tears start flowing again. How much can a body take before overdosing on adrenaline and anxiety? Guess I’m about to find out.
Connie and Sherona are huddled in front of her monitor.
“What have you got?” I want to know.
“So far so good,” Connie says, working her mouse as she clicks through Web sites. “There are nine transplant centers in the metropolitan area. All associated with major hospitals or medical schools. Locations in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Long Island, a couple in New Jersey.”
My heart sinks. “So many? I thought two or three, max.”
“Sorry, no. There are about a 150 centers nationwide, and a fair number of them are in the northeast. Says here there are about 2,300 heart transplants a year. That’s a lot of surgeons, a lot of hospitals.”
“Any obvious military connections?”
“Not that I can find. If there are any military facilities for cardiac transplants in the area, they’re not popping up.”
Weary but agitated, I plop into a seat, tent my hands over my tired eyes. “Let’s think about this. I want to get my son a new heart, where do I go? Remember, the nurses told Sherona that Jesse Cutter wasn’t a candidate for a transplant. If he was, none of this would be happening. The man in the mask—Cutter—he’s trying an end run, outside the usual channels. Outside the system somehow. He can’t just show up at an E.R. and demand surgery, right?”
“I wouldn’t think so.”
“Therefore he must have a place that’s willing to handle an illegal procedure. Or if not exactly illegal, then outside the rules. Does that make sense?”
“Unfortunately, yes,” says Connie.
“See what Google comes up with when you put in ‘transplant surgery’ and ‘lawsuit.’”
Connie keys it in, clicks on the button. “Ten thousand hits,” she says, sounding frustrated.
“Try searching results with ‘New York’ and ‘controversial.’ Cutter has to find a way in. Maybe he researched it on the Internet, just like us. We’re looking for something edgy. A flaw he can exploit.”
“Down to five hundred,” Connie announces.
“Search results with ‘unethical,’” I suggest. “See if we can find a back-alley transplant surgeon.”
Sherona grimaces. “This ain’t an abortion, honey. Can’t do it in a back alley or a storefront.”
“Fine,” I say, unable to mask my irritation. “The high-end version. A hospital that cuts corners, breaks the rules, whatever.”
“Hmm,” says Connie, her prominent, elegant nose almost touching the screen. “This is interesting. Didn’t pop up with the other transplant centers for some reason.”
“Hospital? Medical school?”
“Nope. Better. A private clinic with a clientele of celebrities and the superwealthy.”
The hair tingles on the back of my neck. A private clinic for the wealthy. Which means the place is all about money. And the man in the mask didn’t just take my son, he took all of our money, too.
“Go on,” I urge her.
Connie’s grinning—obviously she’s found something. “According to the New York Times, they’ve been sued for ignoring the federal guidelines for organ donation, specifically the waiting list for liver transplants. Seems they obtained a liver for a famous rock musician who ruined his own liver shooting drugs. Quote—‘one-stop organ shopping, with an all-star transplant team ready to deliver, provided the price is right.’”
“What about heart transplants?”
“It’s not the thrust of this particular article, but there is a reference to a heart-lung transplant for a Saudi prince. Once again, the prince wasn’t on the approved list, but the clinic got around that somehow. Reporter says it’s not like there are federal regulators hanging around the operating rooms. Quote—‘It’s basically an honor system. The major medical centers follow the guidelines, but private clinics can make their own rules.’”
“Where is this place?”
“Scarsdale,” she says, grinning like a kid who knows that teacher is about to award a big fat gold star. “That’s what they call themselves. The Scarsdale Transplant Clinic. And it’s right off 287.”
43 a pair in the hole
Dr. Stanley J. Munk paces the loading dock, puffing on an unfiltered Lucky Strike cigarette. Another personal vice unknown to his wife. The occasional stench of smoke on his clothing he always blames on others—patients, partners, one of the surgical nurses, whoever. Fact is, he only smokes while under stress. Stress, in his life, is not defined as surgery. He loves to cut, loves being in control of an anesthetized life. Stress he reserves for financial, professional or marital difficulties. He’s not sure where this particular situation fits into the scheme of things, but if it goes wrong it could encompass all three areas.
One thing he’s surmised, the man who calls himself Paul Defield is not only dangerous, he’s quite possibly becoming psychotic. Over the last few hours Munk, awakened at three in the morning, has received half a dozen cell-phone calls from the man, and he sounds not only aggressive but increasingly disorganized. Not at all the icy control freak who claimed to be a special agent for the FBI masquerading as a cop. A claim Munk now doubts. But if not a government agent, what is he? How did he get access to electronic and computer surveillance so sophisticated that Munk, something of techie himself, has never even heard of it?
Whatever his sources or methods, the man managed to crawl inside Stanley Munk’s skin, shared his secret life for a time. That alone makes him hideously dangerous. As for the proposed surgery, Munk remains confident that if things blow up legally he can successfully argue that he cooperated under duress. Which happens to be true. Other than whatever medical records Defield may or may not provide, he has no actual knowledge of the prospective patient or the prospective donor. It’s not as if he’s personally gone out on the black market to illegally obtain an organ, which if discovered would likely cause the revocation of his license to practice medicine and therefore endanger the partnership. From the beginning, Munk and his partners have been exquisitely careful about that particular distinction. Patients or the families or associates of patients have always obtained the necessary organs, at whatever the going rate. Thus providing plausible deniability, and legal cover, if not ethical purity.
Munk glances at his Rolex. Almost six in the morning. The days are so long this time of year that the sun has been up for more than an hour. Looks like a beautiful day on the way. Clear blue skies, perfect temperatures. A day to play hooky if ever there was one. Savoring his images, his trophies from the last junket.
Best not to think about that now.
His role in the transplant surgery will require something less than six hours, barring complications. Assuming that all goes well, and he’s able to remove Mr. Defield from his life, Munk has decided that he will reward himself with a spur-of-the-moment trip to Bangkok, or possibly Manila.
Definitely Manila. He’s due for a change, for something new. He can feel the anticipation building like a small, refreshing wave. In his mind, Dr. Munk is entering a certain room, wondering what, exactly, he will find beyond the beaded curtains, when the ambulance backs into the loading dock.
New Jersey plates, he notices. Is that where Defield hails from, some sweaty little suburb in the Garbage State?
The EMT gets out, advances to the dock. Light behind putting him in silhouette.
“Morning, Doctor.”
In the warmth of a summer morning, Munk shivers. He recognizes the voice.
“Everything groovy?” the man who calls himself Defield wants to know as he comes up the steps. “Team assembled, ready to go?”
“No problem,” says Munk. Chill is over and now he’s sweating. “Strictly routine.”
“What did you tell them? Son of a rock star?”
Munk shrugs, attempting to embody a casualness he does not feel. “State Department connection,” he says. “Child of an important diplomat.”
“The ambassador’s boy. I like that. Very classy.”
“Rock-star connection, somebody might tip off the press.”
In the blink of an eye, Defield is on him, rushing him backward until they both slam into the painted cinder-block wall at the rear of the loading dock.
“Are you playing me?” Defield hisses, pressing a gun into the soft flesh of Munk’s neck. “Tip off the press? What the fuck are you thinking?”
Physical fear of the gun makes Munk’s throat constrict, but he manages to say, “No press, that’s the point.”
“Who’d tip them off?”
“Nobody. Happened once with a nurse, she, um, leaked the story to a tabloid. Johnny Beemer gets a new liver. We fired her.”
“Johnny Beemer?” The gun is slowly lowered. Defield’s eyes are so bright they might be illuminated by inner lasers. “Oh yeah, I read about that. The punk rocker with the smack habit. What first put me on to you guys, as a matter of fact. Your high ethical standards.”
Munk wonders if the man is on something, or if the madness in his blood comes naturally. At the same time admonishing himself to keep his own mouth shut, no chitchat about the many celebrity connections to the clinic. No telling what will set Defield off or how he’ll react.
“Who have you told?” Defield wants to know.
“About you? Nobody.”
“About the transplant.”
“Just my partners. They had to know we’d be cutting this morning.”
“Cutting? That’s what you call it?”
“Surgery. We’ll be in surgery. There are six people on the team, you know that.”
“To fix the ambassador’s son.”
“Exactly,” says Munk. “What I told them. All they need to know. Strictly routine.”
Suddenly the man who calls himself Defield changes. Like watching a cloud-shadow rapidly pass over a landscape. He visibly relaxes, and the lack of tension alters his expression. “Okay, good,” he says with a tight smile, and a kind of dreamy look in his eyes. “Time to meet my sons, Dr. Munk. Time to meet my beautiful boys.”
“Sons?” Munk asks, confused. “Boys?”
Defield opens the rear door of the vehicle, revealing two slender, unconscious bodies strapped to a pair of matching gurneys. One fitted with a respirator, the other breathing on his own.
“My God,” says Munk. “Identical twins.”
Suddenly, it all makes sense. And he knows why Defield is so confident of a tissue match. A glance tells him that the twins are not Defield’s progeny, not his children by birth, but there’s no doubt about the man’s paternal connection. Munk doubts the man’s sanity, but not his bond as a father, which informs and explains everything he has done so far. All that he has risked, and all he is about to sacrifice.
“Welcome to my tragedy,” says Defield. “I’ve had to choose. Who lives, who dies. You know what that means? Do you? Can you imagine?”
The surgeon shakes his head.
“Means I go to hell,” the man who calls himself Defield says quite affably. “Maybe I’ll see you there.”
As Munk helps unload the first gurney, he can’t help thinking that when the man smiles, he looks like a grinning skull.